varedsfan
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    Gender: Male
    Location: va duh
    Orientation: Straight
    Children: Proud Parent
    # of Kids: 2
    Body Type: Athletic
    Height: 6'1"
    Religion: Other
    Ethnicity: Undead
    About Me: I love baseball, movies, music, reading, eating Italian food,
    Music: All over the map, Eminem to Led Zeppelin, to Bach
    Movies: 300, Airplane, The Natural, Ghostbusters, Cobb, Godfather 1 and 2 the 3rd never happened,
    TV: 24, Big Love, Family Guy, Futurama, Deadwood, My Name is Earl, The Office is growing on me, Gordon Ramsey the BBC version
    Books:
    Likes: baseball, tacos, people, funny stuff, Eva Mendez, Ashley Judd,
    Dislikes: Trent switching blogs as fast as Kenny Lofton does teams. And ****es.
    Hobbies: Baseball cards, messing with blogs since everytime I get one started I move to another place, writing although I usually don't let anyone read them, redoing old furniture
    Vices: A**holes, deadbeat dads Sons of B!t(hes., that fumbleprick who hit my car, really laid back till you piss me off
    Virtues: a+ smartass when needed, like to laugh,
    Heroes: Mr. Redlegs, Jr., Chuck Norris

    You can find Jr. news anywhere

    Sunday, October 26, 2008, 10:37 PM EST [General]

    I haven't been on here in awhile but I just had to share this article I came across with the lotd peeps.  Jr.'s name caught my eye.  This is directly from the Hindu News

     

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  • Health
    Physical decline caused by slow decay of brain's myelin

    Report by EurekAlert

    It's more than just achy joints and arthritis, researchers sayDuring this year's baseball playoffs, Chicago White Sox outfielder Ken Griffey Jr., 38, threw a picture-perfect strike from center field to home plate to stop an opposing player from scoring. The White Sox ultimately won the game by a single run and clinched the division title.

    Had Griffey been 40, it could be argued, he might not have made the throw in time. That's because in middle age, we begin to lose myelin — the fatty sheath of "insulation" that coats our nerve axons and allows for fast signaling bursts in our brains.

    Reporting in the online version of the journal Neurobiology of Aging, Dr. George Bartzokis, professor of psychiatry at the UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA, and his colleagues compared how quickly a group of males ranging in age from 23 to 80 could perform a motor task and then correlated their performances to their brains' myelin integrity. The researchers found a striking correlation between the speed of the task and the integrity of myelination over the range of ages. Put another way, after middle age, we start to lose the battle to repair the myelin in our brain, and our motor and cognitive functions begin a long, slow downhill slide.

    The myelination of brain circuits follows an inverted U-shaped trajectory, peaking in middle age. Bartzokis and others have long argued that brain aging may be primarily related to the process of myelin breakdown.

    "Studies have shown us that as we age, myelin breakdown and repair is continually occurring over the brain's entire 'neural network,'" said Bartzokis, who is also a member of UCLA's Ahmanson–Lovelace Brain Mapping Center and the UCLA Laboratory of Neuro Imaging. "But in older age, we begin losing the repair battle. That means the average performance of the networks gradually declines with age at an accelerating rate."

    The researchers proposed that cognitive, sensory and motor processing speeds are all highly related to this decline. To test their hypothesis, they used one of the simplest and best understood tests of central nervous system processing speed: how fast an individual can tap their index finger.

    It's well known that the speed of a movement increases with the frequency of neuronal action potential (AP) bursts in the brain. AP is an electrical discharge that travels over the axons connecting nerves, whether it's Ken Griffey Jr.'s brain ordering his arm to throw or the brain telling a finger to tap. Fast movements require high-frequency AP bursts that depend on excellent myelin integrity over the entire axon network involved in controlling that movement.

    In the study, each of the 72 participants had a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan that measured the myelin integrity in the vulnerable wiring of their brain's frontal lobes. The maximum finger-tapping speed (the number of taps over a period of 10 seconds) was measured just before the MRI measure was obtained.

    The results supported what the researcher had suspected, that finger-tapping speed and myelin integrity measurements were correlated and "had lifespan trajectories that were virtually indistinguishable," according to Bartzokis. And yes, they both peaked at 39 years of age and declined with an accelerating trajectory thereafter.

    Bartzokis said these observations are consistent with the hypothesis that "maximum motor speeds depend upon high frequency AP bursts that, in turn, depend on the myelin integrity of the neural networks involved in the task."

    "Beginning in middle age," he said, "the process of age-related myelin breakdown slowly erodes myelin's ability to support the very highest frequency AP bursts. That may well be why, besides achy joints and arthritis, even the fittest athletes retire and all older people move slower than they did when they were younger."

    "The results are pretty striking," Bartzokis said. "The nearly identical trajectory across the lifespan for both measures of myelin integrity and fine motor speed supports the notion that myelin health underlies maximum AP burst frequency."

    Significantly, the research suggests that the myelin breakdown process should also reduce all other brain functions for which performance speed is dependent on higher AP frequencies, including memory; it also supports the suggestion that myelin breakdown is a biological process of aging underlying the erosion of physical skills and cognitive decline, including the onset of such age-driven disorders as Alzheimer's disease.

    There is, however, some good news, according to Bartzokis.

    "Since in healthy individuals brain myelin breakdown begins to occur in middle age, there is a decades-long period during which therapeutic interventions could alter the course of brain aging and possibly delay age-driven degenerative brain disorders such as Alzheimer's," he said. "Non-invasive, serial evaluations of myelin integrity could be used to monitor the effects of new and current treatments that may slow the process of myelin breakdown as early as midlife."

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    Are you back on Bronson's bandwagon?

    Tuesday, September 2, 2008, 02:36 PM EST [General]

     

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    Finding something old

    Wednesday, August 13, 2008, 05:29 PM EST [General]

    I was going through some of my grandpa's old stuff today and came across three cards.  Apparently Joe Nuxhall was his favorite pitcher,  I never got to meet the man he died three months before I was born but it's still pretty cool to know that you root for the same team your grandpa did. 

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    Gallery Photo

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    Did the Reds Fail Jr.?

    Friday, August 1, 2008, 11:29 AM EST [General]

       Back in 2000 when Ken Griffey Jr. was acquired from the Mariners for Brett Tomko after the young up and coming Reds almost made the playoffs the move was suppossed to put the Reds back into legitimacy.  Only problem was that Jim Bowden didn't have any pitching to go along with a nice group of players, from Sean Casey, Barry Larkin, Pokey Reese, and so on.  Quick can anyone remember who the opening day starter was that season?

      Yes Jr. had a rash of injuries that kept us from seeing the Jr. who dominated in Seattle for so many years.  Never did he have a 50 plus homer season.  Didn't come close to putting up MVP numbers, and no he didn't bring the first world championship back to Cincinnati since 1990.  As dissapointing as the Griffey era was people need to admit this.  He wasn't pitching when Joey Hamilton, or the great Steve Avery was on the hill.  What killed this team more than anything else was the inability to bring anything other than retreads in for years.  What if Carl Linder had put a little more money into the scouting department, what if Pedro came to Cincy instead of going to Boston.  Alot of what if's I know but pitching has killed this franchise not Jr.

       And for all the Jr. bashing that has gone on over the years one thing has to be said.  The guy left it all on the field.  Every one of his injuries was him giving it is all, not half assing it like say a Manny Ramirez.  Jr. came back from some of the worst injuries a baseball player can have and still put up solid if no longer spectacular numbers.  Is he a choir boy? No.  I'm sure he had his own rules but in today's sports what superstar doesn't.  He wanted to win in Cincinnati and it just didn't work out.  Now I hope he finally gets his chance in a world series.  But I'm not buying a damned White Sox Jersey. 

     

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Latest Comments


    Leave a Comment | View All Comments

    Yeah, I miss Mr. R too, not the same without his "leathery face" around!

    Chris in Cambridge
    July 10, 2008
    09:46 AM EST

    Eh, could've been worse. Last year I was stuck in front of some dude loudly proclaiming his vast wealth and high self-esteem to his companion.

    Amy
    July 08, 2008
    09:15 PM EST

    I don't know, I understand it was a weak draft but you have had a couple months to come up with a plan. Don't get me wrong the kid is really good, but I worry he'll be too soft and is not really ready for the Association.

    Rashied in Cincy
    June 27, 2008
    04:10 PM EST

    Something came up and we weren't able to go. It really sucked. But I had plenty of relaxing by the pool. So I relaxed instead of driving 10 1/2 hours and running around a big city. I think the trade off was pretty good.

    Jodi
    June 25, 2008
    08:40 AM EST

    I honestly had not heard of a Sterling before va, but there it is on google!

    Chris in Cambridge
    June 22, 2008
    10:37 PM EST
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