Friday, April 12, 2013

Moon Base Over Asteroid? Lawmakers Push for Lunar Landing by 2022

While NASA's proposed budget for 2014 unveiled this week reaffirms the space agency's ambitious plan to send astronauts to an asteroid, some members of Congress are pushing for a more familiar goal: a moon base by 2022.

President Barack Obama's federal budget request for 2014, released Wednesday (April 10), gives NASA $105 million to jump-start a bold plan to?park an asteroid near the moon. Astronauts would then explore the space rock using the agency's Space Launch System rocket and Orion capsule, with the first visit perhaps coming as early as 2021.?

The proposed "Asteroid Initiative" lines up with the manned spaceflight priorities of the Obama Administration, which three years ago cancelled NASA's moon-oriented Constellation program and directed the agency to get astronauts to an asteroid by 2025, then on to the vicinity of Mars by the mid-2030s. [How it Works; NASA's Asteroid-Capture Mission in Pictures]

But some lawmakers contend that?the moon?should still be NASA's immediate human spaceflight target. They have reintroduced a 2011 bill called the RE-asserting American Leadership in Space Act (or REAL Space Act for short), which asks NASA to send astronauts to the moon by 2022 with the goal of establishing a long-term settlement there.

"The moon is our nearest celestial body, taking only a matter of days to reach," Rep. Bill Posey (R-Fla.) said in a statement Wednesday. "In order to explore deeper into space ? to Mars and beyond ? a moon presence offers us the ability to develop and test technologies to cope with the realities of operating on an extraterrestrial surface."

The bill would also give NASA's manned spaceflight efforts more direction, its sponsors say.

"This legislation is not just about landing another human on the moon. It is about restoring our nation?s now-defunct human spaceflight program and setting clear and achievable goals that will lead to advancements in science and technology," said Rep. Rob Bishop (R-Utah). "This legislation restores and clarifies NASA?s role in human spaceflight and sets the US back on course to lead exploration of the cosmos."

Astronauts have not walked on the surface of the moon since NASA's Apollo 17 mission in 1972, which marked the final lunar landing mission of the Apollo program.

In 2004, NASA unveiled its Constellation program that aimed to return astronauts to the moon by 2020 using a new family of rockets, the Ares I and Ares V, as well as new Orion space capsules and moon landers. In 2010, however, the Obama Administration replaced that program with the asteroid-oriented spaceflight goal NASA is currently pursuing.

The current space vision still includes the Orion capsules, but replaces the Ares rockets with a single mega-rocket called the Space Launch System. The first manned flight of the complete Orion-Space Launch System is expected in 2021.

NASA's focus on getting humans to a near-Earth asteroid and Mars makes an American-led manned moon mission unlikely anytime soon, agency chief Charles Bolden reportedly said earlier this month.

"NASA will not take the lead on a human lunar mission," Bolden said during a joint meeting of the Space Studies Board and the Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board on Thursday (April 4), according to a?SpacePolitics.com report by Jeff Foust. "NASA is not going to the moon with a human as a primary project probably in my lifetime. And the reason is, we can only do so many things."

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter?@michaeldwall.?Follow us?@Spacedotcom,?Facebook?or?Google+. Originally published on?SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/moon-over-asteroid-lawmakers-push-lunar-landing-2022-171324487.html

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Thursday, April 11, 2013

Research enables fishermen to harvest lucrative shellfish on Georges Bank

Apr. 10, 2013 ? Combined research efforts by scientists involved in the Gulf of Maine Toxicity (GOMTOX) project, funded by NOAA's Ecology and Oceanography of Harmful Algal Blooms (ECOHAB) program, and administered by the National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science (NCCOS), have led to enhanced understanding of toxic algal blooms on Georges Bank. This new information, coupled with an at-sea and dockside testing protocol developed through collaboration between GOMTOX and U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) investigators, has allowed fishermen to harvest ocean quahogs and surf clams in these offshore waters for the first time in more than two decades.

The shellfish industry estimates the Georges Bank fishery can produce up to 1 million bushels of surf clams and ocean quahogs a year, valued $10 -- 15 million annually. "There is a billion dollars' worth of shellfish product on Georges Bank that is property of the United States but that can't be harvested because of the threat of toxicity, and 99.9% of the time, it is good wholesome product," says Dave Wallace of North Atlantic Clam Association and a GOMTOX participant. "In an unusual and unique partnership, we worked with GOMTOX scientists, the FDA, and the states of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Jersey and Delaware and now that huge resource can go into commerce, which helps the entire country."

"We are extremely pleased that research funded by NOAA can provide such an economic boost to New England shellfisheries," says Robert Magnien, Director of NCCOS' Center for Sponsored Coastal Ocean Research. "It is a clear example of how research authorized by the Harmful Algal Bloom and Hypoxia Research and Control Act can protect both public health and local economies through collaborations between academic scientists, state and federal regulatory agencies, and the shellfish industry."

An elevated area of the sea floor between Cape Cod and Nova Scotia, Georges Bank is one of the best fishing grounds on Earth. But since 1990, it has been closed to harvesting of surf clams and ocean quahogs after harmful algal blooms (also referred to as "red tides") caused paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) that sickened fishermen. For decades scientists speculated the blooms on Georges Bank were fueled by coastal blooms in the Gulf of Maine.

More recent research by GOMTOX investigators, however, has shown that Georges Bank is home to a separate and distinct population of the toxic algae, which is described in a recently published paper by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) scientist Dennis McGillicuddy and other members of the GOMTOX team.

It has been known for many years that the phytoplankton Alexandrium fundyense is the cause of the harmful algal blooms that occur to varying severity each spring and summer along the coastal Gulf of Maine, sometimes extending as far south as Cape Cod and the adjacent islands. The algae's seed populations or "cysts" germinate from seabeds starting in early spring and bloom at the sea surface, until all of the necessary nutrients in the water are consumed. As the nutrients run out, the cells form cysts and fall to the seafloor, as seed for the following spring. High concentrations of the toxic algae can cause closure of shellfish beds and cost the region many millions of dollars.

Precisely why the blooms vary in severity has been much more difficult to determine, and has involved extensive seasonal sampling of water and sediments, study of coastal currents, environmental and oceanographic conditions, availability of nutrients, and the development of a computer program to model all of the variables.

Researchers got the first signal that something very different was happening on Georges Bank during a research cruise to count Alexandrium cells in sea water samples in spring/summer 2007. "We devised our sampling strategy to look at the cells' transport pathways from coastal waters onto the Bank," says McGillicuddy. Throughout the coastal Gulf of Maine, the numbers were very low. But when the research team started sampling at Georges Bank, they found very high concentrations of Alexandrium in the water, despite the fact that the bloom had not really begun along the coast of Maine.

"I'll never forget the moment we hit a big patch of cells on Georges Bank," says Dave Townsend, a GOMTOX scientist from the University of Maine and co-author of the paper. "We extended our sampling to go all the way across Georges Bank and we were still hitting them. We had to turn around and completely reorganize our sampling strategy based on what we were seeing in the microscope."

For such a large bloom to occur, the researchers reasoned the number of cysts on Georges Bank must be similar to the quantities needed to initiate a bloom along the coast. Yet, their fall 2007 survey to map the cyst distribution in the seabed on the Bank found very few cysts -- quantities not likely to cause a large bloom along the coast.

In the three-year course of intensive study on Georges Bank since then, blooms have occurred every year, in concentrations that would typically lead to toxicities in coastal shellfish beds. Yet, a parallel effort by the fishing industry and federal testing labs to analyze shellfish samples from Georges Bank found the bivalves to be clean of toxins. So while toxins were produced at and near the surface, they were not delivered to the surf clams and ocean quahogs in the seabed in quantities sufficient to threaten human health.

The system on Georges Bank was indeed a riddle: Few cysts, yet large blooms; a large bloom, yet little to no toxicity in the shellfish. Applying the same detailed analyses to the offshore population of Alexandrium that they applied to coastal populations, the scientists discovered the optimum growing conditions for Alexandrium on Georges Bank were colder and saltier than those of their coastal relatives. Their analysis uncovered how the currents in the region can isolate Georges Bank to create colder and saltier conditions. If the conditions are favorable, the researchers say, Alexandrium populations can double every three days, and in a month's time, grow from concentrations of 10 cells per liter to 10,000.

Further setting the Georges Bank population apart was the finding by GOMTOX colleagues at University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth's School for Marine Science and Technology (SMAST), working in collaboration with the FDA, who determined that the toxin content of algae on Georges Bank was different than the coastal Gulf of Maine populations. "The toxins present in Alexandrium cells from Georges Bank were, on average, two times lower than those in the coastal Gulf of Maine," said Chrissy Petitpas, a doctoral student working in Professor Jefferson Turner's lab at SMAST.

Despite this new information and the knowledge that the clams have been shown to be safe for humans to eat at the present time, the fact remains that concentrations of the toxins in the clams on Georges Bank in 1989 and 1990 did reach dangerous levels. Scientists know that coastal shellfish populations are directly exposed to the toxins when the blooms make landfall, but they remain uncertain about the conduit for toxicity from the surface ocean to the deep shellfish beds on Georges Bank, located at about 50m depth.

But, thanks to an innovative screening protocol and regulatory structure developed collaboratively by the FDA, NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service, the fishing industry, and testing labs approved by the National Shellfish Sanitation Program, a system is now in place to monitor, test, and verify that clams harvested from Georges Bank are safe. The clams are checked by fishermen at sea using the newly available test kit, and re-checked by regulators when the fishing vessels reach the dock. Combined with the weekly monitoring of shellfish beds along the coast during the bloom season to protect human health, these monitoring systems are extremely effective at keeping toxic shellfish off the market.

"Toxin levels in shellfish on Georges Bank have been very low over the last few years. We are confident that this new testing protocol will serve to protect public health should toxin levels rise again in the future," said Stacey DeGrasse, seafood research coordinator in the FDA's Office of Regulatory Science and a major participant in the development of the new offshore testing protocol. "We intend to continue to work closely with NOAA to ensure that the shellfish from this region are harvested safely."

"I've run over 2,500 samples from Georges Bank since mid-March, and all of them have been clean of toxin," says Darcie Couture, a former manager of the marine biotoxins program at the Maine Department of Marine Resources, who now operates the federally permitted testing lab. "We've been fortunate in finding a way that we can safely harvest that product out there."

"Although we can't predict when conditions on Georges Bank will favor a large bloom, our knowledge of the bloom dynamics was used in establishing a suitable management approach," says Don Anderson, a senior scientist at WHOI and the lead investigator on the GOMTOX project.

For the scientists, the work to understand the dynamics of the Georges Bank population continues. New DNA evidence uncovered by Woods Hole Center for Oceans and Human Health researchers Deana Erdner (University of Texas) and Mindy Richlen from Don Anderson's laboratory at WHOI, suggests the Georges Bank Alexandrium population is genetically distinct.

"We thought the Georges Bank population was just the little toe at the end of the coastal population, but it's not. It is separate, and it occupies a distinct niche from the rest of the Alexandrium in this region," says McGillicuddy. "This was a big surprise to us."

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/7nDqH4FI0l4/130410131447.htm

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Neighbors describe student behind stabbing as shy

CYPRESS, Texas (AP) ? A 20-year-old student who told police he had fantasized for years about stabbing people to death went on a rampage with a knife at a suburban Houston community college, hurting more than a dozen people, authorities said.

The Harris County Sheriff's Office said that about 11:20 a.m. Tuesday, Dylan Quick began a building-to-building rampage with a razor-like knife at the Lone Star Community College System in Cypress. He wounded at least 14 people, two critically.

Neighbors said he was a shy young man who would say hello when he took out the trash and helped his parents tend the yard, though he rarely came out alone.

"I can't imagine what would have happened to that young man to make him do something like this. He is very normal," said Magdalena Lopez, 48, who has lived across the street from the Quick family for 15 years.

The Quicks were friendly and fit in well with the other families on the block of brick, ranch-style homes. Most were aware that Quick is deaf. A street sign, "Deaf Child In Area," was posted on the block to warn drivers.

"I can't believe he would do it," Lopez added.

But hours after the stabbing attack, Quick was charged with three counts of aggravated assault, and the statement from the sheriff's office said pieces of the blade used in the attack were found in at least one victim and at the scene of the attack. A knife handle was found in a backpack Quick was carrying when he was arrested. Authorities were seen leaving Quick's parents' home with two brown paper bags.

No one answered the door or the phone at the red brick home, though two vehicles were parked in the driveway, one of them a Honda Accord with a license plate that read "DYLAN." It was not immediately known if Quick has an attorney.

The attack began before noon on a sunny spring day, interrupting the careless chatter of Diante Cotton and his friends, who were sitting in the cafeteria when a girl clutching her neck walked in, yelling.

"He's stabbing people, he's stabbing people," Cotton said the girl shouted, his first indication that something was amiss on the normally tranquil campus.

Walking outside, Cotton and his friends saw another half-dozen people with injuries to their faces and necks. Some were being loaded into ambulances. The most critically injured were evacuated in medical helicopters.

"I turned around, and there was just blood ? just blood dripping down the stairs, all over the floor, all over everyone's towels, on their necks, just a lot of blood," Melody Vinton told KHOU-TV.

The attacker ran past Vinton, she said, as she was leaving her chemistry class. He was stabbing people, she said, one after another, always aiming for the neck or face.

"There's no humanity in that. Just to see another human being do that was more traumatic than anything," Vinton said.

Vinton and other students in the science building rushed to help the victims until emergency crews arrived.

Michelle Alvarez tried to back away when she saw Quick running toward students. She didn't even feel it as he swiped her.

"He came running and swinging at my neck, as I tried to get out of the way," she told the Houston Chronicle.

It remains unclear how long the attack lasted, but Lone Star college officials said they locked down the campus shortly after 11:30 a.m. Students described phones going off informing them of the lockdown. Some stayed in class until they were dismissed. Others went out to the hallways, where they were evacuated to their cars.

The sheriff's office said Quick told them he had fantasized about stabbing people to death since elementary school and had planned the attack for some time.

But Michael Lincoln, who lives next door, said Quick had never been aggressive, making the accusations even more shocking.

"If he's outside, he speaks to me, 'Hey neighbor, how you doing?'" Lincoln said.

Elva Garcia, 46, who lives two houses down from the Quicks, described him as a nice young man who stayed out of trouble and only came outside with his parents. She saw him, she said, just this past weekend, working with his parents in the front yard.

"We can't even believe it. What motive would he have?" Garcia said.

The attack came three months after a different Lone Star campus was the site of a shooting in which two people were hurt. The suspected gunman in that incident is charged with aggravated assault.

___

Associated Press writers Nomaan Merchant, Terry Wallace and David Warren in Dallas contributed to this report.

__

Plushnick-Masti can be followed on Twitter at https://twitter.com/RamitMastiAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/students-describe-bloody-scene-texas-college-072218198.html

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S&P raises Cyprus rating outlook to stable from negative

NICOSIA (Reuters) - Standard & Poor's Ratings Services on Wednesday raised its outlook on Cyprus to stable from negative, saying it expects the troubled government to agree to the terms of a bailout, averting any immediate risk of a sovereign default.

Cyprus, one of the euro zone's smallest economies, has been forced to wind down one of its largest banks and slap losses on uninsured deposits in a second in order to qualify for a 10 billion euro (8.53 billion pounds) lifeline from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

S&P rates the island CCC. It said it would likely lower the rating if, contrary to its expectations, the Cypriot government rejected the bailout terms. It would consider raising the rating if the economy were to stabilise sooner and at higher levels.

"Our baseline expectation continues to be that Cyprus will remain a member of the euro zone. Nevertheless, it seems likely that recently imposed capital controls will remain, in some form, to protect Cyprus' banks from renewed deposit flight," S&P said.

Cypriot authorities imposed capital restrictions on banks on March 28, introducing a vetting process for payments over 25,000 euros daily by businesses and setting a 300 euro cash withdrawal limit for individuals.

Standard and Poor's said it expected Cyprus's economy to shrink 20 percent from 2013 to 2016. Expected downsizing in the public and financial services sector, and in the banking system would likely lead to significant job losses, it said.

Cyprus plans to raise 10.6 billion euros from winding down Laiki Bank, losses to junior bondholders, and a deposit-for-equity swap for uninsured deposits in the Bank of Cyprus, a draft assessment of Cypriot financing needs prepared by the European Commission showed. It also plans to sell 400 million euros' worth of reserves to finance part of its bailout.

S&P said that it understood that once terms were approved by the Cypriot government, the ECB would once again accept Cypriot government securities as collateral in exchange for its credit support to Cyprus's financial institutions.

"We view this as an important normalisation of monetary support for Cyprus's challenged financial sector," it said.

Under the terms of the bailout deal, Cyprus's economy is expected to contract 8.7 percent this year, continue to shrink in 2014 and return to marginal growth in 2015, documents seen by Reuters show.

(Reporting By Hilary Russ and Michele Kambas; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/p-revises-cyprus-outlook-stable-negative-164557747--finance.html

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

$8 Family Game Night Party PRINTABLE Set {save $21} - Tip Junkie

Are you ready to turn family game night up a notch? ?June Cleaver eat your heart out! ?Whether you?re hosting a family reunion, game night, or gaming birthday party theme ~ you?re going to want these Game Night Party PRINTABLE Set ~ Family Version. ? {shoot yeah!}

It?s the seventh day of our?Printable Shop-a-thon and Fundraiser to fix TipJunkie?with DESIGNER printables so memorable you?re going to knock your families socks off! ? Remember, this discount is for 24 hours only.

** ?You can still get?Tuesdays Deals?until Wednesday 9:00 am CST **
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Only ?7?and?Save 5.50!

You know how much I adore family time and?TODAY ONLY, Holly has discounted her?Game Night Party PRINTABLE Set ~ Family Version? 73% OFF? {you save $21!!!} as well as donating HALF of the proceeds to fix TipJunkie.com. ?{She?s hooking us ALL up!}

Talk about the coolest fundraiser ~ You get something fabulous for Friday Game Night with the family, a steal deal, and Tip Junkie can be re-build Enterprise-Grade {costing hundreds-of-thousands, eek!} to can handle it?s enormous data load {10?Terabytes, double eek!} AND continue to promote creative women. ?{win/win/win} ?I just love it when women support each other ~ don?t you? {hugs}

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Family Game Night Party PRINTABLE Set ~?$8 Today Only!

Game Night Party PRINTABLE Set ~ Family Version?by Holly,?are packaged with 15 printable digital files?{for instant download}?which you will?receive?for?only $8 {SAVE $21 ~ that?s 73% OFF}?if you purchase them?before Thursday, April 11th at 9 am?CST. ?Use coupon code?tipjunkie?at checkout.

The FULL package includes the following Printable PDF files:

1. 2? Cupcake Toppers (10 designs)
2. 4? Cake Toppers/Decorators (10 designs matching Cupcake Toppers)
3. Thank you Cards (1 design)
4. Favor Tags (1 design)
5. Tent Labels (4 designs)
6. Small Candy Wrappers (6 designs)
7. Game Night Banner(1 design-5?5 squares)
8. Cupcake Wrappers (2 designs)
9. Personalized Invitation (5?7 size)
10. Straw Flags (10 designs)
11. Water Bottle Wraps (4 designs)
12. 3/4? Candy Stickers (8 designs)
13. Blank Sign (1 design)
14. Large Candy Wrappers (3 designs)
15. Welcome Sign (2 designs)

Click this link to purchase: ?Game Night Party PRINTABLE Set ~ Family Version

At this price, the ordered?package would not be personalized, but would include the phrase ?game night? on all applicable pieces.

Once?purchased, these files are yours to save onto your computer and print as many times as you like, for personal use.

Use This Coupon Code:

To get the exclusive?Printable Shop-a-thon?price of only?$8,?put in the coupon code?tipjunkie?at checkout, then update your cart to get the sale price.

Once you purchase the?printable collection, an email will be sent to you with a link to download a digital pdf file with the collection. ?All files are 8.5?x 11? and meant to be printed and trimmed yourself. ?These files are now yours to keep and print as many times as you like for personal use.

Also, don?t forget to check out the Tip Junkie Facebook page for even more crafts, activities for kids, creative ideas, and free tutorials. It?s a great place to ask questions on how to make things or for specific tutorials that you are looking for. I?ll be happy to find them for ya!

Tip Junkie ~ Laurie Turk

Creating Memories that Endure,

Laurie

a.k.a. the Tip Junkie

P.S. If you?re thinking to yourself, ?Thanks Laurie but I don?t need a printable, but I do appreciate Tip Junkie and want to help.? ?Then click here to donate $1 via PayPal for the rebuild. ?{Hugs to all who help!}

Source: http://www.tipjunkie.com/all-crafts/game-night-party-printable/

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Forbes.com Showcases Andrea Simon Article Outlining How to Take ...

Always at the forefront of innovative, influential business ideas, Forbes.com is currently featuring a cutting-edge article by Andrea Simon, Ph.D., principal and founder of Simon Associates Management Consultants (SAMC). Dr. Simon?s article, ?Why We?re So Afraid of Change ? and Why That Holds Businesses Back,? examines how in today?s economic landscape, a great many CEOs are struggling with changes in their market space, supply change, consumer behavior?everything.?

Dr. Simon writes, ?A former client contacted us recently, saying: ?We?re stuck.? As in so many cases after 2008?s Great Recession, his division, once an industry leader, had experienced zero growth, using the same outmoded tactics to keep factories running, while wishing for the old world order to return. It never did.?

Why are they ?stuck?,? Dr. Simon asks. ?Beyond fearing change itself, they failed to see how the business environment was shifting. If you can?t change, you risk becoming antiquated,? she states.

A corporate anthropologist and certified?Blue Ocean Strategy?practitioner, Dr. Simon has developed three primary guidelines to enable business leaders??see? ways to get ?unstuck?:

  • Get out of the office.?Venture into the world; see what?other industries?are doing.
  • Go exploring.?Shadow your consumers so you can come up with new solutions for their problems.
  • Build an innovative culture.?Encourage the free exchange of ideas, which ultimately turns good thoughts into actions and measurable results.

If you truly want to see, feel and think in new ways, Dr. Simon advises, ?you have to fight your brain?s desire to stay put. To ignite change, you need to do it yourself first. Then you can roll out the rest of the plan to your company.?

To read Dr. Simon?s article in its entirety on Forbes.com, click?here.

?

Andrea Simon PhD, corporate anthropologist, is the founder of?Simon Associates Marketing Consultants (SAMC), a consulting firm specializing in helping businesses change. SAMC?s team of experts specialize in business change management, from building new businesses to bringing innovation and culture change to firms that have become ?stuck.? For more information please visit the?SAMC?website, and Andrea?s?blog. And for the latest Business Change Management news, follow Andrea on?Facebook,?Twitter?and?LinkedIn.

Source: http://www.business-change-management.com/2013/04/09/2333/

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Waitress sues Hooters, says restaurant cut hours after brain surgery

Following brain surgery, your main worry should not be whether you?ll get fired at work for refusing to wear a wig that scrapes your scar. But former Hooters waitress Sandra Lupo contends in a lawsuit that?s what happened when she declined to don a wig and her hours were reduced so much, she was forced to quit.

She filed a disability discrimination lawsuit in Missouri against Hooters of St. Peters, LLC and Hooters of America LLC and is seeking $25,000 for mental and emotional distress, plus punitive damages, attorney fees and other relief.

"Hooters of America believes the lawsuit is without foundation, denies the accusations and has filed a motion that the lawsuit be dismissed," the company said in a statement to NBC News. Hooters, in an April 5 response to the court, denies most of her statements and says ?its actions were taken for legitimate, nondiscriminatory business reasons.?

Hooters is a privately held chain of restaurants that bank on attractive waitresses wearing short shorts and cleavage-hugging shirts.

Lupo, who had been working at the Hooters of St. Peters, Mo., since 2005, was in her last six weeks of nursing school and was at her computer in June 2012 when she felt tingling and numbness on her left side. ?I was bleeding out in my brain,? she told NBCNews.com.

She spent a week in the hospital following her July 2 surgery and was visited by her Hooters manager, according to her suit filed on the Circuit Court of St. Charles County.

The lawsuit claims that her store manager told her ?she could return to work as soon as she was capable, and that, she could wear a ?chemo cap? or any other items of jewelry to distract from her lack of hair and the visibility of her cranial scar.?

Her hair had been cut to ?-inch for the surgery.

On July 16, Lupo?s doctors gave her the all-clear to return to work. Soon after, she met with her manager and the Hooters' regional manager, who said she would be required to wear a wig at work, according to Lupo?s lawsuit.

Hooters? April 5 filing does not address whether any of its employees told Lupo to wear a wig. It says that her manager ?informed her she would need a head covering.?

At the time of the meeting, Lupo protested that she was unable to afford a wig, which can cost from several hundred to several thousands of dollars, according to her claim.

When she did return to work July 21, wigless, she was told a wig was required. She then borrowed a wig but it ?caused extreme stress to her body because of the surgery and the healing wound,? according to the suit.

Hooters then reduced her hours ?to the point that Plaintiff could not earn an income, thereby forcing Plaintiff to quit,? according to the suit. ?It is and has been the routine custom, policy and practice of Defendants to reduce their employees? hours which forces them to voluntarily resign thereby making them ineligible for unemployment compensation.?

The Hooters filing specifically denies that allegation.

After Lupo said she could not wear the wig, Hooters stopped scheduling her for as many hours, she said.

?I actually had to beg for one shift a week,? Lupo said. Pre-surgery, she was working several days a week while finishing nursing school. She had also trained staff and worked promotions for the restaurant, but no alternate duties were offered to her.

?They refused to accommodate it,? she said.

Today she is recovered, graduated and working as a registered nurse.

?Justice,? she said, is the main goal of the lawsuit.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653351/s/2a8508d5/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Cwaitress0Esues0Ehooters0Esays0Erestaurant0Ecut0Ehours0Eafter0Ebrain0Esurgery0E1C9279586/story01.htm

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