Monday, October 29, 2012

Eastern US braces for dangerous superstorm

NEW YORK (AP) ? From Washington to Boston, big cities and small towns Sunday buttoned up against the onslaught of a superstorm that could endanger 50 million people in the most heavily populated corridor in the nation, with forecasters warning that New York could get slammed by a wall of water.

"The time for preparing and talking is about over," Federal Emergency Management Administrator Craig Fugate said as Hurricane Sandy made its way up the Atlantic on a collision course with two other weather systems that could turn it into one of the most fearsome storms on record in the U.S. "People need to be acting now."

Airlines canceled more than 5,000 flights and Amtrak began suspending train service across the Northeast. New York and Philadelphia moved to shut down their subways, buses and trains Sunday night and announced that schools would be closed on Monday. Boston, Washington and Baltimore also called off school. And non-essential government employees in the nation's capital were told not to report for work in the morning.

As rain from the leading edges of the monster hurricane began to fall over the Northeast, hundreds of thousands of people from Maryland to Connecticut were ordered to evacuate low-lying coastal areas Sunday, including 375,000 in lower Manhattan and other parts of New York City, 50,000 in Delaware and 30,000 in Atlantic City, N.J., where the city's 12 casinos were forced to shut down for only the fourth time ever.

"We were told to get the heck out. I was going to stay, but it's better to be safe than sorry," said Hugh Phillips, who was one of the first in line when a Red Cross shelter in Lewes, Del., opened at noon.

"I think this one's going to do us in," said Mark Palazzolo, who boarded up his bait-and-tackle shop in Point Pleasant Beach, N.J., with the same wood he used in past storms, crossing out the names of Hurricanes Isaac and Irene and spray-painting "Sandy" next to them. "I got a call from a friend of mine from Florida last night who said, 'Mark, get out! If it's not the storm, it'll be the aftermath. People are going to be fighting in the streets over gasoline and food.'"

Authorities warned that the nation's biggest city could get hit with an 11-foot wall of water that could swamp parts of lower Manhattan, flood subway tunnels and cripple the network of electrical and communications lines that are vital to the nation's financial center.

Sandy, a Category 1 hurricane with sustained winds of 75 mph as of Sunday evening, was blamed for 65 deaths in the Caribbean before it began churning up the Eastern Seaboard. As of 5 p.m., it was centered about 530 miles southeast of New York City, moving at 15 mph, with hurricane-force winds extending an incredible 175 miles from its center.

It was expected to hook left toward the mid-Atlantic coast and come ashore late Monday or early Tuesday, most likely in New Jersey, colliding with a wintry storm moving in from the west and cold air streaming down from the Arctic.

Forecasters said the combination could bring close to a foot of rain, a potentially lethal storm surge and punishing winds that could cause widespread power outages that last for days. The storm could also dump up to 2 feet of snow in Kentucky, North Carolina and West Virginia.

Louis Uccellini, environmental prediction chief for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, told The Associated Press that given Sandy's east-to-west track into New Jersey, the worst of the storm surge could be just to the north, in New York City, on Long Island and in northern New Jersey.

Forecasters said that because of giant waves and high tides made worse by a full moon, the metropolitan area of about 20 million people could get hit with an 11-foot wall of water.

"This is the worst-case scenario," Uccellini said.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg warned: "If you don't evacuate, you are not only endangering your life, you are also endangering the lives of the first responders who are going in to rescue you. This is a serious and dangerous storm."

New Jersey's famously blunt Gov. Chris Christie was less polite: "Don't be stupid. Get out."

New York called off school Monday for the city's 1.1 million students and announced it would suspend all train, bus and subway service Sunday night. More than 5 million riders a day depend on the transit system.

The New York Stock Exchange announced it will shut down its trading floor Monday but continue to trade electronically.

Officials also postponed Monday's reopening of the Statue of Liberty, which had been closed for a year for $30 million in renovations.

In Washington, President Barack Obama promised the government would "respond big and respond fast" after the storm hits.

"My message to the governors as well as to the mayors is anything they need, we will be there, and we will cut through red tape. We are not going to get bogged down with a lot of rules," he said.

He also pleaded for neighborliness: "In times like this, one of the things that Americans do is we pull together and we help out one another And so, there may be elderly populations in your area. Check on your neighbor, check on your friend. Make sure that they are prepared. If we do, then we're going to get through this storm just fine."

The storm forced the president and Mitt Romney to rearrange their campaign schedules in the crucial closing days of the presidential race. And early voting on Monday in Maryland was canceled.

Despite the dire warnings, some souls were refusing to budge.

Jonas Clark of Manchester Township, N.J. ? right in the area where Sandy was projected to come ashore ? stood outside a convenience store, calmly sipping a coffee and wondering why people were working themselves "into a tizzy."

"I've seen a lot of major storms in my time, and there's nothing you can do but take reasonable precautions and ride out things the best you can," said Clark, 73. "Nature's going to what it's going to do. It's great that there's so much information out there about what you can do to protect yourself and your home, but it all boils down basically to 'use your common sense.'"

In New Jersey, Denise Faulkner and her boyfriend showed up at the Atlantic City Convention Center with her 7-month-old daughter and two sons, ages 3 and 12, thinking there was a shelter there. She was dismayed to learn that it was just a gathering point for buses to somewhere else. Last year, they were out of their home for two days because of Hurricane Irene.

"I'm real overwhelmed," she said as baby Zahiriah, wrapped in a pink blanket with embroidered elephants, slept in a car seat. "We're at it again. Last year we had to do it. This year we have to do it. And you have to be around all sorts of people ? strangers. It's a bit much."

Before leaving their home in Atlantic City, John and Robshima Williams of packed their kids' Halloween costumes so they could go bunk-to-bunk trick-or-treating at a shelter. Her 8-year-old twins are going as the Grim Reaper and a zombie, while her 6-year-old plans to dress as a witch.

"We're just trying to make a bad situation good," the mother said. "We're going to make it fun no matter where we are."

___

Breed reported from Raleigh, N.C.; Contributing to this report were AP Science Writer Seth Borenstein in Washington; Katie Zezima in Atlantic City, N.J.; Wayne Parry in Point Pleasant Beach, N.J.; and Dave Dishneau in Wilmington, Del.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eastern-us-braces-dangerous-superstorm-202528693.html

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Squirrel Birth Control: To Stop Invasion, Science Gets Seedy

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Monday, October 22, 2012

The 90s strike back! Marvel VS Capcom Origins Review | Video ...

Ever since the console release of Capcom?s Street Fighter 4 in 2009 2d fighters are enjoying a good degree of popularity once again. Trying to ride the success of Marvel VS Capcom 3 and the Marvel Avengers movie, Capcom releases on PSN and XBLA a new collection called Marvel VS Capcom Origins, cointaining two 90s two dimensions fighters: Marvel Super Heroes and the first Marvel VS Capcom.
Do these two games still hold their own after all these years or will Capcom?s collection only attract nostalgics? Let?s find out.

Nostalgia calling

To be completely honest, I can?t really understand why these two games have been choosen for the collection.
The Marvel VS Capcom franchise main feature is the tag team mechanic, where each player chooses 2 or more fighters, can swap them anytime during battle and even unleash some devasting combination attacks; Marvel Super Heroes features the standard 1 vs 1 formula without any tag team option
It?s not like it?s a bad game, but I think including X Men VS Street Fighter or Marvel Super Heroes VS Street Fighter too would have been more appropriate, since they are the first steps of the VS franchise and, nostalgia wise, it would have been a better choice altogether.
And nostalgia definitely is one of the main selling points of this collection and Capcom didn?t even try to hide it!
The Games are identical to their 90s counterparts in every possible way: graphics wise, sound wise and gameplay wise these two games are a trip back in the 90s, when these big detailed sprites dominated arcade cabinets.
To improve the nostalgic feeling of the collection, Capcom added 2 video options, one to simulate old CRT televisions and another to slight distort the image, simulating an old arcade cabinet screen.
These options will probably be fun for a couple minutes and most players will revert to the regular video option after some time.
Gameplay wise, how do the two fighters hold up? Quite frankly, they?re still very fun, despite their shortcomings.

Avengers, Assemble!

As I mentioned before Marvel Super Heroes, the second Capcom fighter featuring Marvel comics heroes, sports a traditonal 1 versus 1 gameplay, where players can unleash special attacks through the usual 2d fighters stick motions and even more devastating attacks called Infinity Combo after charging a special meter bar placed at the bottom of the screen. The fighters roster is quite diverse and feautures many fans? favourites like Captain America, Spiderman, Iron Man, Wolverine, Wolverine and Cyclops and a few villains like Blackheart, Shuma Gorath and Doctor DoomGameplay is enriched by the presence of special gems called Infinity Gems which grant some bonuses for a short amount of time during the fight.Graphics and sound wise we get what we could expect from a 90s 2d fighting game: sprites and backgrounds are nicely detailed and animated and the soundtrack manages to do its job, although some of the tracks sound a bit repetitive.

When two different worlds collide

Marvel VS Capcom: Clash Of The Super Heroes, released in 1998, is a turning point of the franchise: with this game Capcom started to expand the roster way beyond the Street Fighters characters including characters from other Capcom games like Darkstalker, Megaman, Strider and Captain Command. The Marvel roster gets expanded too with the inclusion of Spiderman?s nemesis Venom and a mix of characters already present in Marvel Super Heroes and XMen Vs Street Fighters.
Gameplay wise Capcom refined the tag team formula: players will choose two characters to use in combat and will be able to switch them at will during play. Nice additions are the Duo Team Attacks which allow the player to use both characters at the same time for a brief time with unlimited super moves usage and the Assist Characters which can be summoned for a limited amount of time to assist the player. These characters aren?t normaly usable so it feels like each time is composed by 3 characters, a prelude to the future evolution of the series.
Graphics wise we?re not too far from the other game in the collection except for a bit more details in both characters and backgrounds. The same can be said about soundtrack: it does its job well but there?s hardly anything memorable.

Now it?s time to take them on!

The only modern touch in the collection is, obviuosly, the online multiplayer mode. The online infrastructure is really well done: I experienced very little lag playing with people all over Europe and even when playing with someone far I didn?t experience too many problems.
The main issue with playing online comes from some unbalancing problems of the games: people playing online will try to win at any cost, so you?ll probably costantly fight the powered up versions of Hulk, Iron Man and Venom.
Not being technical fighters, the charm of these games lies in the easy to pick up and play nature and the unbalanced roster but with competitive play this may become an issue.
Final Verdict

I used to play these games when they were released and I had fun playing them again, probably as much as I did back then thanks to online play; nostalgia has probably a lot to do with this.
Players who never played these games in the past are probably better off looking elsewhere since some others 2d fighters are more refinite with more modern and compelling mechanics. Nostalgics like myself are probably going to really enjoying themselves, remembering those times where reading ? Insert Coins? on the arcade cabinets screens made them full of excitement!

The game is available on both PSN (12,99 euros) and XBox Live Arcade (1200 Microsoft points)

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Article from Gamersyndrome.com

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  5. Capcom profits tank 90%

Source: http://gamersyndrome.com/2012/video-games/the-90s-strike-back-marvel-vs-capcom-origins-review/

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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Why you should vote for Gary Johnson : NinerOnline

With the presidential election less than a month away on Nov. 6, we are sure to see more campaign ads and bumper stickers as the big day approaches.

Millions of voters will watch the debates, many of them undecided, looking for a candidate that they can stand behind.? Of course there are two big names in the race that we have heard over and over throughout their campaigns: Mitt Romney and Barack Obama.

But there is a third candidate that will be on the ballot in 47 states, with just as much experience and credibility as either of the two main candidates, Libertarian Party Presidential candidate Gary Johnson.

Johnson was the governor of New Mexico from 1995 to 2003 as a member of the Republican Party. In 1994 he defeated Democratic Governor Bruce King by 50 to 40 percent in a state that was two to one democratic.

His campaign slogan was ?People before Politics,? and as governor he followed a strict small government approach.? During his first term he vetoed 200 bills and proposed a wide range of tax cuts on prescription drugs, income tax and gasoline.

During Johnson?s second term, he became one of the highest ranking elected officials in the country to support the decriminalization of marijuana use.? He called the war on drugs, ?an expensive bust,? and compared it to the nation?s failed attempt at alcohol prohibition.

He suggested that instead of being treated as a criminal issue, drug abuse should be treated as a health issue.? He left New Mexico with a one billion dollar budget surplus and the size of state government substantially reduced.

In April 2011, Johnson announced via Twitter, ?I am running for president.?? He participated in several of the Republican presidential debates, but due to his inability to gain any traction within the party, he withdrew his candidacy for the Republican nomination on Dec. 28, 2011 and declared his candidacy for the Libertarian nomination.

On May 5, 2012, he received the Libertarian Party?s official nomination for President of the United States.? Johnson?s platform is built around fiscally conservative, socially tolerant views and a philosophy of limited government.

Johnson pledged to cut the military budget by 43 percent in his first term as president, bring our troops home from the Middle East and refocus foreign policy toward the protection of US citizens and interests.

Johnson also wants to cut spending by revising the terms of programs such as Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.? Along with cutting spending, Johnson wants to cut taxes by abolishing the IRS and enacting the Fair Tax system, which would increase tax on the purchase of goods and eliminate income tax.

Johnson also strongly opposes the censorship and regulation of the Internet and the Patriot Act, while promising to protect the Second Amendment as a constitutional individual right.

Along with being an experienced politician, Johnson is a fitness enthusiast who has competed in three Ironman competitions, several triathlons, marathons and bike races. He is also a world-class mountain climber and reached the Summit of Mount Everest in May 2003.? He has also climbed Mount Elbrus, Mount McKinley and Mount Kilimanjaro; the tallest mountains in Europe, North America and Africa.

You can learn more about Johnson?s campaign and political platform at his website www.garyjohnson2012.com.

Tags: 2012 election, 49ers, Gary Johnson, Libertarian, Libertarian Party Presidential Candidate, New Mexico, Niner Times, presidential candidate, UNC Charlotte, uncc

Category: Niner Times, Opinion

Source: http://nineronline.com/2012/get-to-know-gary-johnson/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=get-to-know-gary-johnson

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Sleuthing casts doubt on 'Gospel of Jesus' Wife'

A copied error from an online translation of the Gospel of Thomas may be the "smoking gun" that strongly suggests the Gospel of Jesus' Wife, a controversial papyrus fragment that supposedly refers to Jesus being married, is a forgery, scholars say. If the text is fake, it would represent an extraordinary tale of how an amateur with no knowledge of a long-dead language could fool some of the world's leading experts by using a readily available Internet tool ? and how scholars countered by rallying online to swiftly investigate the case together.

The business card-size fragment of papyrus stirred up worldwide controversy with a line of text that reads "Jesus said to them, 'My wife ?'" Many skeptical scholars suggested the document was a forgery in the weeks following the announcement of the discovery by Harvard historian Karen King ? and their early suspicions have evolved into solid theories and findings as they talked through Facebook posts, blogs and e-lists.

Related ? Cosmic Log: Reality check on Jesus and his 'wife'

One of the most compelling arguments for the fragment being a forgery has emerged from Andrew Bernhard, an Oxford University graduate and author of the book "Other Early Christian Gospels" (T & T Clark, 2006). He published an online paper last week pointing out a pattern of similarities between the Gospel of Jesus' Wife and the Coptic Gospel of Thomas ? similarities that include grammatical errors and line breaks found only in the online word-by-word translation of the Gospel of Thomas.

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"It's remarkable that a forger could have forged something like this using a simple tool on the Internet," Bernhard said. "It's equally stunning how quickly scholars could respond and analyze the text."

The smoking gun
All the grammatical anomalies in the Gospel of Jesus' Wife suggest the writer was not a native speaker or even an academic expert in Coptic ? the ancient, dead language of early Christians living in Egypt. Instead, Bernhard says that the pattern of errors and suspiciously similar line breaks suggests an amateur might have forged the "patchwork" text using individual words and phrases taken from Michael Grondin's Interlinear Coptic-English Translation of the Gospel of Thomas. [ Most European Languages Unlikely to Survive Online ]

"There's this general pattern in that everywhere the Gospel of Jesus' Wife could diverge from gospel of Thomas, it doesn't, and in places where it does [diverge], it appears it's following Mike's Interlinear," Bernhard told TechNewsDaily.

One the most suspicious grammatical errors in the Gospel of Jesus' Wife appeared to be a direct copy of a typo in the PDF file version of the Interlinear translation ? a connection that Grondin himself made when he was examining his translation. He shared that knowledge with Mark Goodacre, an associate professor of New Testament at Duke University, who had been writing up a blog post independently about the possibility of the " Jesus' Wife fragment " being a forgery.

Goodacre and Bernhard eventually got in touch and agreed to coordinate the online publishing of their respective blog post and paper. Goodacre credits Bernhard with first making the connection between the Gospel of Jesus' Wife and the online version of the Gospel of Thomas.

"I would have already put money on this thing being problematic, given the links between the fragment and the Coptic Gospel of Thomas," Goodacre explained. "But the link with the online Interlinear version of the Gospel of Thomas really makes, for me, the case of authenticity a very difficult one."

Internet peer review
Both Goodacre and Bernhard cautioned that any final proof of a forgery must come from Harvard University's chemistry tests of the fragment's ink and paper. But if the Gospel of Jesus' Wife is indeed a forgery, the scholars told TechNewsDaily that it would represent an eye-opening, first-time case where an amateur pulled off such a stunt ? with more than a little help from the online Internet translation.

"They were able to mimic the word usage and grammar of Coptic convincingly enough so that I think a lot of people could have been fooled, including some of the most capable scholars in the world," Bernhard said. "It's a strange scenario in a strange new world where an amateur can fool the highest levels of academic knowledge."

The availability of the online translation of the Gospel of Thomas may have provided the unwitting tool for an amateur to fool the experts. But the Internet also allowed scholars from many different fields to combine forces and focus their collective attention on examining the Gospel of Jesus' Wife as soon as the news broke.

"Some people are experts in Coptic language, some people who are experts in the literary relationship among ancient texts," Goodacre said. "It's a combination of different voices talking to one another ? things just move a little bit more quickly now than 30 or 40 years ago."

Similarly, Bernhard confessed to being amazed by how quickly scholars had mobilized online to analyze the Gospel of Jesus' wife. He wondered how anyone would have gathered all the Coptic experts in the world to do something similar just 20 years ago.

"To write this paper, I had to go through e-lists, Facebook posts, blogs, online articles ? there was something like instantaneous international peer review," Bernhard said. "It's clearly a new world of scholarship."

You can follow TechNewsDaily Senior Writer Jeremy Hsu on Twitter @jeremyhsu. Follow TechNewsDaily on Twitter @TechNewsDaily , or on Facebook.

? 2012 TechNewsDaily

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49440019/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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On-Ramps into Academia Position Listings: University of Maryland ...

INSTITUTION: University of Maryland Baltimore County

DEPARTMENT: Biological Sciences

POSITION: Assistant Professor

LINK: http://www.umbc.edu/biosci

NOTES:

Posting Date: October 9, 2012

Closing Date: November 15, 2012

Position Title: Assistant Professors, tenured or tenure-track

Faculty or Department: Eukaryotic cell biology

?The Department of Biological Sciences at UMBC invites applications for a tenure-track
Assistant Professor position in eukaryotic cell biology, especially as it relates to neurobiology, to complement existing departmental strengths in neuroscience and cell and developmental biology, and to interact with faculty whose interests range from genomics and molecular genetics to ecology, evolution, and behavior. The successful applicant will have a Ph.D. in a relevant field of biological sciences, post-doctoral
experience and a strong publication record and is expected to establish a vigorous, externally funded research program, supervise doctoral-level graduate students, and teach at the undergraduate and graduate levels.

Applicants should submit a cover letter, curriculum vitae, summary of current research
and future plans, and a statement of teaching interests and philosophy to
biosearch@umbc.edu in a single PDF in the above order. The applicant should also
arrange to have three letters of reference in PDF format, sent to biosearch@umbc.edu.

For full consideration, applications should be submitted by November 15, 2012 but will
be accepted until the position is filled.

UMBC is a medium-sized research university in the Baltimore-Washington D.C. area,
whose combined excellence in research and outstanding educational programs have
earned recognition by US News and World Report as the "#1 Up-and-Coming National
University? for four years running. For information about the Department of Biological
Sciences and its graduate programs, visit http://www.umbc.edu/biosci/.

The University of Maryland Baltimore County is an Equal Opportunity Employer/Affirmative
Action. UMBC values gender, ethnic, and racial diversity; women, members of ethnic minority
groups, and individuals with disabilities are strongly encouraged to apply. UMBC is the
recipient of an NSF ADVANCE Institutional Transformation Award to increase the
participation of women in academic careers.

Source: http://on-ramps.blogspot.com/2012/10/university-of-maryland-baltimore-county.html

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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Beyonce set for Super Bowl halftime show

FILE - This May 7, 2012 file photo shows Beyonce Knowles at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute gala benefit, celebrating Elsa Schiaparelli and Miuccia Prada in New York. A source familiar with Super Bowl XLVII told The Associated Press that the Grammy-winning diva will take the stage at the Pepsi NFL Halftime Show on Feb. 3, 2013 at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans, La. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini, file)

FILE - This May 7, 2012 file photo shows Beyonce Knowles at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute gala benefit, celebrating Elsa Schiaparelli and Miuccia Prada in New York. A source familiar with Super Bowl XLVII told The Associated Press that the Grammy-winning diva will take the stage at the Pepsi NFL Halftime Show on Feb. 3, 2013 at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans, La. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini, file)

FILE - This May 7, 2012 file photo shows Beyonce Knowles at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute gala benefit, celebrating Elsa Schiaparelli and Miuccia Prada in New York. A source familiar with Super Bowl XLVII told The Associated Press that the Grammy-winning diva will take the stage at the Pepsi NFL Halftime Show on Feb. 3, 2013 at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans, La. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini, file)

(AP) ? All the single ladies will be watching the upcoming Super Bowl along with football lovers ? that's because Beyonce is the halftime show performer.

NFL confirmed the news Tuesday afternoon after Beyonce posted a photo of herself sporting eye black, where "Feb. 3" is written on one and "2013" on the other, on her Tumblr page. The Super Bowl is set for Feb. 3, 2013 at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans.

Beyonce, whose pop and R&B hits include "Crazy in Love," ''Irreplaceable" and "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)," has won 16 Grammy Awards. The 31-year-old sang the national anthem at the 2004 Super Bowl in her hometown of Houston when the New England Patriots defeated the Carolina Panthers.

Madonna performed at halftime at this year's Super Bowl in February with guests CeeLo Green, Nicki Minaj, LMFAO and M.I.A. The New York Giants beat the New England Patriots in a thrilling rematch of the contest four years earlier. Her performance was seen by 114 million people, a higher average than the game itself, which was seen by an estimated 111.3 million people, according to the Nielsen Co.

If Beyonce's performance at the Pepsi NFL Halftime Show features collaborations, it could likely include husband-rapper Jay-Z and her Destiny's Child bandmates Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams.

New Orleans last hosted a Super Bowl in 2002, making next year's game the first NFL championship in the city since Hurricane Katrina devastated parts of the Louisiana Superdome in 2005. Pepsi is returning as the sponsor for the halftime show since doing so in 2007 when Prince performed.

___

Online:

Beyonce's post: http://iam.beyonce.com/post/33722329185

___

Follow Mesfin Fekadu on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/musicmesfin

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-10-16-Music-Super%20Bowl-Beyonce/id-1ff939b156694d29bf8d631af8e7f402

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Science-Based Medicine ? Mortality and lack of health insurance

The 2012 election campaign is in full swing, and, for better or worse, health care is one of the major defining issues of the election. How can it not be, given the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), also colloquially known as ?Obamacare,? was one of the Obama administration?s major accomplishments and arguably the largest remaking of the American health care system since Medicare in 1965? It?s also been singularly unpopular thus far, contributing to the Republican takeover of the House of Representatives in the 2010 elections, as well as the erosion of Democratic control of the Senate. Given that this is a medical blog dedicated to discussing the scientific basis of medicine and not a political or health policy blog, I am not going to go into the reasons for a lot of this. What I am going discuss is a recent eruption of the central problem that led President Obama to make the PPACA one of the central policy initiatives, if not the central policy initiative, of his first term. That problem is the issue of people without health insurance, who number roughly 50 million, with a further estimate that 86.7 million people were uninsured at some point during the two year period from 2007 to 2008, representing about 29% of the total U.S. population under 65.

The question that bubbled to the surface last week in the form of a statement by Republican challenger Mitt Romney, and a tear-inducing op-ed piece published yesterday in the New York Times by Nicholas Kristof entitled A Possibly Fatal Mistake, is what the health impact of not having insurance is for those millions of people. This is a question that can be addressed scientifically and is, despite its politically charged nature, correctly within the purview of science-based medicine. What to do about it, in contrast, is a matter for politics and public policy. So first let?s examine the question.

A clueless statement and an op-ed that puts a face on the problem

Before we discuss the evidence regarding the health effects of being uninsured, let?s look Romney?s statement and why it resulted in so much blowback. Romney made his assertion during an interview with the editors of The Columbus Dispatch:

?We don?t have a setting across this country where if you don?t have insurance, we just say to you, ?Tough luck, you?re going to die when you have your heart attack,?? he said as he offered more hints as to what he would put in place of ?Obamacare,? which he has pledged to repeal.

?No, you go to the hospital, you get treated, you get care, and it?s paid for, either by charity, the government or by the hospital. We don?t have people that become ill, who die in their apartment because they don?t have insurance.?

He pointed out that federal law requires hospitals to treat those without health insurance ? although hospital officials frequently say that drives up health-care costs.

Romney was referring to the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA), a federal law passed in 1986 under the Reagan administration that requires hospitals to provide care to anyone needing emergency treatment regardless of citizenship, legal status, or ability to pay. Hospitals may only transfer or discharge patients requiring emergency care after stabilization, when their condition requires transfer to a tertiary care hospital, or against medical advice. It is highly unlikely that any person who has ever worked in an emergency room or cared for the uninsured would make such a statement. Emergency rooms are not equipped to treat complex conditions; all they can do is to treat the acute problem. In addition, tertiary care hospitals receive a lot of patients admitted under EMTALA, who are transferred at the drop of a hat. Well do I remember my days as a surgery resident rotating in the county hospital, when we used to joke about the Friday afternoon phone calls to transfer patients who had failed a wallet biopsy. We even knew what time was the ?witching hour,? when we were most likely to get such calls. Of course, the problem with EMTALA was (and is) that there were no provisions for reimbursement for uncompensated care. Basically, hospitals were forced by law to eat the costs of caring for the uninsured.

Since completing fellowship, I have held faculty positions in two of the 41 NCI-designated comprehensive cancer centers in the U.S., both of which take care of a lot of uninsured patients. In New Jersey, I used to take care of quite a few illegal immigrants. Here in Detroit, it?s the uninsured and the poor, so much so that a large fraction of my practice is made up of the uninsured and Medicaid patients. I?ve seen more women than I can remember who waited far longer than they should have to see a doctor for their breast cancer because they couldn?t afford it. Over the years, all too often my patients have been symptomatic for quite some time, and when they finally do present their tumors are larger, more difficult to treat, and more likely to kill them. They represent the female equivalent of Kristof?s uninsured friend Scott, who is the human face of the issue discussed in his NYT op-ed and tells his story:

In 2011 I began having greater difficulty peeing. I didn?t go see the doctor because that would have been several hundred dollars out of pocket ? just enough disincentive to get me to make a bad decision.

Early this year, I began seeing blood in my urine, and then I got scared. I Googled ?blood in urine? and turned up several possible explanations. I remember sitting at my computer and thinking, ?Well, I can afford the cost of an infection, but cancer would probably bust my bank and take everything in my I.R.A. So I?m just going to bet on this being an infection.?

I was extremely busy at work since it was peak tax season, so I figured I?d go after April 15. Then I developed a 102-degree fever and went to one of those urgent care clinics in a strip mall. (I didn?t have a regular physician and hadn?t been getting annual physicals.)

The doctor there gave me a diagnosis of prostate infection and prescribed antibiotics. That seemed to help, but by April 15 it seemed to be getting worse again. On May 3 I saw a urologist, and he drew blood for tests, but the results weren?t back yet that weekend when my health degenerated rapidly.

A friend took me to the Swedish Medical Center Emergency Room near my home. Doctors ran blood labs immediately. A normal P.S.A. test for prostate cancer is below 4, and mine was 1,100. They also did a CT scan, which turned up possible signs of cancerous bone lesions. Prostate cancer likes to spread to bones.

I also had a blood disorder called disseminated intravascular coagulation, which is sometimes brought on by prostate cancer. It basically causes you to destroy your own blood cells, and it?s abbreviated as D.I.C. Medical students joke that it stands for ?death is close.?

I realize that right now I?m referring to my anecdotal experience. However, one anecdote is that of a man who gambled and lost because health insurance was too expensive. The rest is my experience in a highly specialized field in a city with high unemployment and poverty. It is quite possible that such experience can be misleading, and certainly one of the key messages we promote on this blog is that anecdotal experience is inherently potentially misleading. (That?s why it?s the primary evidence used by promoters of unscientific or pseudoscientific medicine.) In a way, Kristof?s friend?s story would seem to confirm Romney?s statement, at least on the surface. Scott did, after all, end up getting excellent medical care for his stage IV prostate cancer, and, although he probably could have afforded health insurance if he had stretched a bit, did make a choice not to purchase insurance. But, then, as I said, anecdotes can be misleading.

The evidence

Before we get into the data itself, it is not much of a stretch to imagine that not having health insurance would result in worse health outcomes. What I am trying to say using SBM-speak is that the hypothesis that people without health insurance will be more likely to have health problems and die unnecessarily than people who have decent health insurance is a hypothesis with a fairly high degree of prior plausibility. After all, if you?re uninsured, you?re less likely to see a physician except when you get sick, less likely to be able to pay for your medications (particularly if they are expensive), and less likely to undergo routine preventative care. It?s thus plausible that being uninsured would be associated with an increased risk of death or poor health outcomes. None of this means we don?t have to do the research and look at the evidence; all it does is to suggest hypotheses to test and emphasize that these hypotheses have a reasonable chance of being consistent with the data.

Even twenty years ago, this question was of intense interest. One of the seminal studies examining the relationship between health insurance and health outcomes was published in JAMA by Franks et al., who prospectively followed 4,694 adults older than 25 years who reported they were uninsured or privately insured in the first National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES I), a representative cohort of the US population from initial interview in 1971 through 1975 until 1987. They found a 25% higher risk of mortality in the uninsured after adjusting for age, smoking, alcohol consumption, obesity, education and income. This effect was evident in all sociodemographic health insurance and mortality groups examined.

In 2002, the Institute of Medicine estimated that over 18,000 Americans between the ages of 25-64 die annually because of lack of health insurance, a number comparable to the number who died of diabetes, stroke, or homicide in 2001. Among the conclusions of this report:

  • Uninsured adults are less likely than adults with any kind of health coverage to receive preventive and screening services and to receive them on a timely basis. Health insurance that provides coverage of preventive and screening services is likely to result in greater and more appropriate use of these services.
  • Uninsured cancer patients generally are in poorer health and are more likely to die prematurely than persons with insurance, largely because of delayed diagnosis. This finding is supported by population-based studies of persons with breast, cervical, colorectal, and prostate cancer and melanoma.
  • Uninsured adults with diabetes are less likely to receive recommended services. Lacking health insurance for longer periods increases the risk of inadequate care for this condition and can lead to uncontrolled blood sugar levels, which, over time, put diabetics at risk for additional chronic disease and disability.
  • Uninsured adults with hypertension or high blood cholesterol have diminished access to care, are less likely to be screened, are less likely to take prescription medication if diagnosed, and experience worse health outcomes.
  • Uninsured patients with end-stage renal disease begin dialysis with more severe disease than do those who had insurance before beginning dialysis.
  • Uninsured adults with HIV infection are less likely to receive highly effective medications that have been shown to improve survival and die sooner than those with coverage.
  • Uninsured patients who are hospitalized for a range of conditions are more likely to die in the hospital, to receive fewer services when admitted, and to experience substandard care and resultant injury than are insured patients.
  • Uninsured persons with trauma are less likely to be admitted to the hospital, more likely to receive fewer services when admitted, and are more likely to die than are insured trauma victims.
  • Uninsured patients with acute cardiovascular disease are less likely to be admitted to a hospital that performs angiography or revascularization procedures, are less likely to receive these diagnostic and treatment procedures, and are more likely to die in the short term.

In 2008, the Urban Institute updated the IOM numbers by applying the methodology used by the IOM to more recent Census Bureau estimates of the uninsured, and estimated that in 2006 there were 22,000 excess deaths that could be attributed to lack of health insurance. The Urban Institute also suggested that the IOM analysis might have underestimated the number of deaths resulting from being uninsured. Its rationale was as follows:

The underlying longitudinal studies on which IOM relied did not specify the impact of insurance coverage on mortality by 10-year age groups. Rather, they documented the relationship between insurance and mortality across the sum total of all surveyed age groups. The IOM?s methodology implicitly assumed that insurance reduces mortality by the identical percentage for each 10-year age band, which the underlying research did not show. More grounded in the research would be an application of differential mortality estimates to all adults age 25?64, as was done for those longitudinal studies, rather than separately to each age group within this range. For 2000?06, this alternative approach raises the estimated number of excess deaths by an average of 20.5 percent a year.

In 2009, in a study from Harvard Medical School and the Cambridge Health Alliance, Wilper et al. published updated estimate of excess mortality associated with lack of insurance in the American Journal of Public Health. This analysis used methodology similar to that of Franks et al. applied to the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III), specifically 9,004 patients between ages 17 and 64 with complete baseline data for interview and physical examination. They found that the hazard ratio for death for the uninsured was 1.40 (confidence interval 1.06 to 1.84) compared to those with private health insurance. This particular study is the source of a rather famous number: 45,000 patients die due to lack of insurance each year. This particular study is at the high end of the estimates of excess deaths associated with lack of health insurance, which is why it not surprisingly often comes in for the most criticism, particularly given that it was supported by a partisan group, Physicians for a National Health Program. That?s why I tend to view this study as an outlier, but even outliers can sometimes tell us something. Whether the Harvard study was an outlier or not, that same year, the IOM updated its 2002 report. One of its conclusions was:

In contrast, the body of evidence on the effects of uninsurance on adults? health has strengthened considerably since 2002. Numerous studies have addressed some of the methodological shortcomings of past research. As discussed further below, 17 observational and 13 quasi-experimental rigorous analyses have reported significant findings related to health insurance and adults? health (Table 3-3) (McWilliams, 2008). The quality and consistency of the recent research findings is striking. As would be expected, health insurance is clearly most beneficial for adults who need medical attention, particularly for adults with common chronic conditions or acute conditions for which effective treatments are available. Furthermore, national studies assessing the effects of near-universal Medicare coverage after age 65 suggest that uninsured near-elderly adults who are acutely or chronically ill substantially benefit from gaining health insurance coverage.

There are 13 recent studies on the health effects of health insurance coverage for children, including 5 studies that used quasi-experimental methods (Aizer, 2007; Bermudez and Baker, 2005; Cousineau et al., 2008; Currie et al., 2008; Howell et al., 2008a). These studies suggest that health insurance is beneficial for children in several ways, resulting in more timely diagnosis of serious health conditions, fewer avoidable hospitalizations, better asthma outcomes, and fewer missed school days (Aizer, 2007; Bermudez and Baker, 2005; Cousineau et al., 2008; Currie et al., 2008; Damiano et al., 2003; Fox et al., 2003; Froehlich et al., 2007; Howell and Trenholm, 2007; Howell et al., 2008a,b; Maniatis et al., 2005; Szilagyi et al., 2004, 2006).

But that?s not all. Since it?s my specialty, I?ll start by looking at some of the evidence regarding the outcomes of breast cancer patients who are uninsured compared to those who have health insurance. For example, a study published this year examining the outcomes of 2,157 hospital admissions for women with spinal metastases from breast cancer. Analyses were adjusted for differences in patient age, gender, primary tumor histology, socioeconomic status, hospital bed size, and hospital teaching status. The investigators found that women operated on for spinal metastases from breast cancer tended to do worse and have a higher risk of death if they were uninsured than if they had private insurance. The authors concluded that the poorer outcomes observed among the uninsured were primarily due to the uninsured patients being significantly more likely to have a nonelective hospital admission and present with myelopathy. Although this study had some limitations, namely that it couldn?t account for lesser quality private insurance (for instance, plans with high copays and/or poorer coverage) and variations in Medicaid eligibility by state. Also, the database used only includes in-hospital data and therefore couldn?t examine long-term outcomes.

Since surgery is also my specialty, I thought I?d also point out that there is considerable evidence that being uninsured or underinsured is associated with worse outcomes after surgery. For example, a recent study published in the Annals of Surgery from LePar et al. at the University of Virginia examined outcomes from 893,658 major surgical operations and found that mortality was considerably worse in Medicare, Medicaid, and the uninsured than they were in patients with private insurance. Adjusting for age, gender, income, geographic region, operation, and 30 comorbid conditions eliminated the outcome disparity for Medicare patients, but Medicaid and uninsured payer status still independently conferred the highest adjusted risks of mortality.

In fact, the list of conditions and procedures for which being uninsured is associated with poorer outcomes and higher mortality goes on and on: cardiac valve surgery, surgery for colorectal cancer, breast cancer treatment and outcomes, trauma mortality (including among children), and abdominal aortic aneurysms, to name a few. Moreover, analysis of survey data from patients who were uninsured but then became old enough to be enrolled in Medicare suggests that ?acquisition of Medicare coverage was associated with improved trends in self-reported health for previously uninsured adults, particularly those with cardiovascular disease or diabetes.? In summary, there is a large and robust body of evidence suggesting that people do, in fact, die because of lack of health insurance.

Not so fast?

Of course, for a question as complex and prone to confounders as whether lack of health insurance is associated with poorer outcomes, including mortality, there are always those who are not convinced by existing observational data. Certainly, lack of health insurance can be a marker, not a cause, for poor health and subsequent poor outcomes, and teasing out the various confounding factors is not a trivial task. Perhaps the most widely cited study questioning this relationship was featured prominently in an oft-cited article in the lay press by Megan McArdle in The Atlantic entitled Myth diagnosis. It?s a study by Richard Kronick published in Health Services Research in 2009 that questions the IOM report from 2002:

These results demonstrate that if two people are otherwise similar at baseline on characteristics controlled for in the model presented in Table 3, but one is insured and the other uninsured, their likelihood of survival over a 2?16-year follow-up period is nearly identical. Further, I show that survival probabilities for the insured and uninsured are similar even among disadvantaged subsets of the population; that there are no differences for long-term uninsured compared with short-term uninsured; that the results are no different when the length of the follow-up period is shortened; and that there are no differences when causes of death are restricted to those causes thought to be amenable to the quality of health care.

Basically, Kronick found no relationships between insurance status and mortality. While this study was large (600,000 subjects) and controlled, it is also an outlier, just as much as the Harvard study is an outlier. Again, that doesn?t mean it was a bad study; outliers can often tell us something, and what Kronick seems to be telling us is that the magnitude of the effect on mortality associated with lack of insurance might not be as large as previously thought. Might. It is, remember, just one study, as large as it might be. McArdle might refer to Kronick?s study as ?what may be the largest and most comprehensive analysis yet done of the effect of insurance on mortality,? which sounds incredibly impressive, but the simple fact is that no single study can provide the answer, particularly to question as complex as whether having no health insurance status is associated with increased mortality and poor outcomes. Kronick?s study also has a significant problem that was pointed out in this post by Ezra Klein, namely that people in poor health are more likely to seek health insurance, which would tend to obscure any positive relationship between health insurance and health status.

McArdle also makes another argument against such a relationship:

This result is not, perhaps, as shocking as it seems. Health care heals, but it also kills. Someone who lacked insurance over the past few decades might have missed taking their Lipitor, but also their Vioxx or Fen-Phen. According to one estimate, 80,000 people a year are killed just by ?nosocomial infections??infections that arise as a result of medical treatment. The only truly experimental study on health insurance, a randomized study of almost 4,000 subjects done by Rand and concluded in 1982, found that increasing the generosity of people?s health insurance caused them to use more health care, but made almost no difference in their health status.

I hate to say it, but McArdle is drifting rather close to Gary Null territory here, in which she seems to be arguing that whatever benefit having decent health insurance might convey, it?s about the same as the harm that ?conventional? medicine does. In other words, her argument seems to be that providing people more access to health care will cause as much harm as benefit, making it a wash whether one is insured or not. Of course, that argument cuts both ways, if you accept estimates of over 100,000 ?deaths by medicine? per year in that it would imply that having health insurance confers a benefit in terms of mortality reduction that is much larger than the numbers we have would suggest, making the imperative to improve health care coverage and decrease medical errors a much more reasonable conclusion from such an argument than concluding that striving for universal coverage would not reduce mortality. Be that as it may, more problematic is that like many proponents of dubious medicine and science, McArdle cherry picked the literature, choosing one study that is an outlier and a thirty year old study from the RAND Corporation that showed what she wanted and in essence dismissed the rest. In refuting McArdle, by J. Michael McWilliams, MD, PhD, Assistant Professor of Health Care Policy and Medicine at Harvard Medical School and an associate physician in the Division of General Medicine at Brigham and Women?s Hospital points this out and speculates:

How many lives would universal coverage save each year? A rigorous body of research tells us the answer is many, probably thousands if not tens of thousands. Short of the perfect study, however, we will never know the exact number.

Indeed.

Policy implications

The very term ?science-based medicine? was chosen intentionally. Medicine itself is not a science. It can?t be. There are too many other factors that influence treatments, including patient preference, resource allocation, and level of skill of individual practitioners, to name just a few. Our central thesis is that medicine should be based on science and that the best health care is based on science. My purpose in writing this post was not to advocate for any specific solution to the problem of the uninsured, although people who know me know my politics and my position on the matter. Rather, it is to lay out the science studying the question of the relationship between health insurance status and health outcomes. While we do frequently say that correlation does not necessarily equal causation, in some cases the correlation is so tight that it strongly suggests causation. This is one such case. Given that there is no ethical way ever to do a randomized clinical trial in which people are randomly assigned to be insured or uninsured, much as is the case for examining health outcomes between vaccinated and unvaccinated children, we are forced to rely on observational and quasi-experimental data. Those data support the hypothesis that providing health insurance to as many people as possible is associated with better health outcomes and that lack of insurance is associated with poorer health outcomes. That is the science. When someone like Mitt Romney claims that no one ever dies from lack of insurance in the U.S., he is demonstrably wrong.

What we as a society decide do with the results of the science examining this question is less a matter of science than it is of politics and policy.

Source: http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/index.php/health-insurance-and-mortality/

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Fohnhouse.com | Movies, TV, Art & Entertainment: 56th LFF: Rouille ...

Fohnhouse.com | Movies, TV, Art & Entertainment: 56th LFF: Rouille et d'Os (Rust and Bone)

56th LFF: Rouille et d'Os (Rust and Bone)

Premiering at the 56th BFI London Film Festival on Saturday night, Jacques Audiard?s latest oeuvre tells the tale of a struggling single father (Matthias Schoenaerts) who helps a young girl (Marion Cotillard) regain her strength after a life-changing accident. De Rouille et d?Os is an arresting, powerful and beautifully crafted love story that highlights the vast talents of the two lead actors, and we thoroughly recommend everyone goes out and sees it when it hits our screens on 2nd November. In the meantime you can check out the trailer above.

FG

Source: http://fohnhouse.blogspot.com/2012/10/56th-lff-rouille-et-dos-rust-and-bone.html

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Monday, October 15, 2012

Inflation slows in China

China Flag
China Flag
HONG KONG (CNNMoney) ?

Chinese consumers paid 1.9% more for goods in September than they did a year ago, the government's National Bureau of Statistics reported Monday. That's down from a 2% increase in August.

Food prices, which account for more than a third of the inflation calculation, rose 2.5% during the month.

Household finances in China are especially susceptible to fluctuations in food prices, as many poor families spend large percentages of their income on food.

Still, inflation remains at very low levels. As recently as one year ago, China's consumer price index stood above 6% -- well north of the government's stated inflation rate target of 4%.

In July, officials said that annual economic growth dropped to 7.6% in the second quarter -- down from 8.1% the previous quarter. The government will issue its third quarter GDP report later this week, and economists expect growth to remain well below 8%.

Some analysts have recently lowered their growth forecasts for the rest of the year, while some noted that weakness is likely to extend into 2013.

The People's Bank of China twice lowered interest rates this year in an effort to spur growth, and the central bank has also cut the amount of money banks are required to hold in reserves.

The government confirmed more action last month, finalizing the details on a $157.7 billion investment in 55 new infrastructure products.

China's once-in-a-decade leadership transition is scheduled to start Nov. 8. The timing of the event, which will reshape the ranks of China's Communist Party, could put any policy changes on hold.

Economists at UBS said Monday that further action is unlikely after a round of positive trade data that has eased concerns.

Source: http://www.wxii12.com/news/project-economy/Inflation-slows-in-China/-/9677572/16986514/-/152nb7dz/-/index.html?absolute=true

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So, Does the New Ford Fusion / Mondeo's Snout Resemble that of the Aston Martin Rapide?


A lot has been said about the styling similarities between Ford's new corporate nose and in particular, the trapezoidal grille, and the one used by the Blue Oval's former premium brand, Aston Martin, on models like the Rapide luxury sports saloon.

Naturally, when the opportunity arose, Matt Farah from The Smoking Tire didn't miss out on the chance to park his black 2013 Ford Fusion (to be sold as the new Ford Mondeo in Europe and other regions) next to an Aston Martin Rapide in the same color and shoot a few pictures for us to compare.

After you check out the three shots provided by Farah on his Twitter account, make your way to our comments below and tell us what you think about the Ford vs. Aston Martin grille chatter.

Photo Credits: Mat Farah / Twitter via Autoblog.nl

PHOTO GALLERY


aston-martin_ford-2013-fusion-mondeo-1 - Copyaston-martin_ford-2013-fusion-mondeo-2 - Copyaston-martin_ford-2013-fusion-mondeo-3 - Copy

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Carscoop/~3/e39ifHwjB6w/so-does-new-ford-fusion-mondeo-snout.html

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Mesozoic crocs


ShareShare ?ShareEmail ?PrintPrint



Image of the Week #64, October 15th, 2012:


From: Awesome sea-going crocodyliforms of the Mesozoic by Darren Naish at Tetrapod Zoology.

Source: Darren Naish

One of the joys after practicing to develop drawing skills, is employing them in your own research. Tetrapod Zoology blogger Darren Naish once again shared his rich, personality-filled, achingly accurate Crocodylomorph Montage, (now with metriorynchids!) to demonstrate the breadth of modern crocodiles? prehistoric ancestors. Astonishing variations matching the diversity of any ceratopsian or hadrosaur family portrait immediately grin and gurn their way out at us in Naish?s illustration, underscoring the biodiversity he discusses in his post, Awesome sea-going crocodyliforms of the Mesozoic.

Bora ZivkovicAbout the Author: Bora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=c39204a74f148068bb8b5dddaa3fa7d2

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Sunday, October 14, 2012

Octomom Sexual Abuse Claims: Nannies Say Nadya Suleman Allowed Child to Molest Others

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/10/octomom-sexual-abuse-claims-nannies-say-nadya-suleman-allowed-ch/

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The Right Tools for the Job | Home Improvement Ideas

A business owner should be poised to create a powerful first impression, and this begins well before the customers step inside the headquarters. Understanding the importance of having the lawn mowed during the summer and snow removed from the premises during winter is not enough. What people need is a heavy duty commercial equipment Kentucky that can turn such a job into a breeze while delivering results that meet and exceed the contractor?s expectations.

The acquisition price of the commercial equipment Kentucky is significant but should not be the only factor in making the decision. As long as the product is manufactured by a company with a reputation for quality, such as Toro, Husqvarna or Wacker Neuson they will pay for themselves on the long run. To make things even better, some retailers offer 0% interest for the first two years and will offer maintenance at reasonable prices throughout Bowling Green city.

Another option for keeping the acquisition?s prices low is to purchase used equipment, as long as it is made by one of the aforesaid producers, and it was well maintained. One can buy the best commercial equipment Kentucky has to offer for only a fraction of its shelf price, without trading quality for lower rates. Last but not least, those who need lawn mowers, snowblowers, utility vehicles, air compressors and pretty much any other type of highly specialized gear for a single job, can choose to rent the equipment instead of buying it.

Related posts:

  1. Facilities Maintenance Is a Never Ending Job
  2. Rent Welding Equipment: A Viable Alternative than Purchasing
  3. Tools and Tips in Clearing your Garden
  4. Beat the Job Market Competition ? Get an Online Degree
  5. How To Compare Replacement Window Prices ? Vinyl Replacement Windows, Wood Replacement Windows

Source: http://www.liberilibri.com/the-right-tools-for-the-job/

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Michael Vick Acknowledges He's a Dog Owner | FOX8.com ...

(Courtesy: CNN)

(Courtesy: CNN)

By Khara Lewin, CNN

?

(CNN) ? Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Michael Vick, who served 18 months in federal prison for bankrolling a deadly dogfighting ring, now has a dog.

?I understand the strong emotions by some people about our family?s decision to care for a pet,? he said in a statement released Thursday. ?As a father, it is important to make sure my children develop a healthy relationship with animals.?

He added that ?our pet is well cared for and loved as a member of our family.?

?This is an opportunity to break the cycle,? Vick said. ?To that end, I will continue to honor my commitment to animal welfare and be an instrument of positive change.?

In 2010, Humane Society President Wayne Pacelle told HLN?s Jane Velez-Mitchell that the Philadelphia Eagles quarterback shouldn?t get a pet immediately and should have to meet certain benchmarks whenever he did.

But Pacelle, whose group has worked with Vick in public outreach efforts, said it would be wrong to close the door to his ever having a dog again.

?He?s been going through counseling, he?s been speaking to kids twice a month, and he needs to interact with animals,? Pacelle said at the time. ?If he continues to hit these markers, then if his daughter wants a dog two or three years down the line, ? I?m saying that we should be open to that possibility.?

Under the terms of his conviction, Vick had been barred from owning an animal.

The NFL suspended Vick in August 2007 after he pleaded guilty to a federal charge of paying for a dogfighting operation in Virginia. He returned the NFL in 2009.

Source: http://fox8.com/2012/10/12/michael-vick-acknowledges-hes-a-dog-owner/

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Saturday, October 13, 2012

cryptogon.com ? UK: Draft Communications Bill ? 19,000 Emails ...

October 12th, 2012

Via: Computerworld:

The distinction is that while in the case of that Bill opinion was fairly evenly divided, we have not seen a single email supporting the draft Communications Data Bill, or even agreeing that there may be a case for the security services and law enforcement agencies having greater access to communications data than they do at present.

Got that? Out of 19,000 emails received by the Committee on the subject of the proposed Draft Communications Bill, not a single one was in favour of it, or even agreed with its premise. Has there ever been a bill so universally rejected by the public in a consultation? Clearly, it must be thrown out completely.

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Source: http://cryptogon.com/?p=31794

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OCTOBER 12, 2012 NEEDLE CRAFT - Anything Worth Learning is ...

" Success is an accumulation of successful days."

If this is a true statement, then I have had success. As the?Twelve Promises state, " Beyond my wildest dreams all has happened." Yet all has also gone away even when clean and sober. This was a hard concept to accept, but I had to. There even have been low times and 'the down and outs' in sobriety.
I have been searching for an answer for? my whole life. The question has been ' How to have peace and serenity?" The answer I know now comes from within. I also know now that to have peace and serenity will increase my longevity. Many things bring me peace and serenity today ! Having many hobbies is just one of them. A loving husband is another. Children are another. Family/ friends?are another, yet my understanding of G.O.D., meditation and prayer has certainly been the highlight.



Needlework is one of mankind?s oldest art forms. It dates back to Exodus in the Bible and stitch work has been found in the tombs of Egypt dating back to the 15th century. It came as its own art form in the 12th century in China. Due to technological advances and machinery, it became a dying art form. It was not until the early 19th century , that needle work had its revival. There are very few true 'needlepoint stores' left in most cities. In New York City, we have Annie and Company on the upper east ( east 90s) and Rita's Needlepoint in the East 70's. Stitches East closed about 4 years ago.

About?eleven years ago, I realized I needed to find a hobby to idle my tension. I was in Fort Lauderdale?walking on Los Olas Boulevard when I passed a store that had needlepoint designs in the window. I decided right then to start needle pointing. I went in the store and asked the owner, ?Joan, who paints her own designs to quickly show me a stitch. I easily remembered from watching countless hours of my mother and grandmother stitching while sitting in the living room. I bought my first needlepoint, an Orchid Floral. Check out www.needlepointoriginals.com ?At my graduation in?2005 I gave that needlepoint to?the Fellowship of Integrative Medicine?. In addition to reading medical journals I began to read books on stitching.?

I find needlepoint to be one of the most rewarding hobbies, you will ever undertake. Not only does it fill the hours, relaxes you but also provides you with a finished product which you can feel a sense of pride of accomplishment. It also serves as birthday and holiday gifts for loved ones.

Needlepoint as most hobbies, can be either simple or difficult.. This depends of the individual. I have met some people who always use the basic and easiest stitches. For these people I feel they use needlepoint as a restful pastime to create gifts for people. There are others that use needlework as a way to express their creative outlet. These crafters delight in working with complicated patterns using a variety of threads. Some compose their own designs. I am a needle worker whom is all of the above. Therapeutic though it may be, needle point for me is above all an artistic activity.

Another fallacy is the fact that needle work is not an exclusively a female hobby. I am sure we all remember when Hall of Fame Football player, Rosie Greer started knitting as a hobby. On a cruise, 6 years ago??, I pulled my canvas from my bag and started to stitch while sitting on a deck chair. When I looked up I saw two women also stitching, one doing needlepoint and the other, cross stitching. As we worked our needles, we talked about stitching and enjoyed the warm sun and cool breeze. We later met during the week to share our collection we each brought with us. One woman told me that stitching is a popular hobby among men whom spend a great deal of time at sea.
Needlepoint was another addiction that I had to realize and accept. This led me to timing my hobbies and doing a different hobby every day for at least 15 minutes. Some of my other hobbies include knitting, card making, quilling and?NY 1939 Worlds Fair collecting.

I am currently working on 5 different needlepoint designs. I find this to be a problem which I am currently dealing with. I do like to buy a needlepoint from every city Rick and I visit.--Cluj, Romania was no exception. I found four great canvases . To find reasonable canvases: check out www.canvasesbegone.com??

Until tomorrow

Source: http://stitchyourwaytoahealthyheart.blogspot.com/2012/10/october-12-2012-needle-craft.html

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