Jean Newland Offers New Collected WWII POW Stories

‘Guests of the Emperor’ presents carefully-researched historical and poignant stories of Allied captivity

MIAMI LAKES, Fla. (PRWEB) January 10, 2013
When author Jean Newland’s Uncle Richard died, he left her a trunk of personal papers and clippings. As she went through the papers, she discovered an incredible and horrifying true story of wartime sacrifice and death from World War II, which she turned into her new book “Guests of the Emperor: Allied POWs in Rangoon Burma” (published by AuthorHouse).
NEWLAND’S book is a tribute to the heroism of the soldiers who survived life in a brutal Imperial Japanese prison in Burma during the early 1940s. In addition to the narratives of her Uncle Richard, she includes stories of British, Australian, Chinese, Scots and New Zealanders, all men captured in battle.
An excerpt from “Guests of the Emperor”:
“On December 14, 1944, you had started your bomb run, and I had started mine (for the trenches) when a sudden tremendous explosion from above caused me to dive headlong into the nearest hole. ‘Oh, my God, look!’ One of our invincible B-29 Superforts was in a flat spin; two others were smoking and peeling off in opposite directions; opening parachutes were beginning to appear. What an unexplainable tragedy.

Forty years have passed since that day, and as I recall the many experiences of my 560 days of captivity, none in more vivid or painful than the memory of that day when some of you, our heroes, fell from the sky to join us in our misery.”
“I wanted (the soldiers’) story to be told,” she says. “To just close that trunk and put it away would have diminished what they had endured.”
“Guests of the Emperor”

By Jean Newland

Hardcover | 6 x 9 in | 316 pages | ISBN 9781477281130

Softcover | 6 x 9 in | 316 pages | ISBN 9781477281147

E-Book | 316 pages | ISBN 9781477283127

Available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble
About the Author

Jean Newland was employed for 34 years by the Bascom Palmer Eye Institute in Miami as director of patient financial services. In this capacity, she heard many sad and moving stories, but nothing prepared her for what she was about to read. When her Uncle Richard died, he left her all his personal papers in an old army trunk. When she began to read the trunk's contents she became so intrigued with the stories she found that it became clear that they should be told and these men honored.
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For Scared Children, Author Leeanne Brearley Creates New Picture Book Teaching Wisdom, Strength of Mind

Leeanne Brearley uses canny, practical wisdom and “Harlow the Helpful Ghost”, who represents the angelic side of the unknown, to guide children in understanding the world.

Pukekohe, New Zealand (PRWEB) January 10, 2013
Children who are scared of the unknown will have Harlow the Helpful Ghost as guide. He is what author Leeanne Brearley has created as the unknown from the angelic side, the side children often fail to call upon, wrapped as they are in their fear of the great big world. In this book, Brearley guides them through the many domestic instances which terrify children, when the instinctive urge to explore the dark and dank still cannot overcome the terror conjured by innocent imagination.
There are three instances when Harlow comes out from the ether and gives Johnny three ways to combat his fears. They are what an imaginative child might come up with to adjust to the unknown, a more practical, less effortful way than building a world of his or her own to which he or she retreats in moments of stress. First, Harlow gives Johnny a cloak of invisibility to help out in his fear of the dark just before sleeping. The cloak would make him invisible so nothing or no one can see him while he sleeps. He dozes of soundly, cloak wrapped around him. Next, Harlow appears to him just after Mum had ordered him to shower. Afraid of the shower’s heat, and cold, its dreary wetness and the possibility of drowning, Johnny is immobilized by his fears until Harlow suggests that he bring in his Buzz Lightyear action figure. That a little toy action hero can endure a shower to get clean inspires Johnny to appreciate the need for a shower every day.
A boy only has courage insofar as he can control a situation, like playing with toy armies as Johnny does one afternoon. Hiding behind a tree with some of his toys, a spider suddenly drops on his arm. The hairy, creepy thing, to Johnny, is a cause for crying out in fear. But Harlow comes out again to explain the creatures of nature and a natural law in terms Johnny understands. The little, little spider is deathly afraid of Johnny who is a giant compared to him! Johnny is convinced, even to the point of having the beginning of conscience for nature’s lesser creatures. Harlow the Helpful Ghost is one of the canny children’s books, a way for children to learn the basics of domesticity, of nature, and of the world with easily understood, practical wisdom.   
For more information on this book, log on to http://www.Xlibris.co.nz.
About the Author

Leeanne Brearley was born in New Zealand and has several years’ worth of experience working with children. With passion and interest in helping children’s needs and developments, she has dedicated her time to bring alive this book to help those with fears. The author lives in Auckland with Stewart and her son Cody.
Harlow the Helpful Ghost * by Leeanne Brearley

Afraid of the Dark

Publication Date: October 25, 2012

Picture Book; NZ$44.99; 60 pages; 978-1-4797-3178-7

eBook; NZ$3.99; 978-1-4797-3179-4
Members of the media who wish to review this book may request a complimentary paperback copy by contacting the publisher at 0800-891-366. To purchase copies of the book for resale, please fax Xlibris at (09) 353-1455 or call 0800-891-366.
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Seven Big East basketball teams leaving conference

(The Sports Xchange) The seven Catholic schools in the Big East that do not have Football Bowl Subdivision teams unanimously voted Saturday to take their men's basketball teams out of the conference, ESPN reported.
St. John's president Rev. Donald J. Harrington scheduled a news conference for 4:30 p.m. ET.
DePaul, Georgetown, Marquette, Providence, St. John's, Seton Hall and Villanova will leave the Big East on June 30, 2015. They will pursue another framework for their basketball teams.
The conference future of remaining Big East members Connecticut, Cincinnati and South Florida -- which have FBS programs -- is uncertain.
"Earlier today we voted unanimously to pursue an orderly evolution to a foundation of basketball schools that honors the history and tradition on which the Big East was established," the seven presidents said in a joint statement. "Under the current context of conference realignment, we believe pursuing a new basketball framework that builds on this tradition of excellence and competition is the best way forward."
The Big East will have 12 teams in its conference for football starting next season. Boise State and San Diego State join the Big East in football only next season. Rutgers and Louisville are leaving the conference after next season.
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Pennsylvania suit against NCAA a long shot: experts

(Reuters) - Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett faces serious obstacles to winning his antitrust lawsuit against the NCAA over the harsh sanctions it imposed on Penn State in the Jerry Sandusky child sex-abuse scandal, legal experts said on Wednesday.
While targeting the National Collegiate Athletic Association may be popular politically in a state where Penn State football is widely loved, the federal court handling the case might rule that the state lacks standing to bring the lawsuit in the first place, experts said.
Moreover, the state of Pennsylvania must demonstrate the NCAA penalties harmed consumers and constituted a breakdown in the competitive marketplace.
"It's not a frivolous lawsuit - there are real arguments to make - but, boy, is it weak," said Max Kennerly, a lawyer with the Beasley Firm in Philadelphia who has been following the case closely.
The sanctions the NCAA imposed on Penn State in July included an unprecedented $60 million fine and the voiding of all of the football team's victories over the past 14 seasons.
Corbett's lawsuit was distinct in that, unlike the university, the state of Pennsylvania was not a party directly affected by the sanctions. Instead, Corbett brought the suit on behalf of third parties such as stadium workers, shopkeepers, hoteliers and others whose businesses were disturbed because of the NCAA's penalties.
The obstacle Corbett faced was "converting what may be real and perhaps significant harm" to Penn State students and athletes and local businesses into an antitrust violation, said Gabriel Feldman, a professor at Tulane University Law School.
"This is an extremely uphill battle for Pennsylvania," Feldman said.
The NCAA has been sued on antitrust grounds fewer than 10 times over the past five years, estimated Matt Millen, a professor at Marquette University Law School and director of the National Sports Law Institute. Most of those cases were settled or dismissed because courts often defer to the NCAA when it comes to matters of rules and enforcement actions, Millen said.
Past antitrust suits against the NCAA that have been successful tend to involve operations such as marketing and licensing because the body has "a stranglehold" over those spheres, Kennerly said.
The Supreme Court ruled in the 1984 case of NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma that the NCAA's policies on television broadcast rights to college football games violated federal antitrust laws. Former UCLA basketball player Ed O'Bannon led a class-action suit against the NCAA in 2009 that is still pending over the use of student-athletes' images and likenesses without compensation.
In contrast, antitrust lawsuits over NCAA sanctions have been less successful in court. In the 1988 case of NCAA v. Tarkanian, the Supreme Court ruled the NCAA was a private entity not obligated to abide by due process considerations when it hands down sanctions, Kennerly said.
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Pennsylvania suit against NCAA a long shot, experts say

(Reuters) - Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett faces serious obstacles to winning his antitrust lawsuit against the NCAA over the harsh sanctions it imposed on Penn State in the Jerry Sandusky child sex-abuse scandal, legal experts said on Wednesday.
While targeting the National Collegiate Athletic Association may be popular politically in a state where Penn State football is widely loved, the federal court handling the case might rule that the state lacks standing to bring the lawsuit in the first place, experts said.
Moreover, the state of Pennsylvania must demonstrate the NCAA penalties harmed consumers and constituted a breakdown in the competitive marketplace.
"It's not a frivolous lawsuit - there are real arguments to make - but, boy, is it weak," said Max Kennerly, a lawyer with the Beasley Firm in Philadelphia who has been following the case closely.
The sanctions the NCAA imposed on Penn State in July included an unprecedented $60 million fine and the voiding of all of the football team's victories over the past 14 seasons.
Corbett's lawsuit was distinct in that, unlike the university, the state of Pennsylvania was not a party directly affected by the sanctions. Instead, Corbett brought the suit on behalf of third parties such as stadium workers, shopkeepers, hoteliers and others whose businesses were disturbed because of the NCAA's penalties.
The obstacle Corbett faced was "converting what may be real and perhaps significant harm" to Penn State students and athletes and local businesses into an antitrust violation, said Gabriel Feldman, a professor at Tulane University Law School.
"This is an extremely uphill battle for Pennsylvania," Feldman said.
The NCAA has been sued on antitrust grounds fewer than 10 times over the past five years, estimated Matt Mitten, a professor at Marquette University Law School and director of the National Sports Law Institute. Most of those cases were settled or dismissed because courts often defer to the NCAA when it comes to matters of rules and enforcement actions, Mitten said.
Past antitrust suits against the NCAA that have been successful tend to involve operations such as marketing and licensing because the body has "a stranglehold" over those spheres, Kennerly said.
The Supreme Court ruled in the 1984 case of NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma that the NCAA's policies on television broadcast rights to college football games violated federal antitrust laws. Former UCLA basketball player Ed O'Bannon led a class-action suit against the NCAA in 2009 that is still pending over the use of student-athletes' images and likenesses without compensation.
In contrast, antitrust lawsuits over NCAA sanctions have been less successful in court. In the 1988 case of NCAA v. Tarkanian, the Supreme Court ruled the NCAA was a private entity not obligated to abide by due process considerations when it hands down sanctions, Kennerly said.
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New Hope for Eastern and Carolina Hemlocks; Tree Savers (TM) Announces First-Ever High Volume Commercial Lab for the St Beetle

Tree Savers™ new state-of-the-art biological control laboratory is now producing hundreds of thousands of St Beetles for commercial release. There’s new hope in the fight to eradicate HWA in Eastern and Carolina Hemlock forests.

Greentown, PA (PRWEB) January 08, 2013
Tree Savers™ announces the most advanced private biological control laboratory for the mass production and distribution of what leading scientists and the USDA believes are the eastern and Carolina hemlocks only hope – the St Beetle. This voracious little ladybug is the natural born predator of the Hemlock Woolly Adelgid (HWA) – the invasive transplanted pest destroying entire hemlock forests from Maine to Georgia.
In 1995 the USDA approved the release of the St Beetle in public forests to biologically control HWA. The problem is that cultivation of the beetle has been limited to research laboratories. There’s simply not enough beetles being raised to combat the 50 year establishment and rapid advancement of HWA infestation.
That is, until now. According to Environmental Scientist Jayme Longo of Tree-Savers™ “we’ve created a state-of-the-art commercial laboratory that dramatically increases the availability of St Beetles. We raise them, we sell them directly to both the public and private sector, and we guide people through the process of releasing them. Our first harvest this year will guarantee that hundreds of thousands of beetles will be available for massive deployment. It’s going to be a game-changing year in the fight against HWA.”
In fact, Tree-Savers™ is the only American company currently supplying the beetle to anyone determined to save hemlocks. “HWA doesn’t stop at forest boundary lines” says Longo. “Neither do our beetles. Wherever there’s HWA, St Beetles attack.” St Beetles have been shown to reduce HWA densities by as much as 87% in just 5 months. That’s a startling statistic.
Until now, efforts to eradicate HWA have largely been limited to the use of chemical pesticides. But pesticides, while effective in the short term, have proven to be an unsustainable solution. Once the pesticide wears off, HWA returns. Repeated applications are expensive and quite simply – have not stopped the rapid infestation.
Why save the hemlock?
The destructive impact of HWA goes far beyond the death of a single tree by setting in motion a downward spiral of ecosystem decline. The hemlock provides critical habitat for over 96 bird and 47 mammal species. Streams with hemlock forests contain a higher richness and diversity of aquatic invertebrates and significantly greater trout populations. As hemlocks die, stream-side shading disappears, water temperatures rise, and trout die.
It gets worse. The natural ability of the soil to retain moisture diminishes (hydrological failure). Erosion happens and streams and waterways become clogged with sediment. Dead trees and underbrush become fuel for forest fires. Local economies that depend on a lush hemlock forest decline. Hemlock forests provide aesthetic beauty, tourism, increased property values and wood products.
About Tree Savers™

Tree Savers™ is part of a family of companies devoted to developing and implementing all-natural restorative technologies that are scientifically proven to reverse environmental destruction. According to John Tucci, President of both Tree Savers™ and Lake-Savers LLC, “We believe nature always has the answer if we’re willing to look deep enough. Don’t just treat the symptoms, restore the natural system. Whether it’s restoring a lake’s inherent capacity to process excess nutrients from the watershed or restoring hemlocks using biological control, we’ve found that nature has a better way. Not only are these all-natural technologies effective, they’re intrinsically sustainable.
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Senior Edison Expert, Intellectual Property Specialist, and Utility Engineer Chooses Optisense Networks™ to Drive Intelligence Beyond the Substation

Optisense Networks™, developer of medium voltage optical voltage and current sensors for electric distribution systems worldwide announced today that Jon Bickel, P.E. has joined Optisense Networks as Vice President of Product Management.

Plano, TX (PRWEB) January 08, 2013
Optisense Networks™, developer of medium voltage optical voltage and current sensors for electric distribution systems worldwide announced today that Jon Bickel, P.E. has joined Optisense Networks as Vice President of Product Management.
With more than 25 years experience in engineering, product management and technical consulting in the utility and manufacturing industries, Jon joins Optisense Networks at a critical time for the Smart Grid industry.
“I am excited to be joining the Optisense team,” says Jon. “Utilities today are focused on safety, reliability, efficiency and asset management. New technologies are the backbone of achieving these goals, especially in light of new efficiency and reliability initiatives being introduced by regulatory agencies across the industry.”
“Optisense’s innovative voltage and current sensors provide distribution engineers with the ability to identify and quickly resolve system issues. They also improve the system efficiency by optimizing voltage and current levels between substations and energy consumers. Optisense sensors provide knowledge, control and analytics, which are critical needs in today’s Smart Grid solutions,” Bickel notes.
Jon Bickel brings diverse industry experience to Optisense Networks including power generation, distribution engineering, power quality, and metering development. Jon has filed 30 patent applications with the US Patent and Trademark Office, is an IEEE Senior Member, and has published many articles on energy and metering-related topics both globally and domestically.
Formerly, Jon was responsible for developing energy and reliability metering instruments for Schneider Electric / Square D Company. As a Senior Edison Expert and Intellectual Property specialist for Schneider, Jon led product development of new monitoring systems, invented new metering technologies, authored multiple thought leadership artifacts, and was an international speaker and trainer within the electric distribution industry.
During his fourteen years with TXU Corporation, Jon contributed to distribution and power quality engineering through a dynamic time for TXU – as the company transitioned from a vertically-integrated generation and distribution company to become a retail energy provider. During this time, Jon designed and directed large electrical distribution projects, conducted technical investigations of power quality/reliability issues, and managed many large commercial and industrial energy consumer accounts in the Dallas/Fort Worth area.
“Optisense is excited to have Jon and his utility system engineering expertise join our optical sensor team,” notes Stephen Prince, CEO Optisense Networks. “This century will see global communities collaborating in all aspects of their lives via smartphones. Utilities must meet these global collaboration demands through cost-effective power usage, new analytic technologies, and reliable systems. I’m confident that Jon’s expertise in engineering and intellectual property will allow our clients to gain this critical system intelligence beyond the substation.”
About OptiSense

Founded in 2001, OptiSense (http://www.optisense.net) provides utilities patented, state-of-the-art compact optical voltage and current sensors that increase electric distribution system reliability and efficiency through intelligence beyond the substation. Working closely with electric utilities, these next-generation sensors enable electric power companies to effectively monitor and manage distribution voltage, current and power factor in real-time.
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New Inspirational Book Gives Insight Into Living God’s Word

Patricia Coleman announces the release of ‘Jesus Death Was Not in Vain’

Cleveland (PRWEB) January 08, 2013
Patricia Coleman says that she was inspired to write “Jesus Death Was Not in Vain: Know Who You Are in Christ” (published by Trafford Publishing) by God to “let individuals know that His son did not die for the human race for nothing.”
Coleman pens her novel in a way to help readers grasp a new insight into their faith and the true meaning of Christ’s death. Throughout 12 chapters, she explores new ways to bring success into anyone’s life if they allow the Lord to work through them. Each chapter also has multiple Scriptures to help motivate and explain God’s purpose.
An excerpt from “Jesus Death Was Not in Vain”:
Whatever you are facing today, your angels are there to protect you, so speak words of faith and put your angels to work for you. The angels assigned to you are bound by your words. They have been charged to listen to God’s word—that is, to words of faith. So open your mouth and put your angels to work for you. Hebrews 1:14: “Are they not all ministering spirits sent forth to minister for those who will inherit salvation?” According to this scripture, the angels are there to help us to inherit (or receive) salvation. So put your angels to work for you, but remember to speak only words of faith, words that you want to come to pass in your life. If you speak words of faith, they will bring them to pass, but if you speak negative words, they cannot help you.
“Jesus Death Was Not in Vain: Know Who You Are in Christ”

Patricia Coleman

Softcover | 6 x 9in | 88 pages | ISBN 9781466939936 |

E-Book | 88 pages | ISBN 9781466939943 |

Available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble
About the Author

Patricia Coleman lives in Cleveland. She is divorced and very active in her church, New Spirit Revival. She enjoys exercising and helping people live more productive lives.
Trafford Publishing, an Author Solutions, Inc. author services imprint, was the first publisher in the world to offer an “on-demand publishing service,” and has led the independent publishing revolution since its establishment in 1995. Trafford was also one of the earliest publishers to utilize the Internet for selling books. More than 10,000 authors from over 120 countries have utilized Trafford’s experience for self publishing their books. For more information about Trafford Publishing, or to publish your book today, call 1-888-232-4444 or visit trafford.com.
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Angola: Stampede kills 10 at religious gathering

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Angolan media say 10 people, including four children, have died in a stampede during a religious gathering at a sports stadium in Luanda, the Angolan capital.
Angop, the Angolan news agency, cited officials as saying Tuesday that 120 people were also injured. The incident happened on New Year's Eve when tens of thousands of people gathered at the stadium and panic ensued. Faustino Sebastiao, spokesman for the national firefighters department, says those who died were crushed and asphyxiated.
The event in the southern African nation was organized by the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God, an evangelical group founded in Brazil.
In western Africa, a crowd in Ivory Coast stampeded after leaving a New Year's fireworks show early Tuesday, killing 61 people and injuring more than 200.
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South Africa: Mandela rests at home

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — South Africa's presidency says former leader Nelson Mandela is progressing with his recuperation from illness and doctors are closely monitoring his condition.
Presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj said Wednesday that "everything is moving OK" as 94-year-old Mandela rests at his home in Johannesburg after a hospital stay last month.
The former president received treatment for a lung infection and also had gallstones removed.
Maharaj says Mandela is "taking it easy" and is under "close medical attention."
Mandela spent 27 years in prison under apartheid and became South Africa's first black president in democratic elections in 1994.
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