Archive for the ‘Night Time Live with Jason Spiess’ Category

Onions to Collect Flu Virus?

Monday, November 16th, 2009

I recently received an email about the power of onions and sucking up viruses and air impurities.  So I searched the net and found two stories.

Story 1 – The Email Circulating About H1N1 and Onions

“In the winter of 1918, there was a flu that was all over the world. Gene was in France at this time and there were folks all around dying. One man lost his wife and two children with this flu. The doctors sent out word to the whole community to get a hundred-pound sack of onions and eat them three times a day, anyway you can. Boiled, fried or raw, just eat onions. It seemed to help all right.

They sent riders out all over the community to tell everyone that there was a special Sunday set aside for a prayer day. The sickness started in November and when this rider was sent out at this time it was in the spring. The flu did finally die down, our family did get it, but not as sick as some of the other families.

We were well enough though to take care of our chores and we went down to the King Family and helped them out with their chores at nights for two or three days, which was about three and a half miles from us. Mr. King and the children were all down with it, but we didn’t get it so bad that we couldn’t take care of our own work. It was all over by February or March, but up until then it was a worry for everybody.”

Although influenza is no longer the unchecked grim reaper of years past (in 1918 the so-called “Spanish Flu” killed an estimated twenty to forty million people worldwide, including a half-million Americans), it continues to present a very real danger even in modern times. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), millions of people in the United States, about 10% to 20% of U.S. residents, will get the flu each year. Influenza also costs Americans an estimated $10 billion annually in lost wages and medical expenses. Worst of all, every year about 36,000 people in the United States die from it, and about 114,000 are admitted to hospitals because of it. The flu is not just a mild sickness from which everyone recovers after enduring a week of feeling lousy and missing work; it is an illness that can, has, and does kill.

The 2009 outbreak of H1N1 (swine) flu has brought home even to those who don’t normally ponder such matters the danger posed by contagions often dismissively regarded as mere seasonal flu, maladies that are thought of as wholly unpleasant but not life-threatening. These days, people are far more aware of the sniffles and sneezes around them. Also, unlike in other years, more folks are actively looking for ways to avoid catching the flu.

In addition to good advice about washing one’s hands frequently and avoiding the company of persons who are obviously under the weather, those looking to sidestep being felled by the flu are subject to toutings of a variety of folk remedies, each of which is presented as a surefire and deadly preventive. The missive quoted above about onions absorbing the virus is one such offering.

There’s nothing medically magical about peeled or cut onions: they don’t act as sponges that soak up whatever viruses or nasty microbes might be present in the same room with them. However, the belief that they do act in this fashion antedates the 2009 flu outbreak by at least a hundred years. Long-standing superstition asserts that keeping raw onions in the house (either cut or whole; different folks swear by different methods) will draw illness-causing germs from the air, thereby rendering the home free of contamination.

The full article on this can be found here http://www.snopes.com/medical/disease/onion.asp

Story 2 – Benefits of Onions For Cold and Flu Symptoms

Most of us are aware of the powerful odor of onions. Did you know this is their secret weapon against viruses and bacteria? That pungent odor is caused by the rich sulfur compounds that promote health and well-being. Throughout history onions have been held in high regard for their culinary and medicinal qualities. They have even been used as a currency in Egypt to pay the workers who built the pyramids.

Onions have phytochemicals and quercetin which assist the body by moving and breaking up the mucus in the head and chest. The powerful odor causes the eyes to tear and the nose to run. It is this affect on your body that stimulates the immune system to fight the virus or bacterial infection. This is helping your body shed the virus and reduce the inflammation from congestion.

The onion is a warming, stimulating and penetrating herb. It is used in soups and even cough syrups. But you don’t have to eat it to experience its healing affects. Apply them externally as a poultice and inhale and feel their pungent effects. Onions bring heat to the area and this action brings the fever to that part of the body to control how far the infection spreads.

You can also cut them in slices and put them in a bowl by your bed at night or in any room in the house. It is said they absorb the viruses and bacteria from the air. A doctor during the 1918 Spanish flu discovered a farmer and his family doing this very thing and they did not catch the flu, so the story goes.

Onions are anti-bacterial, ant-viral, and anti-parasitic. They are rich in vitamin C, potassium, chromium, fiber, manganese and vitamin B6. So eat onions every day, learn to make poultices and syrups and continue a 5,000 year old remedy.

Want to know more about how to boost your immune system? Traditional diets and how to prepare them, healthy fats, herbal remedies and debunking health myths are some of the subjects covered in The Natural Living Site Newsletter at http://thenaturallivingsite.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Shanna_Ohmes

To comment or talk about this article, listen to The Mighty 790 KFGO or visit www.kfgo.com or call the studio hotline at 701-237-5948.

Jason Spiess is host of Night Time Live which airs from 7-10pm on KFGO AM..  Jason also hosts Man About Town which airs this Saturday from 1-2pm on KFGO-AM.  Jason can be reached at jason@kfgo.com.   Jason can also be followed on Facebook.

A 7th grader got the best of me

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Faith-Valley-Banner

As I write this, I hold my head in a bit of shame. I just finished leading a mini-retreat with 35 different 7th graders…and to finish the night we played dodge ball.

I passively played the first two games – and my team got whooped. We were grossly outmatched as our opponents had more than 2 kids who had hit puberty on their team. So, the next two games I kicked it into high gear and helped lead my team to victory. They were ecstatic (and so was I). Finally…we found ourselves at the deciding game 5 – but let me help paint the picture a bit more.

The whole night there was this kid who pecked and pecked at my nerves. He was cocky – disrespectful at times – and really got under my skin. Sure enough he was on the other team…and for the first 4 games was exuding arrogance to my team and me. Additionally, he cheated multiple times by never going out (even as I type this I realize how ridiculous I sound being so competitive with a 12 year old).

So now game 5, the deciding game, is underway. I’ll be honest…I whoop it up this game. Kid by kid I manage to pick off almost their entire team (unbenounced to me my team was getting picked off, too). Alas, we’re down to 2 people. It’s my arch nemesis (who is about 200 pounds lighter than me) vs. yours truly. He stands at the very back wall clutching a dodge ball tightly in his defense to block every throw I can muster up. This goes on for 20 minutes. Every miss or blocked shot is followed by a cocky comment from the little guy.

I finally come to the center line and beg for him to throw at me (he hasn’t in this whole 20 minute time period – it was just me throwing at him). He was so afraid of me catching his throw…so he doesn’t throw. I start trash-talking and run my mouth like he has been. I had become what I so greatly despised. And we finally declare it a draw. I wouldn’t let him win.

I was so embarrassed on my drive home for who I had become in that moment. I should’ve let him win. Even though he was an arrogant kid who got under my skin…I should’ve let him win. But I didn’t. I wouldn’t let him. I’m a grown man who knows better and I should’ve let him ‘win.’

The ironic thing is that 90 minutes before that dodge ball game, I spoke to that group of 7th graders of how we can be more like Jesus. We talked about how Jesus lived and how we need to try and live more like that. And sure enough I forget the sermon that I preached. I talked the talk but sure didn’t walk the walk.

Thank God for grace. The Jesus I believe in would’ve let that kid win. The Jesus I believe in would’ve played a fun game of dodge ball and he wouldn’t care who won in the end.

And thank God for grace. Thank goodness Jesus loves me still…even though I’m a hypocrite who preaches about grace and then doesn’t live it out. I sure don’t deserve his grace just like that kid didn’t deserve to win at dodge ball (and as I type this I realize how I sure didn’t deserve to win either).

And none of us deserve what we’re given. The grace of Jesus Christ is the richest and best gift we have ever received – and not one of us deserve it. Not that little 7th grader – certainly not me – and not you, either. None of us deserve grace.

The love of Christ pours down upon us – and it is by grace through our faith that we’re saved. And it isn’t by our own doing – it is a gift from our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Thanks be to God!

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Erik Hatch is a Youth Director at
First Lutheran Church in Fargo, ND.  Hatch is a graduate of North Dakota State University and sells real estate in his spare time for the Jim Lund Team, Keller Williams.  Hatch also is founder and director of Homeless & Hungry.  To contact Hatch,  email him at ehatch@flcfargo.org.

For more information listen to KFGO 790AM or email studio@kfgo.com

Video: Will the US sign the Climate Change Treaty in Copenhagen?

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Film crew returning to research oil discovery

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

A film crew working on a documentary about North Dakota’s recent oil discovery will be returning to the area this week for more research.

Rachel Libert, producer-director with Tied to the Tracks Films, Inc., of Brooklyn, N.Y., said that she, co-director Matt Golkin and cinematographer Tony Hardman will be in the area from Friday until Oct.19.

Libert and Hardman spent several days in the Parshall and New Town areas in December 2008 interviewing a number of area people. Libert said she learned about the oil boom in western North Dakota when she read a national news article in November 2008 about the Parshall area. But when they got to North Dakota last December she said they discovered the oil boom was not just in Parshall, but also in the surrounding area.

Libert’s work mainly is in documentaries.

To comment or talk about this article, listen to The Mighty 790 KFGO or visit www.kfgo.com or call the studio hotline at 701-237-5948.

North Dakota’s Population Becoming More Diverse

Thursday, October 8th, 2009
North Dakota’s Population Becoming More Diverse

Although racial minorities in North Dakota continue to represent a relatively small proportion of the state’s total population (fewer than one in 10), the racial minority population has grown by one-fifth during the past eight years.

This month’s “Population Bulletin,” a monthly publication from the North Dakota State Data Center at North Dakota State University, presents the July 1, 2008, population estimates by race and ethnicity as released from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Population Division.

These estimates reveal a continuing increase in population diversity throughout North Dakota. The state’s racial minority population (people who are nonwhite or report multiple races) totaled 55,209 in 2008, which is 8.6 percent of the state’s total population of 641,481.

While the white population in North Dakota declined 1.8 percent (10,446 people) from 2000 to 2008, the racial minority population grew by 21.4 percent (9,727 people).

The American Indian population, North Dakota’s largest racial minority, grew by 4,226 from 2000 to 2008, which is an increase of 13.4 percent. During the same period, the black population grew by 2,799 (67.3 percent), Asian by 1,183 (30.2 percent) and people of multiple races by 1,519 (25.4 percent).

The Hispanic population (an ethnic category reported separately from race) represents 2.1 percent of North Dakota’s population and grew by 5,441 people (69.9 percent) from 2000 to 2008.

Nationally, the Hispanic population grew 33 percent from 2000 to 2008.

“The growth in North Dakota’s racial minority and Hispanic populations is helping to mitigate some of the population losses in rural areas, especially in the western portion of our state,” says Richard Rathge, State Data Center director.

To comment or talk about this article, listen to The Mighty 790 KFGO or visit www.kfgo.com or call the studio hotline at 701-237-5948.

The Hold Steady Heads to Fargo

Thursday, October 8th, 2009
The Hold Steady Heads to Fargo

Alt-rockers The Hold Steady have lined up a few shows later this month as the group continues to support its latest studio album, along with a recent live CD/DVD set.

The Brooklyn-based band will launch the brief road spell Oct. 17 in Northfield, MN, and the six-city outing will head northwest to North Dakota and Montana before concluding Oct. 22 in Seattle. Dates are below.

October 2009
17 – Northfield, MN – St. Olaf College
18 – Fargo, ND – Fargo Theater
19 – Billings, MT – The Railyard Ale House
20 – Bozeman, MT – The Filling Station
21 – Spokane, WA – The Service Station
22 – Seattle, WA – Crocodile

On the road, The Hold Steady continues to support last year’s “Stay Positive,” which earned the Brooklyn-based quintet its best chart position to date: No. 30 on The Billboard 200. The lead single, “Sequestered in Memphis,” is streaming at the band’s MySpace page, along with another cut from the album, “Constructive Summer,” and two tracks from the band’s recent live album, “A Positive Rage.”

Produced by John Agnello (Son Volt, Dinosaur Jr.), “Stay Positive” came together while the The Hold Steady was touring the world behind 2006’s critically lauded “Boys and Girls in America,” according to the group’s publicist. That outing saw the band play more than 200 shows in 2007 alone.

In April, The Hold Steady released a dual CD/DVD live album and documentary, “A Positive Rage.” The CD features the group’s Halloween 2007 performance at the Metro nightclub in Chicago, while the DVD features backstage interviews, fan commentary and live footage.

NDSU to be Included in ESPN’s Midnight Madness Broadcast

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

ESPNU

North Dakota State University’s basketball progrom joins eight other high-profile college basketball programs when it officially begins its season with a special ESPNU Midnight Madness event at The Bison Sports Arena.

Midnight Madness currently planned include player introductions, a dunk contest, special non-basketball performances by the coaches and players and a team scrimmage.

For a fourth consecutive year, the ESPN family of networks’ college basketball season will commence on ESPNU, with its extensive whip-around coverage of Midnight Madness events from several top college basketball programs around the country on Friday, Oct. 16, from 6 p.m. – 10 p.m. PT.

ESPN2 will simulcast ESPNU’s coverage from 8:30 p.m. – 9 p.m. ESPN has been covering Midnight Madness events since 1993.

The four-hour ESPNU Midnight Madness special will showcase nine schools, the most teams ever featured in the history of the network’s coverage of the annual event, including defending NCAA National Champion North Carolina and Men’s Final Four participants Michigan State and Connecticut, as well as 2009 Cinderella standout North Dakota State. Of the nine schools to be highlighted, eight are ranked in Andy Katz’s Preseason Top 25: No. 1 Kansas, No. 2 Michigan State, No. 5 North Carolina, No. 7 Kentucky, No. 10 Duke, No. 14 Washington, No. 18 Georgetown and No. 25 Connecticut.

The studio team will provide analysis between look-ins at each Midnight Madness event. Every site will feature ESPN commentators providing coverage of various elements including scrimmages, dunk contests, team skits, three point contests, season previews and interviews with most men’s basketball head coaches.

Additional ESPNU Midnight Madness Highlights:

• ESPNU Campus Connection elements from students at Connecticut, Duke, Kentucky, Michigan State and North Carolina

• Coverage of women’s programs, including NCAA Women’s Basketball National Champion Connecticut

• Bonus reports and interviews from other schools.

ESPNU will once again provide extensive coverage of live college basketball games for the ESPN family of networks. The network will televise more than 300 men’s and women’s college basketball games combined, including action from more than 15 NCAA Division I conferences: the ACC, Atlantic 10, Big 12, BIG EAST, Big South, Big Ten, Horizon League, Mid-American Conference, MEAC, Missouri Valley Conference, Ohio Valley Conference, SEC, Southland, SWAC and more.

ESPNU Midnight Madness Commentators
School/Site – Commentators
Connecticut/Gampel Pavilion – Doug Gottlieb
Duke/Cameron Indoor Stadium – Jay Williams
Georgetown/McDonough Arena – Lou Canellis and Bill Raftery
Kansas/Allen Field House – Dave Armstrong and Fran Fraschilla
Kentucky/ Rupp Arena – Dave LaMont and Jimmy Dykes
Michigan State/Breslin Center – Stephen Bardo
North Carolina/Dean Smith Center – Rob Stone and Hubert Davis
North Dakota State/Bison Sports Arena – Jim Barbar
Washington/Bank of America Arena – Steve Physioc and Steve Lavin

ESPNU
ESPNU launched March 4, 2005. The 24-hour college sports television network televises more than 550 live events annually, including college football, college basketball and Olympic sports from more than 25 Division I conferences, as well as premier high school content. The network also has a wide-ranging, long-term agreement with the NCAA for enhanced coverage of 22 NCAA Championships.

ESPNU also offers comprehensive studio programming, including live simulcasts of ESPN Radio’s The Herd with Colin Cowherd, and replays the best games of the week from ABC, ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPN Regional Television. The brand is also available in high definition on ESPNU HD and online at ESPNU.com. In addition, ESPNU Campus Connection, a multi-platform student-generated content initiative, was introduced in August 2007.

To comment or talk about this article, listen to The Mighty 790 KFGO or visit www.kfgo.com or call the studio hotline at 701-237-5948.

Homeless & Hungry 2009

Monday, October 5th, 2009

On October 3, 2009, 750 people from Fargo, ND Moorhead, MN and surrounding communities began a 30 hour fast and slept outside in cardboard boxes as part of a simulation project that hopes to not only raise awareness for the homeless but also a goal of $250,000 and 25,000 lbs of food for the region’s shelters and pantries. photography by Kevin Tobosa, www.NorthDakotaRealized.com

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To comment or talk about this article, listen to The Mighty 790 KFGO or visit www.kfgo.com or call the studio hotline at 701-237-5948.

American Legion may Close

Friday, October 2nd, 2009
American Legion may Close
American Legion may Close

FARGO, ND – A long time downtown Fargo night spot may soon be closing its doors.

Members of the board managing the American Legion club say it’s been struggling financially for several years. They say fFargo’s smoking ban, an aging membership and competition are all to blame.

Fargo Legion Post 2 owns the club.

On Tuesday night, its members will vote on whether to close the building and sell it. The sale would also force the Knights of Columbus to find a new home.

For more information listen to 790AM or visit www.kfgo.com

To comment on this blog, call 701-237-5948 or studio@kfgo.com

Ciro Topher Show on Night Time Live with Jason Spiess

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

Topher

Ciro

Ciro2 Ciro3topher shirt