Monday, December 31, 2012

Last Minute New Year's Eve Ideas From Lonny Magazine And Designer Eddie Ross

We're antsy to get our celebration on in just a few hours! Lucky for us, our friends at Lonny Magazine shared some great New Year's Eve ideas for last minute preparations as well as beautiful and festive tabletop inspiration by Eddie Ross, one of our favorite designers.

Our top 5 tips from Ross and the Lonny team:

new years ideas
Photo courtesy of Lonny Magazine


1. Personalize your party by making homemade hats and horns to match your bash's color scheme. And we've got crafty ideas for both. (Party hats don't have to be dorky -- we promise!)

2. Don't worry about having a fully stocked bar with many different spirits. Ross suggests putting out a champagne buffet with your finest glassware. It looks glamorous, and it's easy on the host. And if any bubbly sprays on your fine attire when you pop the cork, we've got you covered.

3. Don't be afraid to go bold with your designs. New Year's doesn't always have to be about black, gold and silver. Ross' tablescape is a combination of vibrant jewel tones, and the effect is amazing.

4. A gathering in a small space can still be festive. Ross' tips for maximizing a tiny venue incude investing in stylish folding chairs that can be tucked away and utilizing spaces like console tables for party spreads and decor.

5. Always leave some chocolate candies on the table for guests to snack on between dinner and dessert. (This one's our favorite. We can't argue with that!)

Click through the slideshow to see Ross' magnificent designs and head over to Lonny Magazine for some more great tips. Happy new year!

  • Decorative Accents

  • Champagne Buffet

  • Jewel Tones

  • Potted Orchid Centerpieces

  • Add Some Sparkle

  • Go Bold!

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Do you have a home story idea or tip? Email us at homesubmissions@huffingtonpost.com. (PR pitches sent to this address will be ignored.)

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/31/new-years-eve-ideas-lonny_n_2389452.html

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Denver Pioneers crush Boston University, 6-0

The Denver Pioneers broke an eight-game winless streak with a 6-0 victory over the visiting Boston University Terriers on Saturday night in the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame Museum Face-off Classic.

The No. 14 Denver Pioneers (10-6-3) snapped an eight-game winless streak with an impressive 6-0 shutout of No. 6 Boston University (10-6-0) on Saturday night at Magness Arena in the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame Museum Face-off Classic. It was Denver's first win since Nov. 17. The club has gone 0-5-3 over their last eight contests, failing to score more than two goals in an game.

Saturday night, the Pioneers sticks came alive, as Denver scored three first-period goals, including two in the span of nine seconds. Six different players scored for the Pioneers, as the team recorded at least five goals in a game for the eighth time this season.

Boston University's shutout was the first for the Terriers in 125 games, a streak that had led the nation.

The two teams combined for 29 penalties and 91 penalty minutes, as well as three ejections.

Denver will next take the ice on Friday as it begins a two-game series against Cornell.

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Source: http://denver.sbnation.com/denver-pioneers/2012/12/30/3817220/denver-pioneers-hockey-2012-boston-university

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Commentary on NPRSR Operational Policy ? Rock climbing on ...

posted by Dave Reeve

The Department of National Parks, Recreation, Sport and Racing (NPRSR) recently?released its new?Operational Policy - Rock climbing on QPWS managed areas. The document is dated 27th July 2012?and can be viewed here.

This document represents a significant milestone in the management of rock climbing by QPWS. Just how significant a step this is, I?ll endeavour to explain by examining the steps and mis-steps taken along the way, and the societal changes that influenced this outcome.

the changing demographic

Over the past fifty years, the trend in the climbing community has been one starting with a mere handful of climbers, anarchic by nature, certainly unmanageable by external dictate, and growing to a few thousand folk, individualistic, but receptive to appeals from reason. Indeed, it is good fortune that the vast increase in popularity of climbing has been accompanied by a shift to a demographic more understanding of the need for management.

Something else was changing as well over this period, and that was the very nature of the sport itself.? In the fifties and early sixties, rock climbing could best be considered as an extension of bush walking, steep bush walking if you like, where the object was to proceed from bottom to top overcoming such obstacles that lay on the chosen path. A form of adventure seeking that is still preserved on some routes today.

By the late sixties, however, non bush walking climbers were appearing on the scene. These newcomers were increasingly interested in climbing only for what it offered technically. The focus on technical ability, plus the impact of strong technical climbers from overseas rewrote in several decades what it meant to be a rock climber. Add to this process the recent explosive growth in indoor climbing, a substantial percentage of whose participants?will venture outdoors, and it is easy to understand that modern sport climbing brings a radically different demographic to the crags.

And, most importantly for the discussion in hand, sport climbing means bolted routes, no ifs, no buts, no exceptions. The vast majority of modern climbers will be climbing routes narrowly delineated by a line of bolts placed in the rock at roughly 2 to 3m intervals for a height of 20 to 30m.

Several other societal trends over this period play into the story. In the fifties, such National Parks as existed were managed by a state apparatus whose motivation was primary production and the exploitation of the state?s resources. Under these circumstances, located as they were on ?worthless? land, NPs inevitably acquired Cinderella status, and there was no clear vision and no underpinning legislation to guide their management.

However, with growing affluence came ?green? ideology, which began to impact the political discourse. In 1975 the National Parks and Wildlife Service was formed leading to the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service a few years later. Although, no clear legislative framework was in place as to how QPWS should manage the parks under its supervision, a shift occurred within the public service whereby conservation values gained primacy in the formulation of management policy. There followed a phase of management best likened to locking the public library for fear of people damaging the contents through the willful act of reading.

In 1992, the Nature Conservation Act came into force, and for the first time, we see articulated in the state legislation a clear vision for the role of National Parks, and the principles by which they should be managed. Underlying this legislation, one of several eminently practical principles can be seen at play. Namely, the best outcome for the preservation of the natural environment within the National Parks will ensue if every effort is made to present to the public that which is considered worthy of preservation.

If management decisions are based on a logical appraisal of the balance between preservation and presentation, I believe, perhaps naively, that the Tragedy of the Commons can be averted. Where management chooses to present the conservation values of the park in a way that?engenders within park visitors a sense of stewardship, we begin to shift park visitors from being part of the problem to part of the solution.

If the climbing community wishes to access crags on the public estates, then all aspects of that access have to be evaluated within the context of the NCA. Like that for?any other visitor, climbing access needs to be managed?so that climbers?are empowered to become part of the solution. For those who love the great outdoors, I don?t think this is such a bad place to be after the decades of neglect.

A further societal trend worthy of comment is as follows.? With growing affluence there has been a parallel growth of the Nanny State, and with it, a shift in society?s perceptions of negligence and public liability. When I was a lad in the fifties, we were well warned of the hazards of diving into swimming holes, and yet everyone knew of someone, who knew of someone now wheelchair-bound, serving as testament to the folly of such actions. These people received no financial recompense, and nor did anyone think that they should?.. it was simply what happened when you did stupid things.

However, within a matter of decades the landscape shifted to embrace a new idea whereby people weren?t always responsible for their own judgment calls, and the land manager was negligent if he failed to warn of even the most clear and evident danger. Couple this with an unending supply of youth, a percentage of whom will always rise to the dare of their peers, and you have opened a channel by which the more entrepreneurial of the legal profession will help themselves to the largess of the state. A situation was created under which young men still continued to break their necks by diving into rock pools, but the state now compensated them and their families for those fleeting seconds of errant thought.

The debate about how much of a Nanny the state should be is not relevant here. What is relevant is the fact that the apparatus of state needs to manage the estates for which it is responsible in a way that does not result in a bleeding of the public purse through liability claims. As we will see, this one issue rose to dominate the discussion of management of climbing on the public estate.

enter the demon bolt

Up until the development of modern sport climbs within our parks, such hardware as was affixed to the rock for purposes of protecting the lead climber was removed by the seconder. Maybe the situation was not quite as cut and dried as this, but it suffices for the point I am making, which is that the advent of sport climbing with its dependence on permanently fixed bolts signalled a huge increase in the number of fixtures placed throughout the public estate, and a concomitant increase in the number of people placing their trust in a fixture not of their own devising.

The thought that there could be many hundreds of such bolts out there on the cliffs,?all of uncertain heritage and all deteriorating with each passing year, each and every one a possible magnet for a public liability claim, was certain, sooner rather than later, to ring alarm bells in the offices of the responsible state department.

In 1997 we see a the ?South East Queensland Rockclimbing and Abseiling Risk Management and Litigation Conference? being convened in Brisbane. Viewed today, perhaps a little unfairly because the intervening fifteen years grants me the luxury of hindsight, the published proceedings of this conference create a distinct impression that the layers of public servants really had no idea of what it was they were attempting to manage, but they were unified in the belief that, whatever the nature of beast, it needed regulating. Margaret Laurence, the then Principal Legal Officer, Queensland Dept of Justice and Attorney General, concludes her contribution -

This brief overview of the relevant legislation demonstrates the limited scope for allowing activities such as rockclimbing and abseiling on public land. ? Margaret Laurence1

I guess that it is always easier to shut something down? than make the effort to understand it. But, such an approach comes at a cost to the conservation values of the park, where the ever arising novelty of recreation must be embraced and integrated by management if damage is not to ensue.? I believe the public should call out such failures for what they are, ?lazy management?, and? demand better for our National Parks. I could elaborate, but there is an entire blog post waiting to be written here, so I?ll leave it for now and move on.

It was commendable that representatives of the climbing community participated in the conference. However, with the notable exception of Gordon Brysland, all seemed as incapable as the public servants of articulating what it was that everyone was intent on fixing. Fortunately, Gordon Brysland, being both an active climber and legal expert in matters of public liability, was able to ?bell the cat? in his awesome contribution,? ?Waiting for Romeo?.

As a general proposition, it is arguable that in some cases the risk that a bolt may fail in the absence of negligence by anyone is an inherent risk of climbing. In others, a practice of land managers not to become involved in climbing may operate to protect them from liability. It is also possible that a greater proliferation of bolted routes will make it impossible in practice for a duty of care to be imposed which requires inspection and maintenance. There remains also the ability of land managers to avoid liability for bolts by entrenching appropriate policy decisions in management plans. ? Gordon Brysland2

Over a decade later, when Adam Gibson and I fronted up at our first meeting with DERM, having just kicked-off the fledgling ACAQ, it was clear that the cat was no longer belled, and quite a lot of time and effort was expended getting to the heart of the matter at this and the subsequent meetings. However, while attending a meeting some twelve months on, sudden inspiration moved me to ask,? ?Suppose for now we could wish away the problem of public liability that attaches to climber-installed bolts ? are there any other problems associated with climbing on the public estate that are intractable, or could not be managed by the available mechanisms?? People thought for a while and then one by one chimed in with a chorus of ?No, no there is nothing else that is a problem?. The sense of relief was palpable?.. yes, we can fix this, surely we can?

land managers go bolting

This heading is taken from Gordon Brysland?s? ?Waiting for Romeo?. In it he says -

Contracting recreational climbers to do the work, or permitting the same under familiar ?nod and wink? arrangements, would not shift legal liability from the land manager. Once a land manager makes an operational decision concerning climber safety, its duty of care is likely to be non-delegable. The duty is not just to take reasonable care, but to ensure that reasonable care is taken. ??. Were a climber to be injured as a result of bolt failure in these circumstances, and negligence was shown, the land manager could be legally liable, and damages awarded. ? Gordon Brysland2

The land manager is in a bind. In managing sport climbing he needs to be able to say ?don?t bolt there, bolt here instead? as a means of ensuring that impacts fall on areas where they can be best sustained. However, in prescribing where climbers may or may not bolt he is implicitly directing the placement of bolts and concomitantly increasing his exposure to the public liability they attract.? On the other hand, if he turns a blind eye to climbing activity at a particular crag, not only will he be willfully unaware of the placement of bolts , but also of the state of the environment at that particular site ? something that, under the NCA,?ought to be his primary concern.

three outcomes

It is not surprising, therefore, that we find a number of parks having management plans that take the option of proscribing rock climbing. At first brush, this makes sense in terms of the NCA, which makes it clear that in any contest between conservation and recreation, conservation wins (see section 17(a) of the act). Thus, if the only way of managing rock climbing is to turn a blind eye to it, with the consequent risk to conservation values, it might make more sense to ban climbing altogether. Such is the case for the latest Lamington NP management plan, and the blanket ban it places on all climbing within the park, including the substantial climbing resource of Poondarah. The ban on climbing at Poondarah works not because it is policed, but because the aspirations of the climbing community don?t extend to it. In fact it is largely unknown to the current generation of climbers. However, given that management plans run for 10 years, and in 10 years the aspirations of the younger generation will certainly have extended to Poondarah and beyond,? it is seems to me we have set the stage for a policy that serves neither the recreation nor the conservation values of the park. Thus are sown the seeds for future environmental damage at this site.

Where an area has a long and continuing tradition of climbing, it is not so easy for a land manager to shut-down climbing, especially when it is not proscribed by the existing management plan. Any new management plan attempting to do so is likely to be hit with a barrage of opposition during the public consultation phase. The Glasshouse Mountains NP is such an example, and with the exception of the ban on Mt Coonowrin, which is a matter apart, climbing has been managed in this park in a fairly hands-off manner. Here, on Mt Tibrogargan, the managers can quite reasonably claim ignorance of the host of climber-placed bolts, immersed as such bolts are, in a veritable sea of steep rock. Such distancing from the act of bolt placement carries the distinct disadvantage that the land manager is the last to know of damage being done by access to any recently opened sport crag.

The third type of outcome is illustrated by the unique situation that has occurred at Frog Buttress. Because this crag exhibits a very specific and unusual rock structure, one that favours a style of climbing where the use of bolts for protection is spurned, we have what is essentially a bolt-free climbing venue. Relieved of the bogeyman of bolt liability, the land manager has been able to step in and actively manage this park for climbing. This isn?t to say there aren?t ever issues between climbers and managers, but as someone who knew this crag from its inception 45 years ago, the positive benefits to the environment of managing visitor impacts is striking.

losing sight of what matters

To be sure, what matters is easy to grasp? our too few, too fragmented, National Parks ought not be trashed, or loved to death, by mismanagement of visitor traffic. Since 1992, land managers have had clear direction on this matter under the NCA. The spirit in which this act was drafted is abundantly clear. And yes, there is a pile of stuff in the act to?hold the rapacious and the exploitative elements in check, but none of this is germane to the current argument. What we are trying to hold in focus is the problem of managing visitors rightfully enjoying what is, after all, a publicly owned asset of the state. What the?NCA says about management of National Parks under sect 17,? is very straight forward -

A national park is to be managed to?

(a) provide, to the greatest possible extent, for the permanent preservation of the area?s natural condition and the protection of the area?s cultural resources and values; and

(b) present the area?s cultural and natural resources and their values; and

(c) ensure that the only use of the area is nature-based and ecologically sustainable.

(2) The management principle mentioned in subsection (1)(a) is the cardinal principle for the management of national parks.

- Nature Conservation Act 1992 sect 17

Note that visitor safety is not up there in bright lights. Note also that the cardinal principle is flagged, and it is not visitor safety. However, in providing for the chief executive to draft subsidiary regulations of the act for purposes of its administration, we do find visitor safety gets a mention. Under ?sect 175 2, we have -

(1) The Governor in Council may make regulations under this Act.

(2) A regulation may be made with respect to any of the following matters?

(a) access to protected areas by persons or animals;

(b) the use of land, and activities, in protected areas;

(c) providing for the safety of persons in protected areas, including the regulation of access to, and activities in, protected areas by persons or classes of persons; Example for paragraph (c) A regulation might regulate camping in a protected area by children, or adults accompanying children, to protect children from injury by animals.

- Nature Conservation Act 1992 sect 175

It has to be believed that such regulations, as are created under sect 175, are pursuant to the primary aims of sect 17, and not arbitrary or self-serving in any shape or form. However, as we shall see,? it was too much to hope that regulations, being the lantana of the public affairs landscape, would stay subservient to the primary legislation.

With the passage of time, various regulations accreted themselves to the NCA. No doubt all were borne out of good intentions to support sect 17, no doubt all were abundantly clear in their purpose, but, fourteen years after the NCA passed into law, when the Nature Conservation Regulations 2006 were signed off by the Governor in Council, one wonders how clear the intent of much of the minutia was to those authorising them. This four part gift-set for insomniacs includes amongst its number?Nature Conservation (Protected Areas Management) Regulation 2006 (NCR) .? In this we see formulated a number of mechanisms designed to regulate access to the public space. Two of them show that the bogeyman of public liability was causing the regulators to lose sight of what really matters.

Firstly, restricted access areas. Under NCR sect 74 we have -

(1) The chief executive may declare a protected area or a part of a protected area to be a restricted access area only if the chief executive reasonably believes the declaration is necessary or desirable?

(a) to secure the safety of a person or a person?s property; or ???

(c) to conserve or protect the cultural or natural resources of the area or native wildlife ??;

or??.

(f) for the orderly or proper management of the area.

- Nature Conservation (Protected Areas Management) Regulation 2006 sect 74

I can understand 1(c), but what is safety doing up there as the first point?? In what way does this regulation help management to carry out its obligations under sect 17 of the NCA? As the for the final point 1(f), this is the epitome of a self-serving regulation. It is laziness writ large.

Secondly, special activities. Under NCR sect 79 we have -

The chief executive may declare only 1 or more of the following activities to be a special activity for all or part of a protected area?
(a) an activity that will, or is reasonably likely to, have an unusual or significant impact on the cultural or natural resources of the area or part;
(b) an activity for which special training or supervision is needed before a person can safely engage in the activity;
(c) an activity that will, or is reasonably likely to, involve a risk to the public.
Examples of activities that may be declared as special activities?
rock climbing, white water rafting

- Nature Conservation (Protected Areas Management) Regulation 2006 sect 79

Again, I can partially understand point (a), though I am struggling to grasp exactly how any activity that causes ?unusual or significant impact on the cultural or natural resources? would ever be acceptable. But points b) and c)? Whatever has that to do with sect 17 of the NCA? And then to make rock climbing exemplar of a special activity? It is clear that the understanding of the true risks and attendant public liability exposure presented by sport climbing, as well as the appreciation of the aspirations of the burgeoning sport climbing community was at a nadir within the state bureaucracy when these regulations were drafted.

So we see that by 2006, matters had come to a pass whereby land managers were losing sight of the cardinal principle. Fear of litigation and minutia of regulation having displaced the issues of rightful concern. Hindsight is a harsh judge, but I can?t help but think that a simple snapshot of the situation at climbing crags throughout Europe and the United States would have alerted all but the willfully blind to the recreational demand that was heading our way.

closing the gap

In the closing days of 1999, a profound hiatus opened between the climbing community and land managers when Mt Coonowrin, a major and unique facet of South East Queensland climbing, was closed to public access. The closure was pre-emptive, with no public consultation period, and I believe, without the knowledge of the public servants who were actively engaging the climbing community via the South East Queensland Rockclimbing and Abseiling Site Management Forum. This unfortunate mis-step destroyed the trust that had been built up, and pushed? the new surging interest in sport climbing ?underground?, with the subsequent development of sport crags being carried out ?below the radar? of the land management.

Such a situation was less than ideal in that management lost track of where new climbing development was taking place. Even more important was the fact that management was left nursing an increasingly irrelevant understanding of rock climbing, one that might be applicable to the ?bolt-free? climbing at Frog Buttress, but left them ill-equipped to cope with the burgeoning growth of sport climbing. ? This state of affairs persisted for ten years, and might have continued longer if it were not for an event that forced the climbing community to stand-up and be counted. A number of climbers were fined by QPWS for fixing bolts at Mt Flinders. The validity of using the NCR for this purpose is a subject apart. What matters for the purposes of this discussion was that it provided the catalyst for the formation of a climbers organisation capable of engaging the state bureaucratic apparatus. Thus, the ACAQ was born out of this one act of bureaucratic overreach, and formal communications with the Department of Environment and Resource Management (DERM) commenced.

I don?t believe anybody, climber or public servant, wants to see the environment trashed, or more pointedly, wants to be the person responsible for a policy that has such an outcome. So, by keeping this one thing,? the only thing that really matters,? in the centre of the negotiating table,? progress was relatively straight forward.

Kudos should go to the public servants who took on board the new information ACAQ was able to provide, and to come up with a policy draft for cliff-based activities on the estates managed by DERM. And, it was with as much surprise as pleasure for me to discover that the many hours ACAQ had invested in reviewing drafts had finally made it into an official QPWS Operational Policy (OP) some three years later. All this despite hiccups along the way which included contention over the Draft Mt Coolum NP Management Plan, and tumultuous changes in the structure of state departments following the state elections.

where are we now?

There is plenty not to like, or to push back against in the new OP, but it would be churlish to do so without pausing to consider what is good, if not great, about this document.

This is the best bit ? right at the start, where it should be -

1.1 QPWS will allow rock climbing in appropriate areas, consistent with the protection of park values.
1.2 QPWS will accommodate a diversity and range of settings and opportunities for rock climbing activities at appropriate sites across the State.
- Rock climbing on QPWS managed areas 2012

Not impressed? Well you should be. Whilst most climbers have no doubt of their basic right to climb within a National Park, there are still? QPWS officers who view rock climbing as the deviant behaviour of a reckless minority.? In all fairness, in times past (I hope they are past) there were members of the climbing community whose cavalier behaviour showed they had no notion of the concept of a national park, so the above prejudice may well be justified. However, what this OP does, is provide guidance for QPWS officers on the ground, and right there at point 1, it is recognizing recreational rock climbing as a valid activity within the framework of the NCA sect 17. Beyond this point we are, as they say, just messing with the details.

The second best bit is here -

6.1 QPWS acknowledges that permanent fixed protection and other permanent climb aids (including anchors and chains) already exist at many sites within QPWS managed areas and that these are necessary for maintaining a range of climbing opportunities.

- Rock climbing on QPWS managed areas 2012

There, at last, they have gone and spoken the unspeakable. I guess this became easier with the realisation that with the growth of sport climbing came an evolution in safety systems. Bolts became much safer, and the exposure to single point failure diminished, taking it out of the extreme sport classification. Climbing no longer was the edgy, high stakes game it was decades ago.

So we come to a pass, exactly twenty years after a legislative mechanism suitable for the management of recreational climbing within the protected estates was signed into law, to a point where we can actually use its framework in a way that ensures the best for both climber and environment.

References:

1.? Laurence M. 1997, ?Common and Statute Law Relevant to the Management of Public Land?: in Proceedings of the South East Qld Rockclimbing and Abseiling Risk Management and Litigation Conference ISBN 0-7242-7992-X

2.? Brysland G. 1997, ?Waiting for Romeo?: in Proceedings of the South East Qld Rockclimbing and Abseiling Risk Management and Litigation Conference ISBN 0-7242-7992-X

Source: http://www.qldclimb.org.au/2012/12/commentary-on-nprsr-operational-policy-rock-climbing-on-qpws-managed-areas/

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We Look Back Earthily At 2012

60-Second Earth

Superstorms, electric cars, alternative fuels and arctic sea ice all made environmental news in 2012. David Biello reports.

More 60-Second Earth

  • Showcasing more than fifty of the most provocative, original, and significant online essays from 2011, The Best Science Writing Online 2012 will change the way...

    Read More??

Twenty-twelve was quite a year of change for the planet, if not quite the apocalypse imagined by New Age shamans or Hollywood producers.

Arctic summer sea ice shattered its previous record low, and set off a storm of speculation about what an ice-free Arctic might mean for future weird weather. In a bid to counter exactly this kind of thing, a team of would-be geoengineers dumped iron in the ocean off British Columbia to prompt a plankton bloom, in hopes of boosting local salmon populations and sucking CO2 out of the air.

In a perhaps less quixotic bid, scientists continued to work on breakthroughs that could alter our dependence on fossil fuels, from using microbes to turn seaweed into biofuels to better batteries for electric cars.

Speaking of which, an electric car, the Tesla Model S, became simply the best car of the year, according to Motor Trend. Meanwhile, the human population kept growing, urbanizing and struggling to either feed itself or not overfeed itself.

Finally, there was Hurricane Sandy, which closed our offices for a week and appeared to have blown climate change back onto the American political landscape, however briefly. Judging by what happened at the United Nations climate conference in Doha, however, 2012 was not the year when the United States or the world finally did something about restraining the greenhouse gas emissions causing climate change, not even CO2 capture and storage. And it doesn?t look like 2013 will be either.

That said, natural gas began to supplant coal in the U.S., driving down greenhouse gas emissions. And that's a good thing. Happy New Year!?David Biello [The above text is a transcript of this podcast]?
?


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=881749f1f70c40a2e80404ba507b52c0

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Friday, December 21, 2012

'Take Me Out Of It,' President Urges GOP, And 'Take The Deal'

With the end-of-year deadline looming on automatic tax increases and spending cuts, President Obama on Wednesday made the case that Republicans should recognize "I have met them at least halfway in order to get something done for the country."

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and his fellow Republicans should "take the deal," Obama argued, because "if the argument from Republicans is we haven't done enough on spending cuts, that argument's not going to fly. ... We've got close to $1 trillion in spending cuts" in his latest offer.

The other side, as we've reported, doesn't share the president's view. Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Boehner said the administration has proposed $1 trillion in new revenues, "but "only $850 billion in net spending reductions."

Talking to reporters in the White House briefing room at midday, Obama also said Republicans may be resisting a deal because "it's very hard for them to say yes to me. ... They've got to take me out of it and think about their voters and what's best for the country."

And he said that Friday's mass shooting at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., should make all lawmakers think again about priorities. "Goodness, if this past week has done anything it should just give us some perspective," Obama said. "Right now, what the country needs is for us to compromise."

Update at 2:17 p.m. ET. Boehner Responds:

Echoing comments he's made many times in recent days, Boehner just told reporters that he hopes "the president gets serious soon." On Thursday, Boehner predicted, the House will pass the GOP's "plan B." Then, he said, Obama has a choice: get Senate Democrats to pass the plan "or he can be responsible for the largest tax increase in American history" as Bush-era tax cuts expire.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2012/12/19/167627814/take-me-out-of-it-president-tells-gop-and-take-the-deal?ft=1&f=1017

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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Internet ad revenue rises 18 pct to $9.3B in 3Q

NEW YORK (AP) ? Internet advertising hit a new high in the third quarter as marketers continued to shift money from print and broadcasting.

The $9.3 billion spent on Internet ads from July through September is an 18 percent increase from $7.8 billion at the same time last year, according to a breakdown released Wednesday by the accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Internet Advertising Bureau, a trade group.

The third-quarter total marks the highest ad volume for any three-month period since 1995, when online marketing first began to move to the Web. Another record is expected in the current quarter ending this month.

Internet advertising more than doubles the amount in U.S. newspapers' print advertising, which totaled $4.5 billion in the third quarter, according to the industry's own figures.

The upheaval has been driven by the growing number of people who rely on computers and mobile devices to get information on the Internet.

The increasing number of Internet ads helps subsidize many free online services, including search, email and social networking.

Google Inc., the Internet's search leader, has been the biggest beneficiary of the online ad boom so far. Other major sellers of online ads include Yahoo Inc., Facebook Inc., Microsoft Corp. and AOL Inc.

Despite its steady growth, the Internet still lags well behind television as the most popular marketing machine. Through the first half of this year, U.S television advertising revenue approached nearly $35 billion, up 6 percent from last year, according the most recent data from the trade group TVB.

TV stations enjoyed another prosperous period in the third quarter as money poured in from political campaigns heading into November's elections.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2012-12-19-US-Internet-Advertising/id-0c886844c45a43899a93921fd257e5b7

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Flights to Africa and the Middle East from $946 RT Incl. Taxes & Fees

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Source: http://feeds.independenttraveler.com/~r/site/it/deals/~3/Irs79iHVLtI/flights-to-africa-and-the-middle-east-from-946-rt-incl-taxes-and-fees

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Tuesday, December 18, 2012

YouTube's Capture App Opens Direct Route for Video Uploads

YouTube on Monday launched Capture, an app for iPhone and iPod touch that lets people share their videos instantaneously. The new app is Google's first foray into instant video sharing from mobile devices and an effort to bring more homemade video content into its ecosystem by streamlining the sharing process. Capture allows for instantaneous creation and sharing.

Source: http://ectnews.com.feedsportal.com/c/34520/f/632000/s/26ba1c18/l/0L0Stechnewsworld0N0Crsstory0C768810Bhtml/story01.htm

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Top 5 personal finance books of 2012 - South Philly Review

Book Review Roundup

Tara-Nicholle Nelson
Inman News?

The end of the year is the time when most businesses close out their books, and the time when most of us think about our own financials in terms of what we'd like to do differently, financially speaking, next year.

Whether your New Year's resolutions involve making more money, spending less, saving and investing more aggressively better, or paying off your credit cards, one of my favorite personal finance books of 2012 is sure to be of great help.

1: "The Prosperous Heart: Creating a Life of 'Enough'"
Author: Julia Cameron and Emma Lively
Publisher: Tarcher/Penguin, 2012; 240 pages; $25.95

First, Cameron and Lively reset readers' understanding of prosperity as a spiritual matter, not a monetary one, carving out a new definition of prosperity as having faith, satisfaction and "enough" -- "having a life beyond need and worry." Then, they provide a set of five tools to help readers generate this expanded sense of prosperity. Finally, Cameron and Lively provide a 12-week course in prosperity, touching on everything from:

  • inventorying and examining your spending habits, money fears, relationships and past losses;
  • trusting in a higher power and in yourself to provide for your wants and needs; and
  • practicing kindness, forgiveness and velocity -- the authors' term for not too little and not too much action.

2. "Rebounders: How Winners Pivot from Setback to Success"
Author: Rick Newman
Publisher: Ballantine Books, 2012; 256 pages; $26

Resilience, financially and otherwise, is the subject of U.S. News and World Report journalist Rick Newman's new, hopeful and useful book.

The meat of "Rebounders" is a series of detailed stories of figures in business, politics, philanthropy and culture -- stories of rebounders who experienced and recovered from all manner of devastating failures and traumatic disasters on their paths to achieving an assortment of heroics, from becoming our national heroes, like Ben Franklin and Thomas Jefferson, to helming companies such as Pandora and Netflix. Newman uses these stories to surface dozens of nuanced insights with the power to spark and call forth the individual flavor of resilience within every reader.

3. "How to Be Richer, Smarter and Better-Looking Than Your Parents"
Author: Zac Bissonnette
Publisher: Portfolio/Penguin; 2012; 256 pages; $17

Zac Bissonnette spent his college and post-college years teaching his peers the ins and outs of securing a college education, without racking up the debt that seems to be its inescapable companion in modern-day America.

But Zac's no longer in college, nor are his peers. So at the ripe old age of 23, Zac is back with a new mission: to provide detours around the many financial traps that ensnare so many newly minted college grads as they embark upon life as "grown-ups."

4. "The $100 Startup: Reinvent the Way You Make a Living, Do What You Love, and Create a New Future"
Author: Chris Guillebeau
Publisher: Crown Business, 2012; 304 pages; $23

"The $100 Startup" synthesizes the results of a multiyear study Guillebeau conducted with more than 1,500 owners of super-scrappy, thriving businesses into an action plan for those who have very little or no money, and zero special or professional skills, but have the moxie and motivation to build a business, on the side or otherwise.

*/ var formWrap = $( 'add_comment_form' ); var formDivs = $$( '#add_comment_form div' ); for ( i = 0; i ' + name + ' said... on ' + timeStamp }); var commentPar = new Element( 'p', { 'html': '?' + comment + '?' }); var ruleDiv = new Element( 'div', { 'class': 'rule' }); authorPar.inject( commentDiv ); commentPar.inject( commentDiv ); commentDiv.inject( commentWrap ); ruleDiv.inject( commentWrap ); } else { msgPar.innerHTML = "Comment has been sent for approval"; } } } // FUNCTION TO DISPLAY LATEST COMMENT ON MULTIMEDIA PAGES TRIGGERED BY AJAX CALL BACK function showMMComment(theName, theComment) { // 'name' and 'comment' have placeholder content for testing, actual data would be sent from DB var name = theName; var comment = theComment; var flagged = false; var status; var error; /* COMMENT HTML MARKUP STRUCTURE
  • TheDude said...
    Mandy Moore is pretty smokin. I wish I was cool enough to date her. Does anybody know how I can get her number?

  • */ var formWrap = $( 'media_add_comment' ); var commentForm = formWrap.getElement( 'form' ); commentForm.setStyle( 'display', 'none' ); var msgPar = new Element( 'p', { 'html': 'Thank you, your comment has been added.' }); msgPar.inject( formWrap ); if ( comment != '' ) { if ( !flagged ) { if ( name == '' ) name = 'Anonymous'; var commentWrap = $( 'comments_wrap' ); var commentUl = commentWrap.getElement( 'ul' ); var commentLi = new Element( 'li', { 'class': 'clear' }); var numDiv = new Element( 'div', { 'class': 'num', 'html': '?' }); var commentPar = new Element( 'p', { 'html': '' + name + ' said...
    ' + comment }); numDiv.inject( commentLi ); commentPar.inject( commentLi ); commentLi.inject( commentUl ); } else { msgPar.set( 'html', 'Comment has been sent for approval' ); } } } function displayNewComment() { var msgP = document.getElementById("msg"); msgP.innerHTML = "Thank you for your submission. Your comment has been added below."; if(comment != "") { if(!flagged) { var commentSection = document.getElementById("ajaxSection"); var commentDiv = document.createElement("div"); var timeStamp = 'Dec 18, 2012 at 06:18PM'; commentDiv.innerHTML = ''; commentSection.appendChild(commentDiv); } } } function validateCommentForm(form){ var fieldEmail = document.getElementById("field.email"); var fieldName = document.getElementById("field.name"); var nameValue = fieldName.value; var emailValue = fieldEmail.value; var filter = /^([a-zA-Z0-9_\.\-])+\@(([a-zA-Z0-9\-])+\.)+([a-zA-Z0-9]{2,4})+$/; if (filter.test(emailValue)) { var fieldBody = document.getElementById("field.body") var bodyValue = fieldBody.value; bodyValue = bodyValue.replace(/&/g,"&"); bodyValue = bodyValue.replace(/,"/g,">"); bodyValue = bodyValue.replace(/\r\n/g,"
    "); bodyValue = bodyValue.replace(/\n/g,"
    "); bodyValue = bodyValue.replace(/\r/g,"
    "); fieldBody.value = bodyValue; if(navigator.appName == 'Microsoft Internet Explorer') { if(document.getElementById('submit').disabled) { document.getElementById('submit').disabled=false; } else { document.getElementById('submit').disabled=true; } } return insertComment(form,true,function(){return showEditorialComment(nameValue, bodyValue)}); } else { alert('Please enter a valid Email below.'); form.elements[field.email].focus(); return false; } }

    Source: http://www.southphillyreview.com/real-estate/top_5_personal_finance_books_of_2012-184000721.html

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    Movement seen in 'fiscal cliff' talks

    WASHINGTON (AP) ? The White House and congressional Republicans are a long way from agreeing on a plan to deal with the "fiscal cliff." But it seems like some progress is being made.

    House Speaker John Boehner is offering $1 trillion in higher tax revenue over 10 years and an increase in the top tax rate on people making more than $1 million a year. He's also offering a large enough extension in the government's borrowing cap to fund the government for one year before the issue must be revisited ? conditioned on President Barack Obama agreeing to the $1 trillion in cuts.

    The offer, made Friday after a long impasse between Boehner, R-Ohio, and Obama, calls for about $450 billion in revenue from increasing the top rate on million-dollar-plus income from 35 percent to the Clinton-era rate of 39.6 percent.

    The additional revenue required to meet the $1 trillion target would be collected through a rewrite of the tax code next year and by slowing the inflation adjustments made to tax brackets.

    In return, Boehner is asking for $1 trillion in spending cuts from government benefit programs like Medicare. Those cuts would defer most of a painful set of across-the-board spending cuts set to slash many domestic programs and the Pentagon budget by 8-9 percent, starting in January.

    Boehner's proposal was described Sunday by officials familiar with it. They required anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks.

    Boehner also continues to press for a less generous inflation adjustment for Social Security benefits, a move endorsed by many budget hawks. Obama and Democrats on last year's deficit "supercommittee" endorsed the idea in offers made last year, but they're more reluctant now.

    The new inflation adjustment would also raise about $70 billion over a decade in new revenues because tax brackets would rise more slowly for inflation, driving people more quickly into higher tax brackets.

    The increased optimism come as time is running out before the adjournment of Congress. Tax rates on all workers go up in January, and $109 billion worth of across-the-board spending cuts begin to take effect then as well. Taken together with the expiration of extended jobless benefits and a 2-percentage-point break in Social Security payroll taxes, the combination of austerity steps threatens to send the economy back into recession.

    The burst of optimism is tempered by the caution that the remaining steps to reaching a deal ? particularly how much to cut Medicare and whether to impose the new, less generous inflation adjustment to Social Security ? are difficult. Then comes the job of selling it to a polarized Congress, where GOP conservatives have been railing against higher tax rates for months as sure to cost jobs and hurt small business, and Democrats have taken a harder line against cost curbs to Medicare.

    But it appears clear there is momentum as White House and congressional aides worked through the weekend.

    The movement comes as an increasing number of Republicans have called for a tactical retreat that would hand Obama a victory on his longstanding campaign promise to raise taxes on households making more than $250,000 a year. That increase, combined with an increase in the tax rate on investment income from 15 percent to 20 percent, would raise about $800 billion in tax revenue over a decade.

    In that context, Boehner's move could be seen as an attempt to get spending cuts linked to the rate increase rather than giving them up and getting nothing in return. Judging from the numbers, Boehner is also willing to allow tax rates on investment income to increase for high-end income and allow the reinstatement of curbs on the value of exemptions and itemized deductions for high-income earners.

    Still, the Boehner offer is sure to cause unrest among many conservative Republicans dead set against raising tax rates at all.

    Obama has offered $600 billion in spending cuts over a decade, including $350 billion from federal health care programs and $250 billion from other cuts to domestic programs like farm subsidies and the pension program for federal workers, and through sales of used federal property.

    Obama and Boehner met Thursday in a session described as "frank" by both sides. Boehner's offer and a follow-up phone call came the next day, amid increasing speculation that Republicans might move on to a plan B in which they would give Obama a win on tax rates for upper-bracket earners and renew the fight when increasing the government's borrowing cap ? which needs to be done soon, probably in February.

    Boehner's $1 trillion cut proposal would be paired with a comparable increase in the borrowing cap, enough to keep the government borrowing for about a year. But if the cuts are smaller, the debt limit increase would be smaller as well.

    "Our position has not changed. Any debt limit increase would require cuts and reforms of a greater amount," said Boehner spokesman Brendan Buck.

    But Boehner is showing flexibility on how quickly to implement any increase in the Medicare eligibility age, recognizing the Democratic opposition to the idea. Republicans have been cautious on that front as well; they have regularly exempted those close to retirement age from their Medicare cuts.

    Obama originally sought $1.6 trillion in new tax revenue over a decade and has since revised that to $1.4 trillion. He would probably go lower, a decision fueled in part by resistance from Democratic allies in the Senate to Obama proposals like taxing capital gains and income at rates equal to earned income.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/movement-seen-fiscal-cliff-talks-012258067--finance.html

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    Matt Damon Talks Gay Rumors About Him & Ben Affleck

    Matt Damon prides himself on having a "boring" nice-guy reputation. Still, he's been the subject of a few juicy rumors -- like the one early on in his career, when there were whispers about him and best friend Ben Affleck being lovers. In a new interview with Playboy, Damon explained why the gossip bothered him.

    Source: http://www.ivillage.com/matt-damon-talks-gay-rumors-about-him-ben-affleck/1-a-509086?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Amatt-damon-talks-gay-rumors-about-him-ben-affleck-509086

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    Thursday, December 13, 2012

    Pew: Social Networking Most Popular In The UK, And Despite The ...

    The Pew Center has been running a long-term study on U.S. consumer habits on the Internet and ?other digital media (you can read about past research findings?here); today it?s releasing a new set of data that looks at the wider global state of affairs, as part of Pew?s Global Attitudes Project, specifically covering social media and Internet and mobile usage.

    A survey of 26,000 consumers across 21 nations, conducted in March and April of this year, found that the UK is the most social-networked country at the moment; that making voice calls is still, on average and by far, the most popular thing to do with a phone; and that events like the Arab Spring have pushed people to use the Internet more to express political opinions.

    We?ve embedded the full document below, but here are some of the standout conclusions we have found:

    • When it comes to social networking, the UK has the highest proportion of users with 52%, of adults using social media services like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. The U.S. tied in second place with Russia at 50%, while the Czech Republic and Spain at 49%.
    • For the most part, it looks like social media use runs in direct proportion with how widespread Internet usage is. So, for example, 89% of India?s surveyed consumers, and 94% of Pakistan?s, said they had no Internet access, and they were the two least socially-networked countries too, at 6% and 3% respectively. In the UK, only 15% of respondents said they did not have Internet access.
    • The one exception here seems to be Russia. It actually has a fairly high proportion of people without access: 40%, according to the report, and yet it still came in tied for second place in social media usage. This could be because Russia is one of the biggest Internet using nations in Europe ? so when people are online, they?re online a lot. Brazil has a similar profile to Russia?s, with only half its respondents saying they have Internet access with around 40% of them using social media.

    As companies like Facebook know all too well, a lot of social networking, especially in markets with lower PC and broadband penetration, takes place over the mobile phone. In fact, Pew found that in 12 of the countries it surveyed, at least 60% of smartphone users were using their devices to access social networks. The top three for this trend, it said, were?Egypt (79%), Mexico (74%) and Greece (72%), where broadband penetration is low.

    But how it?s used has some interesting variations depending on the region in question:

    • By and large, social networking is used for entertainment. Music and movies, Pew found, were the most popular topics on average across all 21 nations, with 67% of respondents saying that these were the topics discussed most by them. ?Community issues,? which could mean anything from chit-chat about friends and your life to local events, came in second at 46%, and sports at 43%.
    • Religion is very low down at just 14% ? whether that presents and opportunity or challenge to the Pope, who just started tweeting today, remains to be seen.

    Politics on average globally is moderately more popular than religion, with a 34% average in terms of social media subject. But that changes when you focus on one specific group, Arabs. While Lebanon, Tunisia, Egypt and Jordan fell very squarely into the global average for social networking usage (around the arab social media use30-34% mark), they had double the amount of chatter about politics and, with the stark exception of Lebanon, five times the amount of chatter about religion compared to global averages. Community issues also got double the attention in these Arab nations than they did on average globally.

    What does this show? That despite some of the restrictions that took place around the Arab Spring protests, the Internet remains a powerful force for information dissemination in communities where it has otherwise been difficult to express opinions through the media.

    In mobile phone ownership and usage, Pakistan and India again stood out as having the lowest?penetrations at around 50% (again, showing the connection between mobile phones and social media, since these two also had the lowest proportion of social media users). Many many other countries at 80% or higher and the global average at 87%.

    Although taking pictures and video are now noted as common mobile activities by 54% of respondents ? and those surely have shot up over the years ? voice calls remain by far the most popular thing to do on a phone, at 98% of all respondents noting it as their most regular mobile activity.

    You might think that this is because smartphones are still are a relatively nascent phenomenon on the global stage ? it?s developed countries like the U.S. and UK where smartphones have started to tip past the 50% usage mark; many other countries are far behind that ? that voice has remained so popular. But in fact, what keeps it so high is that practically, no matter how fancy their phone is and how many apps it has on it, has pushed away from voice services altogether.

    By comparison, Internet usage came out only at 26%. Again, turning to companies like Facebook, which are keen to grow their gobal audiences, this is another sign of how they will need to focus on other ways of accessing their networks, for example by text message (74% global penetration), while they wait for the rest of the world to catch up with the iPhone/Android generation.


    Source: http://techcrunch.com/2012/12/12/pew-social-networking-most-popular-in-the-uk-and-despite-the-smartphone-app-boom-voice-calls-remain-king/

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    Wednesday, December 12, 2012

    Cassini spots mini Nile River on Saturn's moon Titan

    Dec. 12, 2012 ? Scientists with NASA's Cassini mission have spotted what appears to be a miniature, extraterrestrial likeness of Earth's Nile River: a river valley on Saturn's moon Titan that stretches more than 200 miles (400 kilometers) from its "headwaters" to a large sea. It is the first time images have revealed a river system this vast and in such high resolution anywhere other than Earth.

    Scientists deduce that the river, which is in Titan's north polar region, is filled with liquid hydrocarbons because it appears dark along its entire length in the high-resolution radar image, indicating a smooth surface.

    "Though there are some short, local meanders, the relative straightness of the river valley suggests it follows the trace of at least one fault, similar to other large rivers running into the southern margin of this same Titan sea," said Jani Radebaugh, a Cassini radar team associate at Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah. "Such faults -- fractures in Titan's bedrock -- may not imply plate tectonics, like on Earth, but still lead to the opening of basins and perhaps to the formation of the giant seas themselves."

    The new image is available online at: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/multimedia/pia16197.html .

    Titan is the only other world we know of that has stable liquid on its surface. While Earth's hydrologic cycle relies on water, Titan's equivalent cycle involves hydrocarbons such as ethane and methane. In Titan's equatorial regions, images from Cassini's visible-light cameras in late 2010 revealed regions that darkened due to recent rainfall. Cassini's visual and infrared mapping spectrometer confirmed liquid ethane at a lake in Titan's southern hemisphere known as Ontario Lacus in 2008.

    "Titan is the only place we've found besides Earth that has a liquid in continuous movement on its surface," said Steve Wall, the radar deputy team lead, based at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "This picture gives us a snapshot of a world in motion. Rain falls, and rivers move that rain to lakes and seas, where evaporation starts the cycle all over again. On Earth, the liquid is water; on Titan, it's methane; but on both it affects most everything that happens."

    The radar image here was taken on Sept. 26, 2012. It shows Titan's north polar region, where the river valley flows into Kraken Mare, a sea that is, in terms of size, between the Caspian Sea and the Mediterranean Sea on Earth. The real Nile River stretches about 4,100 miles (6,700 kilometers). The processes that led to the formation of Earth's Nile are complex, but involve faulting in some regions.

    The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and ASI, the Italian Space Agency. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. The Cassini orbiter was designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The radar instrument was built by JPL and the Italian Space Agency, working with team members from the US and several European countries. JPL is a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

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

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/n0Qo40m5dLQ/121212164028.htm

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    Astronomers discover 'missing link' of black holes

    Dec. 12, 2012 ? The discovery of a binging black hole in our nearest neighbouring galaxy, Andromeda, has shed new light on some of the brightest X-ray sources seen in other galaxies, according to new work co-authored by astronomers from the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research's Curtin University node.

    Using a suite of Earth-orbiting X-ray telescopes, including NASA's Swift and the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellites, a large international team of astronomers watched as the X-ray emission from the black hole -- found over 2million light years away -- brightened and faded over the course of six months.

    The study, published in the scientific journal Nature, also shows what happens when black holes feast rapidly on the material stripped from a companion star.

    It is the second Ultraluminous X-Ray source (ULX) to have been spotted in Andromeda -- the Milky Way's nearest neighboring galaxy -- in the past two years.

    X-ray telescopes have shown many nearby galaxies to host ULX sources, which can be bright enough to outshine an entire galaxy in X-rays.

    Astronomers have spent years debating whether these are black holes just a few times the mass of the Sun which are gorging themselves on gas from an orbiting star, or whether they are more massive black holes eating more sedately.

    Lead author Dr Matthew Middleton, who led the latest research while at Durham University, said the findings helped solve this debate.

    Dr Middleton, now based at the University of Amsterdam, said: "The black hole we observed in Andromeda is the missing link.

    "Our observations tell us that this ultraluminous X-ray source -- and by extension, many others -- is just a run-of-the-mill black hole, only about ten times the mass of the Sun, that is swallowing material as fast as it can."

    Dr Middleton added: "We watched a black hole go from nibbling daintily at an appetiser to binging on the main course, and then gradually slowing down over dessert."

    Black holes in our own Milky Way galaxy are very rarely seen to binge, but when they do, they also launch very powerful beams of material called jets, which are blasted outwards at close to the speed of light, and can be tracked using sensitive radio telescopes.

    The team trained the National Science Foundation's Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array on the black hole, and saw extremely bright radio emission that dropped by a half in just 30 minutes.

    "Discovering these radio waves from an ultraluminous X-ray source is the smoking gun, a dead giveaway that these are just normal, everyday black holes," said co-author Dr James Miller-Jones, of the Curtin University node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research in Perth, Australia.

    "This tells us that the region producing radio waves is extremely small in size, no further across than the distance between Jupiter and the Sun."

    This finding was confirmed by zooming in using the world's most eagle-eyed radio telescope, the Very Long Baseline Array.

    This was the first time that radio jets had been detected from a stellar-mass black hole outside our own Milky Way galaxy.

    Despite the large distance to Andromeda, the absence of dust and gas in that direction allows an unhindered view of the feast, giving scientists key new insights into how jets are produced by a binging black hole.

    Co-author Dr Natasha Hurley-Walker, also from the Curtin University node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, said: "We were very lucky that this ULX appeared in our local neighbourhood; its proximity meant that we could make these radio observations and demonstrate that the black hole emitting the X-rays is fairly small."

    ICRAR is a joint venture between Curtin University and The University of Western Australia providing research excellence in the field of radio astronomy.

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR).

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


    Journal Reference:

    1. Matthew J. Middleton, James C. A. Miller-Jones, Sera Markoff, Rob Fender, Martin Henze, Natasha Hurley-Walker, Anna M. M. Scaife, Timothy P. Roberts, Dominic Walton, John Carpenter, Jean-Pierre Macquart, Geoffrey C. Bower, Mark Gurwell, Wolfgang Pietsch, Frank Haberl, Jonathan Harris, Michael Daniel, Junayd Miah, Chris Done, John S. Morgan, Hugh Dickinson, Phil Charles, Vadim Burwitz, Massimo Della Valle, Michael Freyberg, Jochen Greiner, Margarita Hernanz, Dieter H. Hartmann, Despina Hatzidimitriou, Arno Riffeser, Gloria Sala, Stella Seitz, Pablo Reig, Arne Rau, Marina Orio, David Titterington, Keith Grainge. Bright radio emission from an ultraluminous stellar-mass microquasar in M 31. Nature, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/nature11697

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

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

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/1veHo7vapMw/121212130756.htm

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    How outside money was poured into governors' races

    By Paul Abowd and Andrea FullerThe Center for Public Integrity

    Despite outraising its Democratic counterpart by a 2-to-1 margin, the Republican Governors Association won only four of 11 races in the 2012 election, a far cry from the success it enjoyed two years ago.

    The Washington D.C.-based political organization raised almost $100 million, according to recently released Internal Revenue Service data. The group targeted six states it considered winnable, losing five of them. Democrats won seven of the 11 contests, but the GOP managed to pick up one seat in North Carolina, long held by Democrats.


    The top donors to the so-called ?527? organization, which can accept unlimited contributions from billionaires, corporations and unions, are familiar Republican Party patrons ? No. 1 is?Bob Perry, a Texas homebuilder and perennial RGA supporter, who gave $3.25 million. That?s a little more than half of what he gave in 2010.

    Billionaire casino magnate Sheldon Adelson is?No. 2, with $3 million in donations between him and his wife. According to the latest Federal Election Commission reports, Adelson is?the top donor to super PACs in?2012, doling out more than $93 million along with his family.

    Conservative billionaire David Koch ? who has not made any contributions to?super PACs ??was the organization?s third-highest donor, writing?two checks totaling $2 million. Koch is co-owner of the second-largest privately held company in America, Koch Industries, an energy conglomerate.

    Seven of the RGA?s top 10 donors are corporate executives who gave at least $1 million. Two of them, Paul Singer and Kenneth Griffin, are hedge fund managers.

    Six of the Democratic Governors Association's top donors were unions. The American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees topped the DGA donors list, giving about $1.3 million. The Service Employees International Union gave about $1.1 million, while the American Federation of Teachers gave at least $772,000.

    Top corporate donors to the DGA included pharmaceutical giants Pfizer, which gave almost $700,000, and AstraZeneca, which contributed nearly $600,000. The companies also gave comparable sums to the RGA. The DGA also got corporate support from?health insurer United Healthcare Services Inc., and?AT&T.

    The DGA raised nearly $50 million, the organization's "strongest fundraising year ever," according to spokeswoman Kate Hansen.?

    'Enormous impact on state elections'
    The DGA and RGA have devised national strategies for collecting unlimited funds from unions, corporations, and wealthy individuals, and funneling the money into state races. Both have used networks of state-based PACs to maneuver around various state limits on campaign giving.

    ?They?ve had an enormous impact on state elections across the nation,? said Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, an election law expert at Stetson Law School. ?In many states they were consistently a top spender.?

    The circuitous methods used by both organizations to inject corporate and union cash into state races and mask the identity of its donors have raised legal questions, prompted lawsuits, and tested the capacity of state election boards to enforce limits on outside spending.

    Both organizations have told the Center for Public Integrity that they?fully comply with campaign finance laws, and that they report their donors and spending to the IRS.

    The RGA set up a federal super PAC called RGA Right Direction, and fed it with $9.8 million in contributions. The super PAC ? another?type of organization that can?accept unlimited donations from individuals and corporations ? then made a?large contribution to Indiana Republican candidate Mike Pence, and bought ads in tight state races in Montana, Washington, New Hampshire, and West Virginia.

    Super PACs are normally used to spend money on federal campaigns. By passing the funds through the super PAC, which reported its sole donor as the RGA, the association effectively shielded the identities of the donors who paid for ads in the state races.

    In North Carolina, the RGA spent millions of dollars, directly from corporate treasuries to win in a state long?led by Democratic governors. The unlimited contributions from dozens of corporations across the country went toward ads supporting Republican candidate Pat McCrory, who won convincingly over Democratic Lt. Gov. Walter Dalton.

    The DGA, too, used a network of state-affiliated PACs, to fund ad campaigns in battleground states like Montana and North Carolina. It was the primary funder of a PAC called North Carolina Citizens for Progress, which purchased ads attacking McCrory.

    While America?s wealthiest corporate executives tend to prefer the RGA, and unions give almost exclusively to the DGA, some donors played both sides this election.

    Agricultural giant Monsanto, credit card company Visa and health insurance company Humana were large donors to both the RGA and DGA ? each giving about $100,000 to both groups.

    Despite the?Republicans' win-loss record, RGA spokesman Michael Schrimpf called 2012 "a successful year by any standard"?with Republicans now in control of governorships in 30 states. Most of those gains, however, came in 2010. The?North Carolina win and the failed effort to recall Scott Walker, Wisconsin's Republican governor, in June, were high points for the GOP this year.

    In addition, in five?states targeted by the RGA where it lost, the Democrats held advantages unrelated to fundraising.?

    Missouri and West Virginia featured?Democratic incumbents. Three other states ??Montana, Washington and New Hampshire ??had open seats where a Democrat had previously been in power.

    The two organizations will put their fundraising powers to the test again in 2013, when Virginia and New Jersey choose their next governors.

    Michael Beckel contributed to this report.

    The Center for Public Integrity is a non-profit independent investigative news outlet.? For more of its stories go to publicintegrity.org

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    Source: http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/12/15847499-how-outside-money-was-poured-into-governors-races?lite

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    akhisingh: Self-Defense For Women! | Jackies Womens Interest ...

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    Tuesday, December 11, 2012

    Sexual and social behavior modified by serotonin system drugs

    Dec. 11, 2012 ? Drugs that bind to specific serotonin receptors in the brain can both improve and impair female sexual function in non-human primates.

    These are the findings of a study conducted by Leiden PhD candidate Yves Aubert and colleagues at the division of Medical Pharmacology of the Leiden/Amsterdam Center for Drug Research (LACDR & LUMC).

    The common marmoset

    Aubert carried out his research in co-operation with the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. 'Relationship dynamics between partners are a key factor in determining female sexual behaviour,' Aubert concludes from experiments conducted in common marmosets, a species of New World monkeys that form long-term pair-bonds similar to those of humans. After treating female marmosets for several weeks with drugs that have specific serotonin receptor binding properties, Aubert was surprised to find not only changes in the females' sexual and social behaviour directed at their male pairmates, but also changes in the males' behaviour towards the females. In an innovative approach, he used two experimental drugs in his experiments that resulted in opposite behavioural effects.

    One drug (8-OH-DPAT) had a negative impact on female sexual and social behaviour, while the other had a positive impact, as Aubert demonstrated for the first time in a non-human primate. 'Clearly, pair-bond quality between partners and sexual behaviour are closely linked. While one drug increases aggression between male and female and sexual rejection of the male by the female partner, the other drug increases social grooming between pairmates and enhances the female's sexual attractiveness to her male partner.'

    A pharmacotherapeutic treatment option for women suffering from HSDD?

    The drug with the positive impact, called Flibanserin, was developed as a potential non-hormonal treatment for pre-menopausal women with hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD). HSDD is the most commonly reported female sexual complaint and is characterised by a persistent lack of sexual fantasies or desire that causes marked personal distress and/or personal difficulties. Aubert suggests that Flibanserin's therapeutic effects in women with HSDD may stem from improvements in sexual, social and emotional bonding between partners.

    Unraveling the neurobiology of female sexual behaviour

    Using a monkey model provided the researchers with the opportunity to ask detailed questions about the neurobiological underpinnings of female sexual behaviour. Aubert and his teams of researchers in Madison (Wisconsin, U.S.A.) and in Leiden conducted endocrine, imaging and genetic experiments to learn about hormonal and brain activity and gene expression patterns that are involved in the processes leading to impaired or improved female sexual and social behaviour. 'I believe that our results provide new leads and may spur renewed interest in the study of female sexual function -- a topic that has been a taboo, or marginalised, for too long,' comments Aubert. 'Our study suggests that oxytocin may be the pivot of serotonergic regulation of female sexual behaviour, pair-bond and pharmacotherapy of HSDD; a finding that warrants attention in future studies.'

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    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/jyDJMXAAY-w/121211083033.htm

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    Yoga and fitness Works Miracles In Order To Alleviate Stress And ...

    Posted by DennenBusick188 on December 11, 2012 in Articles with No Comments


    Tension is unavoidable in your life. That doesn?t suggest, nonetheless, that stress must principle your way of life. Getting stress from being a big part of your own working day to some little one is all dependent on hard work and some personality. Comply with some of the effective ideas within the report below.

    Arts and crafts really are a wonderful way to remove stress. Making some thing permits your mind to express by itself as well as to cease focusing on stressful matters.

    Signing up for a brand new exercise course it an incredible why to overcome tension. Workout offers you durability, provides you with time and energy to relax and crystal clear your thoughts and helps you to be full of energy and versatile.

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    A professional restorative massage is recommended should you suffer from great levels of stress. Muscles tension is an actual physical manifestation of anxiety. Booking a professional therapeutic massage can also work the muscles directly into comfortable form.

    Make strategies for amusement. When you make ideas, it will give you the opportunity to focus on something apart from the worries you might be sensation right now. Program to attend an anime meeting or perhaps a rock-scaling health and fitness center, as an example.

    You must not live with stress. Anxiety triggers fury, frustration, and it also enables you to a typically distressing person. Surprisingly, tension is definitely an needless and avoidable element in your life. Utilize the advice you have been offered to help you have the changeover from the anxious individual to your more enjoyable version of your self.

    There is more content available on hypnosis for stop smoking check out June F. Rutland?s site there is plenty of information not outlined in this post, find those details on Author?s blog to discover more.

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