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Monday, May 5, 2014

Sklz Mother's Day Sale and Toshiba Deal

US Sports Strength and Conditioning Receives 2014 Best of Alexandria Award

Alexandria Award Program Honors the Achievement
ALEXANDRIA April 23, 2014 -- US Sports Strength and Conditioning has been selected for the 2014 Best of Alexandria Award in the Sports Motivational Training category by the Alexandria Award Program.
Each year, the Alexandria Award Program identifies companies that we believe have achieved exceptional marketing success in their local community and business category. These are local companies that enhance the positive image of small business through service to their customers and our community. These exceptional companies help make the Alexandria area a great place to live, work and play.
Various sources of information were gathered and analyzed to choose the winners in each category. The 2014 Alexandria Award Program focuses on quality, not quantity. Winners are determined based on the information gathered both internally by the Alexandria Award Program and data provided by third parties.
About Alexandria Award Program
The Alexandria Award Program is an annual awards program honoring the achievements and accomplishments of local businesses throughout the Alexandria area. Recognition is given to those companies that have shown the ability to use their best practices and implemented programs to generate competitive advantages and long-term value.
The Alexandria Award Program was established to recognize the best of local businesses in our community. Our organization works exclusively with local business owners, trade groups, professional associations and other business advertising and marketing groups. Our mission is to recognize the small business community's contributions to the U.S. economy.
SOURCE: Alexandria Award Program

CONTACT:
Alexandria Award Program
Email: PublicRelations@recognitionawarding.com
URL: http://www.recognitionawarding.com

Sunday, May 4, 2014

14th Annual Awards Ceremony Concludes Athletic Season

BOWIE, Md. – The Bowie State University Department of Intercollegiate Athletics concluded its 2013-2014 athletic year Sunday (5/4) afternoon with its 14th Annual Awards Ceremony on campus in the Fine and Performing Arts Building - Main Stage Theater. Athletic as well as academic awards were presented to members of each of Bowie State’s athletic teams and the inaugural Bowie State Athletic Hall of Fame Class was inducted.

Highlights of the evening included the presentation of 82 student-athletes, as well as six student managers/trainers with a 3.0 or better grade point average, 2013-2014 Female and Male Student-Athletes of the Year (Brelyn Finley and Delante White), Volunteer of the Year (M. Burton Cornish), Service Award (Department of Student Life), Highest Team GPA (Women’s Volleyball – 3.17) and Coaches of the Year (Danielle Adams – Women’s Tennis and Damon Wilson - Football). Following is a full list of awards presented at the event:

STUDENT-ATHLETE HONOR ROLL - 3.0 or Better
(Volleyball) Brooke Archer-Simpson, Lace Coleman, Alexis Fisher, Briana Flowers, Antonique Johnson, Symone’ Jordan, Marissa Martinez, India Mason and Yaje Ngundam … (Football) Jaylen Byrdsong-Powell, Julian Crandall, Syree Davis, Tyler Drew, Alexander Eason, David Izebere, Kendall Jefferson, Daris Johnson, Urijah Johnson, Durrell Jones, Marcus King, Christopher Labidou, Khari Lee, Michael Miller, Justin Nestor, Denzel Prince, Quentin Walker, Eric Walters, Leon Wheeler (4.0 – Fall 2013) and Antoine Young … (Men’s Track & Field) Malik Butts, Daniel Ballah, Wendell Felder, Keenan Frye (4.0 Fall 2013) and Kenyon Sellers … (Women’s Track & Field) Maya Belvin, Kiara Dickerson, Phyllicia Ennis, Bobbie Jones, Brianna Milbourne, Jamilah Muhammad, Kendall Reynolds, Ayanna Tweedy and Kayla Watson … (Cheerleading) Erica Baynes, Vivica Brooks, Jordan Hayworthne, Erica Johnson, Chantel Lattimore, Kendra Ross (4.0 – Fall 2013), Stephanie Wilcher and Tyriq Simmons … (Women’s Bowling) Ambrianna Bankston, Shayla Lightfoot, Adrienne Tolson and Ashley Wade … (Men’s Basketball) Justin Beck, Joel Clemmons, Ray Gatling, David Golladay, Cameron, Knox and Dayshawn Wells (4.0 – Fall 2013) … (Women’s Basketball) Uchechi Ahaiwe, Alisha Burley, Ashley Davis, Alessandra Flores, Alauna Jackson, Jasmine McIntosh, Donia Naylor, Keira Phipps and Reven Smith… (Women’s Tennis) Mieke Allen, Brianna Burke, Channae Manning (4.0 – Fall 2013) and Iyabode Sodipo (4.0 – Fall 2013) … (Softball) Hailey Bethke, Cassandra Clayborne (4.0 – Fall 2013), Hayley Flint, Alexis Frazier, Mariela Hernandez, Adria Lewis (4.0 – Fall 2013), Miranda Luna and Kiara Washington … (Student Managers) Natalie Kernizan (Football), Iesha Lee (Football), Breanna Lumpkin (Football), Lana Williamson (Football) and Jacquilla Wright (Men’s Basketball – 4.0 Fall 2013) … (Student Trainer) Shaneeka Smith.


CHEERLEADERS
Most Improved Golden Girl – Maya Brown
“Rookie” Golden Girl of the Year – Selena Slaughter
Most Valuable Golden Girl – Britnne Matthews

FOOTBALL
Offensive Most Valuable Player – Omar Fahnbulleh
Defensive Most Valuable Player – Anthony McDaniel
Jerome Harrington Courage Award – Kendall Jefferson

VOLLEYBALL
Most Valuable Player – Yaje Ngundam
Coaches Award – Brelyn Finley
Most Improved – Amy Harvey

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Unsung Hero – Alisha Burley
Most Improved – ReVen Smith
Most Outstanding – Donia Naylor

MEN’S BASKETBALL
Academic Award – Justin Beck
Newcomer of the Year – Zafir Williams
Most Valuable Player – Ray Gatling

CROSS COUNTRY
Women’s Most Valuable Runner – Brittany Williams
Men’s Most Valuable Runner – Rhema Ndjami
Women’s “Lisa Wiggins” Courage Award – Faith Sykes
Men’s Lisa Wiggins Courage Award – Ronald Exum
Women’s Most Improved Runner – Leia Conrad
Men’s Most Improved Runner – Vernon Swanson

INDOOR TRACK & FIELD
Women’s Most Consistent Athlete – Kendall Reynolds
Women’s Most Valuable – Brelyn Finley
Women’s “Lisa Wiggins” Courage Award – Rayshawn Penn
Men’s “Lisa Wiggins” Courage Award – Channing Johnson
Men’s Improved – Brian Tyler
Men’s Most Valuable – Rhema Ndjami

OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD
Women’s Most Improved Runner – Alicia Grant
Women’s “Lisa Wiggins” Courage Award – Jade George
Women’s Most Valuable – Brelyn Finley
Men’s Most Improved Runner – Jonathan Harper
Men’s “Lisa Wiggins” Courage Award – Sonny Hicks
Men’s Most Valuable – Rhema Ndjami

WOMEN’S TENNIS
Most Improved – Antonique Johnson
Hustle Award – Amber Peters
Coaches Award – Rahwa Habtemariam

WOMEN’S BOWLING
Most Improved – Ashley Wade
Most Valuable – Shayla Lightfoot

SOFTBALL
Coaches Award – Mariela Hernandez
Most Improved Player – Megan Windsor
Most Valuable Player – Cassandra Clayborne

Each student-athlete, including those listed above, received a certificate of participation for the 2013-2014 athletic year.

Is this Brazilian berry the ultimate antioxidant?


This Purple Brazilian Berry
Has More than 5 Times the Antioxidants
Of Blueberries

You may have noticed the explosion of products featuring acai juice or powder that have hit the U.S. markets in recent years.
They're hard to miss given that this fruit has been packaged and sold in various pills, powders, juices, nutrition bars, and shakes.
The acai berry (pronounced ah-SAH'-ee) is an inch-long, dark purple fruit of the acai palm tree, which is native to Central and South America. Some studies show that acai fruit pulp is even richer in antioxidants than cranberries, raspberries, blackberries, strawberries, or blueberries.
This antioxidant bonanza is the main reason why acai berries have gotten such good press. All hype aside, there really is evidence this is a super berry. Let's take a look. . .
Continued below…

These Doctors Were Forced to Admit
This "Crazy" Treatment Plan Works
Rev. Cobus Rudolph's doctor told him, "Congratulations! You're cancer free!" That was six months after the same doctor had told him his case was hopeless and he should prepare to die. Rev. Rudolph saved his own life, at home, thanks to a book by cancer expert Ty Bollinger.
Richard Wiebe's doctor told him, "You're a miracle from God!" Just a year earlier the same doctor told Richard he'd be dead in six months from terminal brain cancer. Richard treated himself with the tips and secrets Ty Bollinger recommends.
Kevin Irish's doctor was shocked. He asked Kevin, "Are you the terminal patient I saw two months ago? You look great!" Kevin saved his own life when he found Ty Bollinger's book on the Internet and started following the advice.
Frank Woll's doctor was stubborn: "Well, I know the cancer is here somewhere!" But the doctor couldn't find Frank's cancer with a magnifying glass. Only a month earlier, the same doctor had told Frank they'd have to cut off half his ear and part of his neck!
These four men got TOTALLY WELL with Ty Bollinger's secrets. Now, Cancer Defeated is proud to publish them in a new Special Report. Click here and discover an effective, cheap, at-home plan to get rid of almost any cancer in one month.

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Many folks are convinced the nutrients in acai berries can help you lose weight, boost your immune system, and slow down the aging process. Some studies suggest it might be a natural wonder when it comes to fighting cancer, too.
In one study published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, researchers from the University of Florida showed that acai berry extracts triggered a self-destructive response (apoptosis) in up to 86 percent of leukemia cells tested in vitro (i.e. in a lab culture).
Stephen Talcott, assistant professor with UF's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, said "acai berries are already considered one of the richest fruit sources of antioxidants. This study was an important step toward learning what people may gain from using beverages, dietary supplements or other products made with the berries."
Although this was only a cell-culture model, Talcott said "compounds that show good activity against cancer cells in a model system are most likely to have beneficial effects in our bodies."
So what's acai got that
other berries don't?
Acai berries are relatives of blueberries and cranberries. These close relatives contain nutrients similar to those in acai—it's just that acai berries have more bounteous amounts.
A study conducted by the Arkansas Children's Nutrition Center reported that freeze-dried acai berries have the highest antioxidant activity of any food reported to date!
In fact, the Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity (ORAC) score—a measure of a food's antioxidant power—is 167 in acai berries. By comparison, the ORAC score is 32 for blueberries and 14 for apples.
This superfruit contains anthocyanins and flavonoids, two powerful classes of antioxidants that can help:
  • Block the harmful effects of free radicals
  • Decrease inflammation
  • Protect your body from environmental stress (e.g. pollution and traffic)
  • Lower your risk of heart disease and cancer—and possibly slow the spread of cancer cells!
The idea that acai is an effective free radical blocker is no small thing. Here's why…
Acai helps protect you from
free-radical health destroyers!
Free radicals form in your body as you metabolize food and through other natural body functions.
They are also created from pollutants in the air, sun exposure, eating processed foods, smoking, and elevated stress.
If your body has low levels of antioxidants or antioxidant enzymes, factors like these can cause you to become more susceptible to developing oxidative stress. This is what destroys or damages cells—and contributes to the development of major diseases.
Strangely enough, despite eating many foods with a high fat and sugar content—people in France tend to have a lower incidence of heart disease.
Although this has baffled the medical community for decades, many people believe that the French have healthier hearts because they drink a lot of red wine with meals.
The sort of anthocyanin antioxidants in acai berries are also found in red wine grapes. But here's the kicker…
Acai berries contain as much as 10 to 30 times the antioxidant capacity of red wine grapes! If you're like me and already take a lot of antioxidants – in both foods and supplements – you may be wondering, "How much is enough?"
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, you should be consuming 3,000 ORAC units of fruits and/or vegetables a day. Given the government's hostility to natural medicine, that's probably a lowball estimate.
Unfortunately, many of us only get about 1,000 to 1,200 ORAC units per day.
To achieve the recommended ORAC values, you need to eat at least 5-9 servings of fruit and vegetables every day.
Many folks object to this recommendation because they don't like the taste of some vegetables. Others don't want to deal with the peeling, cutting and other prep work.
But if you want to reap the health benefits, you can purchase fruit and vegetable supplements in powdered form that you could use to make delicious smoothies to drink.
And you can easily find products that contain acai berries at most nutritional supplement stores.
It won't hurt to incorporate some form of this great-tasting berry in your quest for optimal health!

Saturday, May 3, 2014

Big Train: 2014 Roster Released! College Round-Up 5/2

2014 Roster Released 
 
The Big Train officially released the roster for the 2014 season. The Big Train return nine players from last summer, and also welcome 23 new faces as well. Last-minute additions and subtractions are common as the season gets closer, but the first game of the season is just under a month away, and the roster is already looking very competitive. The Big Train open their season with an exhibition game against the Gaithersburg Giant onSaturday, May 31st at 7:30 PM, and admission is free for all fans.


College Round-Up 5/2
Ryne Willard (BT '13-14) went 4-for-10 including a HR this week.
 
Ryan Willard (BT '13-14) had another big week for the Tallahassee Community College Eagles, who won both of their games this week by a collective score of 28-6. Willard went 4-for-10, hitting a home run and a double with three RBIs, two walks and five runs scored. Willard was a key bat in the Big Train's playoff run last season, and will be returning this summer.

Reebok Spartan Race

Back Pain and Your Job


 
 
This article is reprinted from, and is the property of the Back Association of Canada (BAC).
Sit much? Well, how much? What causes most people's back pain? The person who finds a cut and dried answer to that one will win the Nobel Prize. Not that the question hasn't been studied. Over the years, many back pain researchers have directed their energies to the issue of cause.
This does not mean, however, that you cannot be treated successfully. Quite the contrary! Over the past few years, health care professionals have realized that, when it comes to treating back pain, it's almost always enough to know the category - or categories - into which the problem falls. Narrowing the problem down further doesn't usually make a whole lot of difference since the conservative treatment for each category is more or less the same.
A few decades ago, trauma (falls, for instance) was extremely popular as a cause while, in recent years, a lot of attention has been paid to sitting. During the years between, lifting has been at the top of the list. So has "cause unknown". For instance, Dr. C. Hirsch, an American researcher, found that it was impossible to pinpoint the cause for six out of ten of the back pain sufferers he studied.
The problem is that back pain is complex. Just for openers, we are talking about a problem whose source - never mind whose cause - cannot, in many cases, be identified. (Is the pain coming from the 4th lumbar vertebra, or the 5th? The facet joint or the disc?). A second issue is that a person's state of mind plays an important role. An anxious person who has a back injury can end up with a serious, long-lasting problem, while someone else is back to normal in a couple of days. So it makes sense that linking cause and effect can be a nightmare.
With that in mind, an interesting study was published by another American researcher, Dr. Alexander Magora. Rather than trying to link back pain with a specific cause - like a fall or a poor lifting technique - Dr. Magora studied the occupations of more than 3,300 people. He was interested to know how much of their work day people spent doing three particular kinds of tasks: tasks that required them to sit; tasks that required them to stand; and, tasks that required them to lift.
In the case of sitting and standing, the workers were divided into three categories. Often meant that a person sat for more than 4 hours each working day; sometimes meant between two and four hours each day, on average; and rarely or nevermeant that a person sat for less than two hours a day. (In the case of lifting, the categories were a bit different since the weight of the object also had to be considered.)
The results were very interesting, especially when it came to sitting. For example, hardly any of the back pain sufferers in Dr. Magora's study (3.5%) had jobs that required them to sit "sometimes". On the other hand, more than half of the back pain sufferers sat "rarely, or never" (54%). And a little less than half of them had jobs which required them to sit "often" (42%).
"Both too much sitting, and too little sitting," Dr. Magora concluded, "seems to be related to low back pain ." To put it simply, people are far less likely to suffer from a bad back if their jobs require them to do a variety of tasks - some sitting, some standing, some lifting - during the course of the work day.
It will require a commitment from management if a change in job routine is going to happen on a large scale. In the meantime, however, many of us could change our work habits, if we made it a priority in our own minds. For instance, if you have three hours of typing and two hours of filing, why not divide it up into 20 minute chunks? At the very least, it can't do your back any harm.

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