Wednesday, February 27, 2013

AA's longest-serving flight attendant retires

A retirement party was held for an American Airlines flight attendant Barbara Beckett Monday as she celebrated her 53-year career with the company.

"It's something that I grew up wanting to do,? said Beckett, who is based in Miami. ?When I was very young my parents took me to the airport and I saw the stewardesses get off the plane. And I thought that's what I want to do.?

Beckett donned the American Airlines uniform for one last trip ? a last hurrah from Miami International Airport to London?s Heathrow Airport and back. Her flight was set to leave at 8 p.m.

Beckett has worked 8,000 flights for American, traveling the globe and going to places like Hawaii, Japan and Argentina.

The longest-serving flight attendant on American?s staff, she graduated from training on July 29, 1960, and has worked for the airline ever since.

Beckett?s longtime partner, her colleagues and friends, and some passengers wished her well at the gate before her Heathrow flight. Beckett said the first thing she wants to do once she retires is travel ? but she and her partner joked that she will be grounded for a while before booking a trip to Hawaii.

More from NBC Miami:

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/travel/itineraries/american-airlines-longest-serving-flight-attendant-retires-after-53-years-1C8543813

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Orders jump for key US long-lasting factory goods

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Orders for U.S. factory goods that signal business investment plans jumped last month by the most in more than a year, suggesting companies are confident about their business prospects.

The Commerce Department said Wednesday that orders for so-called core capital goods, which include industrial machinery, construction equipment and computers, rose 6.3 percent in January from December. A sharp fall in demand for commercial aircraft caused overall durable goods orders to drop 5.2 percent, the first decline since August.

Orders for commercial aircraft are volatile from month to month and can cause large swings in the overall figure. Boeing reported orders for only two planes in January, down from 183 in December. Orders for defense equipment also plummeted by the most in more than 12 years.

Durable goods are items expected to last at least three years.

The increase in core capital goods suggests companies are willing to expand their production capacities despite worries that automatic government spending cuts will slow the economy in the coming months.

"The fact remains that capital spending appears to be holding up very well," Dan Greenhaus, chief global strategist at BTIG, a brokerage firm. "In fact, it appears to be accelerating."

Still, the jump in orders wasn't broad-based and occurred mostly in machinery and manufactured metal products. Orders for computers and communications equipment both fell and orders for autos and auto parts were unchanged.

About $85 billion in spending cuts are scheduled to kick in Friday and there is little sign that the White House and Congress will reach a deal to avoid them. Defense Department officials may have slowed purchases in January in anticipation of the cutbacks.

Business investment plans have held up in recent months despite the uncertainty surrounding tax and spending policies. Core capital goods orders dipped 0.3 percent in December but posted strong gains of 3.3 percent in November and 3 percent in October.

The report suggests U.S. manufacturing is strengthening. The Institute for Supply Management said earlier this month that factory activity grew in January at the fastest pace in nine months. Measures of new orders and hiring both rose.

But industrial production fell in January after two months of increases, the Federal Reserve said. Much of the decline reflected a big drop in auto production that was likely temporary. The auto industry is coming off its best year for sales in five years. Sales continue to rise, so production will likely rebound in February.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-27-US-Durable-Goods/id-524da65e0dd24d6cbfde6ca466455ded

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Paul Russell: Euthanasia's euphemisms

Here's a great summary of the changes in language employed by those who support changes to the law. This is a time-honoured campaigning tool for anyone who has ever tried to win an argument - but when dealing with life and death - it's just not appropriate.


When a social movement must rely on euphemisms to obfuscate its goals, it is a good bet that there is something wrong with its agenda. From the very beginning of the modern movement, euthanasia advocates have euphemistically bent language as a means of convincing society to endorse killing?an accurate and descriptive term that simply means to end life?as an acceptable method of ending human suffering.

Euthanasia, from the Greek, literally means ?good death.? As the historian Ian Dowbiggin has noted, the term once described ?a calm and easy? natural death at home, ?so family members and friends could say their farewells.?

That changed after an 1870 essay by a teacher named Samuel D. Williams was published arguing that the value of human life depends on whether it is ?worthwhile??an idea known today as the ?quality of life ethic??and moreover, that mercy killing and assisted suicide should be allowed for those who are ?hopelessly suffering.? The essay went viral?to use today?s terminology?and within a few years, the word euthanasia had taken on its modern meaning. The euthanasia movement has been coining new definitions and idioms ever since.

The movement?s latest euphemistic phrase is ?aid in dying,? promoted most prominently by the (euphemistically) named assisted suicide advocacy organization Compassion and Choices (which came into being after a merger with the more descriptively named Hemlock Society). According to C&C, when a terminally ill patient swallows an intentionally prescribed lethal overdose of barbiturates, it isn?t really suicide. Why? Because the word ?suicide? has negative connotations, and C&C wants people to feel positive about some self-killings.

Here?s the idea: A terminally ill patient doesn?t really want to die, but has no choice. Hence, taking an intentionally prescribed lethal overdose of ?medication??another euphemism, since the purpose is not to treat but to poison oneself?doesn?t constitute suicide. Thus, in a C&C press release from a few years ago boosting use of ?aid in dying,? the (late) Peter Goodwin, a prominent assisted suicide-participating doctor, said, ?As a physician, I resent the term ?physician-assisted suicide.? I never felt I was assisting a suicidal patient, but rather aiding a patient with his or her end of life choice.? Since then, ?aid in dying? has become ubiquitous in media stories and assisted suicide advocacy.

Note that Goodwin?s complaint had nothing to do with accuracy and everything to do with emotions. He ?feels? rather than ?thinks.? And that?s how C&C wants listeners and readers to react?emotionally rather than rationally?toward the end that people are more likely to approve of legalizing assisted suicide if it isn?t called what it actually is.

But surely, accurate language must still mean something in public policy debates. Suicide is defined as ?the act or an instance of taking one?s own life voluntarily and intentionally especially by a person of years of discretion and of sound mind.? Thus, under C&C?s reckoning, if the distraught owner of, say, a failed business intentionally takes an overdose of prescribed sleeping pills, it?s suicide. But if the same man takes the pills because he has cancer, and the doctor prescribed the pills for that purpose, it isn?t suicide. That?s nonsensical.

Assisted suicide proponents claim that changing the lexicon is necessary to avoid furthering a supposed stigma associated with suicide. I am not sure whether that stigma exists anymore. But if some suicidal people don?t kill themselves because they worry what others might think, why is that so bad? I mean, the outcome is a saved or extended life. Indeed, many once-suicidal terminally ill people later come to be glad that they didn?t do the deed. Aren?t their lives worth protecting?

I want to make it very clear that I don?t think we should judge or condemn anyone who is suicidal or commits suicide. None of us knows what our own emotional limits might be. Given sufficient despair, fear, or pain, any of us might be attracted to the siren song of self-destruction. The good news is that such causes of despair can often be treated and overcome?including in the dying.

The real issue, then, is how we react to our brothers and sisters who have fallen into a darkness sufficient to make them want to end it all. Should we engage in suicide prevention for all, or only for some? I believe that the dying deserve to have their suicidal desires treated just as seriously as the despairing widow or the troubled teen.

That?s certainly the hospice philosophy, the truly compassionate approach to terminal illness. In contrast to assisted suicide?which is about dying?hospice is about living. Hospice does not seek to simply ?extend life? but maintain its quality to the natural end, and that explicitly includes suicide prevention.

Assisted suicide is suicide.The term is descriptive and accurate. When legalized, it amounts to state-approved suicide, an issue too culturally consequential for us to allow gooey euphemisms to serve as the sugar that helps the bitter hemlock go down.

Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute?s Center on Human Exceptionalism. He also consults for the Patients Rights Council and the Center for Bioethics and Culture. His previous ?On the Square? articles can be found here.?

Source: http://blog.noeuthanasia.org.au/2013/02/euthanasias-euphemisms.html

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

21 eBooks for $21- This Week Only! | Wellness Mama

Wellness Bundle 21 eBooks for $21  This Week Only!

I?m so excited to announce a project that I?ve been working on for months?

A group of bloggers has come together to create a bundle of valuable eBooks on topics of health, nutrition, fitness and more.

This week only, the Wellness Bundle is being offered at a steeply discounted price (90% off!)!

My favorite part of this sale is that 10% of proceeds will be donated to Food for the Poor to provide clean water and sustainable food sources (cattle, chickens, etc) to those in need around the world!

NUTRITION AND COOKING:

  • I Quit Sugar E-Book?from SarahWilson.com.au
  • I Quit Sugar Cookbook?from?SarahWilson.com.au
  • 1-Month Meal Plan and Shopping List?from WellnessMama.com
  • Slow-Cooker Freezer Meals?from MamaandBabyLove.com
  • Against the Grain?from ModernAlternativeMama.com
  • Salad Dressings and Sauces Digital Cookbook- WellnessMama.com
  • Gluten Free Grain Free Baking?from MamaandBabyLove.com
  • Real Food Real Frugal?from RealFoodRealFrugal.com
  • Toadally Primal Smoothie Book- PrimalSmoothies.com
  • The Modern No-Nonsense Guide to Paleo: Shopping, Kitchens, Lunches??from PaleononPaleo.com
  • Nourishing Diet?from DynoMom.com
  • Decadent Desserts Grain Free Digital Cookbook-WellnessMama.com
  • Food Philosophy 2.0?from FemFusionFitness.com

FITNESS AND LIFESTYLE

  • Fitness for Intimacy?from FemFusionFitness.com
  • Tips and Tricks ToRemineralize and Repair Your Cavities Now??from CureToothDecay.com
  • 15 Questions to Ask Your Dentist?(to find a natural one) ?from OraWellness.com

PARENTING AND HEALTHY FAMILY

  • Paleo Approach to Parenting?from PaleoParents.com
  • Breast to Bib?(Nutrition for Babies) from ModernAlternativeMama.com
  • Natural Beauty Recipes for the Whole Family??from WellnessMama.com
  • Mindset for Moms?from?MindsetforMoms.com
  • Natural Cleaning Recipes and Checklists?from WellnessMama.com

Many of these e-books cost as much as the bundle individually, and this is a great opportunity to get a wealth of information at an incredible price!

Here?s the link for more info: Click here to get the Wellness Bundle!

Source: http://wellnessmama.com/8121/21-ebooks-for-21-this-week-only/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=21-ebooks-for-21-this-week-only

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ZTE launches 4G Cloud Radio networking solutions

ZTE

ZTE does more than make Android phones that we rarely see in the U.S. They're also a big vendor to the folks who build out cellular networks, and provide all manner of equipment to folks like Verizon and other carriers. Today at Mobile World Congress 2013 they have launched what they are calling a 4G Cloud Radio solution.

Android Central at Mobile World Congress

It's technical, and a look at the white papers and press release is bound to bring on some serious head scratching for even the most seasoned smartphone veteran. In a nutshell, "cloud radio allows operators to address interference and coordination that affect OAM and arise as a result of the coexistence of multistandard networks. Wireless network performance can be optimized for given bearer resources, and user experience can be significantly improved. Cloud radio also protects investment, increases revenue, and helps operators secure a leading position in the wireless market."

I told you it was complicated. What we, as users, need to take away from this is that this new technology will allow carriers and the industry as a whole to make the transition from legacy 2G networks to 4G LTE smoother, more cost effieient, and cheaper. All of that trickles down to us and is reflected in our monthly bill. The full press release is after the break.

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/5Fz0pFrJCmc/story01.htm

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Talk of more corporate deals sends stocks higher

NEW YORK (AP) ? Talk of more deal-making sent the stock market higher Tuesday, putting the Dow Jones industrial average within close reach of its all-time high.

Reports that retailers Office Depot and OfficeMax are discussing a merger came after big corporate deals for Heinz and Dell were announced in recent weeks. Some investors are betting that more deals could be on the way as buyers pay premium prices for publicly traded companies.

The Dow rose 53.91 points to close at 14,035.67. All it would take now is one good day to push the average above 14,164, the record high reached in October 2007.

"It seems that investors are more comfortable with taking risk right now," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at BMO Private Bank in Chicago. That's despite the $1.2 trillion in automatic federal spending cuts that are scheduled to start March 1 unless Congress and the White House find a way to avoid them. Congress returns from vacation next week.

Previous budget battles in Washington have rattled financial markets. But this time out, many investors seem unfazed by the prospect that Congress won't stop the "sequester" from kicking in. One reason is that the cuts are spread across the board for a decade, instead of all at once.

"I think investors are actually comforted by it," Ablin said. "It's not ideal. But if Congress can't do it when left to their own devices, this is the next best thing."

In other trading Tuesday, the Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 11.15 points to 1,530.94. The technology-heavy Nasdaq composite index gained 21.56 points to 3,213.59. Google crossed $800 for the first time.

The gains were widely shared, if slight. Nine of the 10 industry groups tracked by the Standard & Poor's 500 index inched higher, led by energy companies. More than two stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange.

Markets were also higher in Europe following news that the German economy is picking up steam. Indexes rose more than 1 percent in Germany and France.

Stocks of office supplies stores jumped following a report in The Wall Street Journal that OfficeMax and Office Depot were considering a deal to merge. The paper said an announcement could come as early as this week.

OfficeMax soared $2.25 to an even $13, a gain of 21 percent, and Office Depot shot up 43 cents to $5.02, a gain of 9 percent. Staples also rose as investors anticipated that more mergers could be on the way.

Analysts cautioned that antitrust regulators could block mergers in the office-supply business. Staples, for instance, tried to buy Office Depot in 1997, but was stopped by the Federal Trade Commission.

Health insurers fell after the release of preliminary government data that suggests rate cuts to Medicare Advantage plans for next year will be steeper than anticipated.

The two largest Medicare Advantage providers, Humana and UnitedHealth, sank. Humana had the biggest loss in the S&P 500, dropping 6 percent, or $4.98, to $73.01. UnitedHealth fell 66 cents to $56.66.

The government says it expects costs per person for Medicare Advantage plans to fall more than 2 percent in 2014. The government uses this figure as a benchmark to determine payments for these privately run versions of the government's health care program for the elderly and disabled.

In the market for U.S. government bonds, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.03 percent from 2 percent late Friday.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/talk-more-corporate-deals-sends-stocks-higher-144623643--finance.html

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Apple supplier Foxconn places hiring freeze on its largest plant

Thursday, 21 February, 2013

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Source: http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/breaking-news/companies-world/apple-supplier-foxconn-places-hiring-freeze-its-largest-plant-20130220

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Obama wraps up 3-day Florida golf vacation

President Barack Obama hit the links with a comparatively low-key group of partners on Monday, the third and final day of a Florida golf vacation.

Obama played at the Floridian yacht and golf club, where he spent Presidents Day weekend, with departing U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk, the president's Chicago pal Eric Whitaker and White House aide Marvin Nicholson, the White House said.

Tiger Woods was part of Sunday's presidential foursome.

Obama was returning home late Monday, with days to go before a March 1 deadline to stop billions of dollars in spending cuts that could potentially cripple the government from kicking in.

With his wife and daughters away on an annual ski trip, Obama arranged a post-State of the Union, mini-vacation for himself to the exclusive club along Florida's Treasure Coast. The Floridian is owned by Houston businessman Jim Crane, who also owns the Houston Astros baseball team and has donated money to Obama's political campaigns.

Crane and Kirk also played golf with the president on Saturday and Sunday. Obama also got some instruction from Butch Harmon, Woods' former swing coach.

The White House barred media coverage of the president's vacation, but released the names of his golf partners daily.

March 1 is the start date for $85 billion in across-the-board spending cuts, known in Washington as "the sequester," that would drain the money from the Pentagon and other domestic agencies over the next seven months. The White House has warned that thousands of FBI agents, prosecutors, food safety inspectors, air traffic controllers and other federal workers would either be laid off or furloughed.

Obama has called on Congress to pass a smaller package of spending cuts and measures to close tax loopholes to buy time to negotiate a broader agreement. Republicans so far have rejected that idea.

On Friday, Obama was meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Obama telephoned Abe last week to discuss North Korea's recent nuclear test.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/02/18/3241216/obama-wraps-up-3-day-florida-golf.html

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Colorado House passes gun-control measures (reuters)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/285721892?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Baubles to bars: India gold culture defies curbs

India's steep new tax on gold imports doesn't deter Mousumi Rao as she holds up a glittering $5,000 filigree necklace that could adorn her daughter on her wedding day. Rao's daughter isn't getting married next month or even next year. The 12-year-old is at least several years away from her wedding.

Since tradition demands a bride practically drip with gold jewelry, it's never too early for an Indian family to start preparing, particularly with the high cost of gold these days.

"I'm collecting things for her now so when she grows older and marries, I should have enough gold for her," said Rao. "It is very auspicious for us, one of the most auspicious things, to give gold to your daughter."

Gold has been deeply entwined in Indian culture for thousands of years. Nowadays, India is by far the world's biggest buyer of gold and those imports are an increasing drain on an economy that is growing too slowly to reduce widespread poverty. Last year Indians imported 864 tons of gold, about one fifth of world sales. The cost of 2.5 trillion rupees ($45 billion) was second only to India's bill for imported oil. The unquenchable appetite for gold coins, bars and jewelry has swelled India's trade deficit and weakened its currency, making crucial imports such as fuel more expensive.

The government can't do much about oil imports - without fuel, the economy would grind to a halt - so in the past year it has tried to rein in gold demand, raising the import duty three times in a year to its current level of 6 percent. The higher tariff is proving little match for age-old tradition.

"Every Indian wants gold. Now is the wedding season, and I'm seeing an increase in demand no matter about the tax," said jeweler Arun Kaigaonkar. "Prices have been rising for years, and still people buy."

He said not only jewelry, but gold bars and coins remain in high demand because in many rural areas banking is less available. "In the countryside, people save their money only in gold."

Last year Indian gold-buying briefly dropped for six months, but then it roared back in the second half of the year. And in January, sales spiked sharply as jewelers and investors rushed to buy ahead of the import tax hike to 6 percent, which took effect at the end of the month.

"The culture of gold is so strong in India. It's difficult to contain this demand by just tweaking import duties," said Samiran Chakraborty, an economist with Standard Chartered Bank in Mumbai.

Through centuries of warfare and the shifting borders of regional kingdoms, gold was the safest currency. In some Hindu legends, Brahma, the god who created the universe, was born from a gold egg. In India, gold is spiritual and it is also practical. Parents of the bride give gold as a symbol of their prosperity. But it is also an insurance against a bad marriage, since the jewelry is the wife's, though many men take it anyway.

In early 2011, an ounce of gold cost about $1,375 on the world market, or nearly 62,000 rupees inside India at the exchange rate at the time.

It now costs over $1,600 an ounce but the drop in the rupee against the dollar means the cost in India has risen by an even greater extent, to about 90,000 rupees.

The rising price does reduce demand but each festival and wedding season brings sales back up again.

Industry experts say there are signs that higher import taxes have encouraged smuggling, which hasn't been a problem since India lifted strict gold controls more than 20 years ago.

Few expect a return to those draconian measures. Potentially more effective is a new scheme to get the vast amounts of gold already in India back into circulation.

"India is not only the world's biggest importer of gold, it's the biggest hoarder of gold," said Albert Cheng, a managing director of the World Gold Council, which estimates there are some 18,000 tons of gold locked up in bank vaults and family homes around the country.

Standard Chartered's Chakraborty said such "non-productive" gold in India is worth some $1 trillion, about half of India's GDP.

The government recently stopped requiring gold-backed exchange-traded funds to hold physical gold in the amount of their sales. Instead, the funds will be allowed to deposit some gold with banks who in turn can lend it to jewelers, which in theory should reduce imports for a time.

"Up to now, both jewelers and ETF's have been driving the rise in import demand. Now, maybe they can start to cancel each other out," Chakraborty said.

The funds have combined assets of about $1.8 billion, a small proportion of India's gold purchases, so progress might be slow.

"Gold is considered pure in our culture, and giving it is a virtue. Certain amount of gold must be bought," said 26-year-old Rohini, a Mumbai physiotherapist as she browsed in a jewelry shop.

Her mother, Jaishri, agreed. "Of course, nobody can afford as much as we used to. Once upon a time, we used to buy gold by the kilo," she said. "But the price is so high now, we just buy what we can for the necessary things."

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/02/19/3241884/baubles-to-bars-india-gold-culture.html

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Monday, February 18, 2013

China now has more tablets and smartphones than the US

SmartDevice_InstalledBase_China_vs_US_Feb2013-resized-600

After becoming the world?s leading manufacturer of goods and largest emitter of carbon dioxide, China can add world?s leading consumer of mobile devices (smartphones and tablets) to its trophy case.

?By the end of February 2013, China will have 246 million devices compared to 230 million in the U.S.,? says mobile analytics company Flurry, which estimates that its survey covers more than 90% of the world?s ?smart devices.?

In January, the US and China were within one million devices of one another. Flurry is measuring what it calls ?active? devices, which means phones and tablets that are actually connecting to the internet, and not simply devices sold.

SmartDevice_InstalledBase_Jan2013-resized-600

Despite the enormous size of the Chinese market, it is still the sixth-fastest growing market for tablets and smartphones, by Flurry?s estimate.

SmartDevice_GrowthRates_Jan2013-resized-600

Even as this growth slows, its dizzying pace, and the relatively maturity of the US market for smartphones means that China will almost certainly remain a larger market for mobile devices than the US.

Source: http://qz.com/54860/china-now-has-more-tablets-and-smartphones-than-the-us/

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Would You Buy a 10,000$ Luxury Android Phone?

When it comes to pampering yourself with nice things, I?m all up for it. Clothes, accessories, cars, electronics,? if you have the money, why not get the best? But that?s the thing with luxury, most items aren?t really ?the best?. They?re the most flashy, expensive, refined, and even ridiculous, but certainly not the best.?So I draw a line between luxury and value.

That?s why I find the newly announced 10,000$ Vertu Ti rather ludicrous. I know this kind of device isn?t made for people who care about specs,?but a WVGA screen and ? most importantly ? Ice Cream Sandwich? This phone is already two Android versions behind and will soon be even more outdated. Plus, the only selling point other than the build materials is the concierge feature. I would expect people who have 10,000$ lying around to already have a concierge at their disposal.

As Connor pointedly remarked when covering the news in his column, you could buy 33 Nexus 4s for the price of one Vertu Ti. But as luck would have it, there are people out there who have the kind of money that allows them to purchase this Vertu, try the Concierge feature a couple of times for fun, and either only take the Ti out with them to red carpet and socialite events while they use another phone daily, or use the it daily for calls and messages only.

Personally, at the rate technology is going, I think that?s a waste of Titanium ? and human resources. As for the ten grand? I would consider paying that amount money for a 1cm thick phone that has a 1080p screen that works with gloves, a 40MP camera with Xenon flash, a 6000mAh battery and an octa-core processor, with the promise of instant updates to the next 10 versions of Android. That?s true luxury if you ask me, but one can only dream.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AndroidAppStorm/~3/KHB4SKEcMNU/

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College Profile: John Hopkins University

blogs.hopkins-interactive.com

John Hopkins University can be difficult to get into.

Berta Tarqui, Academics Editor
February 15, 2013 ? 9 views
Filed under Academics, Student Life

Location:?3400 N. Charles Street Baltimore,?MD?21218

Tuition: $43,930

Enrollment:?5,980

Founded: 1876

Application Deadline: January 1

Application Fee: $70

Percentage of Acceptance: 18.4 percent

John Hopkins is an ideal college for students who want to get away from home but at the same time be close. This private college is in an urban setting and has four campuses for students to roam. Classroom sizes are fairly small; at a 9:1 faculty to student ration. Only about 11 percent of classrooms have more than 50 students. It is perfect for students who want to a have variety of classroom sizes. However, this college is painfully hard to get into. The?acceptance rate is is barely under 20 percent. Popular majors include Public Health and International Relations and Affairs. John Hopkins isn?t too big of a school; the population is around the same as AHS. There are about an equal amount of females and males in this college. Like many other colleges, there are common safety measures taken, such as 24 hour vehicle and foot patrol. Health insurance and financial assistance is available and many students get the financial help they need.

This college is right for you if?

-You want to stay close to home, but get away.

-You have the drive to get into a selective college.

-You want a variety of class sizes.

-You need financial?assistance.

Source: http://www.thea-blast.org/student-life/academics/2013/02/15/college-profile-john-hopkins-university/

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EU slaps more sanctions on North Korea

BRUSSELS (AP) ? EU finance ministers, condemning the Feb. 12 nuclear test by North Korea, have imposed trade and economic sanctions on the Asian nation.

A statement by the 27 European Union finance ministers, who met Monday in Brussels, said they condemn the test "in the strongest terms" and demand that North Korea abstain from further tests. The statement also urged North Korea to sign the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty without delay.

Monday's action brings the number of North Koreans subject to a travel ban and an asset freeze to 26, and the number of sanctioned companies to 33. The ministers also banned the export of components for ballistic missiles, such as certain types of aluminum, and prohibited trade in new public bonds from North Korea.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eu-slaps-more-sanctions-north-korea-160545634.html

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Dragons on Parade

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

FACT CHECK: Overreaching in State of Union speech

President Barack Obama gives his State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday Feb. 12, 2013. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, Pool)

President Barack Obama gives his State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday Feb. 12, 2013. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, Pool)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama did some cherry-picking Tuesday night in defense of his record on jobs and laid out a conditional path to citizenship for illegal immigrants that may be less onerous than he made it sound.

A look at some of the claims in his State of the Union speech, a glance at the Republican counterargument and how they fit with the facts:

OBAMA: "After years of grueling recession, our businesses have created over 6 million new jobs."

THE FACTS: That's in the ballpark, as far as it goes. But Obama starts his count not when he took office, but from the point in his first term when job losses were the highest. In doing so, he ignores the 5 million or so jobs that were lost on his watch, up to that point.

Private sector jobs have grown by 6.1 million since February 2010. But since he became president, the gain is a more modest 1.9 million.

And when losses in public sector employment are added to the mix, his overall jobs record is a gain of 1.2 million.

___

OBAMA: "We have doubled the distance our cars will go on a gallon of gas."

THE FACTS: Not so fast.

That's expected to happen in 12 more years.

Under a deal the Obama administration reached with automakers in 2011, vehicles will have a corporate average fuel economy of 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025, twice the 27 miles per gallon, on average, that cars and trucks get today. Automobile manufacturers won't start making changes to achieve the new fuel economy standards until model year 2017. Not all cars will double their gas mileage, since the standard is based on an average of a manufacturers' fleet.

___

OBAMA: "Already the Affordable Care Act is helping to reduce the growth of health care costs."

THE FACTS: The jury is still out on whether Obama's health care overhaul will reduce the growth of health care costs. It's true that cost increases have eased, but many experts say that's due to the sluggish economy, not to the health care law, whose main provisions are not yet fully in effect.

___

OBAMA: "Real reform means establishing a responsible pathway to earned citizenship ? a path that includes passing a background check, paying taxes and a meaningful penalty, learning English and going to the back of the line behind the folks trying to come here legally."

THE FACTS: The seemingly stern admonition that illegal immigrants must go to the back of the line, often heard from the president, doesn't appear to have much practical effect except in the most obvious sense. Everyone who joins a line, whether for a movie, a coffee or citizenship, starts at the back of that particular line. It's not clear he is saying anything more than that illegal immigrants won't get to cut in line for citizenship once they've obtained provisional legal status.

Like those living abroad who have applied to come to the U.S. legally, illegal immigrants who qualify for Obama's proposed path to citizenship will surely face long waits to be processed. But during that time, they are already in the U.S. and will get to stay, work and travel in the country under their new status as provisional immigrants, while those outside the U.S. simply have to wait.

Sending illegal immigrants to the "back of the line" is something of a distinction without a difference for some legal immigrants who dutifully followed all the rules before coming to the United States.

For instance, some legal immigrants who are in the U.S. on an employer-sponsored visa can't easily change jobs, or in some cases take a promotion, without jeopardizing their place in line to get a green card. In other cases, would-be legal immigrants in other countries wait for years to be able to settle in the U.S.

Obama is using "back of the line" somewhat figuratively, because there are multiple lines depending on the applicant's relationship with family already in the U.S. or with an employer. Generally, a foreign-born spouse of a U.S. citizen or someone with needed skills and a job offer will be accepted more quickly than many others.

But even as a figurative point, his assertion may cloak the fact that people who came to the U.S. illegally and win provisional status have the great advantage over applicants abroad of already being where they all want to go.

___

OBAMA: "Study after study shows that the sooner a child begins learning, the better he or she does down the road. ... And for poor kids who need help the most, this lack of access to preschool education can shadow them for the rest of their lives. ... Every dollar we invest in high-quality early education can save more than $7 later on ? by boosting graduation rates, reducing teen pregnancy, even reducing violent crime."

THE FACTS: Dozens of studies have shown Head Start graduates are more likely to complete high school than their at-risk peers who don't participate in the program. But a study last year by the Department of Health and Human Services that found big vocabulary and social development gains for at-risk students in pre-kindergarten programs also found those effects largely faded by the time pupils reached third grade. The report didn't explain why the kids saw a drop-off in performance or predict how they would fare as they aged.

___

OBAMA: "I urge this Congress to pursue a bipartisan, market-based solution to climate change, like the one John McCain and Joe Lieberman worked on together a few years ago. But if Congress won't act soon to protect future generations, I will. I will direct my Cabinet to come up with executive actions we can take, now and in the future, to reduce pollution, prepare our communities for the consequences of climate change and speed the transition to more sustainable sources of energy."

THE FACTS: Obama failed to get a global warming bill through Congress when both Houses were controlled by Democrats in 2010. With Republicans in control of the House, the chances of a bill to limit the gases blamed for global warming and to create a market for businesses to trade pollution credits are close to zero. The Obama administration has already acted to control greenhouse gases through existing law. It has boosted fuel-efficiency standards and proposed rules to control heat-trapping emissions from new power plants. And while there are still other ways to address climate change without Congress, it's questionable regulation alone can achieve the reductions needed to start curbing global warming.

___

FLORIDA SEN. MARCO RUBIO, in the Republican response: "The real cause of our debt is that our government has been spending $1 trillion more than it takes in every year. That's why we need a balanced-budget amendment."

THE FACTS: That statement may reflect the math behind recent debt, but it doesn't get directly to the cause ? the worst recession since the Depression and its aftereffects. The deficit is not only caused by spending, but by reduced tax revenues. And during the recession, revenues from both individual and corporate taxes fell markedly.

The steep increases in debt and the measures that should be taken to ease the burden are central to the debate in Washington. But there is no serious move afoot to amend the Constitution to prohibit deficit spending.

The ability to take on debt has been used by governments worldwide and through U.S. history to shelter people from the ravages of a down economy, wage war and achieve many other ends. An effort to amend the Constitution for any purpose faces daunting odds; this would be no exception. Most state constitutions demand a balanced budget, but states lack some big obligations of the federal government, including national defense. And Washington's ability to go deeper into debt provides states with at least a minimal safety net in times of high unemployment.

___

Associated Press writers Tom Raum, Dina Cappiello, Andrew Taylor, Christopher S. Rugaber, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, Alicia A. Caldwell and Philip Elliott contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-13-US-State-of-Union-Fact-Check/id-43dfe4e526eb4b5d9bf27aca275ecba0

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International Week to focus on Global Connections: Business ...

International Week

International Week 2013

USF St. Petersburg will observe International Week Feb. 25 through March 1 with a series of events organized around the theme, ?Global Connections: Business, Culture, and
Community.?

The events underscore USF St. Petersburg?s commitment to enhancing the global competence of its students and faculty and to raise public awareness regarding important international issues.

The week of events is designed for students, faculty and staff as well as the general public.

The events, all of them free and open to the public, include film screenings, discussions of the immigration experience in the U.S., a presentation about joining the Peace Corps, a discussion involving refugees from several countries, a panel discussion about the effects of the digital revolution and globalization,?and a talk about the role of social media in the Egyptian revolution by journalist Ashraf Khalil, author of Liberation Square: Inside the Egyptian Revolution.

Download the International Week 2013 program?in PDF format. Or go here for more details about all the events.

Source: http://www.usfsp.edu/blog/2013/02/12/international-week-to-focus-on-global-connections-business-culture-and-community/

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Being There: Scientists Enlist Inuit for Long-Term Observations of Arctic Wildlife [Slide Show]

Hunters and elders spend decades next to narwhals, whales, seals and other animals and provide important traditional knowledge that yields ecological insights in the fast-changing Arctic


double-tusk-narwhal-skullDOUBLE TUSK: Scientists who want to study the elusive narwhal often rely on traditional knowledge to inform their research. Image: ? Isabelle Groc

During the summer in Qaanaaq, Greenland, an Inuit hunter paddling next to a resting narwhal observed a thin gauzelike layer coming off the narwhal's body and dissipating into the water. The event lasted only a few seconds, but Connecticut-based dentist Martin Nweeia, a Harvard University and Smithsonian Institution researcher who studies narwhal tusks as his passion, immediately saw the scientific significance of the hunter's observation.

Whereas the beluga, the narwhal's nearest relative, is known to enter warmer estuarine waters in the summer to molt, this skin-renewal process had never been scientifically documented for narwhal, in part because no scientist has ever spent sufficient time in remote Arctic locations to record such an event. "One voice from an Inuit hunter can be more significant than 100 scientists," says Nweeia, who presented his findings at the 18th Inuit Studies Conference in Washington, D.C.

Nweeia, a professor at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine, has obtained many more scientific insights from the Inuit elders and hunters who have lived close to the narwhal for thousands of years. Taking a cue from the Inuit who indicated that narwhal tusking was not a sign of aggression, he discovered that the unicornlike tusk was a sensory organ, capable of detecting changes in the ocean environment. Narwhals gently rubbing their tusks together are not dueling, as previously believed, but engaged in a type of ritualistic behavior, Nweeia argues. He also learned that the tusk could bend at least 30 centimeters in any direction without breaking, an observation that he did not believe until more scientific tests demonstrated the tusk?s unusual strength and flexibility.

View a slide show of scientific collaboration around narwhals.

More scientists now collaborate with indigenous peoples to learn about rare and elusive wildlife. ?The biologists are starting to understand that hunters have good eyes, they know what they are looking for, and it can really help them,? says Gabriel Nirlungayuk, director of wildlife and environment for Nunavut Tunngavik, Inc. Nirlungayuk has collaborated with scientists on different research projects.

Reliance on aboriginal insights is particularly crucial in the Arctic, where climate change creates an urgent need to understand local dynamics. ?The Arctic is changing rapidly, and often it is just too fast for scientists to keep up with all the details or implications,? says Henry Huntington, science director for the Arctic program at the Pew Environment Group in Alaska.

Changing environmental conditions open unprecedented opportunities for industrial development that has the potential to compromise wildlife habitat. In Nunavut one of the biggest resource extraction efforts ever proposed for the eastern Arctic, the Mary River iron ore project, could have impacts on various species including caribou, bowhead whale, narwhal, beluga and walrus. Scientists and locals combine forces to tackle those major conservation issues.

?We have to try our best to work together in a cooperative way so that we all know as much as we can about how fragile these populations can be,? says Jack Orr, project lead for the Arctic Research Division at Fisheries and Oceans Canada. Orr captures narwhals and fits them with satellite transmitters to understand the whales' diving behaviors and migration routes. Inuit hunters provide information about weather conditions, best timing and locations for accessing the whales.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=831492de8f5dc6e3e74ca0edc4ac6bb8

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Stem cell discovery gives insight into motor neuron disease

Feb. 11, 2013 ? A discovery using stem cells from a patient with motor neuron disease could help research into treatments for the condition. The study used a patient's skin cells to create motor neurons -- nerve cells that control muscle activity -- and the cells that support them called astrocytes.

Researchers studied these two types of cells in the laboratory. They found that a protein expressed by abnormalities in a gene linked to motor neuron disease, which is called TDP-43, caused the astrocytes to die.

The study, led by the University of Edinburgh and funded by the Motor Neurone Disease Association, provides fresh insight into the mechanisms involved in the disease.

Although TDP-43 mutations are a rare cause of motor neuron disease (MND), scientists are especially interested in the gene because in the vast majority of MND patients, TDP-43 protein (made by the TDP-43 gene) forms pathological clumps inside motor neurons.

Motor neurons die in MND leading to paralysis and early death.

This study shows for the first time that abnormal TDP-43 protein causes death of astrocytes. The researchers, however, found that the damaged astrocytes were not directly toxic to motor neurons.

Better understanding the role of astrocytes could help to inform research into treatments for MND.

Professor Siddharthan Chandran, of the University of Edinburgh, said: "Motor neuron disease is a devastating and ultimately fatal condition, for which there is no cure or effective treatment. It is not just a question of looking solely at motor neurons, but also the cells that surround them, to understand why motor neurons die. Our aim is to find ways to slow down progression of this devastating disease and ultimately develop a cure."

These findings, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences., are significant as they show that different mechanisms are at work in different types of MND.

The research, led by the University of Edinburgh's Euan MacDonald Centre for Motor Neurone Research, was carried out in collaboration with King's College, London, Columbia University in New York, the University of California and the Gladstone Institutes in San Francisco.

Dr Brian Dickie, the MND Association's Director of Research Development, said: "From a therapeutic perspective this finding is important because it means that specific treatments targeted at astrocytes may only be relevant and effective, in specific subsets of patients who will have to be carefully selected for drug trials."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Edinburgh.

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


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/health_medicine/genes/~3/brOMFda4Du4/130211162331.htm

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2 men charged in murder of teen who performed at inauguration

CHICAGO (AP) ? Chicago police say the two men accused of killing a 15-year-old honor student mistook her and her friends for rival gang members who'd shot one of the men over the summer.

Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy says murder charges were filed Monday against 18-year-old Michael Ward and 20-year-old Kenneth Williams.

Both are accused in the Jan. 29 death of Hadiya (hy-DEE'-uh) Pendleton. She and her friends weren't affiliated with gangs but were shot at in a park not far from President Barack Obama's Chicago home. She'd recently performed during his inauguration ceremonies in Washington.

McCarthy says Ward told investigators the shooting was meant as retaliation for Williams being shot in the arm in July.

McCarthy says they were arrested while driving to a strip club Saturday, just hours after Pendleton's funeral.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/2-charged-slaying-chicago-honor-student-005334349.html

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

How a PS3 Game Launched Japan's Newest Sex Symbol

How a PS3 Game Launched Japan's Newest Sex SymbolThese days, it seems like you cannot turn on the TV in Japan without seeing her. Her name is Mitsu Dan. She's currently Japan's biggest sex symbol, appearing in racy TV shows and even racier movies and photo spreads. But before rocketing to fame last fall, she was just another pin-up model, and her biggest role was in a PS3 exclusive. But she wasn't yet Mitsu Dan.

The game was Yakuza 4. And the current sex symbol was known as Shizuka Saitou. Then largely unknown, Saitou was part of the open casting call that ultimately landed her?and at that time, the far more famous porn star Rio?a role in the game as a hostess. It was a fitting gig for Saitou, who spent a chunk of her 20s working at a high-class hostess club in Tokyo's ritzy Ginza. After college, she studied to become a cook. Then, she got a mortician's license. Somewhere along the line, she started hostessing.

That fall of 2009, the then 29 year-old Saitou appeared at the Tokyo Game Show to promote Yakuza 4, posing for pictures next to the Japanese gangster emperor-style throne that TGS visitors could line up for to have their photos taken.


How a PS3 Game Launched Japan's Newest Sex Symbol

That following spring, she appeared in a weekly tabloid in her first pin-up. And by that fall, she was renamed "Mitsu Dan". But it wasn't until last fall that she started popping up everywhere. She appeared in the S&M-themed motion picture Watashi no Dorei ni Narinasai (?????????? or "Be My Slave") as well as the S&M-themed late night TV drama Tokumei Tantei ????? or "Anonymous Sleuth"). Dan then popped up a few times on variety shows and movie premieres, doing all sorts of scandalous things, whether that was wearing next to nothing or pouring honey down her underpants.

How a PS3 Game Launched Japan's Newest Sex Symbol

Dan is sexually charged, but that doesn't mean she's won over Japan's libido. Online, especially, there are many who say it's unsettling to see someone act like a porn star on primetime television or others who say Dan has confused being sexy with being vulgar. Dan's fans would say she is using sexuality as power.

Often with the Japanese entertainment industry, people play characters. And Mitsu Dan is either casting herself (or being cast) as the sexy one. Japanese variety shows often have celebrities play certain types, whether that's the cool one, the smart one, the airhead one, or the funny one. Mitsu Dan is now the sexy one. But the whole thing?the lewd public displays, the nude photos?could all be an act?a way to stand out and get attention. But this is make-believe. A world as virtual as any video game.

On a recent variety show, Dan showed off her apartment. It was a tiny apartment that hardly looked like a den of sin:

How a PS3 Game Launched Japan's Newest Sex SymbolHow a PS3 Game Launched Japan's Newest Sex Symbol

"This room isn't sexy at all," wrote one online commenter. "It's completely normal." And it probably is.


Culture Smash is a regular dose of things topical, interesting and sometimes even awesome?game related and beyond.
Kotaku East is your slice of Asian internet culture, bringing you the latest talking points from Japan, Korea, China and beyond. Tune in every morning from 4am to 8am.

Source: http://kotaku.com/5983596/how-a-ps3-game-launched-japans-newest-sex-symbol

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Monday, February 11, 2013

Hamster-sized mammal topped our family tree - Care2 News Network

Thursday February 7, 2013, 8:05 pm
The scampering, insect-eating animal was about the size of a hamster, with a long tail and a narrow snout, an international team of 23 scientists conclude in a study published Thursday online in the journal Science.

Their analysis also determined that the earliest ancestor of placental mammals ? which nourish their unborn using the organ inside the uterus called the placenta ? lived about 200,000 to 400,000 years after the dinosaurs died out. That is about 36 million years later than DNA evidence had suggested, and it means nothing resembling modern-day mammals such as lemurs or squirrels ever scurried among the dinosaurs.

By and large, the ancestral animal looks similar to what scientists had previously guessed, said Mary Silcox, a professor of anthropology at the University of Toronto Scarborough, and co-author of the study.

However, Silcox noted that the reconstruction was not based on guessing. Since no fossils have yet been found of the tiny animal, its characteristics were extrapolated based on an exhaustive analysis of 4,500 physical traits found among 86 mammals, about half of them living and about half of them from the fossil record, thought to be descended from it. That resulted in a detailed family tree of all placental mammals ? with different traits on different branches, mapping how they changed over time ? and their earliest ancestor at the top.

"This was based on data," Silcox said. "It's a much more powerful approach than just kind of making up a story based on your expectations."

That said, she added, there were some surprises. "The brain is actually advanced over what I expected," she said.

Silcox's main role in the study was to be in charge of the 1,400 teeth traits that were analyzed. She said that was very important because most mammal fossils are actually teeth.

"The hardest substance in the body for a mammal is enamel, and therefore it tends to survive better than anything else in the fossil record. So there are a lot of species that we only know from teeth," she said. "Fortunately, teeth are incredibly informative."

For example, they provide information about how big the animal was and what it was eating.

In addition to figuring out what the animal looked like, the study also estimated when it lived.

DNA evidence has suggested the earliest placental mammal arose about 100 million years ago, while dinosaurs still roamed the Earth. Dinosaurs went extinct about 65 million years ago during a catastrophe that wiped out 70 per cent of all species.

But based on how mammals' traits changed over time, the research team concluded that the placental ancestor didn't exist until 200,000 to 400,000 years after the dinosaurs died out.

Silcox noted that the estimates based on DNA are calibrated against certain events in the fossil record.

"So at some point, they have to believe in our data," she said.

She suggested that perhaps some of the assumptions used to generate the estimates from the DNA are wrong.

The data used in the study, which was led by Maureen O'Leary, researcher at Stony Brook University and the American Museum of Natural History, is compiled in a huge database of animal traits called MorphoBank that is publicly available online.

Why is this inappropriate?