Monday, June 16, 2008

Bloomsday




Bloomsday is a secular holiday, celebrated annually on June 16. The day both celebrates the life of the Irish writer James Joyce and commemorates the fictitious events in his novel, Ulysses, all of which took place on a single day in Dublin.

I reposted this from my original on this date in 2004.

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Saturday, June 14, 2008

Link Between Cellphones and Cancer ???

Well - Debate Over Link Between Cellphones and Cancer Is Revived - NYTimes.com

Cellphones emit non-ionizing radiation, waves of energy that are too weak to break chemical bonds or to set off the DNA damage known to cause cancer. There is no known biological mechanism to explain how non-ionizing radiation might lead to cancer.

But researchers who have raised concerns say that just because science can’t explain the mechanism doesn’t mean one doesn’t exist. Concerns have focused on the heat generated by cellphones and the fact that the radio frequencies are absorbed mostly by the head and neck. In recent studies that suggest a risk, the tumors tend to occur on the same side of the head where the patient typically holds the phone.

Like most research on the subject, the studies are observational, showing only an association between cellphone use and cancer, not a causal relationship. The most important of these studies is called Interphone, a vast research effort in 13 countries, including Canada, Israel and several in Europe.



I bought one of these types of earpieces, with an air tube.

It isn't bad sounding but it will take some getting used to. I also use the speaker phone more.

See also:

Bobby Kennedy, Jr. interviews Dr. George Carlo, Public Health Scientist, on Ring of Fire, you can see this on GoLeft.tv, search for

RFK, Jr: Hidden Cell Phone Dangers

Dr. Carlo's website


Look at the info, decide if you still love your bluetooth headset.  I think I have a headache behind my eye, now.  Ow.
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Thursday, June 12, 2008

Master of the Celtic harp | delawareonline | The News Journal

Master of the Celtic harp | delawareonline | The News Journal

Master of the Celtic harp

Wesley professor taught himself how to play this rare musical instrument

By MIKE BILLINGTON • Special to The News Journal • June 12, 2008






DOVER -- Mike Nielsen's fingers caress the strings of his harp, and the instrument's bright tones soar over the audience gathered on The Green to hear him and his band Celtic Harvest play Irish and Scottish music.

The song ends, and applause ripples through the air. Nielsen and his band mates pause, make some adjustments to their instruments, and launch into another song. Once again his fingers dance over the strings of his harp, and its notes fill the air.

Nielsen, 57, is a musical anomaly. Not many people in Delaware play the harp, and fewer play the smaller Celtic harp that is Nielsen's instrument of choice. As a result, he's in demand for weddings and other formal occasions.

By day, Nielsen is a professor who teaches media at Wesley College. He did not grow up with a desire to play the harp. He discovered his unlikely interest in the instrument by accident while visiting Maine.

"About 14 years ago I was up in Maine in a little town called Bar Harbor," Nielsen said. "There was a Celtic music shop there, and I went in just to see what they had."

While browsing through the shop's aisles, he wound up standing in front of a display of Celtic harps. He ran his fingers over the strings and something amazing happened.

"All I really did was touch one of them, and it made music," said Nielsen, who described himself as a guitar-playing closet musician back in those days.

"It was pretty remarkable."

He didn't buy a harp, but he told his wife Betsy about the experience -- over and over.

"I guess she got tired of hearing me talk about it so she egged me on by saying 'why don't you get one?' Eventually I did, and it sort of went from there," Nielsen said.

Nielsen, who also plays the guitar, is self-taught. He took some lessons from Kathy DeAngelo, a Celtic harper from Voorhees, N.J., whose credits include a couple of well-reviewed albums and a stint as musical director for the New Jersey Folk Festival. She taught him the basics, but the rest he learned on his own.

"He's just a natural musician," said Betsy Nielsen, an English professor at Delaware State University. "He's always played music, ever since I've known him, and he also has a wonderful singing voice. Even though he doesn't read music, he has this natural ability to just hear something and incorporate it into his music."

Nielsen's entry into the world of professional musicians was as much of an accident as his discovery of the Celtic harp. He and his wife were active members of the Dover Art League for years, and members asked him to play at one of its events.

"We were very active in the league at the time, and they were having an open house and invited me to come and play," Nielsen said. "I did, and I guess people liked what they heard. Someone who was there that night and heard me later hired me to play at a private party, and that's how it started."

Nielsen began taking out advertisements and developed a Web page. He also joined Celtic Harvest.

His musical career, combined with teaching, keeps him busy. His wife she doesn't mind.

"Most people wouldn't consider it a hardship, listening to harp music," she said. "He's really easy to live with."




The Celtic harp is different from instruments used in orchestral arrangements. It is smaller and has a different sound than its larger musical cousin.

"The Celtic harp has lighter strings than a concert pedal harp, so it's a little easier to play in that respect. The pedal harp that you see in an orchestra requires a lot of force and a lot of leverage to play it properly. It also has a deeper, more resonant sound. The Celtic harp has a brighter sound," Nielsen said.

That brighter sound strikes a chord with those enjoying the Celtic sounds in Dover.

Sitting in a lawn chair not far from the makeshift bandstand at the Green, Ardythe Simmons tapped her foot gently on the grass in time with the music, while listening to Nielsen's unusual harp.

"This is really nice," she said. "It almost makes you think you're in Ireland."

INFORMATION

For more information about Celtic harpist Mike Nielsen, visit www.weddingharper.com or call 531-5312.


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Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Morning Ireland 11 June, 2008


Photo credit


Presented by Aine Lawlor and John Murray

View Original Article

16ยบ and raining, unhappy fishermen blockading Cork Harbour. Ahhhh, the old sod.



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Sunday, June 08, 2008

Challenge: One Sentence Journal

Could I do this here?

It might make me HAPPY.


Okay, let's give this a whirl, this part won't count.

--oo00oo--

Hot today, Sunday laundry, Pampered Chef party at Lauren's, rehearsal tonight and catching up on the RSS feeds.

Whew!


Philly Flowers 2008

There is a Creative Commons license attached to this image.
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