Friday, November 30, 2012

Trace Adkins Performs Two USO Shows for Airmen in Japan with the Promise of More to Come in the Following Days

Country music star Trace Adkins wraps up first leg of week-long USO holiday tour with a performance for troops and their families at Yokota Air Base (Nov. 27) and Misawa Air Base (Nov. 28). Coming up, Adkins will visit and perform more USO shows at Camp Hansen on Nov. 30, followed by Kadena Air Base on Dec. 1. This is the seventh USO tour for Adkins, who was among the first group of entertainers to travel to the Middle East with the USO in 2002.

Arlington, VA (PRWEB) November 29, 2012

Twitter Pitch: @TraceAdkins celebrates 11 years with @the_USO during holiday tour to Japan!

Country music star Trace Adkins has embarked on this seventh USO tour to bring holiday tidings to troops and their families stationed in Japan as part of a USO/Armed Forces Entertainment tour Nov. 26-Dec. 2. Earlier this week, Adkins performed two full band USO shows and toured multiple military duty posts.

DETAILS:

  • ????Three days into his six-day USO tour to the Pacific, Adkins has lifted the spirits of more than 1,000 Airmen, soldiers, sailors and their families. Having just wrapped up spirit lifting USO visits to Yokota Air Base (Nov. 27) and Misawa Air Base (Nov. 28), he will visit Camp Hansen on Nov. 30 followed by Kadena Air Base on Dec. 1. This is the singer?s first USO visit to the Pacific.

  • ????Among the first entertainers to travel to the Middle East with the USO in 2002, Adkins performed a special 9/11 USO concert at Ramstein Air Base in 2011. Since then, Adkins has lifted the spirits of more than 29,000 servicemen and women, and participated in seven USO tours. Among the countries he has visited with the USO are Bahrain, Afghanistan, Iraq, Kuwait, the U.S. and Germany.
  • ????An avid supporter of our Armed Forces and the USO, Adkins performed with the West Point Cadet Glee Club at the 2009 USO Gala and is a recipient of the 2007 USO Merit Award for his ongoing patriotism. Coming up, Adkins will perform on NBC?s 15th Annual ?Christmas in Rockefeller Center? Special on Nov. 28 (8-9 p.m. EST) and on NBC?s first-ever ?All-Star Celebrity Apprentice.?

QUOTE:????

Attributed to Trace Adkins:


?A lot of people get attention for the wrong reasons, but the true measure of a hero is serving others. Our servicemen and women stationed around the globe are the real people who fit that bill. They devote their lives to supporting our nation, protecting our freedoms and sacrificing their lives. And deserve all the recognition and thanks we can give them. Each and every USO tour I go out on is important and unique, and this one is no different.?

MULTI-MEDIA:

USO Tour Photos: http://bit.ly/XWNpxW

USO Fact Sheet: http://bit.ly/yaebvo

###

About the USO


The USO (United Service Organizations) lifts the spirits of America?s troops and their families millions of times each year at hundreds of places worldwide. We provide a touch of home through centers at airports and military bases in the U.S. and abroad, top quality entertainment and innovative programs and services. We also provide critical support to those who need us most, including forward-deployed troops, military families, wounded warriors and their families and the families of the fallen.

The USO is a private, nonprofit organization, not a government agency. All of our programs and services are made possible by the American people, support of our corporate partners and the dedication of our volunteers and staff. In addition to individual donors and corporate sponsors, the USO is supported by President?s Circle Partners: American Airlines, AT&T, Clear Channel, The Coca-Cola Company, jcpenney, Kangaroo Express, Kroger, Lowe?s, Northrop Grumman Corporation, Procter & Gamble, and TriWest Healthcare Alliance and Worldwide Strategic Partners: BAE Systems, The Boeing Company, Lockheed Martin, Microsoft Corporation and TKS Telepost Kabel-Service Kaiserslautern GmbH & Co. KG. We are also supported through the United Way and Combined Federal Campaign (CFC-11381). To join us in this patriotic mission, and to learn more about the USO, please visit uso.org.

Oname Thompson
USO
(703) 908-6471
Email Information

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/trace-adkins-performs-two-uso-shows-airmen-japan-224840990.html

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Book Review : Seduced by Logic: ?milie Du Ch?telet, Mary Somerville and the Newtonian Revolution by Robyn Arianrhod

Seduced by Logic: ?milie Du Ch?telet, Mary Somerville and the Newtonian Revolution

By Robyn Arianrhod

Web edition: November 29, 2012
Print edition: December 15, 2012; Vol.182 #12 (p. 30)

The tales of two women ? a French aristocrat and a Scottish commoner ?intersect in an exploration of how the pair advanced Newton?s ideas about the universe.

Oxford Univ., 2012, 338 p., $34.95

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/346726/title/Book_Review__Seduced_by_Logic_%C3%89milie_Du_Ch%C3%A2telet,_Mary_Somerville_and_the_Newtonian_Revolution_by_Robyn_Arianrhod

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Intel rumored moving to non-upgradable desktop CPUs with Broadwell

Intel rumored moving to nonupgradable desktop CPUs with Broadwell

For many, the very definition of the custom desktop PC is the ability to upgrade the processor, choosing a $300 retrofit instead of a $1,500 whole-system replacement. We might have to kiss that symbolism goodbye if sources at Impress Watch, SemiAccurate and ZDNet are genuinely in the know. They claim that desktop processors built on Intel's future, 14-nanometer Broadwell architecture will be switching from contacts based on a land grid array (LGA) to a ball grid array (BGA) that could dictate soldering the chips in laptop-style, rather than putting them in an upgrade-friendly socket. The exact reasons for the supposed switch aren't available, but there's speculation that it would be mutually beneficial for Intel and PC manufacturers: Intel would have more control over motherboard chipsets, while builders could save money on assembly and conveniently drive more outright PC sales. Intel hasn't confirmed any of the strategy, so we'd still be very cautious before making any presumptions. If real, though, the switch would be glum news for chipset makers, motherboard makers and most of all hobbyists; even though socket changes have made CPU upgrades tricky in the past, having the option removed altogether could put a damper on the do-it-yourself community.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: Impress Watch, SemiAccurate, ZDNet


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

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Precisely engineering 3-D brain tissues

ScienceDaily (Nov. 29, 2012) ? Borrowing from microfabrication techniques used in the semiconductor industry, MIT and Harvard Medical School (HMS) engineers have developed a simple and inexpensive way to create three-dimensional brain tissues in a lab dish.

The new technique yields tissue constructs that closely mimic the cellular composition of those in the living brain, allowing scientists to study how neurons form connections and to predict how cells from individual patients might respond to different drugs. The work also paves the way for developing bioengineered implants to replace damaged tissue for organ systems, according to the researchers.

"We think that by bringing this kind of control and manipulation into neurobiology, we can investigate many different directions," says Utkan Demirci, an assistant professor in the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (HST).

Demirci and Ed Boyden, associate professor of biological engineering and brain and cognitive sciences at MIT's Media Lab and McGovern Institute, are senior authors of a paper describing the new technique, which appears in the Nov. 27 online edition of the journal Advanced Materials. The paper's lead author is Umut Gurkan, a postdoc at HST, Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital.

'Unique challenges'

Although researchers have had some success growing artificial tissues such as liver or kidney, "the brain presents some unique challenges," Boyden says. "One of the challenges is the incredible spatial heterogeneity. There are so many kinds of cells, and they have such intricate wiring."

Brain tissue includes many types of neurons, including inhibitory and excitatory neurons, as well as supportive cells such as glial cells. All of these cells occur at specific ratios and in specific locations.

To mimic this architectural complexity in their engineered tissues, the researchers embedded a mixture of brain cells taken from the primary cortex of rats into sheets of hydrogel. They also included components of the extracellular matrix, which provides structural support and helps regulate cell behavior.

Those sheets were then stacked in layers, which can be sealed together using light to crosslink hydrogels. By covering layers of gels with plastic photomasks of varying shapes, the researchers could control how much of the gel was exposed to light, thus controlling the 3-D shape of the multilayer tissue construct.

This type of photolithography is also used to build integrated circuits onto semiconductors -- a process that requires a photomask aligner machine, which costs tens of thousands of dollars. However, the team developed a much less expensive way to assemble tissues using masks made from sheets of plastic, similar to overhead transparencies, held in place with alignment pins.

The tissue cubes can be made with a precision of 10 microns, comparable to the size of a single cell body. At the other end of the spectrum, the researchers are aiming to create a cubic millimeter of brain tissue with 100,000 cells and 900 million connections.

Answering fundamental questions

Because the tissues include a diverse repertoire of brain cells, occurring in the same ratios as they do in natural brain tissue, they could be used to study how neurons form the connections that allow them to communicate with each other.

"In the short term, there's a lot of fundamental questions you can answer about how cells interact with each other and respond to environmental cues," Boyden says.

As a first step, the researchers used these tissue constructs to study how a neuron's environment might constrain its growth. To do this, they placed single neurons in gel cubes of different sizes, then measured the cells' neurites, long extensions that neurons use to communicate with other cells. It turns out that under these conditions, neurons get "claustrophobic," Demirci says. "In small gels, they don't necessarily send out as long neurites as they would in a five-times-larger gel."

In the long term, the researchers hope to gain a better understanding of how to design tissue implants that could be used to replace damaged tissue in patients. Much research has been done in this area, but it has been difficult to figure out whether the new tissues are correctly wiring up with existing tissue and exchanging the right kinds of information.

Another long-term goal is using the tissues for personalized medicine. One day, doctors may be able to take cells from a patient with a neurological disorder and transform them into induced pluripotent stem cells, then induce these constructs to grow into neurons in a lab dish. By exposing these tissues to many possible drugs, "you might be able to figure out if a drug would benefit that person without having to spend years giving them lots of different drugs," Boyden says.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Massachusetts Institute of Technology, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS. The original article was written by Anne Trafton.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Umut Atakan Gurkan, Yantao Fan, Feng Xu, Burcu Erkmen, Emel Sokullu Urkac, Gunes Parlakgul, Jacob Bernstein, Wangli Xing, Edward S. Boyden, Utkan Demirci. Simple Precision Creation of Digitally Specified, Spatially Heterogeneous, Engineered Tissue Architectures. Advanced Materials, 2012; DOI: 10.1002/adma.201203261

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/fUfdj_J3bHc/121129143454.htm

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

SAP to Deliver Enhanced Enterprise Security, Apps and App Platform for Windows 8

SAP is planning to deliver six new SAP mobile apps for Windows 8. SAP also announced forthcoming support for Windows 8 development on the SAP Mobile Platform as well as security enhancements to the?SAP Afaria?mobile device management solution. Through these apps, platform support and security enhancements, SAP said it intends to extend business processes to Windows 8 to accelerate a business? ability to run better with devices of various form factors. The announcements were made at?SAPPHIRE NOW + SAP TechEd in Madrid.

The six new SAP mobile apps for Windows 8 are focused on enterprise functions such as training, recruiting and sales. All six of these mobile apps are planned to be available for download in both the Windows Store and SAPStore. SAP WorkDeck, developed first for Windows 8, is a new persona-centric app that offers contextual integration of various information sources and processes into a role-based view. It enables employees to initiate new requests, oversee upcoming events and monitor the progress, as well as enable managers to react and process workflows on-the-go, such as travel, leave and purchasing requests. In addition, SAP Manager Insight?is an employee profile app that provides managers with access to key indicators, such as diversity, headcount, employee talent by location, as well as employee profiles, to drive collaborative and informed human resources (HR) decision-making; SAP Learning Assistant?is a training app that gives on-the-go workers tag-along teachers. It makes on-demand, online training available anytime, anywhere so workers can access required classes to address compliance and job requirements; SAP Interview Assistant?is a recruiting app that eases the cumbersome task of arranging interviews. It also helps managers review candidate information, prepare notes, record results, and provide immediate feedback to HR;? SAP Customer Financial Fact Sheet?is a customer profile app for account executives to access financial data, invoices and critical sales orders in real time; and? finally SAP GRC Policy Survey?is a policy app for employees to review and acknowledge relevant policy changes and fill in surveys to ensure they understand the policies.

In addition, SAP Mobile Platform (previously called the Sybase Unwired Platform)?is planned to support the creation and deployment of mobile apps for Windows 8 and Windows Phone 8. SAP intends to enable the large community of Microsoft developers to quickly create apps (HTML5 and JavaScript) using Visual Studio, as well as enable developers to access SAP Mobile Platform services for enhanced security and authentication, user/device/app provisioning and push notification to help ensure a consistent user experience across devices of different form factors on a single platform. To make app development of security-enhanced apps even simpler, SAP announced plans to release a library for login and authentication for Windows 8, which aims to allow developers to enable multiple incorporation options in their apps. By connecting to SAP Mobile Platform, apps are planned to be able to access SAP and non-SAP apps and data while helping deliver enterprise-grade enhanced security, policy and access management as well as app life-cycle management. The mobile platform is intended to provide a high-availability infrastructure for apps, helping ensure knowledge workers can stay productive virtually anytime, anywhere. SAP also plans to enable partners to begin to develop apps for Windows 8. A free trial of SAP Mobile Platform for developers is available on SAP Community Network?here.

Enhancing enterprise security, customers can help secure their mobile environment to help protect Windows 8 devices, content and apps using one of the industry?s mobile device management leaders, SAP Afaria, which is now available for Windows 8. SAP Afaria is also now certified to fully support Intel-based tablets featuring Windows 8.

SAP also announced plans to develop apps for Windows RT and Windows Phone 8.


Source: http://www.dbta.com/Articles/ReadArticle.aspx?ArticleID=86365

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Log Data Management And Analytics Company Sumo Logic Raises $30M From Accel, Greylock

sumoSumo Logic, a startup focused on enterprise log management and analytics, has raised $30 million in Series C funding round led by Accel Partners, with participation from existing investors Greylock Partners and Sutter Hill Ventures. The latest round brings the company?s total venture capital funding to $50.5 million.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/OR_exH026I4/

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

The journey in life is never a straight line (PART 1)

I delved deeply into religion and two years later, in 1982, I went to Mekah to perform my Haj (pilgrimage). There I met up with the late Haji Fadzil Mohd Noor (the PAS President who died in office in June 2002). I also linked up with Tok Guru Haji Abdul Hadi Awang, Mustafa Ali and a couple of other top PAS leaders from Terengganu.

NO HOLDS BARRED

Raja Petra Kamarudin

When I was in my teens I never suspected that life is actually quite complicated. Then, I would live day-to-day. I lived by the motto ?tomorrow never comes?, which is quite true because once tomorrow comes it would be today, if you get what I mean.

Life was all about enjoying yourself -- eat, drink and be merry for tomorrow you may die. And, if you can?t avoid dying, then go with a smile on your face because once you die you die, that would be the end of everything. Hence have fun while you still breath.

Then my world, as I knew it, came to an end. My father -- the only breadwinner in the family -- died. And we were all still in school -- all four siblings. That was probably the first greatest shock of my life -- other than the 13 motorcycle accidents that I had prior to my father?s death.

My father was only 46. Surely that was too young an age to die, especially when my mother was only 38 and the four of us kids were still at school. That could be considered as the first ?injury? in my life. And, to add insult to this injury, the hundreds of friends and family members that my father had suddenly ?disappeared?.

You see; my father was a ?big man?. That was why I could afford the devil-may-care lifestyle. However, once the ?big man? had gone, no one wanted to know us any more.

I remember the first Hari Raya after my father died. When my father was still alive, the road outside our house would be jam-packed with cars. The place would be almost like the venue of an opposition ceramah -- crowded with people. That first Hari Raya after my father?s death, however, not a single person came to our house.

My mother stood looking out the window and cried. I did not know what to do so I phone my father?s ?best friend? -- a man I call Uncle Cedric and who now lives in Australia. Uncle Cedric came over to console my mother. Thereafter our days of the Hari Raya ?open house? ended. We realised that now our father had died we no longer have any friends or family members.

It hit me then that we would have to pick up what was left of our lives and get on with it. I got a job that paid RM250 a month and got married soon after that. I was forced to ?restart? my life (or ?reboot? in today?s terminology) from the bottom. And it was a long and hard battle to get back to the top, the position I had always known until my father died.

Then the second blow of my life hit me nine years later. My mother, who was only 47, died. She had earlier left Malaysia and had gone back to England. She could no longer live in Malaysia, which was giving her so much ?pain?.

That was in 1980 when I was 30.

My father had died age 46 and my mother at age 47. I was 30. How much longer would I live before I too would die? What was the purpose of life if all it means is you are going to leave this world and cause your family so much pain by your death?

I needed to console myself with the fact that life was not a total waste and that we are all here for a purpose. And to find that answer I turned to Islam. No doubt I was born a Muslim but I was never really a Muslim. I ?became? a Muslim much later in life.

I delved deeply into religion and two years later, in 1982, I went to Mekah to perform my Haj (pilgrimage). There I met up with the late Haji Fadzil Mohd Noor (the PAS President who died in office in June 2002). I also linked up with Tok Guru Haji Abdul Hadi Awang, Mustafa Ali and a couple of other top PAS leaders from Terengganu.

I spent almost a month in Mekah and Medina where I also mingled with the Iranians (who had just had their Islamic Revolution three years before that in 1979). I even joined the Iranians in their anti-Saudi/anti-US demonstration in Mekah that attracted about 100,000 protestors.

A year before that, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad had taken over as the Prime Minister of Malaysia and that same year I did my Haj (1982), Anwar Ibrahim had joined Umno. So this was the ?hot? discussion in Mekah and Medina.

Part of the reason I became a ?radical? Muslim was because of Anwar Ibrahim. Before he joined Umno in 1982 he was the President of ABIM and I attended a few of his ceramah, all organised by PAS, of course. It was in a way Anwar who made me ?see the light? that the future lay with Islam.

Umno was evil. Umno was unIslamic. Umno was a creation of the ?kafir? British. We must oppose Umno and ?turn? to Islam. And turn to Islam I did, in a very big way, even believing that the future was in an Islamic Revolution in Malaysia a la Iran.

Killing and dying in the name of Islam was an acceptable option. This was what I learned during my Haj trip and in my association with the Iranians. This was also what the President of ABIM, Anwar Ibrahim, had been telling us.

But now Anwar had abandoned the Islamic cause to join Umno -- the very organisation he had condemned and had told us to oppose to the death. Anwar was now with the ?infidels? in Umno. Is it, therefore, also halal (kosher) to kill Anwar?

TO BE CONTINUED

?


busy

Source: http://www.malaysia-today.net/mtcolumns/no-holds-barred/53014-the-journey-in-life-is-never-a-straight-line-part-1

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Millennials Ready to Play Key Role in Housing Market Recovery ...

Recent data from a survey commissioned by Better Homes and Garden Real Estate (BHGRE) suggests a pent up desire among 18-35 year olds to own a home of their own that could easily fuel a real estate boom for at least the rest of this decade.?

In contrast to predictions from some futurists that the Millennial generation, born 1982-2003, will be content to be lifelong renters, BHGRE?s survey found home ownership still ranked as young Americans? most important definition of personal success.? Overall, three-fourths of those surveyed named home ownership as an indicator of having succeeded financially, more than seven times the number who named other major expenditures such as taking extravagant vacations, buying an expensive car, or owning designer clothing. Even among those living in the Northeast or in cities, seventy percent identified home ownership as the best indicator of having made it financially. This is fully in line with earlier studies by Pew Research that found home ownership was among the top three priorities in life for members of the Millennial generation.

Unlike comments often made about this generation by some of their elders, most Millennials didn?t express sentiments suggesting that they feel entitled to be simply handed this badge of success. ?Seventy percent of those in BHGRE?s survey said they needed to possess the skills to own a home; only thirty percent said they ?deserved it.? Respondents also made it clear they were prepared to sacrifice to achieve their dream of home ownership. ?About sixty percent were willing to eat out less and/or only spend on necessities to save the money needed to buy a home. These sentiments were most strongly expressed by those who had grown up in a home ?owned by their parents. ?In addition, forty percent were willing to take a second job. And, almost a quarter ?of the generation accused of ??failing ?to launch?? were prepared to live with their parents for a couple of years to save the money they would need to own a piece of the American Dream. ?

The collapse of the housing market that triggered the Great Recession also has made Millennials sophisticated, knowledgeable consumers when making decisions about how and when to purchase a home. ?Rather than thinking they should buy a home as soon as they get married or qualify for a mortgage, seventy percent of BHGRE?s respondents said the time to buy a house is when a person can ?afford it and maintain their lifestyle.??

Millennials are careful consumers, as befits a group shaped by the most lengthy economic downturn in decades. Sixty-one percent suggested they would want to have a secure job before buying a house and more than half said people should wait until they had saved enough for the down payment before making such a purchase. ?When asked to indicate the factors they would research in determining whether to buy a home, financial considerations were cited by a majority of the respondents.

They understand the power of money. Interest rates, home prices and how those two factors impacted their ability to secure a mortgage, all ranked much higher in importance than the type of neighborhood a house was in, school district ratings or foreclosure rates.? With the median sales price of both new and existing homes up almost five percent this year, Millennials are likely to jump into the market soon before it becomes too expensive for them to do so.??????

These findings suggest the current policies of the Federal Reserve and its Chairman, Ben Bernanke to keep interest rates low in order to stimulate this key part of the U.S. economy are right on target. If home builders and sellers can tailor their offerings to these technologically sophisticated, family-oriented potential buyers, Millennials could well play an important role in reinvigorating the nation?s housing market, further spurring the nation?s recovery from the Great Recession.

Morley Winograd and Michael D. Hais are co-authors of the newly published Millennial Momentum: How a New Generation is Remaking America and Millennial Makeover: MySpace, YouTube, and the Future of American Politics and fellows of NDN and the New Policy Institute.

Homes image by BigStock.

Source: http://www.newgeography.com/content/003259-millennials-ready-play-key-role-housing-market-recovery

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Monday, November 26, 2012

leroykirman: How to Become Recertified in Pet Loss Grief Counseling

How to Become Recertified in Pet Loss Grief Counseling

November 22nd, 2012 by admin

There are already a significant number of pet loss grief counselors in the United States. They have been certified to offer mental health and emotional support in a unique field. However, those with certification should be aware of the requirements to get recertified. Certification typically lasts three years. To be eligible to renew pet loss grief certification, the medical doctor, nurse or minister must have been actively practicing. In other words, it may be desirable to reapply several months before current certifications are due to lapse. The counselor must have been in practice for about 500 hours or more during the last two or three years. He or she should also have had 50 hours of continuing education. The standards for pet loss grief continuing education are somewhat tolerant and can include seminars and college courses. Publications in academic journals may meet up to half of the 50 hour requirement.

Posted in Self Improvement and Motivation |

Source: http://www.hubph.com/self-improvement-and-motivation/how-to-become-recertified-in-pet-loss-grief-counseling/

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Source: http://leroykirman.blogspot.com/2012/11/how-to-become-recertified-in-pet-loss.html

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Source: http://nathaniel79.typepad.com/blog/2012/11/leroykirman-how-to-become-recertified-in-pet-loss-grief-counseling.html

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Source: http://slgogam.posterous.com/leroykirman-how-to-become-recertified-in-pet

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Golden Horses: Mainland Chinese and Hong Kong Films Dominate ...

Michael Buckner/Getty Images

Hong Kong filmmaker Johnnie To's "Life Without Principle" won three awards at the Golden Horses, including Best Director, Best Actor and Best Original Screenplay titles

HONG KONG ? They came, and they conquered again: mainland Chinese and Hong Kong filmmakers swept Taiwan?s Golden Horses Awards this year, with the island?s own contingent nearly completely brushed aside in all categories.

Gwai Lun-mei?s coronation as best actress (for romance drama Gf*Bf) and Chang Jung-chi?s best new director win (for Touch of the Light, Taiwan?s entry in the best foreign language Oscar race), in addition to composer Lo Tayu?s contribution to the best original film song (for the Hong Kong film Romance in Thin Air), provided the few moments of cheer for local audiences eager to see their own making a mark at the 49th edition of the awards, held in the town of Yilan this year.

STORY: Outmatched Taiwanese Filmmakers Prepare for Tough Battle at Golden Horses Awards?

There was certainly no repeat of the Taiwanese triumph as in last year, when Wei Te-sheng?s historical epic Warrior of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale held off the challenge of Hong Kong film A Simple Life to take home the best feature film prize. It?s particularly ironic that most Taiwanese nominees did not make the cut, given how the awards were evenly spread among the many entries competing for the race this year.

Gao Qunshu?s Beijing Blues and Johnnie To?s Life Without Principle ended the night with three gongs apiece, with the mainland Chinese policier nabbing best feature film as well as editing and cinematography titles, and the Hong Kong suspense thriller (and the city?s representative at the Oscars) winning best director, best actor (for Lau Ching-wan) and best original screenplay.

Design of Death and Mystery, both from the mainland, won two prizes each ? the former for best supporting actress (Liang Jing) and best art direction (Lin Mu), and the latter in best new performer (Qi Xi) and best musical score (Peyman Yazdanian and Johann Johannsson). Theoretically, both Gf*Bf and Touch of the Light secured a brace too, but the two films added to their main-category wins only with the more festival-specific titles of audience choice awards (for Gf*Bf) and the Fipresci prize (for Touch of the Light).

STORY: 'Life Without Principle' Chosen as Hong Kong's Foreign Oscar Entry?

In other leading categories, Hong Kong?s Ronald Cheng won the best supporting actor title for his turn in comedy Vulgaria. The best adapted screenplay prize went to Bao Jingjing (for mainland Chinese romantic comedy Love Is Not Blind), and best visual effects to the team behind Tsui Hark?s 3-D martial arts spectacle Flying Swords of Dragon Gate. The best documentary title went to Yung Chang?s China Heavyweight, a piece about the lives of aspiring young boxers on the mainland.

Huang Yu-siang won the outstanding Taiwanese filmmaker of the year, with veteran actor and King Hu collaborator Shih Chun receiving the lifetime achievement prize.

Source: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/golden-horses-mainland-chinese-hong-393777

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Sunday, November 25, 2012

Most Interesting Papers of the Week ? Teaching Biology

These are papers that may be of general interest published this week, with commentary as necessary. No specific case studies, overly specialised research, or taxonomic papers. Papers ordered only by their appearance in my inbox. For PDFs, e-mail me, I get most of them. You can request an in-depth analysis of any paper and I?ll do it as I get the time.

Open-access papers, those that are free to read/download even without an academic connection, are tagged with [OA] for easy finding with your browser?s text search (Ctrl+F).

18 papers this week, 2 of them open access.

New Books in the Store:

Special Issues:

I was mostly interested in McInerny & Etienne.

All papers [OA]! I especially recommend Dunn et al. and Telfer & Bown.

Arthropods:

Every aphid species has special cells called bacteriocytes within which live symbiotic bacteria, Buchnera. This relationship has been around for ~250 million years, and is retained because it?s an obligate symbiosis for both the aphid and the bacterium, since neither can reproduce successfully without the other. This paper identifies just how deep the co-speciation has gone between these two is, with aphids generating completely new proteins to deal somehow with Buchnera:

We identified a novel class of genes that encode small proteins with signal peptides, which are often cysteine-rich, that are over-represented in bacteriocytes. These genes are first expressed at a developmental time point coincident with the incorporation of symbionts strictly in the cells that contribute to the bacteriocyte and this bacteriocyte-specific expression is maintained throughout the aphid?s life.

This is a thorough review of Mesozoic weevils. If you work with them, get it! For the basics of weevils, see my post.

Botany:

This review summarizes current knowledge about optimal defence patterns in above- and below-ground plant tissues, including information on basal and induced defence metabolite accumulation, defensive structures and their regulation by jasmonic acid (JA).

?Floral mimicry? refers to traits in flowers that allow them to attract insects by mimicking other flowers in either Batesian (mimic offers no nectar reward) or M?llerian (both flowers mimic each other, resulting in more flower visits to both) ways. This study shows which traits are most important for flowers to mimic, at least in orchids.

This study shows that traits that mimic, in order of importance, the spectra, shape and nectar guide patterns of flowers of rewarding plants would be under strong selection in food-deceptive orchids as they maximize attractiveness to their pollinators.

One of my pet peeves is the overreaction to wildfires, with people exclaiming that they?re disastrous to ecosystems. No, they?re not. Plants in wildfire-prone areas are adapted to seasonal fire, and adaptations to fire are ancient in many plants, as this paper demonstrates.

Focusing on the widespread 113-million-year-old family Proteaceae, fireproneness among Gondwanan Angiosperm floras can now be traced back almost 90 million years into the fiery Cretaceous. The associated evolution of on-plant (serotiny) and soil seed storage, and later ant dispersal, affirms them as ancient adaptations to fire among flowering plants.

Environmental:

A good meta-analysis on the topic.

We find 136 case studies of climatic impacts that are potentially relevant to this topic. However, only seven identified proximate causes of demonstrated local extinctions due to anthropogenic climate change. Among these seven studies, the proximate causes vary widely. Surprisingly, none show a straightforward relationship between local extinction and limited tolerances to high temperature. Instead, many studies implicate species interactions as an important proximate cause, especially decreases in food availability. We find very similar patterns in studies showing decreases in abundance associated with climate change, and in those studies showing impacts of climatic oscillations.

Evolution:

Besides being a good review of the state of the art, this is an excellent reference article:

I also provide tables with full or summarised data on (a) genital asymmetry across all animal phyla with internal fertilisation; (b) genera with dextral as well as sinistral species; (c) species with dextral as well as sinistral individuals; (d) genera with symmetric as well as asymmetric species; (e) species with symmetric as well as asymmetric individuals.

(Historical) Geology:

The break-off of India from Gondwana and its subsequent crash into Asia, forming the Himalaya Mountains, is one of the most spectacular events in Earth?s history ? the Himalayas changed climatic conditions (including setting the stage for human evolution!), and the sheer speed at which India jetted into Asia is remarkable. There?s even speculation that it may have played a role in the Cretaceous extinction, since its path went through the Reunion magmatic hotspot, where India might have picked up the lava that later went into the Deccan Traps. This reviews deals with how India evolved during this time.

A geochemical analysis of the most important Chinese Ediacaran localities (including Dengying and Doushantuo), with implications for palaeoenvironment. See Bristow et al. (2009) for more information.

Palaeontology:

Phosphatocopines are a group of 60+ Cambrian bivalved arthropods (probably crustaceans) with a unique, phosphatised carapace.

Not all impacts are globally-devastating events.

I didn?t know people still wrote Cenozoic like that.

The earliest flying fish fossil!

Zoology:

Cool party trivia.

I wrote about this cancer and its detrimental effect on the Tasmanian Devil in this post (the charity offer is long gone by now, although you should still buy that book anyway).

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Source: http://bioteaching.wordpress.com/2012/11/25/most-interesting-papers-of-the-week-6/

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Internet Market For The Savvy Business Owner - KurtTasche.com ...

Internet Market For The Savvy Business Owner

For businesses promoting their services or products, Affiliate marketing becomes useful, also, it can replace traditional advertising and other methods like television or print. Use these tips if you would like to perform Website marketing with your business.

If you know what kind of lingo people use when talking about the brand you are selling you can use it in your ads. Using terms that your customers are already comfortable with will allow you to reach them on a more familiar level. Your target market will readily identify with your message when you use the correct terminology in your writings.

Make sure you have the money to buy a good domain URL. Chances are, you are not going to find a domain name that is the exact name of your company. But, if you are willing to spend between $1,000 to $2,000, you will likely get one close enough.

Strategic placement of ads is the cornerstone of Website marketing. Companies such as Google?s AdSense make this easy. These companies offer a lot of marketing for your advertising dollar.

Emailing clients is a very important part in any Internet marketing endeavor. You need to ensure that your mail stays safe. Don?t use free email services that lack functions that you need, such as the ability to store mail indefinitely. If you have sensitive information contained in your emails, consider security and archiving methods to keep them safe.

Marketing online is like other markets in some ways; however, in other ways, it is very different. Be ready for any changes that may come up, like if search engines stop putting focus on title tags. When that happens, you need to be ready to switch gears, like putting an increased effort behind video marketing.

Don?t just abandon and reject ideas that did not produce the results that you wanted. Your idea that failed to catch on in the past, may work now. The Internet evolves daily. Don?t sink extra time and money into ideas that aren?t working, but hang onto them in case they become viable down the road.

Make your advertisements descriptive, and make sure to entice readers with promises of quick results. Play up the speed of the process; how quickly the order is processed, how little time shipping takes, or how quickly your product will give them the results they want. This means improving download speed, having very fast checkouts, or quickly confirming orders.

Here is some great web marketing advice! Be very clear with your customers that their information is completely safe with you. You can do this by placing a privacy policy on the top right part of the page. Doing this will reassure your customers that the money they spend will be handled with care. In addition, their identities are safe when buying from your website.

Another option is putting it together with a product that is similar and selling it for a good price. Make sure that the terms are stated clearly in all of your marketing literature.

You can assess the results of online marketing campaigns with sophisticated programs that measure the sales versus the number of visitors to your site. Many of the bigger online companies have tracking meters available that will show you the precise number of visitors in comparison with buyers and repeat visitors.
These web analysis products are designed to suit a number of uses and easily integrate with you sites per-existing software.

To sum things up, Internet marketing can be a valuable business tool. Internet promotion can be utilized to advertise your services and products instead of traditional TV or print ads. Using the information and suggestions in this article can help you utilize the Internet to further your business.

Source: http://kurttasche.com/internet-marketing-articles/internet-market-for-the-savvy-business-owner-2.html

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Montee Ball Sets NCAA Record: Wisonsin Star Breaks Travis Prentice's Mark For Most Career TDs

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) ? Wisconsin star running back Montee Ball set an NCAA record after scoring his 79th career touchdown on a 17-yard run in the first quarter of Saturday's game against Penn State.

The score broke a tie in the record book with Travis Prentice of Miami (Ohio), who had previously set the major college mark in 1999.

Entering Saturday's game, Ball had 72 career rushing scores ? including 17 this season ? to go with six receiving touchdowns.

Ball clutched the football tightly in his right arm while getting pats on the helmet from teammates after the touchdown run gave the Badgers a 14-7 lead at 6:27 of the first quarter.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/24/montee-ball-ncaa-record-touchdowns-career_n_2185472.html

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Saturday, November 24, 2012

Owl feathers inspire quieter change

8 hrs.

An owl glides by on silent wings. Many holiday travelers probably wish airplanes could do the same.?

"On airplanes, the back edge of the wing is where you get most of the noise," Justin Jaworski, a mathematician at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom, told TechNewsDaily. "My work is looking at developing theoretical models to explain trailing-edge noise."

Most recently, he and his colleague Nigel Peake showed, mathematically, that the noise from airplane wings could be reduced tenfold if their designers took a few cues from the feathers that fringe the trailing edge of an owl's wings.?

In their latest research, Jaworski and Peake found that owl wings are especially quiet in part because their trailing-edge feathers are flexible and porous, allowing some air through. Plane wings, of course, are hard and solid. But the pair found that if the edge of a plane's wings were perforated in a particular way, "the theory says you should be able to reduce noise as if there were not an edge there at all," Jaworski said.

Makers of real planes might have a difficult time taking that suggestion. Holes in the wings might reduce a plane's aerodynamics too much for the companies' liking, Jaworski said. Also, flexible trailing edges might flap in the wind, which would also reduce aerodynamics. These are issues that other engineers would work out in later stages of research, Jaworski said. He collaborates with experimental researchers to uncover the engineering trade-offs in his ideas.

In any case, the findings are still in their earliest stages, and it might take two or three years before the ideas for a quieter airplane wing are tested with a small model in a wind tunnel, Jaworski said. After? wind tunnel tests, even more research would go into seeing whether the ideas would be cost-effective in real planes.

Meanwhile, the Cambridge researchers continue to refine their model and study owl wings for further secrets into their quiet flight, Jaworski said.?

On the theory side, the next step is to study other features of owl wings that are not common to noisier flapping birds such as pigeons. "We're really excited about looking at this downy material on top," Jaworski said, referring to a unique, soft covering owl wings have. He said the down covering is difficult to model mathematically, no one has studied it before, and it may be especially important to quiet flight.

Jaworski presented his and Peake's research Nov. 18 in San Diego at a conference hosted by the American Physical Society.

You can follow TechNewsDaily staff writer Francie Diep on Twitter @franciediep. Follow TechNewsDaily on Twitter @TechNewsDaily, or on Facebook.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/owl-feathers-inspire-quieter-change-1C7226147

vice presidential debate Martha Raddatz

Iraq, Afghan war veterans joining Congress

WASHINGTON (AP) ? As Tammy Duckworth sees it, her path to Congress began when she awoke in the fall of 2004 at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. She was missing both of her legs and faced the prospect of losing her right arm.

Months of agonizing therapy lay ahead. As the highest-ranking double amputee in the ward, Maj. Duckworth became the go-to person for soldiers complaining of substandard care and bureaucratic ambivalence.

Soon, she was pleading their cases to federal lawmakers, including her state's two U.S. senators at the time ? Democrats Dick Durbin and Barack Obama of Illinois. Obama arranged for her to testify at congressional hearings. Durbin encouraged her to run for office.

She lost her first election, but six years later gave it another try and now is one of nine veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars who will serve in next year's freshman class in the of House of Representatives.

Veterans' groups say the influx of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans is welcome because it comes at a time when the overall number of veterans in Congress is on a steep and steady decline. In the mid-1970s, the vast majority of lawmakers tended to be veterans.

For example, the 95th Congress, which served in 1977-78, had more than 400 veterans among its 535 members, according to the American Legion. The number of veterans next year in Congress will come to just more than 100. Most served during the Vietnam War era. In all, 16 served in Iraq or Afghanistan, not all in a combat role.

"We're losing about a half a million veterans a year in this country," said Tom Tarantino, chief policy officer at Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans for America. "We are not going to be in a world where a significant plurality of people spent some time in the military, so to have 16 men and women who fought in this current Congress is incredibly significant."

Tarantino said he recognizes that the 16 Iraq and Afghanistan vets have wide-ranging political views. But at the end of the day, he said, their shared experiences make it more likely they'll put political differences aside on issues like high unemployment and suicide rates among returning veterans, or in ensuring that veterans get a quality education through the post-9/11 GI bill.

Their election victories also provide a sense of assurance to veterans.

"The biggest fear we have as veterans is that the America people are going to forget us," Tarantino said. "When you have an 11-year sustained war, the fight doesn't end when you pull out."

Duckworth carries the highest profile of the incoming vets. She was co-piloting a Black Hawk helicopter in Iraq when a rocket-propelled grenade landed in her lap, ripping off one leg and crushing the other. At Walter Reed, she worried about what life as a double amputee had in store. But during her recovery, she found a new mission ? taking care of those she describes as her military brothers and sisters. That mission led her to a job as an assistant secretary at the Department of Veterans Affairs during Obama's first term.

"Had I not been in combat, my life would have never taken this path. You take the path that comes in front of you," Duckworth said from a wheelchair last week as she and her fellow freshmen went through orientation at the Capitol. "For me, I try to live every day honoring the men who carried me out of that field because they could have left me behind, and they didn't."

Duckworth is one of two freshmen Democrats who served in Iraq or Afghanistan. The other is Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, who served near Baghdad for a year and was a medical operations specialist. Gabbard said she hopes the two of them can be a voice for female veterans and the unique challenges they face.

About 8 percent of veterans are women. They tend to be younger on average. Nearly one in five seen by the Department of Veterans Affairs responds yes when screened for military sexual trauma.

Seven Republicans served in Iraq or Afghanistan. Most had backing from tea party supporters who share their views that the size and scope of the federal government should be curtailed.

?Ron DeSantis of Florida was a judge advocate officer in the Navy who deployed to Iraq as a legal adviser during the 2007 troop surge.

?Brad Wenstrup of Ohio was as a combat surgeon in Iraq.

?Kerry Bentivolio of Michigan served in an administrative capacity with an artillery unit in Iraq and retired after suffering a neck injury. He also served as an infantry rifleman in Vietnam.

?Jim Bridenstine of Oklahoma was a combat pilot in Iraq and Afghanistan.

?Scott Perry of Pennsylvania commanded an aviation battalion in Iraq in 2009 and 2010.

?Doug Collins of Georgia was a chaplain in Iraq.

?Tom Cotton of Arkansas, a Harvard Law School graduate, was an infantry platoon leader in Iraq and then was on a reconstruction team in Afghanistan. In between, he was a platoon leader at Arlington National Cemetery.

Cotton said the reason he ran for Congress is the same one that led him to enter the Army after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

"I felt we had been attacked for who we are ? the home of freedom," Cotton said. "And I worry now our liberty is threatened at home by the debt crisis we face, which in the long term will mean less prosperity and less opportunity, and therefore less liberty."

Cotton said he could easily see himself working with Duckworth and Gabbard on veteran's issues. "They've carried a heavy load and we owe them a great debt," he said.

At the same time, it's clear the freshmen veterans have clear differences of opinion over policy matters. For example, Gabbard is a strong critic of the war in Afghanistan. She says the United States needs to get out as quickly and safely as possible. Cotton opposes setting timetables for withdrawal.

"We're trying to win a counter-insurgency war where we can put a friendly, allied, stable government in place," Cotton said. "It's certainly been a long and somewhat winding road, but on the whole, America and our interests in the world are much better off for having waged the war in Afghanistan."

There also will be differences over spending priorities. Cotton is reluctant to trim spending on defense as a way to deal with the deficit.

Duckworth said certain programs need close examination, particularly in the area of government contracts. She said she "can actually stand up and talk about defense spending in a way that will be realistic without being attacked for lack of patriotism or not being strong on defense."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/9-more-iraq-afghan-war-veterans-joining-congress-140652303.html

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Thursday, November 22, 2012

What Obama means for business - Management and Career

By Nina Easton

This story is from the July 2, 2008?issue of Fortune. It is the full text of an article excerpted in Tap Dancing to Work: Warren Buffett on Practically Everything, 1966-2012, a Fortune Magazine book, collected and expanded by Carol Loomis.

The reconciler: Obama wants to rebalance an economy that rewards only

The reconciler: Obama wants to rebalance an economy that rewards only "a very few."

FORTUNE -- Barack Obama is shaking his head. "No, no, no, no, no." His slim figure had been bent forward in a folding chair (prime position to radiate outsized charm). But my question -- does he consider corporate America a destructive force? -- prompts him to bolt upright to a more defensive pose. It's a purposely provocative query, but a fair one: When Obama talks about business, it's usually to complain about corporate tax breaks or trade deals or jobs shipped overseas. High-paid CEOs are the familiar villains in his stump speeches, including the one he has just given on this Raleigh fairground. Free-market critics look at his varied plans to raise taxes and pronounce him hostile to wealth creation and market growth. And in a small but telling episode during the Indiana primary, his campaign used a 2007 Fortune cover story -- "Business Loves Hillary" -- to attack Clinton, as if "business" were a dirty word, not the nation's economic engine.

So? "There's a reason why the business community in Chicago as a whole has been very supportive of me," he says. "They know I am a pro-growth guy, and I'm a pro-market guy. And I always have been. What I do get frustrated with is an economy that is out of balance, that rewards a very few -- with rewards that are all out of proportion to their actual success -- while ordinary, hardworking Americans continue to get squeezed. Over the last decade or so, this economy grew substantially, and more than half of the total growth was captured by the top 1%."

Here, the great reconciler pauses, just briefly, to give due to forces that aren't easy targets of political blame. "Now part of that has to do with globalization and with global capital being able to move everywhere it wants. It has meant a winner-take-all environment." But, he adds, quickly returning to Washington politics, "a lot of it has to do with tax policies" that favor the big winners. That means President Bush's policies, and by extension those of Obama's rival, John McCain.

We are sitting in a bare, cinderblock room next to the hall where he has just kicked off a two-week tour to promote his economic plan. "I love the heat -- I just don't like wearing suits in the heat," he explains as we take refuge from a 100-plus-degree North Carolina afternoon, and he politely asks permission to take off his suit jacket and drape it on the back of his chair. I think back to the first Obama campaign rally I covered, picking through treacherous ice patches in the parking lot of an Iowa high school gym, where earnest troops of volunteers operated under the motto Respect, Empower, Include, as if they were prepping for a Boy Scout jamboree. The first-term Senator from Illinois -- unheard of on the national scene until his "audacity of hope" speech at the 2004 Democratic convention -- was an improbable nominee. Yet five months later, this political upstart had dashed a former First Lady's carefully laid plans, and with Kennedy-like cool, laid claim to the Democratic nomination.

Now November suddenly looms, and Obama must court an audience far larger than the nearly 18 million voters who checked his name in the Democratic primaries -- most of whom told pollsters they were either "liberal" or "very liberal." He must win over not only skeptical independents but also a like number of Democratic Clinton voters -- many of them in key swing states and some of whom worry that Obama is too far to the left or too inexperienced to govern.

Toward the business community, he will build on a message of "tough love" that he has delivered since he landed in Detroit a year ago to tell the auto industry he would impose strict emissions standards, but in return help them with crippling health-care costs. In the coming months voters will hear that a decade-long middle-class squeeze hurts business, because it "reduces demand for the stuff that companies are selling," says his economic advisor, Austan Goolsbee. Therefore, he argues, business should support Obama's plan to shift the tax burden toward the wealthy and raise the federal minimum wage to $9.50 over two years (under current law it goes to $6.55 in July). As Obama says on the campaign trail, "In America, prosperity has always risen from the bottom up." Likewise, he argues, increased regulatory oversight, capital requirements, and transparency standards will help capital markets by injecting stability. More federal spending on education and basic science will improve workforce quality. "I still believe that the business of America is business," Obama told Fortune. "But what I also think is that with all that power and talent, and all those resources at their disposal, comes some responsibilities -- to not game the system, to not oppose increased transparency in the marketplace, to not oppose fiscally prudent measures to balance our budget."

Industrial turmoil: The GM plant in Janesville, Wis., that Obama toured in February was chosen for shutdown four months later because of falling SUV sales. Rising energy prices, Obama notes, will bring

Industrial turmoil: The GM plant in Janesville, Wis., that Obama toured in February was chosen for shutdown four months later because of falling SUV sales. Rising energy prices, Obama notes, will bring "some pretty wrenching retooling."

Obama insists that he's a pragmatist, not an ideologue. "We're not an ideological people," he says. "We're a commonsense people who say, 'What's going to work?' and 'Let's figure it out.'" His voting record, however, is among the most liberal in the Senate, reflecting the sensibility of a former community organizer who for 20 years belonged to a church that urged congregants to disavow the pursuit of middle-classness. During the primary campaign, his rhetoric was sharply populist, denouncing big business and blaming the shift of jobs overseas on free-trade agreements. "He's the least influenced by corporations and CEOs" of any candidate, proclaimed Anna Burger, president of the union coalition Change to Win. Obama was so tightly aligned with labor leaders, embracing a legislative measure to promote union organizing, that it's still hard to find any points of disagreement.

Yet there are hints that the presumed Democratic nominee's economic agenda remains a work in progress -- and will evolve toward his ambition to win in November. Already his circle of advisors has expanded beyond a small core of academics to include veteran capitalists inside the Democratic Party. In late March he gave a thoughtful if sometimes vague speech on the need for more financial-markets supervision, which was heavily influenced by advice from former Fed chairman Paul Volcker. He is frequently on the phone with billionaire CEO Warren Buffett ("one of my favorite people," says Obama, "he's just completely down-to-earth and as smart as they come"), a critic of the financial industry and of tax breaks for the rich who also happens to understand capital markets better than just about anyone. Obama calls on Apple's (AAPL) Steve Jobs to help him "think about how to be successful and nimble in the current global environment." Advice also comes from Wall Street veterans like J.P. Morgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon and Centerbridge Partners founder Mark Gallogly -- as well as longtime Chicago friends Penny Pritzker of Hyatt (who runs his campaign finances), Ariel Capital's John Rogers, and investor James S. Crown.

In his first management act as de facto Democratic nominee, Obama signaled that he might inch toward the center. He enraged labor leaders and liberal activists by appointing Jason Furman to run his economic team. Furman directed the Hamilton Project, a Brookings Institution-based initiative sponsored by former Clinton Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, a centrist and pariah among hard-core liberals. Furman has defended free-trade agreements, and at a time when unions were on the warpath against Wal-Mart (WMT), he produced a research paper arguing that the chain's low prices are a boon to low-income consumers.

On the same day that Furman's appointment was announced, Obama told CNBC he might consider deferring some of his tax increases if the economy remains in bad shape. According to Furman, Obama will consider cutting the corporate tax rate while revising the tax code to eliminate business incentives to accumulate more debt and to discourage moves offshore. And in Obama's interview with Fortune, the candidate suggested that his overheated rhetoric on NAFTA was just that -- overheated rhetoric.

Asked what single economic concern worries him most and will be uppermost on his mind if he steps into the Oval Office next January, Obama said energy supplies. "It's not a problem I think we can drill our way out of," he says. "It can be a drag on our economy for a very long time unless we take steps to innovate and invest in the research and development that's needed to find alternative fuels, to make our transportation system more energy efficient, retool our industry and our buildings." But to encourage a transition toward alternatives, Obama favors legislation that would make fossil fuel more expensive. Doesn't that mean more pain to come under an Obama presidency? "There is no doubt that in the short term, adapting to this new energy economy is going to carry some costs." But, he adds, citing the coal industry's ability to adapt to stop acid rain in the 1980s, "I would never underestimate the power of American innovation."

Road show: Obama back stage on the first stop, in Raleigh, N.C., of his two-week campaign in June to roll out his ideas for fixing the economy. Says he:

Road show: Obama back stage on the first stop, in Raleigh, N.C., of his two-week campaign in June to roll out his ideas for fixing the economy. Says he: "We're going to have to make some basic investments" in everything from energy to health care.

During this year's long, hard-fought primary campaign, Obama had about the same effect on his audiences as Bruce Springsteen did on his breakout Born to Run tour. This time they had seen the future of the Democratic Party, and its name was Barack Obama. In Iowa they braved below-zero wind gusts; in balmy Oregon they had to contend with each other: a throng of 70,000 human beings gathered on the Portland waterfront. By contrast, this June kickoff to the general election campaign is oddly subdued -- as if the excitement over the freshness of his candidacy, his message of unity and optimism, hasn't carried over to the mostly traditional Democratic policy prescriptions he offers in the small print of his campaign.

Here in Raleigh, there are empty seats sprinkled about rather than hourlong lines to get in. His audience is respectful but lacks the mass energy that transformed this 46-year-old Harvard Law graduate into a national phenomenon. And anyone hoping for an innovative response to the previous week's outpouring of bad economic news will be disappointed. At the climax of his speech, Obama offers ... another $50 billion federal stimulus plan.

Bill Clinton jumped to the front of the pack in 1992 with a commitment to break with liberal orthodoxy, promising to balance the budget and "end welfare as we know it." Obama has praised Ronald Reagan for bringing optimism, dynamism, and a sense of entrepreneurship that changed the "trajectory of America." Likewise, Obama burst on the scene as an inspiring and inclusive leader, one offering a "politics of practicality vs. ideology." A standard applause line was, "It's easy to be against something. It's harder to be for something." Money poured in, and he used it to build a nimble, efficient, and admirably honorable campaign operation (See How Obama Manages).

His critics say that, unlike Reagan or Clinton, there's not much that is daring or innovative in his economic policies. The core of Obama's economic plan is (a) more government spending: $65 billion a year for universal health insurance, $15 billion a year on alternative energy, $20 billion to help homeowners avoid default, $60 billion to bolster the nation's infrastructure, $10 billion annually to give students college tuition in exchange for public service, and on and on; and (b) shifting the tax burden upward: ending the Bush tax cuts on families making more than $250,000 and raising payroll taxes on those same higher-income earners (the latter meant to bolster Social Security without cutting benefits or raising the retirement age). Middle-class earners would receive tax cuts, and low-income seniors would pay no income tax. Combined with a tax rebate as part of this new $50 billion stimulus plan, he argues, putting more money in the hands of middle-class consumers will help them cope with the income squeeze as well as rising energy prices.

Obama also wants to raise a range of other taxes on business and investment. He would increase the 15% capital gains tax rate -- probably to 25%, according to advisors, though he excludes small businesses and new ventures from the tax altogether. He would raise the dividends tax, reinstate a 45% tax on estates worth more than $3.5 million, and close $1.3 trillion in "corporate tax loopholes." The thinking behind those tax hikes comes in part from Goolsbee, a University of Chicago economist who has studied behavioral response to economic policies. Goolsbee believes the Republican argument that lower tax rates -- by spurring investment and productivity -- end up generating more revenue than they lose is overblown. (He notes that Obama wants to go back to the rates of the '90s, when the economy was booming.) Instead, he believes the tax code should be used to ease financial pressures on the middle class.

In mid-February, as the Democratic primary contest between Obama and Clinton moved toward the Rustbelt, the populist rhetoric of both candidates sharpened. Both candidates blamed free trade for factory closings. And in a move that unnerved leaders around the globe and prompted top House Democrats to distance themselves, both Obama and Clinton vowed to opt out of America's most important standing free-trade agreement, NAFTA. The pact linking Mexico, Canada, and the U.S. into a North American free-trade zone was Bill Clinton's signature accomplishment, but NAFTA is also the bugaboo of unions, liberal activists, and plenty of angry Midwesterners looking for a root cause of factory closings.

Obama jumped right into the antitrade waters with Clinton, calling NAFTA "devastating" and "a big mistake" -- even though a 2005 Congressional Research Service study showed the pact had a mild positive effect on the U.S. and Mexican economies. Obama's own advisor, Goolsbee, had argued that America's wage gap was the result of a globalized information economy -- not free trade.

There were signs back then that Obama's view was more conflicted. On Feb. 8, Goolsbee met with the Canadian consul general in Chicago and offered assurances that Obama's rhetoric was "more reflective of political maneuvering than policy," according to a Canadian memo summarizing the meeting and obtained by Fortune. "In fact, he mentioned that going forward the Obama camp was going to be careful to send the appropriate message without coming off as too protectionist."

With the primary contest over, I asked Obama to clarify his remarks on NAFTA. "I think that sometimes during campaigns the rhetoric gets overheated and amplified," he concedes. Did his? "Politicians are always guilty of that, and I don't exempt myself." During a debate before the Texas and Ohio primaries, Obama said, "We should use the hammer of a potential opt-out" to force Canada and Mexico to renegotiate NAFTA. Now, however, he says he doesn't plan to unilaterally reopen NAFTA, that he had just spoken with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper that morning (Harper had called to congratulate him on the nomination), and that "I'm looking forward to a conversation with him. I'm a big believer in opening up a dialogue and figuring out how we can make this work for all people."

Obama also argues that "there are costs to free trade": He notes that under NAFTA, a more efficient and modernized U.S. agricultural industry displaced Mexican farmers, producing more immigrants. We "can't pretend that those costs aren't real. My job as President is to take those into account." Otherwise, he says, it feeds "the protectionist sentiment and the anti-immigration sentiment that is out there in both parties."

The author of Dreams From My Father and The Audacity of Hope is, at root, a storyteller. So he has a narrative on the troubled U.S. economy behind his stump-speech observation: "We did not arrive at the doorstep of our current economic crisis by some accident of history. This was not an inevitable part of the business cycle that was beyond our power to avoid." Today's mortgage-market troubles, according to the Obama camp, are the inevitable result of a middle-class squeeze that President Bush never addressed. "It left people with no margin for error," notes Goolsbee. "The savings rate goes to zero. People start taking money out of their houses. And a powder keg gets lit when a downturn comes." The next potential implosion, he says, is credit card debt, and Obama has proposed a consumer bill of rights that restricts card companies' ability to raise rates and creates a federal credit-card rating system.

At the center of Obama's plan to help ease the middle-class crunch would be a requirement that nearly all businesses provide health insurance or contribute to a government-backed "purchasing pool" that includes private plans and one public plan like Medicare. Since there is no mandate that adults buy insurance (as there was in Clinton's plan), critics note that healthy young people will opt out altogether, making an expensive government program even more costly. (Obama says he will pay for the program by ending the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy.)

While Obama insists that "we don't need more heat, we need more light" in Washington, his plans to increase spending and taxes -- to "make the most fortunate pay more of their fair share," as he puts it -- is certain to generate plenty of heated opposition from business and taxpayer advocates. Already, though, Team Obama is on the prowl for areas of consensus, pointing to growing calls by business leaders for health-care reform, for energy independence, for a more skilled workforce, for investments in the country's physical infrastructure -- roads and bridges and communications networks. Obama argues that American business needs government help to stay competitive in the global economy. He has made believers out of Chicago's business leaders -- now he has four months to persuade the rest of America that it's not just spending he wants, it's investment in the future.

Source: http://management.fortune.cnn.com/2012/11/21/buffett-obama-business/

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Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed (Xbox 360)


Longtime Sega fans believed that the House That Sonic Built simply didn't care about anyone but the Hedgehog once the company exited the hardware business. That sentiment changed (somewhat) with the 2010's Sonic & Sega All-Stars Racing, an enjoyable "kart" title that gathered many of Sega's other game heroes into a driving competition. Its sequel, Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed, expands the roster, with new drivers including NASCAR star Danica Patrick and Disney's Wreck-It Ralph. It also adds tons of unlockables, tracks inspired by Sega games of yore, and (as the title suggests) multi-mode vehicles. It's a fun racer that will bring a smile to the face of old-school fans, though the lack of speed in air and aquatic sections dulls the experience. I reviewed the Xbox 360??version, but the game will appear on numerous platforms, including the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC, PlayStation Vita, and Nintendo Wii U.

Old School Characters and Tracks
Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed features a mix of familiar SEGA faces and those plucked from long-dormant series. Besides the Sonic family (Sonic, Amy Rose, Eggman, Knuckles, Tails) there's also Gilius Thunderhead (Golden Axe), Vyse (Skies of Arcadia), Joe Musashi (Shinobi), Ulala (Space Channel 5), Nights (Nights Into Dreams), and many more. You start with eight characters, but you can unlock more?as well as additional racing environments?as you play.

The two most interesting recent roster additions are auto-racer Danica Patrick (unlockable) and Wreck-It Ralph, the star of Disney's upcoming animated video game flick, who is playable from the start. Each racer has his or her own strengths and weakness. Wreck-It Ralph, for example, has killer speed, but it takes him a bit of time to reach a full head of steam. Earned experience points can be applied to a racer to improve its abilities.?Danica Patrick, though a very solid in-game character, feels shoehorned in; the oter characters are video game stars, so the presence of a flesh-and-blood person is odd.

The environments and tracks pull from SEGA's rich history. One of the most striking is the After Burner-inspired track, which sees gamers race on aircraft carriers, oceans, and in the airspace directly overhead the boats as Kenny Loggins-esque pop-rock grinds in the background.

More Than Meets The Eye
The big change here is transformable vehicles that allow you to dash for the finish line across land, air, and water. Each of the wonderfully designed levels features air and aquatic stretches that demand that you take to the sky and water. Thankfully, you don't have to actively change modes; your vehicle does so automatically when it approaches a body of water. This keeps you focused on driving and not properly timing a mode change.

Transforming vehicles is an interesting concept in theory, but the blazing sense of speed is lost when you leave the land. Air and water travel plods along until you hit one of the boost areas that give you temporary ground-like speed.

Gameplay and Other Features
The racing action is all about jockeying for position, hugging corners for boost, and keeping an eye on incoming attacks (such as ice beams that freeze you in place). When you get friends together in multiplayer contests, Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed turns into heated battles.

All-Star Moves return with a brand-new mechanic that lets your racer's All-Star bar fill faster if you race with flair, such as power sliding around corners. In addition, you can now block or evade weapons fired at you. Sega includes 10-player online multiplayer mode, as well as Grand Prix and Battle Arena modes for competitive action. The PS3 and Xbox 360 versions feature four-player local co-op, but the Wii U will support five courtesy of its innovative GamePad controller.

Racing Transformed
Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed is a racer designed to appeal to hedgehog fans as well as fans of Sega's old school franchises?and it does so for the most part. The air and water levels' slow the game's speedy pace (to its detriment), but arcade racing fans should give it a whirl.

More Video Game Reviews:
??? Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed (Xbox 360)
??? Halo 4 (Xbox 360)
??? Paper Mario: Sticker Star (Nintendo 3DS)
??? Street Fighter X Tekken (PlayStation Vita)
??? Killzone Trilogy (PS3)
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/kXBPshPYrRg/0,2817,2412247,00.asp

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Chevy Chase is leaving NBC's sitcom 'Community'

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The NBC series "Community" will finish the season without Chevy Chase.

Sony Pictures Television said Wednesday that the actor is leaving the sitcom by mutual agreement with producers.

His immediate departure means he won't be included in the last episode or two of the show's 13-episode season, which is still in production.

Chase had a rocky tenure playing a bored and wealthy man who enrolls in community college. The actor publicly expressed unhappiness at working on a sitcom and feuded last year with the show's creator and former executive producer, Dan Harmon.

The fourth-season premiere of "Community" is Feb. 7, when it makes a delayed return to the 8 p.m. EST Thursday time slot. The show's ensemble cast includes Joel McHale and Donald Glover.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chevy-chase-leaving-nbcs-sitcom-community-014156688.html

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Ex-Marcos aide charged in NY with art conspiracy

A photo provided by the United States Attorney?s Office in New York shows an 1899 painting by Impressionist master Claude Monet entitled, ?Le Bassin aux Nymphease,? which is also known as ?Japanese Footbridge Over the Water-Lily Pond at Giverny.? Vilma Bautista, one time secretary to Philippine?s first lady Imelda Marcos, was indicted in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2012, on charges of conspiracy, tax fraud and offering a false instrument for filing for attempting to illegally sell this work and others that disappeared as Ferdinand Marco?s regime collapsed in the late 1980?s. (AP Photo/United States Attorney?s Office)

A photo provided by the United States Attorney?s Office in New York shows an 1899 painting by Impressionist master Claude Monet entitled, ?Le Bassin aux Nymphease,? which is also known as ?Japanese Footbridge Over the Water-Lily Pond at Giverny.? Vilma Bautista, one time secretary to Philippine?s first lady Imelda Marcos, was indicted in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2012, on charges of conspiracy, tax fraud and offering a false instrument for filing for attempting to illegally sell this work and others that disappeared as Ferdinand Marco?s regime collapsed in the late 1980?s. (AP Photo/United States Attorney?s Office)

In this photo provided by the United States Attorney?s Office in New York shows an 1881 painting by Impressionist master Claude Monet entitled ?L?Eglise et La Seine a Vetheuil.? Vilma Bautista, one time secretary to Philippine?s first lady Imelda Marcos, was indicted in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2012, on charges of conspiracy, tax fraud and offering a false instrument for filing for attempting to illegally sell this work and others that disappeared as Ferdinand Marco?s regime collapsed in the late 1980?s. (AP Photo/United States Attorney?s Office)

In this photo provided by the United States Attorney?s Office in New York, shows an 1887 painting by Alfred Sisley entitled ?Langland Bay.? Vilma Bautista, one time secretary to Philippine?s first lady Imelda Marcos, was indicted in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2012, on charges of conspiracy, tax fraud and offering a false instrument for filing for attempting to illegally sell this work and others that disappeared as Ferdinand Marco?s regime collapsed in the late 1980?s. (AP Photo/United States Attorney?s Office)

(AP) ? A former secretary to Imelda Marcos was charged Tuesday in New York with conspiracy to sell valuable artworks that disappeared during the collapse of Marcos' husband's regime in the Philippines.

Vilma Bautista, 74, was indicted on charges of conspiracy, tax fraud and offering a false instrument for filing. Two of her nephews, Chaiyot Jansen Navalaksana and Pongsak Navalaksana, also were charged.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. said Bautista used false paperwork to sell a work from Claude Monet's "Water Lilies" series for $32 million in September 2010.

"The integrity of the international art market must be protected," Vance said in a statement. "This indictment sheds light on what happened to major works of art missing for more than 25 years."

Her attorney, Fran Hoffinger, said Bautista got caught in a civil dispute between the Marcoses and the Philippine government.

"It's a civil dispute," Hoffinger said. "It doesn't belong in criminal court."

According to the indictment, Bautista was a foreign service officer assigned to the Philippine Mission to the United Nations but unofficially served as Imelda Marcos' New York-based personal secretary.

The indictment says that during the presidency of her husband, Ferdinand, Imelda Marcos used state assets to acquire a vast collection of artwork and other valuables. Prosecutors say some of the art ended up in Bautista's possession after the Marcoses were ousted in a citizen revolt in 1986.

According to the indictment, the most valuable work was the 1899 Monet painting that was sold, "Japanese Footbridge Over the Water-Lily Pond at Giverny." There was also another Monet and Alfred Sisley's "Langland Bay" from 1887.

Prosecutors said Bautista and her nephews plotted to sell the paintings and keep the proceeds tax-free.

Bautista pleaded not guilty. Bail was set at $175,000.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-11-20-Marcos%20Staffer-Art%20Conspiracy/id-41b41d24f92948f1aedfab2209899ea7

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