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Hire Me!
Hire Me! Hire me for your writing assignment or event. I'm reasonable and reliable. Also looking for additional writing gigs. Email me at rclimpert003@yahoo.com

Based in Atlanta, GA - Rick Limpert is an award-winning writer, a best-selling author, and a featured sports travel writer.

Named the No. 1 Sports Technology writer in the U.S. on Oct 1, 2014.

Sunday
Mar042012

Vitamin A Cuts Risk of Skin Cancer

Vitamin A supplements could reduce the risk of developing the deadly skin cancer melanoma, according to experts in a new study.

The results show that people takingvitamin A were 60 percent less likely to develop melanoma over the course of the six-year study. People who had taken the vitamin, but weren't currently taking it, did not gain any protective effect.

The reduced risk was more pronounced in women than men.

Vitamin A is found in foods such as sweet potato, carrots, spinach, milk, eggs and liver. The vitamin plays an important role in vision, bone health, immune function and reproduction, but high doses of it can be toxic.

The study appears in the March issue of the Journal of Investigative Dermatology.

Most people don't realize that melanoma is the sixth leading cause of cancer in the U.S., according to the American Cancer Society. About 76,000 cases of melanomas will be diagnosed this year, based on recent estimates.

In the study, researchers examined about 69,000 men and women, and after about six years, 566 had developed melanoma.

Among the 59,000 people in the study who had never taken vitamin A supplements, there were 506 cases of melanoma, while among the 5,800 people who were currently taking it and had used it regularly over the past 10 years, there were 28 cases.

The recommended daily amount of vitamin A is 700 micrograms for adult women and 900 micrograms for adult men, according to the National Institutes of Health. Taking more than 2,800 micrograms of vitamin A could lead to toxic symptoms in adults.

Sunday
Mar042012

The Amazing Race Preview for "Bust Me Right in the Head With It"

The Race travels to Paraguay for the first time ever, as Teams struggle to produce during a fruity challenge, and Racers face a harsh reality if they fail to perfect a local balancing act, on THE AMAZING RACE, Sunday, March 4 (8:00-9:00 PM, ET/PT) on CBS.

Saturday
Mar032012

Google Street View Catches French Guy Peeing

A 50-year old French man is suing Google after a Street View camera captured an image of him urinating in his yard and posted it online.

The unidentified man said the Google camera pictured him urinating in his Anjou yard and the Web site blurred out his face but refused to take the picture down, The Connexion reported Friday.

"This presents a problem because everyone has the democratic right to a certain level of privacy. In this case, it is not serious, it is rather funny. But if he had been caught kissing another woman, the problem would be the same," a lawyer for the man said in a court filing.

The lawsuit is seeking the image's removal from Google Street View and $13,200 in damages.

Even more shocking to me than Google using the picture is I now know that the French also pee on their lawn.

Saturday
Mar032012

College Basketball Play of the Day for 3/3/12

Gonzaga

Gonzaga hosts BYU today in a matchup featuring a couple of evenly matched teams.

Even though Gonzaga hasn't been all that great at covering this season, I still like them covering the 2 points they are favored by tonight at home.

ByU has won 6 out of their last 7 and Gonzaga has won 5 of their last 6.  Should be quite a battle late tonight in Spokane.  But take the Zags.

Saturday
Mar032012

Storms Hit Midwest and South

Powerful storms spawned tornadoes that killed dozens as they ripped through the South and Midwest, flattening towns and turning churches into shelters.

At least 28 people were killed: 15 in Indiana, 12 in Kentucky and one in Ohio.

Rescue workers combed through rubble overnight for dozens believed missing after the storms struck Friday, according to state and local authorities.

In Tennessee, there were reports of possible tornado touchdowns in nine counties, according to Jeremy Heidt, the state's emergency management spokesman. At least 29 people were injured across the state, said Dean Flener, also with TEMA.

By early Saturday morning, as the storms moved through northern Georgia, a tornado was believed to have struck in north Georgia's Paulding County, damaging two elementary schools, a small local airport and an undetermined number of homes, said Ashley Henson, a sheriff's spokesman.

Damage at a Home Depot in East Cobb County, GA