Thursday, January 24, 2013

Belgian trainee teachers fail in basic general knowledge

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - A large number of Belgium's future secondary school teachers struggle with basic concepts of geography, politics and history, a study published on Wednesday has shown.

Among final year teaching students involved in the study, one in three could not identify the United States on a map and almost half did not know where the Pacific Ocean was.

Shown a picture of Mao Zedong, two in three could not recognize the Chinese Communist leader, with the most common response being that it was the late North Korean leader Kim Jong-il.

Researchers at the Limburg Catholic University College tested 1,000 students in eight teacher training colleges in Belgium's Flemish region.

The test, which asked 114 multiple choice questions, was carried out because students often showed gaps in their general knowledge, the researchers conducting the test said.

"Nobody is completely taken aback by the results," Erik De Winter of the Limburg Catholic University College said.

When asked which political ideology stood for the redistribution of wealth, higher taxes and state involvement only one in two answered socialism.

Students who followed the news and read newspapers scored better in the test than those who said they did not, De Winter said. He added the college would now carry out further research to see how the situation could be improved.

The Flemish education ministry said it was already rethinking the training of its future teachers and would, if necessary, make adjustments by summer 2013.

(Reporting by Robert-Jan Bartunek; editing by Philip Blenkinsop and Paul Casciato)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/belgian-trainee-teachers-fail-basic-general-knowledge-174046323.html

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Move over! - Michigan emergency vehicle caution law

New blog series: Little known Michigan traffic laws

emergency vehicle stoppedEven people who pride themselves on being very careful drivers probably don?t know all the traffic laws in this state. if you?ve lived in Michigan your entire life, chances are you might be surprised now and then.

I?ve decided to have a bit of fun with all of the crazy questions I?ve gotten at parties or when I meet people, not to mention after nearly 20 years of seeing just about every type of automobile accident possible, and write a new blog series on little known traffic laws.

We all wonder from time to time while driving? ?Is it legal to turn on red right here?? Hopefully you aren?t thinking you?ll finally get the answer when you get pulled over.

Oh, and then we can add to this all? the local ordinances that vary by city.

So starting today, I?ll be writing once a week to address these little known or crazy traffic laws.? Hopefully this will be fun and also help inform Michigan drivers about some of the ?lesser known? traffic laws out there, for those ?I think this is legal but I?m just not sure?.? types of moments.

With all the news about auto accidents lately due to? winter, we?re starting our series with Michigan?s emergency vehicle caution law.

This law is over 10 years old.? It was enacted to help protect? local law enforcement, fire fighters and even tow truck drivers while they help out after an auto accident, rendering assistance to accident victims, and people we see on the side of the road with car trouble..

Here?s the law, according to the Michigan Legislature website: Section 257.653a

1. Upon approaching and passing an authorized stationary emergency vehicle with flashing lights, the driver of an approaching vehicle must:

a. On any public roadway with at least two adjacent lanes proceeding in the same direction of the emergency vehicle, proceed with caution and yield the right-of-way by moving into a lane at least one moving lane or two vehicle widths apart from the emergency vehicle, unless directed otherwise by a police officer. If this movement is not possible due to weather, road conditions or the presence of? traffic or pedestrians, go to step b:

b. The approaching vehicle should reduce and maintain a safe speed for weather, road conditions and traffic, and proceed with due care and caution, or as directed by a police officer.

Penalties for violating Michigan?s emergency vehicle caution law

  • If you violate the law: You are guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not more than $500 or imprisonment for not more than 90 days, or both.
  • If you violate the law and cause injury to a police officer, firefighter or other emergency response personnel:? You are guilty of a felony punishable by a fine of not more than $1,000 or imprisonment for not more than two years, or both.
  • If you violate the law and cause death to a police officer, firefighter or other emergency response personnel: You are guilty of a felony punishable by a fine of not more than $7,500 or by imprisonment for not more than 15 years, or both.

Take it seriously.? The fines and punishments for not driving with caution around emergency vehicles are very serious.

Next week, I will take on the law on Michigan left turns, and when it?s legal to turn left on a red light.

Do you have a Michigan traffic law you?d like to see us write about or explain in more depth?? Let us know by making a comment below, or on our Michigan Auto Law forum page.

?- Photo courtesy of Creative Commons, by tsairprogram

Related information:

Michigan car accident FAQs

?

Source: http://www.michiganautolaw.com/auto-lawyers-blog/2013/01/24/michigan-emergency-vehicle-caution-law/

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Assessment of Offshore Wind Energy Potential in the United States


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The development of an offshore wind resource database is one of the first steps necessary to understand the magnitude of the resource and to plan the distribution and development of future offshore wind power facilities. The U.S. Department of Energy supported the production of offshore wind resource maps and potential estimates for much of the United States. This presentation discusses:

  • NREL?s 2010 offshore wind resources report
  • Current U.S., regional, and state offshore maps
  • Methodology forthewindmappingandvalidation
  • Wind potential estimates
  • Geographic Information Systems (GIS) database
  • Future work and conclusions....(Read more...)
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Civil Society, Public Action and Accountability in Africa

An important new paper from some big development names ? Shanta Devarajan and Stuti Khemani from the World Bank, and Michael Walton (ex Bank, now at Harvard Kennedy School) ? directs a slightly fierce (but welcome) political economy gaze at donor efforts to strengthen civil society (one of the more recent developmental fads). As with most such papers, after a monumental literature review, one of the striking conclusions is how little we really know, but it gropes gamely through the fog of ignorance and confusion and arrives at some interesting conclusions.

First, the authors find that something significant is going on among Africa?s citizens: ?a large shift in Africa in organization among citizens. Village-level group formation in Africa increased dramatically over the 1990s when participatory approaches were emphasized in international development paradigms, promoted through aid, and adopted deliberately by country governments to deliver projects to communities.? Interestingly, that increased participation applies to both democratic and less democratic systems. The question is in what situations that upsurge in civil society has impact, and how (if at all) aid agencies can help.

The paper adds its support to the growing demand that aid interventions abandon futile searches for ?best practice? in favour of understanding what are the ?best fits? for any given context:

?In general, aid is most likely to be effective if it essentially organic, in the sense of (a) supporting existing domestic initiatives and pressures for change, and (b) in ways that are consistent with the initial state of the polity.?

But with that caveat, the authors give the thumbs up for some particular kinds of intervention. Italics in square brackets are my attempt at translating the rather academic language.

?There are a number of areas where there is a good prima facie case for support. This will typically be a function of the nature of overall polity. For example, there is the largest range of potential action for democracies with real political competition, albeit of a competitive clientelistic form, whether the regime is consolidated or fragile. [to have impact civil society needs to be able to get traction on the political process, and find potential allies within the state] Here are some categories.



  • There is a strong case for general support on information-related initiatives?from information on politician performance, to school test results, procurement processes and so on.

  • There is also a contingent case for support for local organizational initiatives that are working with and processing information that the evidence base suggests has potential in solving accountability problems. This domain can include NGOs working with right-to-information laws, think tanks analyzing budgets or regulator behavior, or service delivery outcomes, etc. [no point in supporting access to information if organizations aren?t able to use it or the information is not relevant to poor people]

  • A related area concerns support for information for benchmarking of performance of local levels of government, e.g. municipalities; or across local service providers (schools; electricity and water supply), where service quality can be measured and compared [league tables can be effective in naming and shaming officials and politicians and otherwise galvanizing action]

  • It often makes sense to support local client-power-related initiatives, but these are only likely to be fruitful if linked to broader change over the long route. [Bottom-up initiatives are good, but only if they can get traction on wider political process]

  • Support for the strengthening of compact mechanisms is highly desirable if this has domestic political and technical support. [You need political leadership and/or influential allies within the state apparatus]

  • There are two kinds of roles for civil society in the business sector.

o Support for processes that provide mechanisms for both identifying and resolving conflicts between business investment and social and environmental concerns, especially in mining and urban development. [Dispute/conflict resolution]

o Support for business associations working for public goods for business, e.g. agencies such as IFC that are concerned with private business, with the important concern that this needs to take account of conflicts of interest in aid, since such agencies are also often engaged with particular investment projects and firms. [Enabling environment]

Finally, in all cases, there is a need to base any support in an analysis of the nature and functioning of civil society. Civil society can be a force for pressuring the state to be more responsive to citizens and more equitable, or can be a source of exclusion and the reproduction of inequalities. Civil society will also typically work very differently under more and less democratic regimes. [Power and context analysis has to include the power and politics of civil society itself ? there are few selflessly altruistic Robin Hoods in real life]

In general, aid should not be focused on ?money?. This can be counter-productive. Rather, external partners can provide technical assistance in designing locally-grown interventions; they can play a role in financing information-gathering by local NGOs; and can finance experimental interventions (and their learning). Most valuable is likely to be support for a domestic process of innovation and learning involving a generalized approach of experimentation?of which RCTs are one, but only one, component. [Chucking big money at civil society initiatives is a good way to destroy them. Aid needs to be smart, and about ideas. Trial and error is a better way to pursue success than trying to roll out best practice at large scale.]

Can aid ever lead to transformational changes in accountability relations? Almost certainly not, if designs are hatched and brought in from outside. However, aid can potentially provide a supporting role if it is aligned with the flow of internal initiatives, is consistent with domestic political strategy, and supports greater accountability at the margins of major projects. An aspiration to effect some form of system change is admirable, for both internal and external actors. But for donors this needs to be blended with humility over the limits and unintended consequences of external action, and a central focus on helping domestic actors learn by doing.? [Domestic politics rules. Aid is a bit player, for good or ill. Get over it.]

This post first appeard on From Poverty to Power

Photo Credit:?UN?Women

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Source: http://blogs.worldbank.org/publicsphere/civil-society-public-action-and-accountability-africa

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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

haidarr: Codifying Creativity | Self improvement tips

Can we codify creativity? Within these few words are a number of principles that must be identified and resolved before we can really answer the question.

The first question is, what is creativity? What are we trying to codify?

One useful definition of creativity is that it is problem identification and idea generation. Another is the production of a number of diverse and novel ideas. Yet another is the engagement in a number of diverse and novel behaviours.

The second question is, can we measure creativity?

This is necessary, as any codifying must result in measurable change. From the above, we can see that creativity can be measured on a number of levels such as: a) we can measure the number of ideas produced and their diversity and novelty, b) the frequency of idea production over periods, c) the frequency of divergent and novel behaviours engaged in over periods or d) we can ask people to rate themselves as being creative before and after training.

The third question is, what do we mean by codify?

It means to code or organise into a systematic process. From the above, it becomes clear that codifying creativity is possible if we produce systematic processes that produce measurable change in the ways mentioned above.

Now onto the real question then. Can we codify creativity?

Well, yes. If we just set out a number of processes that produce measurable improvement in the ways described above.

What processes?

There are an infinite number and each produces it?s own set of results. By combining, mixing and rearranging, different results occur.

Simple psychological games, such as role-play, can be used. In the Journal of Psychology, businessmen were asked to rate themselves on creativity and they ranked themselves very low. Then, after asking them to pretend they were happy-go-lucky hippies, they re-rated themselves much higher.

Lateral thinking techniques can

be used, where the point is to generate ideas without purpose, for the sake of generating ideas, follow seemingly nonsensical pathways and so forth. This simply maximises the quality and quantity of the idea pool.

Linking techniques can be used. Where everyday, novel and diverse objects are used to create connections with the endeavour.

What I have just done is codify creativity. Ask any group to come up with ideas related to a particular problem and they will produce a set quantity. Use the above three (each contains an infinite number of possibilities) and the group will produce more creative output.

Using and extrapolating the above principles (and using more precise techniques), I can, for example, codify processes and structures that make it possible to complete a screenplay very quickly.

The above is an incredibly general example, but you get the idea. And this small case begins to demonstrate how creativity can be made measurable, useable and tangible.

This topic is covered in depth in the MBA dissertation on Managing Creativity & Innovation, which can be purchased (along with a Creativity and Innovation DIY Audit, Good Idea Generator Software and Power Point Presentation) from http://www.managing-creativity.com. You can also receive a regular, free newsletter by entering your email address at this site.

Kal Bishop, MBA

**********************************

You are free to reproduce this article as long as no changes are made and the author?s name and site URL are retained.

Kal Bishop MBA is a management consultant based in London, UK. He has consulted in the visual media and software industries and for clients such as Toshiba and Transport for London. He has led Improv, creativity and innovation workshops, exhibited artwork in San Francisco, Los Angeles and London and written a number of screenplays. He is a passionate traveller. He can be reached on http://www.managing-creativity.com

Source: http://www.moonsbeing.com/2013/01/08/Codifying-Creativity/

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Source: http://haidarro.blogspot.com/2013/01/codifying-creativity-self-improvement.html

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Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Sony to launch 4K digital distribution network this summer, 'mastered in 4K' Blu-ray discs

Sony to launch 4K digital distribution network this summer, 'mastered in 4K' Bluray discs

Now that Sony is bringing 4K TVs to more mainstream sizes with the launch of 55- and 65-inch models later this year, it's also expanding the availability of content. When it launched its $25,000 84-inch Ultra HD LCD last year it loaned owners a hard drive solution that came preloaded with movies, but now buyers will be able to download native 4K movies as well. According to CEO Kaz Hirai "4K is not the future...it's now" and Sony is doing it's best to make that happen.

Also arriving on shelves are a series of "mastered in 4K" Blu-ray discs, which it promises are sourced in 1080p from their original 4K masters in high bitrate to look their best when upscaled back to 4K. The first movies up for the treatment are The Amazing Spider-Man, The Karate Kid, Taxi Driver and The Other Guys. If you've been wondering where high res content will come from then check the press release after the break, we'll get more details when they're available.

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Racial divide in Miss. charter school debate

Jackie Mader / The Hechinger Report

Students attend a summer session at Lyon Elementary School near the city of Clarksdale in the Mississippi Delta. School districts throughout the state could see increased competition from charter schools if a controversial bill passes the Mississippi Legislature this session.

By Sarah Carr, The Hechinger Report

Mississippi lawmaker Kenneth Wayne Jones, a Democrat, briefly became a political pariah last winter when he voted in favor of a proposal to expand charter schools in his state. He was the only African-American state senator to support the bill, which most members of Mississippi?s legislative Black Caucus disavowed. Jones liked the idea of expanded school options for families, but he also understood his colleagues? mistrust.

?You?ve got conservative Republicans all of a sudden showing a lot of concern about the education of African-American children, while in the same breath they are denying them health care,? Jones said.

This winter, charter supporters will make their fifth attempt in five years to bring charters to Mississippi, one of a dwindling number of states without a real charter school law. (The state has an existing law so restrictive that no charters have opened.)

But the deep-rooted skepticism of the state?s black leadership remains one of the biggest obstacles to bipartisan support for charters in Mississippi and throughout the South, where powerful white Democrats are a disappearing breed. It also speaks to broader mistrust among black officials nationwide ? particularly those who came of age before or during the civil rights movement ? toward contemporary school reform efforts they believe are being imposed by outsiders on low-income, minority communities.


?White people cannot tell us what?s best for educating our children,? said state Sen. David Jordan, a 78-year-old African American from the Mississippi Delta town of Greenwood. ?Heck, we did it for decades without even the money for books. Through the help of God we made it.?

Similar tensions have emerged in Washington, D.C. and New Orleans, where veteran black politicians and venerable civil rights organizations like the NAACP have been among the most vociferous opponents of recent education reforms. Those changes include the expansion of charter schools, the recruitment of out-of-town educators through programs like Teach For America, and the weakening of job protections for teachers.

In Mississippi, which has the nation?s highest rate of childhood poverty and posts some of the weakest test scores, there?s particular urgency to improving the schools. Advocates of charters believe the autonomous schools will help boost the state?s abysmal academic performance. They say they can learn from mistakes made in other states to ensure Mississippi?s charter law is exemplary.

Critics counter that the state needs to focus on fully funding the schools it already operates and create a desperately needed pre-kindergarten program before it looks to alternatives like charters. They also worry that the charter movement will be hijacked by virtual schools and for-profit companies hoping to profit off of Mississippi?s children.

The support of the Black Caucus likely won?t be crucial to passing a new charter school law in Mississippi, though. Republicans control both houses of the legislature, some Democrats support charters, and Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant, who is white, has made the issue one of his top priorities. (Last year?s bill failed largely because a few key Republicans didn?t support it.)

But the caucus? response will be a litmus test for whether black leaders are growing more receptive?or more resistant?to the reforms that are steadily reshaping public education across America.

Charter skeptics
The debate over school reform doesn?t always fall neatly along racial lines. President Barack Obama has embraced charters and other controversial changes. Black leaders like Howard Fuller in Milwaukee and Geoffrey Canada in New York City are among the most outspoken and prominent supporters of radical changes to the traditional public school structure. And, as the divide between Jones and Jordan illustrates, not all members of Mississippi?s Black Caucus are united in full-throated opposition to charters.?

But in Mississippi and elsewhere, charter and reform backers have often struggled to win over civil rights organizations like the NAACP and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, as well as a majority of black lawmakers and voters.

In Washington D.C., for instance, former mayor Adrian Fenty lost his re-election bid in 2010 at least partly because middle-class black voters were frustrated with the hard-charging style of his schools chief, Michelle Rhee. She not only supported charters but also aggressively pushed to close low-performing schools and fire struggling teachers. In New Orleans, thousands of educators lost their jobs in the lead up to the rapid chartering of the city?s schools after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The move left many of the city?s predominantly black veteran educators feeling disenfranchised and suspicious of the changes. And in New York City, NAACP leader Hazel Dukes underscored her organization?s intense disdain for charters when she accused a parent who supported them of ?doing the business of slave masters.?

More from The Hechinger Report

The racial tensions surrounding school reform have complicated origins. Mississippi State Sen. Jordan, a retired public-school science teacher, said he fears charters partly because they could bring more white out-of-state educators to Mississippi who won?t be able to relate to the children there. ?Teachers who come in claim they can do a yeoman?s job,? he said. ?But I don?t think someone can come from Illinois and do a better job with the kids of the Mississippi Delta than the teachers who are already here.?

Jordan also worries that charters could mean a loss of black power and leadership in rural communities where the black community fought long and hard to claim top positions in the schools. In the Delta town of Indianola, for example, the black community staged a lengthy boycott of white businesses in order to get the first African-American school superintendent appointed in 1986.

?If you go to another model, people are not going to hire African Americans in the top positions,? said Jordan. ?The bottom line is to eliminate African Americans.?

In the Mississippi Delta, nearly 90 percent of the public-school children are black, and school districts are one of the few sources of stable jobs.

?In rural counties, the school districts are the main employer,? said Mike Sayer, senior organizer at Southern Echo, a black leadership organization based in Jackson that opposes charters. ?If these school districts go down altogether, it will have a crippling effect. In a lot of these communities there are no other places to work.?

Lessons from New Orleans
Charter proponents say they hope talented local educators will open charters, and that fears of widespread upheaval and displacement are overblown.

?Forty other states have [charters] and, to my knowledge, traditional public education hasn?t been destroyed,? said Sanford Johnson, deputy director of Mississippi First, a nonprofit education advocacy organization that supports charters.

Mississippi First executive director Rachel Canter adds that charter supporters have been careful to specify in the proposed bill that all educators with strong track records will be eligible to open charters ? regardless of whether their experience is with charter or traditional schools. That way, Mississippi locals will not feel dissuaded from the start.

In search of high-quality teachers, charter school network trains its own

?Whether local people can open charters has been a huge issue for the Black Caucus,? Canter said.

A draft of the bill presented earlier this winter calls for a statewide authorizing board to vet charter applicants. In low-performing school districts, applicants would need only the board?s approval to open. But in stronger districts, they would also need a nod from a majority of local school-board members.

?The most important thing is to give new opportunities to talented educators who are right there in their communities,? said Kenneth Campbell, president of the Black Alliance for Educational Options, which advocates for charters and increased school choice for low-income black families.

Campbell points out that in New Orleans ? ground zero for controversy surrounding education reform ? several of the most successful charters were started by black veteran educators who ran traditional public schools before Katrina. The city has a higher percentage of charters than any other, and could become the first citywide school system comprised entirely of charters within the next few years.

New Orleans has also attracted national charter-school networks such as the Knowledge is Power Program and Future Is Now Schools, and most of the school leaders recruited by the charter ?incubator? New Schools for New Orleans have come from out of town. The new, less local leadership has helped contribute to the changing demographics of the city?s teacher corps.

Before Katrina, New Orleans had one of the highest percentages of black educators of any city in the country. But starting in 2007 that percentage began to drop steadily, to 63 percent during the 2007-08 school year, and 57 percent the next year, according to data from the Louisiana Department of Education.

Overall, test scores are going up for a variety of reasons, and parents of all races and income levels have reported growing satisfaction with the city?s public schools. But ?one can be as kumbaya as they come and still worry about the psychological effect on black children who come to equate both education and authority with whiteness,? wrote Times-Picayune columnist Jarvis DeBerry of the shift.

Trying to overcome history, mistrust
History might be one of the biggest obstacles to building more broad-based support for charter schools in Mississippi.

Black officials say it?s tough to trust that the state?s white leadership has the best interests of children at heart when they have underfunded the public schools for so long.

Many also fear that charters could provide a means for dozens of nearly all-white ?segregation academies? to obtain public funding. The draft legislation doesn?t allow private schools to convert to charters, but that provision has not squelched the fears. Many of the academies are facing declining enrollments as middle-class whites flee the Delta, and would jump at the chance to become charters, skeptics say.

New US visa rush: Build charter school, get green card

?Claiming that private schools can?t convert to charter schools is nonsense,? said Sayer, who adds that savvy school operators will be able to find a way around the letter of the law. But Mississippi First?s Johnson says the statewide authorizing board would be able to identify suspect applicants because of the rigorous approval process outlined in the proposed bill.

?Mississippi?s history is the reason people are suspicious about all these things,? said Nancy Loome, executive director of The Parents? Campaign, which supports a more restricted charter law that would ban virtual and for-profit operators.

Campbell acknowledges that ?people have long memories? in Mississippi, which can make it challenging to build trust. But he said lawmakers and citizens of all races and political affiliations are more open to the concept of charters than in previous years.

?There?s an increased desire to learn more,? he said.

Kenneth Wayne Jones, who will chair the Black Caucus during the upcoming legislative session, agrees.

?I don?t think it will be as toxic as it was last year,? he said. ?I don?t know if the Caucus will be more supportive when it comes to votes, but I know we?ll be listening more than last year. If this train is coming, we need to make sure we are on it.?

This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University. Sarah Carr, a contributing editor at The Hechinger Report, is the author of the forthcoming "Hope Against Hope: Three Schools, One City, and the Struggle to Educate America?s Children"?(Bloomsbury Press, February 2013).

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/08/16415035-racial-divide-seen-in-mississippi-debate-over-charter-schools-reform?lite

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Retired Pa. pastor to stand trial in wife's death (Providence Journal)

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Monday, January 7, 2013

Roger Hickey: GOP Threat: Cut Social Security and Medicare or We'll Kill the Economy -- Americans Say No to Both

Here we go again. Republicans are very clear about their latest extortion threat to the American people: Unless you cut Social Security and Medicare benefits, within the next two months we will throw the U.S. economy back into recession; by refusing to allow the U.S. raise the debt ceiling and pay our bills; or by pushing the economy over another fiscal cliff of deep spending cuts and tax increases; or by shutting down the government by refusing to pass a continuing budget resolution.

But it is very important for progressives and politicians to remember that most Americans hate what the Republicans are doing here. Who but the right-wing could support pushing the economy back into recession, throwing millions of Americans out of work? That's what Republicans are threatening. And huge majorities also hate the price Republicans are demanding to prevent their threat of manufactured chaos: the idea of cutting Social Security and Medicare benefits.

Republicans can get their way only if Democrats fail to realize they have the American people on their side. And once Republicans are clear about their proposals, Americans turn against them.

During the election, Paul Ryan's plan to turn Medicare into a voucher was so unpopular that candidate Mitt Romney ran away from his Vice Presidential nominee's proposal. Democrats won the election.

Now, Tennessee Republican Senators Bob Corker and Lamar Alexander have dared to unveil a proposal (called their "dollar-for-dollar plan") that would only allow the debt ceiling to be raised by the amount we allow them to cut what they term "entitlements." How many Americans would embrace these changes?:

  • They would privatize Medicare by creating competing private options giving seniors greater choice of healthcare plans. Shades of the plan Mitt Romney endorsed and then ran from.
  • They would also give states more flexibility to cut Medicaid programs.
  • And they would gradually raise the Social Security retirement age and immediately impose the "chained CPI" formula to cost-of-living adjustments -- a cut to retirement benefits of today's seniors.

"Unfortunately for America, the next line in the sand is going to be the debt ceiling," Corker told The Hill, laying out his leverage strategy for negotiations with Democrats. These guys couldn't be more explicit

Over the next two months, everyone who loves our country must rise up and say 'no' to this Republican nihilistic extortion. We must isolate them, ridicule and shame them. And we must force the Democrats to have the backbone to stand with us and reject Republican extortion and economic terrorism.

President Obama campaigned for re-election on his pledge to repeal the Bush tax cuts for people making more than $250,000, but he backed down and agreed to raise taxes only on people making more than $400,000. In return, he got an extension of unemployment benefits and important low-income tax provisions. But he could only get Republicans to postpone for two months the fiscal cliff tax increases and spending cuts known as "sequestration." And he failed to get them to give up the threat to destroy the full faith and credit of the United States that their refusal to raise the debt limit ceiling would bring on. Their refusal to support the once-routine legislation insuring we can pay our debts is already causing the Treasury Department to juggle accounts and will reach crisis stage by the end of February.

President Obama has pledged that he will not bow to Republican extortion over the debt limit:

"I will not compromise over ... whether or not Congress should pay the tab for a bill they've already racked up. If Congress refuses to give the United States the ability to pay its bills on time, the consequences for the entire global economy could be catastrophic. The last time Congress threatened this course of action, our entire economy suffered for it. Our families and our businesses cannot afford that dangerous game again."

But remember that President Obama did negotiate the last time Republicans threatened to crash the economy by refusing to raise the debt limit, in September 2011. Obama was willing to offer up Social Security benefit cuts (in the form of a new "chained CPI") and a change in the Medicare eligibility age (from 65, when many people are forcibly retired, to 67). It was only because Republicans refused to accept tax increases that Obama's dangerous offer was not accepted. Instead, in return for Republican votes to lift that last debt ceiling, the draconian fiscal cliff sequestration budget cuts scheme was created (now postponed until early March).

So while President Obama may refuse to negotiate with Republicans over their latest manufactured debt limit crisis, he could end up negotiating to avoid the threat of sequestration. And Social Security and Medicare cuts could be on that table.

A Powerful Coalition Reminding Democrats What Americans Want -- And Don't Want.

President Obama and other Democrats need to listen to the voices of the groups who helped get them elected in 2012 -- unions, community organizations, groups representing women, African Americans and Hispanics, and online activist groups like MoveOn and the Campaign for America's Future.

On November 8, many of these groups placed an ad in the Washington Post making a set of demands on the president and Congress. These demands have served as unifying principles for a powerful organizing and outreach coalition. Signed by organizations including the AFL-CIO, SEIU, Center for Community Change, Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, and the Campaign for America's Future, the ad was accompanied by an open letter to the White House and Congress signed by 146 national organizations.

If the president and the Democrats in Congress listen to these principles -- and to these groups who have been communicating with them before and after the election -- they will refuse to cut Medicare and Social Security in response to the Republicans' threat reject the debt ceiling and tank the economy. And they will discover they have the vast majority of Americans on their side.

Here what the ad said, in part:

To the President and The Congress.

As you face urgent budget decisions, you must keep the election results in mind and resist budget cuts that slow our economy and hurt families. The best way to reduce the deficit is to put people back to work and get our economy going again. That's why we are calling on national leaders from both parties to stand up for the middle class and demand that any budget agreement:

Asks all Americans to pay their fair share of taxes.

Prioritizes job creation first. It's time to grow -- not slow -- the economy.

Does not cut Medicare, Medicaid, or Social Security benefits and does not shift costs to beneficiaries or the states. Voters loudly and clearly spoke up for these programs.

Protects the safety net and vital services for low-income people.

Stops the sequester. The scheduled automatic budget cuts threaten our fragile recovery and put huge numbers of people out of work while cutting education, child care, job training and dozens of vital services people and communities need.

The groups involved have helped the American Majority of working families communicate these demands to the President and the Congress. So far, we have kept Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid off the chopping block. We are redoubling our efforts to prevent Democrats from capitulating to Republican hostage-taking. And we are turning our campaign to opposing conservative austerity -- and fighting for jobs and robust economic growth.

?

Follow Roger Hickey on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rogerhickey

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/roger-hickey/fiscal-cliff_b_2421307.html

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Passing the trash ing K-12 Schools - Laurie Lima - kattywhite9's ...

Around the 10-year anniversary of his first book, ?The Lecherous University: What Every Student and Parent Should Know about the Epidemic of Sexual Harassment on Campus,? lead author Charles Hobson, Ph.D., decided the book?s second edition should include a chapter about the problem in K-12 schools.

But, when the Indiana University Northwest Professor of Management set out to research the topic, he said, the information he discovered was so unspeakably shocking that the topic begged a book all its own.

?Doing the background research for what I was planning to have as just a chapter,? Hobson said, ?I ran into some statistics that I had never seen or heard before that were so shocking, I said, ?Somebody has to do something about this.??

The resulting book, ?Passing the Trash: A Parent?s Guide to Combat Sexual Abuse/Harassment of Their Children in School,? published by CreateSpace in the fall of 2012, educates readers about the alarming frequency of sexual abuse and harassment in K-12 education and provides advice to help parents protect their children and hold the appropriate leaders and institutions accountable.

Hobson said three studies prompted his fervor about releasing a book devoted to the problem of sexual abuse and harassment in K-12 education.

First, a 2004 report by the U.S. Department of Education estimated that nearly 4.5 million (almost 10 percent) of students will have been sexually abused or harassed by an educator sometime between kindergarten and 12th?grade.

Second, Hobson learned from a 2010 U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report to Congress about the frequency of a silent practice happening in schools known as ?passing the trash,? in which sexual offenders are encouraged to resign voluntarily in exchange for the school providing positive letters of reference and not reporting incidents to police or taking any disciplinary action.

Finally, Hobson learned from a 2001 national survey by the American Association of University Women that 81 percent of students in grades 8 through 11 had experienced sexual harassment at school and that 38 percent of the respondents said that teachers (and other school employees) sexually harass students.

Despite having his own children in the K-12 system for 25 years, Hobson said that he, like most parents, was unaware of the problem of sexual abuse/harassment in the schools and had never heard of the ?unconscionable passing-the-trash practice.? Hobson has two grown children, two step-children ages 14 and 12, and a 7-year-old grandson. As a parent, Hobson said the research infuriated him so much that he had trouble sleeping at night.

?I had naively assumed that incidence rates of this problem would be low for two major reasons,? he explained. ?First, given that any sexual contact between a teacher and a young student would constitute a criminal offense, I assumed such sexual misconduct would be minimal.? Second, since K-12 schools typically have close and direct control over students, I believed this would also reduce the likelihood of educator sexual misconduct.?

Once enlightened about the problem, Hobson felt compelled to pen a guide specifically aimed at parents.

Hobson asked his 7-year-old grandson to illustrate the cover of the book. He wanted to portray a child?s view of what is supposed to be a safe environment. The crayon rendering of a school and school bus has the word ?danger? stamped over it to emphasize Hobson?s point.

?I wanted to convey a common, simple, innocent, upbeat image of a school, overshadowed or interrupted by an ominous signal of danger,? Hobson said.

Hobson wants parents to get riled up and take action against this problem.

To help them do that, Hobson?s book provides conversation starters and sample letters that parents can customize when talking with administrators. He outlines the rights of parents and children and provides guidance on steps to take. As a parent, he used them with his own district?s school boards while advocating for his own kids.

Hobson said the book does not ?sugar coat? the problem or the culprits.

?Criminal culpability rests not only with the child sexual predators, but also with school administrators, union officials, and teachers who have enabled the abuse by failing to report it, as required by law,? Hobson said.

?I provide parents with aggressive strategies to confront school officials and teachers, in order to ensure the safety of their children. I also provide detailed information about how to file and document complaints with government agencies and law enforcement.?

Rochelle Brock, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Urban Education and Director of the Urban Teacher Education Program at IU Northwest, applauded Hobson?s effort to empower parents through knowledge and said that she intends to recommend the guide to her students.

Brock agreed that, ultimately, parents are the ones who will have to take action. Like Hobson, she had never heard the term ?passing the trash? before, but she acknowledged that many teachers and administrators have a tendency to ?bury their heads in the sand,? not only about sexual harassment and abuse, but also other social problems such as suicide and bullying about sexual preferences.

?Passing the Trash: A Parent?s Guide to Combat Sexual Abuse/Harassment of Their Children in School,? is available at Amazon.com both in hard copy and in a Kindle version.

Hobson holds a Ph.D. in industrial and organizational psychology. He has served as an expert witness in 39 court cases involving workplace and educational sexual abuse and harassment. Hobson has offered training and consultation services to organizations wishing to prevent and correct any abuse or harassment, and he has spent his 31-year-career at IU Northwest as an outspoken advocate for student rights.

Source: http://laurielima.blogspot.com/2013/01/passing-trash-ing-k-12-schools.html

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Source: http://kattywhite9.posterous.com/passing-the-trash-ing-k-12-schools-laurie-lim

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Better Ways to Manage Anxiety Than Eating - Eating Disorders Blogs

On the whole, disregulated eaters are people with high anxiety. In fact, I?d guess that many of you would qualify for the diagnosis of Generalized Anxiety Disorder. Anxiety is manageable, however, so here are some ways to chill you out rather than eat. None of them will come as a surprise, so consider them just a simple reminder.

Although you might think of exercise as an activity that jazzes you up, it?s actually a great way to calm yourself down. According to Sweating away all that anxiety (Sarasota Herald Tribune, Health and Fitness, 10/30/12), ?Studies published by the American Psychological Association show that exercise improves the body?s ability to cope with stress. People who exercise also have lower rates of anxiety and depression? because ?exercise spurs the creation of norepinephrine, which acts as a brain stress ?buffer,? keeping levels of epinephrine and cortisol, two stress hormones, under control.??

Does exercise mean you must suit up and head for the gym or the track? Not at all. It could mean blasting the radio and doing jumping jacks or dancing the Watusi (for those of you who recall what that is!), taking a brisk walk outside, gardening, or climbing up and down your stairs for five minutes. Imagine automatically thinking about moving your body when you?re stressed or anxious rather than eating. Consider what reminders will help you move in that direction rather than toward the refrigerator. Exercise also helps you sleep better?just don?t do it right before bedtime?so that you get a good night?s sleep which helps regulate hunger and satiation hormones.?

When you?re anxious, try a quick relaxation exercise by tightening and relaxing parts of your body. Do it sitting in a chair or lying down. This is not hard work, but the pay off is a near instant drop in anxiety. I see it when clients enter my office frantic or frazzled. If I take them through a five-minute body relaxation, when they open their eyes, they?re calmer and more present. Don?t want to put the energy into activity or doing a relaxation exercise? How about deep breathing? Really, there?s nothing simpler. You?re already breathing, so it?s not as if you have to learn a new behavior. Just s-l-o-w?i-t?d-o-w-n by mindfully inhaling calming air and exhaling your tensions. Focus attention on your breath and gently push out other thoughts from your mind.?

The truth is that you?re still turning to rather than away from food when you?re anxious because you?re not taking other actions to calm yourself down. Push yourself to do a new activity. Give it two or three weeks of practice and it will become more automatic.

Best,

Karen?

http://www.eatingnormal.com/

http://www.nicegirlsfinishfat.com/

PLEASE NOTE: ?Please post your comments and suggestions for future blogs at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/foodandfeelings.

?

Source: http://www.eatingdisordersblogs.com/healthy/2013/01/better-ways-to-manage-anxiety-than-eating.html

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Sunday, January 6, 2013

Toshiba unveils $800 Satellite U845t: a touchscreen Ultrabook for the budget crowd (hands-on photos)

Toshiba unveils $800 Satellite U845t a touchscreen Ultrabook for the budget crowd

We've been expecting to see some budget Ultrabooks at CES, especially as the category has been around for a while and just about all notebooks are due to receive updates with Windows 8-friendly touchscreens. Toshiba just unveiled one such sub-$1,000 system, the Satellite U845t. It's a 14-incher with a touch-enabled, 1,366 x 768 screen, and it will be available for $800 when it debuts in March (on March 10th, to be exact). It's not Toshiba's first Ultrabook with touch -- the Satellite U925t claims that honor -- but it's the first entrant in the budget category. At four pounds and 0.8 inch thin, it's not the thinnest or lightest system out there, but it packs solid specs: a Core i3 or Core i5 processor with up to 6GB of RAM and a 500GB hard drive with 32GB of SSD memory. Connections include HDMI, Ethernet and an SD card slot, along with one USB 3.0 and two USB 2.0 ports. We got an early look at the U845t at Toshiba's (very clubby) press event; check out our gallery

Jose Andrade contributed to this report.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/fLoAxOBspto/

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Global regulators agree on bank asset rules

(AP) ? International banking regulators agreed Sunday on global rules meant to ensure banks keep enough cash in hand to survive future market crises, and gave banks until 2019 to comply fully.

The rules will require banks in future to hold enough cash, and assets such as equities, corporate and government bonds that can easily be sold, to tide them over during an acute 30-day crisis.

The body that oversees the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, which sets international rules, said Sunday that they will have to hold 60 percent of that amount when the rules start being phased in on Jan. 1, 2015; that will increase by 10 percentage points every year until the standards take full effect at the beginning of 2019.

The oversight body's head, Bank of England governor Mervyn King, said after regulators met in Basel, Switzerland, that the timeframe ensures the new standards "will in no way hinder the ability of the global banking system to finance the recovery." The hope is that it will prevent lenders from becoming over-reliant in future on help from central banks, which have stepped in over recent years to keep the financial system flush with cash.

King said that "the vast majority" of the world's biggest banks "already hold liquid assets well above the minimum required by this standard."

The rules are part of wider efforts to prevent another shock to the financial system like that prompted by Lehman Brothers' 2008 collapse, which led to taxpayer-funded bailouts of banks in the U.S. and Europe.

They are part of the so-called Basel III package of reforms. That package will require lenders to increase their highest-quality capital ? such as equity and cash reserves ? gradually from 2 percent of the risky assets they hold to 7 percent by 2019.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-01-06-Bank%20Assets/id-29f535cda7b644bc85faafed3ecd986a

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Missoni fashion executive's plane disappears

By The Associated Press

The search resumed Saturday for a small plane that has disappeared off the Venezuelan coast with six people aboard, including Vittorio Missoni, a top executive in Italy's Missoni fashion house, officials said.

Daniel Dal Zennaro / EPA file

Italian fashion executive Vittorio Missoni, son of Italian fashion designer Ottavio Missoni, is missing after a plane disappeared off the coast of Venezuela.

Missoni, 58, is the director general of the iconic brand and the eldest son of the company's founder. Flying with him on Friday's flight from Venezuela's Los Roques resort archipelago to Caracas, was Missoni's wife, Maurizia Castiglioni, two Italian friends of the couple, and a crew of two Venezuelans.

Italy's Corriere della Sera newspaper reported that family patriarch Ottavio Missoni, 91, and his wife, Rosita, were at their home in Italy, along with their daughter, Angela, the chief fashion designer and sister of Vittorio Missoni, waiting for information about the search. Italian news reports said the third Missoni sibling, Luca, had flown to Venezuela.

"We have no other news" beyond that the plane went missing, Paolo Marchetti, a Missoni official told reporters as he left company headquarters in the northern Italian town of Sumirago on Saturday afternoon.

Missoni, with its trademark zigzag and other geometric patterns in sweaters, scarves and other knitwear, is one of Italy's most famous fashion brands abroad. Vittorio Missoni played a key role in marketing the Missoni family creations in Asia, especially in Japan, Hong Kong and South Korea, and he took on the title of general director of marketing of Missoni SpA. He also is responsible for the company's products in the United States and France.

His elderly parents still play an active role in the family.

On Friday, Venezuela's Interior Minister Nestor Reverol said the plane was declared missing hours after taking off from Los Roques, a string of islands, cays and islets that is popular for scuba diving, white beaches and coral reefs, where the Missonis and their friends were on vacation.

Revero said the plane had been expected at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Caracas but never arrived.

A first day of searching on Friday yielded nothing.

As the search resumed Saturday, the Italian news agency ANSA, reporting from Rome, said a specialized ocean-searching naval vessel was being deployed.

The Missoni brand is scheduled to display its latest menswear creations on the Milan runways in fashion show later this month.

More world stories from NBC News:

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? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/05/16368537-missoni-fashion-house-executive-missing-after-plane-disappeared-off-venezuela-coast?lite

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Jack Klugman's Cause of Death -- Prostate Cancer | TMZ.com

Jack Klugman
Died from Prostate Cancer

EXCLUSIVE

0104-jack-klugman-doc-gettyJack Klugman's cause of death was prostate cancer according to the actor's death certificate ... TMZ has learned.

The document also states Klugman died at his home in the San Fernando Valley. His wife Peggy was by his side.

Klugman -- who died unexpectedly on Christmas Eve -- was most famous for playing Oscar Madison on the legendary TV show "The Odd Couple" ... followed by the title role on "Quincy, M.E." in the 70s and 80s.

The actor had already beat cancer once in the 80s -- and although the throat cancer battle cost him his voice, he eventually trained himself to speak again.

Klugman was 90 years old.

Source: http://www.tmz.com/2013/01/04/jack-klugman-cause-of-death-prostate-cancer/

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Saturday, January 5, 2013

24-Property CRE Portfolio Reels in $607M in Financing ...

January 4, 2013

By Barbra Murray, Contributing Editor

Acting on behalf of a pension fund advised by Invesco, RREEF Real Estate and TA Associates Realty, commercial real estate and capital markets services HFF has orchestrated financing totaling $607 million for a real estate portfolio encompassing 5 million square feet of commercial space and 3,499 multi-family units.

It?s a diverse collection with a respectable occupancy level of 90 percent. Consisting of 24 properties, the group features nine industrial assets accounting 3 million square feet; five retail centers totaling 1.8 million square feet; two office holdings totaling approximately 304,300 square feet; and eight multi-family properties offering a combined 3,499 units. The assets span nine states, with locations in leading markets in California, Florida, Georgia, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas, Virginia and Washington.

M&T Realty Capital Corp. (Fannie Mae), Bank of America and Principal Global Investors provided the financing through a total of 24 loans. Culling the funding was no simple feat.

?The pension fund?s requirement for each property to be financed separately required a significant amount of effort to still obtain loan economics similar to a large crossed collateralized crossed defaulted portfolio financing,? Eric Tupler, senior managing director with HFF, told Commercial Property Executive. ?The ability to fund all the loans in less than 90 days was a result of the lenders? willingness to prioritize the financing for three of the country?s largest and most successful advisors.?

?

M&T came through with eight loans totaling $237 million, while BofA supplied seven loans for a sum of nearly $186 million and Principal provided approximately $183.7 million via nine loans. HFF?s arrangement of more than a half-billion in financing for a sizeable portfolio is an accomplishment that the real estate sector may see quite a bit of in 2013. Lenders aren?t dishing out loans like candy as they did for a few years before the credit crunch took hold in in 2007; however, they have certainly warmed up to the commercial real estate sector again.

?There?s no question that the equity and the debt capital markets became more liquid in 2012, and I expect that to continue through 2013,? Dan Fasulo, a managing director with real estate research and consulting firm Real Capital Analytics, told CPE. ?Despite all the challenges that the securitization world has faced, CMBS has a really strong finish to 2012 and I expect it to be a prolific source of debt capital this year, especially for the larger portfolio transactions and especially making loans on assets throughout the country.?

HFF?s recent deal is indicative of a shift that is presently underway, spurred by the growing pool of lenders vying for transactions involving high-quality assets in premier locations.

?For a prime property in, say, New York, I would argue there?s probably just as many lenders competing to make that loan today as there were at the top of the market five years ago,? said Fasulo. ?The national banks have also definitely picked up their lending but it?s getting increasingly competitive for them to make loans in some of the top markets?like New York, D.C., Los Angeles?so increasingly, they?re going to have to basically spread their geographic horizons if they want to be active players this year.?

It?s all to be expected. ?This is the natural progression of the recovery,? he added. ?We?re in the part of the cycle where the capital starts to flow out of primary markets into secondary markets, both on the debt and equity side.?

Source: http://www.cpexecutive.com/uncategorized/24-property-cre-portfolio-reels-in-607m-in-financing/

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Graeme Smith all praise for Vernon Philander and Alviro Petersen ...

Graeme Smith all praise for Vernon Philander and Alviro Petersen ? Cricket News Update

Graeme Smith, the South African Test captain, is jubilant with his side?s performance in the first Test of the two-match series against New Zealand at the Newlands, Cape Town, and was all praise for Vernon Philander and Alviro Petersen.

The Black Caps won the toss and opted to bat first on a track which was expected to assist the seamers. The decision was not a wise one, especially against the Proteas, who possess one of the finest bowling attacks of the world.

The visitors were bundled out for merely 45 runs in their first innings inside 20 overs, courtesy a brilliant bowling spell by Philander, who grabbed five wickets.

In reply, the hosts posted a huge score of 347 runs on the board for the loss of eight wickets before declaring their innings, with Petersen smashing a fine century.

New Zealand performed better in their second innings but could not avoid defeat as they lost by an innings and 27 runs, which allowed the Proteas to take an assailable lead in the series.

While expressing his views in the post-match presentation ceremony, the left-handed opening batsman said that his team did not take things for granted against a relatively weaker side and showed his delight over the performance of Philander and Petersen.

Smith vows to carry on with the momentum in the next match as well, which begins from January 11, at Port Elizabeth.

?I don't think anyone can question our intensity in this game. We had a good build-up. We need to carry it on in PE,? said the South African skipper. ?Vern knows his game really well, attacks the off stump and creates some talk with the ball. Alvrio played a terrific knock, it wasn't an easy wicket.?

Philander, who was named as the Player of the Match, said that the pitch at Cape Town was conducive to his style of bowling and is extremely happy over his performances in Test cricket over the last 14 months.

?I'd like to take this pitch with me! I don't take it for granted. Teams try different theories against me. I've changed my game slightly, I used to bowl wider, but now take off stump a lot more. It's something you work our yourself the more you play,? the seamer mentioned.

Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/Graeme-Smith-all-praise-for-Vernon-Philander-and-Alviro-Petersen-Cricket-News-Update-a212656

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Friday, January 4, 2013

Liquid jets and bouncing balls combine for surprising results

Jan. 3, 2013 ? A new study published in the American Institute of Physics' (AIP) journal Physics of Fluids reveals that the normal rebounding of a ball changes when it is partially filled with a liquid.

Unlike an empty sphere or a solid rubber ball, which both rebound in a classical and well-understood fashion, a fluid-filled ball has its second bounce remarkably cut short. A team of researchers from Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, uncovered this phenomenon when they investigated what would happen if a sphere were partially filled with a liquid and how that would affect the way it bounces. To their surprise, they discovered that on the first bounce the sphere behaved rather predictably, but on the second bounce it produced more of a thud than a bounce.

The reason for the stalled second bounce is that a large portion of the energy of the ball-liquid system is transferred from a falling mass into a liquid jet, dampening the rebound force. This form of passive dampening was produced when two separate masses (sphere and liquid) that once behaved as one were suddenly separated, or decoupled. As revealed in high-speed images, this decoupling didn't occur until the second bounce because the surface of the liquid first had to be perturbed by the initial bounce.

The researchers hope to apply these insights to engineer better methods of mitigating violent motions, ranging from improved sport helmet designs to removing some of the force associated with waves slamming into boats. Further research will also help answer additional questions about the scale of the phenomenon, as well as how other types of fluids (such as non-Newtonian fluids) might react under the same circumstances.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Institute of Physics (AIP), via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Taylor W. Killian, Robert A. Klaus, Tadd T. Truscott. Rebound and jet formation of a fluid-filled sphere. Physics of Fluids, 2012; 24 (12): 122106 DOI: 10.1063/1.4771985

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/3vnMOGJDwFg/130103130802.htm

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Nearly half of 280 New York pets displaced by Sandy left behind

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The New York City shelter housing 280 pets displaced by Superstorm Sandy must shut down and, with nearly half the animals still unclaimed, cannot rule out euthanizing any left behind.

An uncertain future lies ahead for 52 cats and 84 dogs who remain in the Brooklyn emergency boarding facility run by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, spokeswoman Kelly Krause said on Thursday.

They are among 280 pets sheltered since November, after the New York City area was devastated by the late October storm.

The facility was originally scheduled to close on December 17, but the volume of unclaimed pets prompted the ASPCA to extend its deadline into January.

What will happen to those pets whose owners fail to return is unclear. The ASPCA is looking into placing the unclaimed pets in foster homes or shelters if their owners are unreachable or unable to take them back, although no hard deadline has been given to owners, said Krause.

Following Hurricane Katrina, many similarly unclaimed pets were put up for adoption and placed in caring homes, only to have their owners surface months later and seek to get them back.

"We are still caring for the displaced pets at our emergency boarding facility, but we're also planning the next step, which is to find homes for unclaimed animals as we start to demobilize our operation," Tim Rickey, senior director of ASPCA Field Investigations and Response, said in a statement.

Most of the owners that the ASPCA has identified live in temporary housing or with family and friends, environments that prevent them from bringing their animals home, Krause said. A majority of the owners who had yet to claim their pets lived in the hard-hit Rockaways neighborhood in Queens.

Many pit bulls and mastiffs, dogs that shelters typically find hard to place given their vicious reputations, were among the unclaimed canines.

It was too early to say whether any of the pets that remain left behind would be put down, Krause said. (Reporting by Peter Rudegeair; Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Sandra Maler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nearly-half-280-york-pets-displaced-sandy-left-011354269.html

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Inside UPS' Worldport: How a shipping titan moves 2,000 packages every 17 seconds

DNP Inside UPS' Worldport facility how one of the world's shipping titans moves 2,000 packages every 17 seconds

Online shopping seems like a straightforward process: hunt down the perfect item, trudge through the checkout pipeline and await a package's inevitable arrival. The trip between a warehouse and your doorstep, however, involves meticulous organization on a massive scale. In order to pull off such a feat, United Parcel Service (UPS) relies on Worldport in Louisville, Ky.: a 5.2 million-square-foot processing facility that's capable of sorting up to 416,000 packages an hour. Within Worldport, 70 aircraft docks and 155 miles of conveyor belts await the arrival of packages from over 220 countries and territories. So, what happens when UPS gets ahold of those parcels destined for air delivery? The folks clad in brown took us inside their largest sorting hub to find out.

Continue reading Inside UPS' Worldport: How a shipping titan moves 2,000 packages every 17 seconds

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