Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Entrepreneur to Launch an “Adult School” Speaking Tour

Entrepreneur to Launch an “Adult School” Speaking Tour

Author, Entrepreneur and Motivational Speaker James Thomas Sr. to visit area Adult Schools to speak to students about the benefits of owning a business and why they should always “Expect To Win.”

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 James Thomas Sr.
James Thomas Sr.
PRLog (Press Release) - Feb. 12, 2014 - LOS ANGELES, Calif. -- James Thomas Sr. still remembers the day he visited the Employment Development Department in his South Central Los Angeles neighborhood.  His goal was to find a bank job and speak to a counselor about how to start a business.  “To my dismay the counselor told me, no bank would hire me and the chances of me ever owning a business were astronomical.  He then gave me a referral for a janitor position at ABC Market” said Mr. Thomas.

That was more than 30 years ago and not only did he get a bank job, he has owned several successful businesses.  Today he is the President and CEO of BEM Media Group, Inc. a multimedia company that sells entertainment, information and motivational products and “The Red Letter Agency PR Firm, a Corporate, Entertainment and Sports PR Firm, in addition to being a highly sought after Motivational Speaker and Author.

Not one to rest on past success, Mr. Thomas is always searching for opportunities to encourage and motivate others.  “I was passing a local high school and there was a sign outside advertising their “Adult School” and it hit me, to my knowledge no one has ever done a speaking tour targeting adult school students.  I made a couple of phone calls and found the principles of these schools very enthusiastic about having a speaker come in so I decided to launch the “Expect to Win” Tour.” Stated Mr. Thomas

The “Expect to Win” program is designed to teach students that not only should they strive to win but if they remain focused and work hard, they should “Expect to Win.”

Mr. Thomas shares personal stories of obstacles he faced growing up in South Central Los Angeles, overcoming incarceration, a failed marriage, and lack of funding to become a speaker who has brought his message of faith and encouragement to audiences around the country.

The “Expect to Win” Adult School Tour is scheduled to begin in March with 10 stops throughout the state of California.

If your Adult School or College is interested in having Mr. Thomas visit your school contact Lisa at 562-547-2524

Contact
The Red Letter agency
***@bemmediagroup.com

Photo:
http://www.prlog.org/12282076/1

Major Snowstorm to Slam into Northeast Wednesday Night

Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2014
Winter Weather Massachusetts
Peggy Udden, of Norwood, Mass., shovels her driveway in Norwood, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2014. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

A storm bringing heavy ice and snow to the interior South will reach the Northeast Wednesday night and Thursday with heavy snow, gusty winds and disruptions to travel and daily activities.

The same storm set on disrupting flights at the major hubs of Atlanta, Dallas and Charlotte, N.C., in the South will take a tour of the Northeast before Valentine's Day. Airports from Washington, D.C., to Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City and Boston will experience trouble with this storm.



Flight delays and cancellations are possible throughout much of the nation well away from and ahead of the storm, due to aircraft and crews being displaced.

A swath of heavy snow is projected by AccuWeather.com to reach from portions of western and central Virginia, the West Virginia mountains and northern Maryland to southeastern and central Pennsylvania, northern New Jersey, southeastern New York and central New England.

This includes the I-81 corridor in Virginia, Maryland and part of Pennsylvania, as well as I-77 inNorth Carolina and Virginia and I-87 in New York.



The storm will start as accumulating snow throughout the I-95 corridor and most coastal areas in the Northeast.

According to Chief Meteorologist Elliot Abrams, "While some rain can mix in along some of the I-95 cities, this will be a major storm throughout the corridor with enough snow to make for slippery roads and difficult travel."

Even though the storm will move much faster through the Northeast, when compared to the South, it has the potential to bring a foot of snow in a swath north and west of the track of the center of the system. This is most likely in the northern and western suburbs of the I-95 cities in the mid-Atlantic and New England.



The system will track in such a way that part of the I-95 corridor will experience a change from snow to rain or to a mix of rain and snow. Such a scenario would result in added weight to the snow. The weight and increasing winds near the coast could bring down trees and power lines.

Inland from the coast, where the precipitation falls as all snow, the storm will garner enough wind to cause blowing and drifting snow at the height of and in the immediate wake of the storm.

According to Senior Meteorologist Henry Margusity, "In some areas from parts of Virginia, northeastward to New England, it may seem like a blizzard at times."

The storm is not likely to spare coastal areas, I-95 cities and their northern and western suburbs from heavy precipitation.

Folks from the Atlantic coast up to the Appalachians of the mid-Atlantic and New England should prepare for a classic nor'easter.

As the storm strengthens Thursday into Thursday night, enough onshore wind may be generated to cause minor flooding at times of high tide from New Jersey to Maine. The highest astronomical tides typically occur a day or so before the full moon, which happens to be on Friday, Valentine's Day. Water levels are likely to run about 2 feet above published levels.

RELATED:
AccuWeather.com Winter Weather Center
South Interactive Radar
Is the Northeast Running Out of Road Salt?


Prior to the arrival of the southern storm, most of the Northeast will be free of accumulating snow and will remain quite cold through the day Wednesday.

As of Tuesday midday, PECO was reporting that approximately 2,100 utility customers were still without power in the wake of the ice storm that hit southeastern Pennsylvania on Feb. 5, 2014.

There is the possibility of the power being knocked out in some of the same communities that were hit a week earlier.

For folks looking for a break in the cold, wintry pattern, a change to milder, less stormy weather is possible beginning around Feb. 17 or 18.

However, cold weather and storms may once again fight back toward the end of the month.

PHOTOS ON SKYE: Winter Storm Bears Down on US

Maze and Gisin tie for Olympic downhill gold


Sochi Olympics Alpine Skiing Women
Women's downhill gold medal winners Switzerland's Dominique Gisin, left, and Slovenia's Tina Maze, right, pose for photographers on the podium during a flower ceremony at the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics, Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2014, in Krasnaya Polyana, Russia. (AP Photo/Gero Breloer)

KRASNAYA POLYANA, Russia (AP) - For the first time in Olympic history, an Alpine skiing race ended in a tie. Tina Maze of Slovenia and Dominique Gisin of Switzerland both sped down the Rosa Khutor course 1 minute, 41.57 seconds on Wednesday to share Olympic gold in women's downhill.
A few moments later, the good friends held hands as they stepped up to the top of the podium.
"I'm sure glad I'm going to share this gold with Tina," said Gisin, who will get a medal all to herself. "She's such a great woman and one of the greatest athletes of our sport."
Lara Gut of Switzerland earned bronze, 0.10 behind the winners.

Wednesday's marquee event was the eighth time that Olympic gold has been awarded to two competitors in the Winter Games, and the first time in Alpine skiing.
"Maybe just one finger or one hand can change the color of a medal," said Maze, adding there was no need to slice up their finishing times into thousandths of seconds rather than hundredths.
"It's even more interesting because it's not a usual thing," Maze said. "It's something special."
Still, if the rare occurrence had to happen, it might have been predicted that Gisin and Maze would be involved.
For the 28-year-old Gisin, it was only her third downhill victory, but two have been in ties. In January 2009, she shared a World Cup victory with Swedish great Anja Paerson in Altenmarkt-Zauchensee, Austria - the last time a women's downhill ended in a tie.
Maze was even involved in a three-way tie in October 2002. The World Cup season-opening giant slalom in Soelden, Austria, saw Maze, Andrine Flemmen of Norway and Nicole Hosp of Austria all occupy the podium's top step. Hosp placed ninth Wednesday.
Wednesday's Olympic race seemed in Maze's hands when she led Gisin at each time split and speed check. But she then appeared to make a small mistake before the final slope, which was slowed by softening snow.
Wearing bib No. 21, Maze started 30 minutes after No. 8 Gisin as temperatures approached 50 degrees (10 C).
Maze stretched both arms overhead and threw her race goggles in the air after seeing that she shared the lead. It's the best result in a difficult season for the Slovenian, who has struggled to match her exceptional 2013 campaign.
Though Maze won two silvers at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, Gisin earned her first major medal. When Maze completed her run, Gisin came out of the leader's box and into the finish area to give her a hug.
Four years ago, Gisin's Olympic downhill ended when she crashed off the final jump and endured a long slide to the finish line, where she hit a bank of snow and was tossed into the air.
Then, Gisin sustained a concussion. This time, the Swiss racer was crying while speaking with her grandparents on her mobile phone.
"It was very emotional," Gisin said. "They did so much for me; my whole family did. This is just very nice to share it with them."
The last tie in Olympic skiing happened in men's super-G at the 1998 Nagano Olympics. Didier Cuche of Switzerland and Hans Knauss of Austria both got silver behind winner Hermann Maier of Austria.
Twice, two women have tied for second place in Olympic giant slalom races.
At the 1992 Albertville Olympics, Diann Roffe of the United States and Anita Wachter of Austria both took silver behind Pernilla Wiberg of Sweden. At the 1964 Innsbruck Olympics, Christine Goitschel of France and Jean Saubert of the United States were second to gold medalist Marielle Goitschel of France.
In men's downhill at the 1948 St. Moritz Olympics, Swiss pair Karl Molitor and Ralph Olinger tied for bronze when timing was measured in tenths of seconds.
Pre-race favorites Maria Hoefl-Riesch of Germany and Julia Mancuso of the United States slipped out of contention, racing after Gisin.
Hoefl-Riesch, who was looking for a record-equaling fourth Olympic Alpine gold, was 1.17 back in 13th place. Mancuso trailed by 0.99 in eighth place after losing more than a half-second in the lower sections.
"I really thought Tina could do it," Mancuso said. "She almost did the same thing that I did on the bottom, but she was going a little faster so I think she pulled it off."
Mancuso had been fastest in the downhill portion of Monday's super-combined, in which she took bronze and Hoefl-Riesch won. Maze was fourth.
That day, Gut had been second-fastest in downhill before letting a medal slip by skiing out in slalom.
On Wednesday, Gut was in tears again, seemingly unable to understand how her speed - clocking 64.9 mph (104.4 kph) - did not translate into a faster time.
Gut placed her hands on her bowed head and looked exasperated before walking over to hug her winning teammate.
"It's cool to win a bronze, but when you know you can do more, at the beginning I think it's normal to be a bit disappointed," Gut said.
In a nasty crash, No. 4 starter Marie Marchand-Arvier of France slid back-first into safety fencing after losing her balance over a jump. She did not appear to be seriously hurt.


Bridget Gordon, HIV-Positive 'Oprah Show' Guest, Addresses Her Decision To Get Pregnant

 
In 2010, the "Oprah Show" audience met Bridget, a woman with a high-paying career, a beautiful home in Los Angeles and a loving husband... or so she thought. Shortly after her honeymoon, Bridget got sick and visited her doctor, who delivered shocking news: She was HIV-positive.
Bridget's husband John tested positive the very next day. Devastated, Bridget called and told her brother about their diagnoses. Her brother gave her very specific instructions.
"'You ask [your husband] how many men he's had sex with,'" Bridget remembers her brother saying.
So she did. John's response gave Bridget another shock.
"He said, 'Two,'" she told Oprah during her 2010 interview. "I said, 'Oh, really? When were you going to tell me that?'"
Bridget then opened her husband's computer and discovered that he had been cruising men-for-men websites, looking for other HIV-positive married men to have sex with. She threw him out of the house, filed for divorce and sued him for fraud.
After struggling to make peace with her HIV-positive status, Bridget told Oprah she found a way to move on, which included a new boyfriend and a planned pregnancy. Bridget, who was pregnant at the time of her "Oprah Show" appearance, conceived "the old-fashioned way," through unprotected sex -- a decision that drew criticism from those who thought she was putting her unborn child's health at risk.
"But you were willing to take that risk?" Oprah asked back then.
"Yes," Bridget nodded.
"Are you worried about the baby contracting HIV?" Oprah asked.
Bridget explained that she was taking a drug recommended to HIV-positive pregnant women. "It gives the baby less than one percent [chance] of getting the disease," she said. "Hopefully, little girl won't have HIV."
Bridget's little girl, Nina, is now 3 years old. "Oprah: Where Are They Now?" recently caught up with the family to see how they are doing today.
"The baby was born healthy, alert, eyes wide open and perfect," Bridget says. "When I heard she was HIV-negative… [it was a] huge relief."
Others still reacted to Bridget's planned pregnancy with anger. "There were people who were absolutely livid and said that I was irresponsible, that it was unfair to my child, that I shouldn't have children," she says. "It was really saddening because it told me that we really have not come as far as we should have after 30 years of this disease being present in America and around the world. People still have so much to learn."
"Oprah: Where Are They Now?" airs Fridays at 9 p.m. ET on OWN.