Friday, September 16, 2022

Wow House: $1.45M West Islip Home W/In-Ground Pool & Finished Patio - Patch

WEST ISLIP, NY — This gorgeous West Islip home is located closely to West Islip School District and Good Samaritan Hospital. With an in-ground pool, a finished patio, and outdoor barbecue, you're bound to make lasting memories in this home.
Listed by: Christopher Varvaro, Eric G Ramsay Jr Assoc LLC
This listing appeared on redfin.com. For more information click here. See more photos of the listing below, courtesy of Eric G Ramsay Jr Assoc LLC:
For more real estate news, follow Patch on Facebook


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

source https://1home.streamstorecloud.com/wow-house-1-45m-west-islip-home-w-in-ground-pool-finished-patio-patch/?feed_id=2579&_unique_id=6324f43b93550

KY3 story helps Springfield music store get its stolen guitars back - KY3

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (KY3) - Thieves stole guitars worth thousands from a Springfield music store. And store surveillance caught the theft. Those guitars are back in the store, all thanks to police and customers sharing our original story.
Cheryl Bodendieck is the store manager of Ernie Williamson Music. And she credited their customers.
“It was really the community by watching, sharing, and supporting us is how we really got them back,” said Bodendieck.
Bodendieck said the awareness helped tremendously.
“They were on the lookout, they were going to our Facebook page, sharing the story even more, and it just took on a life of its own,” said Bodendieck.
Bodendieck said after the story aired on KY3, people reached out like crazy.
“People across the state knew about what happened,” said Bodendieck. “It had reached where my family lives over in Cape Girardeau, Missouri.”
Security footage from the incident caught two men posing as customers rushing out the door, with workers and customers running after them.
Bodendieck said the thieves left fingerprints on this guitar, leaving valuable clues for investigators.
“As a local business, it’s our community that keeps us here, and so we are very, very grateful and very thankful for our customers, especially those who were with us that day,” said Bodendieck.
Bodendieck said that without the dedicated support, the guitars might never have come back.
“They have gone above and beyond not only for our store but for our associates,” said Bodendieck. “They’ve shown genuine concern.”
Staff said they are going to press charges. This is a pending investigation. We will update you when there is more information.
To report a correction or typo, please email digitalnews@ky3.com
Copyright 2022 KY3. All rights reserved.

source https://4awesome.streamstorecloud.com/ky3-story-helps-springfield-music-store-get-its-stolen-guitars-back-ky3/?feed_id=2556&_unique_id=6324d0e632e8f

Thursday, September 15, 2022

Why don't children with obesity benefit instantly from exercise? - Northeastern University

Enter your search terms then press the return/enter key to submit your query.

/

Immediately before children in Naperville, Illinois, sit down to take standardized tests, they are routinely led on an invigorating walk outdoors. 
The school district, which ranks among the top 40 in the U.S., recognizes that exercise improves intellectual performance, says Charles Hillman, a Northeastern professor of psychology and physical therapy, movement, and rehabilitation sciences, who serves as associate director of the Center for Cognitive and Brain Health.
Hillman’s research has found that children in general experience a jump in cognitive performance in the hour immediately following exercise.The exception to this rule is children with obesity, as affirmed by 2020 research. Among children ages 8 to 11, Hillman’s center found that those with a higher body mass index failed to realize a cognitive gain following 20 minutes of exercise on a treadmill.
“One of our long-term goals is to understand why there is that difference in how children respond,” says Lauren Raine, an assistant professor in the Department of Physical Therapy, Movement and Rehabilitation Sciences and the Department of Medical Sciences at the Center for Cognitive and Brain Health.
The short-term gains of exercise enable children of normal weight to perform better at multitasking, ignoring distractions in a classroom and setting aside thoughts to be applied later, such as when solving math problems. 
What prevents children with obesity from enjoying the instant benefits of physical activity? Hillman’s team is focusing on the role played by visceral adipose tissue, the layers of fat that envelop the body’s organs. A 2018 study by Hillman and Raine showed that children with obesity had significantly lower performance on tests of reading and math, and that the deficiency was related to visceral fat.
“This is the fat that keeps your organs safe and warm,” Hillman says. “Some amount of visceral fat is important. But when it exceeds a certain amount, it becomes dangerous.”
Raine says that inflammation may be crucial to understanding the connection between visceral fat and cognitive performance. Does exercise inflame the adipose tissue?
“We know that increased fat is related to increased inflammation,” Raine says. “The thought is that because this ‘bad tissue’ surrounds the liver, it becomes much easier for these detrimental inflammatory markers to travel around the body, including the brain.”
While short-term exercise offers less cognitive gain for children with obesity, they benefit greatly from a long-term approach to fitness. A sustained nine-month program of exercise resulted in greater-than-normal cognitive gains for children with obesity, as shown by the center’s 2017 study.
“Weight loss is not the goal, because these children are still growing in height,” Raine says. “Unless they’re an extreme outlier case, most kids [with obesity] should be maintaining their weight as they grow.”
One of Raine’s goals is to come up with an exercise program that creates instant results for children with obesity. 
Hillman’s team does their work at the center’s headquarters on the sixth floor of Northeastern’s Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Complex, where children of all body types undergo a variety of physical and cognitive tests in pursuit of inter-relationships.
Children with obesity face numerous challenges. Deriving measures to support them in the short term may help inspire healthier long-term solutions.
“We know children with obesity have faced all sorts of barriers to being physically active,” Raine says. “If we can find out that children with obesity need to walk for 40 minutes at 50% of their heart rate to get the same benefit, wouldn’t it be better to recommend that to teachers and doctors? How do we actually give them something that they can use?”
Hillman’s team began publishing physical fitness and brain outcomes in children in 2005. Now the researchers are hoping to zero-in on a way to help a group of children realize the same gains as their peers.
“I would like to believe that acute exercise is good for everybody,” Raine says. “We just have to find the right starting spot.”
For media inquiries, please contact media@northeastern.edu.
Share

News @ Northeastern
We are Northeastern University’s primary source of news and information. Whether it happens in the classroom, in a laboratory, or on another continent, we bring you timely stories about every aspect of life, learning and discovery at Northeastern.
Sections
Keep in touch
© 2022 Northeastern University
This website uses cookies and similar technologies to understand your use of our website and give you a better experience. By continuing to use the site or closing this banner without changing your cookie settings, you agree to our use of cookies and other technologies. To find out more about our use of cookies and how to change your settings, please go to our Privacy Statement.

source https://1home.streamstorecloud.com/why-dont-children-with-obesity-benefit-instantly-from-exercise-northeastern-university/?feed_id=2444&_unique_id=6323a1dd98532

An expert on home appliances takes your questions - The Washington Post

Buying a major appliance takes a lot of research. And with new features being added each year, it’s a challenge to determine which make and model is best for you and your budget. Jessica Petrino, the editorial director at AJMadison, a family-owned appliance store offering more than 150 brands, has made a career of keeping up on the latest in the appliance industry.
She compiles buying guides and runs webinars for consumers as well as trade professionals. Topics have included smart home technology as well as new and trending features on appliance models for the kitchen, the laundry room and outdoor living.
Every week, Jura Koncius helps you in your quest to achieve domestic bliss. She and weekly guests, whether Martha Stewart, Marie Kondo, or the Property Brothers, answer your decorating, design and decluttering questions. For more than 20 years, our Thursday Q&A has been an online conversation about the best way to make your home comfortable, stylish and fun. We invite you to submit questions and share your own great tips, ideas and gripes. No problem is too big or too small.
Join the conversation here or check out some of our past discussions.
Send us your question below. The question box includes a space for your name, but this is optional. Your question may be edited for accuracy and clarity.
Looking for more? Read some of our coverage on home appliances:
Sign up for At Home, a digest of the best home and garden stories, delivered to your inbox every Thursday.
Helen Carefoot, writer and editorial aide for the Lifestyle section, produced this Q&A.

source https://4awesome.streamstorecloud.com/an-expert-on-home-appliances-takes-your-questions-the-washington-post/?feed_id=2411&_unique_id=63237ee1d274e

Wednesday, September 14, 2022

The Best Retouching Tools for Photographers - Fstoppers

Fstoppers has teamed up with Infinite Tools to bring you the best retouching plugins online. These tools are relevant for every type of photographer and will dramatically speed up and improve any retouching workflow. We are offering them at 20% off in the Fstoppers Store through July 5th.
If you're brand new to retouching, the best place to start is Infinite Guide, an intelligent, step-by-step retouching educational video. No matter your experience level, this guide will make your workflow better and faster.
When it comes to color grading your images, you have a variety of options to improve and automate color selections by using Infinite Color, Infinite Black and White, and Infinite Looks
If you're working with portraits, you're going to want to check out Infinite Retouch, Infinite Skin, and Infinite Texture.
Finally, no matter what genre you're in, Infinite Luma, Infinite Radiance, and Infinite Unify will help you fine-tune your images and bring everything together into a final, polished image. 
Be sure to check out this incredible catalog before July 5th to take advantage of this discount. 
David Strauss is a wedding photographer based in Charleston, SC.

source https://1home.streamstorecloud.com/the-best-retouching-tools-for-photographers-fstoppers/?feed_id=2295&_unique_id=632249cc6ff76

WILSON RELEASES ULTRA V4 TENNIS RACKET - PR Newswire

Searching for your content...
In-Language News
Contact Us
888-776-0942
from 8 AM - 10 PM ET
News provided by
Aug 31, 2022, 11:00 ET
Share this article
New performance racket available now, exclusively at the US Open, Wilson store locations and Wilson.com
CHICAGO, Aug. 31, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Wilson Sporting Goods Co., the official ball and racket stringer of the US Open for over 40 years, today launched the Ultra v4, a significant evolution of its popular tour frame. Drawing upon the Ultra features the pros rely on at the highest levels of competition, the newly upgraded tennis racket includes even more power through stability, empowering athletes to play with Pure Beauty and Ruthless Power.

FORTYFIVE°, Wilson's proprietary carbon fiber construction, enhances the stability of the Ultra v4 resulting in increased energy return and power. The racket is also equipped with a sleeker geometry with a revolutionary color-shifting design that changes as it moves, from ocean blue to purple haze.
"I've played and trained with Wilson rackets for many years, and I'm excited to use the new Ultra v4 on the biggest stage in tennis at the US Open," said Wilson Advisory Staff member and current Women's Tennis Association-ranked No. 3, Maria Sakkari. "Wilson consistently delivers the power I need, but also the style and light-weight feel that complements my game."
The Ultra v4 is available exclusively at Wilson's onsite store at the US Open, Wilson retail stores as well as wilson.com beginning today, and launches globally across Wilson's retail partners on Wednesday, Sept. 14. Pricing is $249 for the Ultra 100 v4, Ultra 100L v4, Ultra 100UL v4 and Ultra 108 v4. Ultra 25 v4 and Ultra 26 v4 are available for $110.
"The Ultra v4 can help players of all levels take their games to new heights by harnessing both beauty and power," said Hans-Martin Reh, Global General Manager of Wilson Racquet Sports. "We are excited to unveil this racket during one of the greatest moments in sports, alongside some of the most impressive tennis players in the world."
In addition to the Ultra v4, Wilson's onsite US Open store features the popular Night Series Collection with rackets and gear made to shine brightest after dark, as well as Wilson's latest tennis-inspired sportswear drop. Fans will also have the opportunity to see Wilson's skilled racket stringers in action. For those who can't make it to the Open, Wilson offers three retail locations in Manhattan (Upper East Side, SoHo and Columbus Circle), plus a pop-up shop in the Hamptons that features a curated assortment of tennis equipment and sportswear.
For more information, please visit wilson.com or follow @wilsontennis #RuthlessBeauty. 
Note: Pros often customize the racket they use. Racket specifications on endorsed consumer models may vary from the models used by pros for match-play.
Chicago, USA-based Wilson Sporting Goods Co., a subsidiary of Amer Sports Corporation, is the world's leading manufacturer of high-performance sports equipment, apparel, footwear and accessories. The Company brings more than a century of innovation, history and heritage across many sports including Racquet Sports, Baseball, Softball, Football, Basketball, Volleyball, Soccer and Golf.
In Racquet Sports, Wilson is a global leader in tennis, padel, racquetball, badminton and pickleball. The brand also offers Wilson Sportswear inclusive of lifestyle and performance apparel for all to live like an athlete. Leveraging player insights to create products that push equipment and apparel innovation into new territories, Wilson empowers athletes at every level to perform at their best. Visit www.wilson.com for more information.
SOURCE Wilson Sporting Goods
Cision Distribution 888-776-0942
from 8 AM - 9 PM ET

source https://4awesome.streamstorecloud.com/wilson-releases-ultra-v4-tennis-racket-pr-newswire/?feed_id=2280&_unique_id=63222b52ab2d7

Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Traditional Buddhist celebration returns to Santa Maria after pandemic hiatus - Santa Maria Times

Please log in, or sign up for a new account and purchase a subscription to continue reading.
Please log in, or sign up for a new account to continue reading.
Thank you for reading! We hope that you continue to enjoy our free content.
Please log in, or sign up for a new account and purchase a subscription to continue reading.
Please purchase a subscription to continue reading.
Your current subscription does not provide access to this content.
Sorry, no promotional deals were found matching that code.
Promotional Rates were found for your code.
Sorry, an error occurred.

do not remove
Costumed participants celebrate the annual Obon Festival, which the Guadalupe Buddhist Church brought back to Santa Maria on Sunday after a two-year absence due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The virus led to modifications to this year's event, moving performances to the street outside the Veterans Memorial Cultural Center.
Togen Daiko of the Oxnard Buddhist Temple performs at the Obon Festival held Sunday afternoon in Santa Maria.
Students from Rising Sun Martial Arts, of Santa Maria, demonstrate the skills they've learned during the Obon Festival presented Sunday in Santa Maria by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church.
Bon Odori, a traditional Japanese dance, was performed to close the Obon Festival held Sunday in Santa Maria.
Members of the public join in the Bon Odori, a traditional Japanese dance, that closed the Obon Festival presented Sunday afternoon in Santa Maria by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church.
Students from Central Coast Kenpo Karate in Nipomo demonstrate their martial arts skills for the audience at the Obon Festival presented Sunday by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church in Santa Maria.
The Guadalupe Buddhist Church's annual Obon Festival returned Sunday at the Santa Maria Veterans Memorial Cultural Center, where most events took place outside.
Traditional Japanese collectibles, apparel and crafts were on sale inside the Santa Mara Veterans Memorial Cultural Center, where a silent auction and raffle were conducted Sunday during the Obon Festival in Santa Maria.
Members of the public peruse the traditional Japanese collectibles, apparel and crafts that were on sale Sunday afternoon at the Guadalupe Buddhist Church's Obon Festival in the Santa Maria Veterans Memorial Cultural Center. 
A variety of Japanese collectibles were on sale Sunday afternoon at the Obon Festival presented by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church at the Santa Maria Veterans Memorial Cultural Center.
Costumed participants celebrate the annual Obon Festival, which the Guadalupe Buddhist Church brought back to Santa Maria on Sunday after a two-year absence due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The virus led to modifications to this year's event, moving performances to the street outside the Veterans Memorial Cultural Center.
Bon Odori, a traditional Japanese dance, was performed to close the Obon Festival held Sunday in Santa Maria.
Members of the public join in the Bon Odori, a traditional Japanese dance, that closed the Obon Festival presented Sunday afternoon in Santa Maria by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church.
Students from Central Coast Kenpo Karate in Nipomo demonstrate their martial arts skills for the audience at the Obon Festival presented Sunday by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church in Santa Maria.
The Guadalupe Buddhist Church's annual Obon Festival returned Sunday at the Santa Maria Veterans Memorial Cultural Center, where most events took place outside.
Traditional Japanese collectibles, apparel and crafts were on sale inside the Santa Mara Veterans Memorial Cultural Center, where a silent auction and raffle were conducted Sunday during the Obon Festival in Santa Maria.
Members of the public peruse the traditional Japanese collectibles, apparel and crafts that were on sale Sunday afternoon at the Guadalupe Buddhist Church's Obon Festival in the Santa Maria Veterans Memorial Cultural Center. 
A variety of Japanese collectibles were on sale Sunday afternoon at the Obon Festival presented by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church at the Santa Maria Veterans Memorial Cultural Center.
The Obon Festival sponsored by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church is usually held the last Sunday of July, although the date may vary.
Workshops are held in advance to teach people the Bon Odori dance so they can join in at the close of the festival.
For information as the 2023 festival approaches, visit http://guadalupebuddhistchurch.org/obon-festival.
After two years on hold, the Obon Festival returned to Santa Maria with drumming, dancing, martial arts demonstrations, traditional crafts and food Sunday afternoon, restarting a 75-year local tradition.
Guadalupe Buddhist Church presented the Obon Festival that has become a favorite local celebration held every year since Japanese Americans returned to the area from internment following the end of World War II.
Staged at the Veterans Memorial Cultural Center on West Tunnell Street, the festival was still impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, as dancing, drumming and martial arts demonstrations took place outdoors.
Esther Trejo, chair of the church’s Obon Committee, didn’t have an estimate on the number of people who attended the free event.
Togen Daiko of the Oxnard Buddhist Temple performs at the Obon Festival held Sunday afternoon in Santa Maria.
“You know, when you’re running a festival, you tend to get tunnel vision,” Trejo said. “But we had a lot of happy people, we sold out all the food we had and there was a lot of joyful dancing.”
The thunder of traditional taiko drumming filled the area with performances by Togen Daiko from the Oxnard Buddhist Temple and Ichi Mi Daiko from the San Luis Obispo Buddhist Temple.
“Our sister temples really came out and supported us,” Trejo said.
Visitors were also thrilled by martial arts demonstrations by Rising Sun Martial Arts in Santa Maria and Central Coast Kenpo Karate in Nipomo.
The celebration was something of a “street party,” as the street outside the Cultural Center was closed to allow events outdoors, and Trejo expressed gratitude to the city for allowing and facilitating that.
“We’ve never done that before,” she said. “So while we tried to make the festival a little smaller, we ended up expanding it.”
Students from Rising Sun Martial Arts, of Santa Maria, demonstrate the skills they've learned during the Obon Festival presented Sunday in Santa Maria by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church.
While a teriyaki chicken dinner could be ordered prior to the festival, other foods were available for purchase on-site, where crafts were also for sale and a silent auction and raffle took place.
Obon is a traditional celebration for Japanese Buddhists that usually lasts three days but has no specific date.
It is a time of family reunions, returning to ancestral family places and visiting and cleaning the graves of ancestors, who are believed to revisit household affairs during that time.
Obon has been celebrated for more than 500 years in Japan and, in California, since the arrival of the first Japanese immigrants.
“It’s been celebrated continuously here since the Japanese returned after World War II — and before that, too, except for the break during the war,” Trejo said.
Sunday’s celebration ended with dancing.
“Bon Odori is the traditional way we close out the festival,” she said, noting that anyone who in any way helped with preparing and serving the food was given a happy coat and joined the dance. “And the public is invited to join us, too.
“We often go out and grab friends and family to join us,” she added. “We are a small church, but we have a big heart.”
The Guadalupe Buddhist Church's annual Obon Festival returned Sunday at the Santa Maria Veterans Memorial Cultural Center, where most events took place outside.
Togen Daiko of the Oxnard Buddhist Temple performs at the Obon Festival held Sunday afternoon in Santa Maria.
Costumed participants celebrate the annual Obon Festival, which the Guadalupe Buddhist Church brought back to Santa Maria on Sunday after a two-year absence due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The virus led to modifications to this year's event, moving performances to the street outside the Veterans Memorial Cultural Center.
Bon Odori, a traditional Japanese dance, was performed to close the Obon Festival held Sunday in Santa Maria.
Students from Rising Sun Martial Arts, of Santa Maria, demonstrate the skills they've learned during the Obon Festival presented Sunday in Santa Maria by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church.
A variety of Japanese collectibles were on sale Sunday afternoon at the Obon Festival presented by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church at the Santa Maria Veterans Memorial Cultural Center.
Members of the public peruse the traditional Japanese collectibles, apparel and crafts that were on sale Sunday afternoon at the Guadalupe Buddhist Church's Obon Festival in the Santa Maria Veterans Memorial Cultural Center. 
Students from Central Coast Kenpo Karate in Nipomo demonstrate their martial arts skills for the audience at the Obon Festival presented Sunday by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church in Santa Maria.
Traditional Japanese collectibles, apparel and crafts were on sale inside the Santa Mara Veterans Memorial Cultural Center, where a silent auction and raffle were conducted Sunday during the Obon Festival in Santa Maria.
Members of the public join in the Bon Odori, a traditional Japanese dance, that closed the Obon Festival presented Sunday afternoon in Santa Maria by the Guadalupe Buddhist Church.

Get up-to-the-minute news sent straight to your device.

source https://1home.streamstorecloud.com/traditional-buddhist-celebration-returns-to-santa-maria-after-pandemic-hiatus-santa-maria-times/?feed_id=2143&_unique_id=6320f0926a704