Thursday, January 31, 2013

LG Spirit 4G arrives on MetroPCS, delivers 4.5-inch display and ICS to the budget-minded crowd

LG Spirit 4G arrives on MetroPCS, delivers 45inch display and ICS to the budgetminded crowd

We are definitely no strangers to seeing MetroPCS bring well-priced, decently-specced Android handsets to market, and we have a feeling that's something potential and current subscribers certainly appreciate. Because, well, who doesn't like choice? With today's LG Spirit 4G launch, MetroPCS continues to expand its LTE-at-a-bargain ideals, announcing a smartphone that carries some pretty decent specs for being contract-free and costing a mere 269 bucks. Naturally, the 4.5-inch, 960 x 540 display is among the Spirit's main highlights, but there's also an unspecified 1.2GHz, dual-core CPU, a 5-megapixel rear shooter capable of 1080p video, and Ice Cream Sandwich, to boot. The carrier's quick to point out that its newly introduced slab is a follow-up to that LG Motion 4G we saw last year, and that it's compatible with those LTE plans which were unveiled earlier this month. It's worth noting that while the LG Spirit 4G's official MSRP is $269, MetroPCS will have it up for grabs, starting today, at the cheaper price of $199 -- that, of course, after a beloved mail-in rebate and for "a limited time" only. You'll find a couple more press shots after the break, and be sure to hit the source link if you're interested in grabbing one of these for yourself.

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Source: MetroPCS

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Japan airlines replaced multiple batteries before grounding

2013-01-30 07:03:30 GMT2013-01-30 15:03:30(Beijing Time) ?SINA.com

Japan's two major airlines said Wednesday they had replaced a number of batteries in their Dreamliners ahead of the worldwide grounding of Boeing's next generation aircraft.

A spokeswoman for All Nippon Airways said the batteries on 10 of its fleet had been switched, while a representative of rival Japan Airlines told AFP "quite a few" had needed changing.

No production faults at Dreamliner battery plant - Japan inspectors

Japan's transport ministry said Monday safety inspectors had found no major problem on the production line making batteries for Boeing's Dreamliner, further muddying the waters in a worldwide probe.

"We have found no major quality or technical problem," an official at the ministry said on condition of anonymity, as Japanese and American safety inspectors ended a week-long probe at battery maker GS Yuasa.

Shares in GS Yuasa, which has the contract for all Dreamliner batteries and is based in the western city of Kyoto, closed up 4.77 percent at 329 yen Monday after the ministry's comments.

Aviation regulators were focusing on the lithium-ion batteries as the cause of a problem that forced an All Nippon Airways (ANA) flight to make an emergency landing on January 16.

(Agencies)

Source: http://english.sina.com/business/2013/0129/555481.html

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Twitter?s Vine Experiences Its First Service Outage 5 Days After Launching (Update: And We?re Back)

vinedownVine, Twitter’s latest foray into video sharing, seems to be having some service issues at the moment. We’ve been trying to access and use the app here at TechCrunch with no progress, and Vine has tweeted to confirm the service issues. Vine launched last Thursday and has had a whirlwind of a week. Though relatively buggy for an app launched by a major company like Twitter, Vine was welcomed by the tech blogosphere as the next Instagram, as it lets you share six-second looping videos (with or without sound) to all your favorite social networks. However, the fun ended quickly as users noticed a slight porn problem on the app. A porn clip called “DildoPlay,” which showed up on the app’s Editors’ Picks section on Monday, made matters even worse. Twitter claims that the clip was chosen because of “human error.” Then, Apple removed Vine from the App Store’s Featured section, presumably after seeing that a porn clip had been featured within the app. Vine has since started censoring the app, filtering out searches for various porn-related search terms. Today, the string of obstacles gets a bit longer with the reported service outage. Vine is experiencing a temporary service interruption. Thanks for your patience. ? Vine (@vineapp) January 29, 2013 Is everyone looking for the newly-hidden pr0n on Vine all at once, because the service appears to be down. ? Eric Zeman (@phonescooper) January 29, 2013 We’ll be sure to update the post as soon as Vine is back up and running. Stay tuned. Update: It looks like service is back up for a few users, but Twitter has not confirmed that we’re at full stability yet.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/V5pH3y1WCF4/

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'Taken' Director Pierre Morel Pursues New Action Franchise

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - Pierre Morel, who launched Liam Neeson's second act as an action star in "Taken," is in talks to direct "Prone Gunman" for Silver Pictures and Studio Canal.

Sean Penn will star in the film, based on Jean-Patrick Manchette's novel about an international spy betrayed by his own organization. Peter Travis adapted the book, and Silver Pictures' Joel Silver and Andrew Rona will produce.

Silver Pictures and Studio Canal, which is financing the film, are hoping they have a new action franchise on their hands.

Morel, left, who started his career as a cinematographer, made his debut as a director with "District B13," an adrenaline-filled film about the plot to blow up an area of Paris filled with the city's least savory characters. He then directed "Taken," which spawned a sequel and helped turn Neeson, long a respected actor, into an international action star.

Though he won an Oscar for playing a violent father in "Mystic River" and earned a nomination for playing an ex-convict in "Dead Man Walking," Penn has not appeared in many strictly action movies.

The film aims to begin production in Spring 2013 across Europe.

The Hollywood Reporter first reported news of Morel's potential involvement.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/taken-director-pierre-morel-pursues-action-franchise-180347685.html

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Report: Syria President Assad announces wife Asma is pregnant

Syrian Arab News Agency via EPA

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, photographed here with wife Asma al-Assad in February 2012, announced that she is pregnant with their fourth child.

By Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

A fawning profile of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad Monday revealed, as an aside to the larger story, that his wife Asma al-Assad is pregnant with their fourth child.

?The man seems calm and in control,? the al-Akhbar article says of Assad, whose country has been embroiled in a bloody civil war for 22 months. ?His confidence level stands out. Also, there?s the news of the pregnancy of his wife Asmaa, which could not be dealt with as a simple personal matter between a couple.?

Asma al-Assad, 37, was born in London to upper-class Syrians. She was an investment banker before leaving England for Syria, where she married Assad two months after he assumed the presidency in 2000. Before him, his father Hafez al-Assad ruled the country for 30 years.


Asma al-Assad has not been seen recently ? which Arab online news site Al Bawaba attributes to her pregnancy. Citing a Syrian news outlet, Al Bawaba reports that she was five months pregnant in November, which means her due date is eminent.

This also means she likely became pregnant in June, a remarkably violent month for Syria. United Nations monitors left the country that month because it was deemed too dangerous, and because Assad had refused to abide by cease-fires.

Eight thousand people had been killed in the conflict ? the death toll is currently at 60,000, the U.N. estimates ? and Syrian citizens were fleeing for the country?s borders. Thousands were leaving each day; now tens of thousands are leaving, most at night, dodging fire from Assad's troops.

Asma al-Assad had also become a controversial figure, with diplomatic wives around the world pleading with her to reason with her husband. Around the same time, a hacker had released thousands of emails from the Assads? email accounts, revealing Asma al-Assad?s love for Chanel dresses and crystal-encrusted Louboutin shoes ? and also her fierce loyalty to her husband and his hard-line approach.?

The European Union then slapped her with sanctions, saying she could no longer travel to Europe or shop at European companies.

Vogue, meanwhile, had taken down a glowing profile of Asma al-Assad from 2011 ? titled ?A Rose in the Desert.? The Vogue piece, which is still available on a website dedicated to President Assad, begins: ?Asma al-Assad is glamorous, young and very chic ? the freshest and most magnetic of first ladies.?

?

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/28/16745634-report-syria-president-assad-announces-wife-asma-is-pregnant?lite

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Cadavers honored in med student dissection lab

In this photo taken Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, in Gary, Ind., medical student Jimmy Beasley, left, speaks with Joan Terry, about her sister, donor Judy A. Clemens, after a memorial service for bodies donated to science at Indiana University School of Medicine - Northwest. During the hour long service, relatives of donors gather around the steel tables where their loved ones were dissected along with the medical students who worked on the bodies during the previous semester. The students read letters of appreciation, clergy offer prayers, and tears are shed. The program is geared towards teaching the medical students that this is not merely a cadaver, but a person, and their first patient. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green

In this photo taken Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, in Gary, Ind., medical student Jimmy Beasley, left, speaks with Joan Terry, about her sister, donor Judy A. Clemens, after a memorial service for bodies donated to science at Indiana University School of Medicine - Northwest. During the hour long service, relatives of donors gather around the steel tables where their loved ones were dissected along with the medical students who worked on the bodies during the previous semester. The students read letters of appreciation, clergy offer prayers, and tears are shed. The program is geared towards teaching the medical students that this is not merely a cadaver, but a person, and their first patient. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green

In this photo taken Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, in Gary, Ind., family members watch as a medical student lights a candle atop the remains of their grandfather, donor William N. Kelly, during a memorial service for bodies donated to science at Indiana University School of Medicine - Northwest. During the hour long service, relatives of donors gather around the steel tables where their loved ones were dissected along with the medical students who worked on the bodies during the previous semester. The students read letters of appreciation, clergy offer prayers, and tears are shed. The program is geared towards teaching the medical students that this is not merely a cadaver, but a person, and their first patient. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

In this photo taken Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, in Gary, Ind., A military honor guard folds the flag of a Viet Nam veteran and anonymous donor, during a memorial service for bodies donated to science at Indiana University School of Medicine - Northwest. During the hour long service, relatives of donors gather around the steel tables where their loved ones were dissected along with the medical students who worked on the bodies during the previous semester. The students read letters of appreciation, clergy offer prayers, and tears are shed. The program is geared towards teaching the medical students that this is not merely a cadaver, but a person, and their first patient. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

In this photo taken Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, in Gary, Ind., Linsdey Ellingsen, granddaughter of donor William N. Kelly, wipes a tear from her eye as a song is sung during a memorial service for bodies donated to science at Indiana University School of Medicine - Northwest. During the hour long service, relatives of donors gather around the steel tables where their loved ones were dissected along with the medical students who worked on the bodies during the previous semester. The students read letters of appreciation, clergy offer prayers, and tears are shed. The program is geared towards teaching the medical students that this is not merely a cadaver, but a person, and their first patient. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

In this photo taken Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, in Gary, Ind., medical student Sarah F. Shaaban reads from the Quran during a memorial service for bodies donated to science at Indiana University School of Medicine - Northwest. During the hour long service, relatives of donors gather around the steel tables where their loved ones were dissected along with the medical students who worked on the bodies during the previous semester. The students read letters of appreciation, clergy offer prayers, and tears are shed. The program is geared towards teaching the medical students that this is not merely a cadaver, but a person, and their first patient. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

(AP) ? When medical students have finished their study and practice on cadavers, they often hold a respectful memorial service to honor these bodies donated to science.

But the ceremonies at one medical school have a surreal twist: Relatives gather around the cold steel tables where their loved ones were dissected and which now hold their remains beneath metal covers. The tables are topped with white or burgundy-colored shrouds, flags for military veterans, flowers and candles.

The mixture of grace and goth at the Indiana University School of Medicine-Northwest campus might sound like a scene straight out filmmaker Tim Burton's quirky imagination. Yet, despite the surrounding shelves of medical specimens and cabinets of human bones, these dissection lab memorials are more moving than macabre.

The medical students join the families in the lab and read letters of appreciation about the donors, a clergy member offers prayers, and tears are shed.

Family members are often squeamish about entering that room. This year's ceremony was last Friday, and relatives of one of the six adult donors being honored chose not to participate. And some who did attend had mixed feelings.

Joan Terry of Griffith, Ind., came to honor her sister, Judy Clemens, who died in 2011 at age 51 after a long battle with health problems including multiple sclerosis and osteoporosis. Terry said she felt a little hesitant about being in the dissection lab and was relieved that nothing too graphic was visible.

"I was kind of looking forward to coming," Terry said. "This is ... like a closure. I know Judy's not with us anymore. I know that she's dancing on the streets of gold in heaven. She's probably smiling knowing that her body's helping other people, helping these young doctors learn something about her, because that's what she wanted. That's the type of person that she was. She was always giving."

More than three dozen students, donors' relatives and campus staff members crowded the anatomy lab during Friday's memorial, surrounding the tables and standing solemnly along the room's perimeter. Some dabbed their eyes as prayers and remembrances were said, but faces were mostly stoic and there was no sobbing. The lab's usual odor of formaldehyde was strangely absent, masked perhaps by the sweet aroma of bouquets decorating the cadaver tables.

Some donors' relatives wore formal funeral attire. Terry, noting her plain pink T-shirt, said her sister wasn't a fancy person, either. Terry closed her eyes and struggled not to cry during the service, saying beforehand that Clemens "would be upset if I did."

Abdullah Malik, a medical student who worked on Judy Clemens, thanked her in a letter he read aloud during the ceremony.

"To have the courage and fortitude to endure as much as she did is a testament to her strength and an inspiration to us all," he read, standing next to Clemens' sister beside the dissection table holding Clemens' remains.

Ernest Talarico Jr., an assistant professor and director of anatomy coursework, created the unusual program and began holding the laboratory ceremonies in 2007. The cadavers are considered the medical students' first patients, and students are encouraged to have contact with the donors' families during the semester, too.

At other medical schools, donated bodies remain anonymous and students never meet the families. Talarico said his program humanizes the learning experience.

Talarico views the services as life-affirming and a chance to give thanks. The education these donated bodies have provided is invaluable, he says, teaching doctors-to-be how the body works, and what causes things to go wrong.

"We look at it as a celebration of the lives of those individuals and the gift that they have given to us," Talarico said.

He considers the location fitting.

"I think it is appropriate in that we honor them in the setting in which they desired to give what they viewed as their last gift to humanity," he said.

Malik, the medical student, said knowing the donors' identities and meeting their families enriches the students' medical education.

"Once you put a name and a face to the body that you're working with, once you kind of put an identity to it, you kind of connect to it in a really meaningful and powerful way," he said.

Medical student Kyle Parker said he admired the donors' relatives for showing up, and wondered if he were in their shoes, "would I be willing to meet the people who have actually dissected my family member?"

Parker said he hopes the answer would be yes.

___

Online:

Indiana University School of Medicine-Northwest: http://iusm-nw.medicine.iu.edu

___

AP Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner can be reached at: http://www.Twitter.com/LindseyTanner

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-01-29-Cadaver%20Memorial/id-d4773c807cf843de9dfb6b5c92adc6de

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S_47P::::10 Things to Know for Today

Please check the URL for proper spelling and capitalization. If you're having trouble locating a destination on Yahoo!, try visiting the Yahoo! homepage or look through a list of Yahoo!'s online services.

Please try Yahoo Help Central if you need more assistance.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/10-things-know-today-101340019.html

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Yahoo Japan to buy back up to $220 million of its own shares

TOKYO (Reuters) - Yahoo Japan Inc said on Tuesday that it plans buy back up to 20 billion yen ($220 million) of its own shares, or 1.4 percent of its issued stock.

Yahoo Japan said it would buy back 800,000 shares between February 1 and March 15.

($1 = 90.6350 Japanese yen)

(Reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro; Editing by Chris Gallagher)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/yahoo-japan-buy-back-220-million-own-shares-062049832--sector.html

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The Top 7 Time Management Secrets of Billionaires ? Carolyn ...

The Top 7 Time Management Secrets of Billionaires

Richard Branson. Photo by David Shankbone

Richard Branson. Photo by David Shankbone

Over the last number of years the pinnacle of financial success has shifted from the millionaires to the billionaires. People like Oprah, Richard Branson and JK Rowling have raised the bar.?Although financial success is only one aspect of what makes an individual successful it is often used as the measuring stick.

I am always looking for the strategies and techniques of the uber successful in all aspects of life so we can learn and implement their secrets to better our own lives.? I think the question is not what do I have to do to become a billionaire it is more who do I have to become.

It became evident to me that we would all have to become someone who has laser like focus on their priorities and someone who can manage their time to maximize their energy levels. The following strategies were compiled from a number of articles and bios of billionaires and offers insight into how they handle some of their day-to-day business.

After all, it is what we do on a daily basis compounded over time that makes all the difference in our levels of success. Whether you aspire to be a billionaire or not these strategies practiced consistently will be a huge help in reaching whatever goals you set for yourself.

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The Top 7 Time Management Secrets of Billionaires

1. Only touch a task once
Whether it?s an email, letter, voicemail, only handle it when you have time to reply. If you?re dealing with it when you don?t have a chance to respond you?re wasting your time by handling it twice and spending too much time thinking about it.

2. Make a List
Make a daily list with the 6 most critical tasks that must get done today. I started doing this about a year and a half ago every morning when I wake up. It?s amazing when you really prioritize what needs to get done, how much more likely you are to achieve it.

3. Time Each Task.
Plan how long each of these tasks will take. Be realistic and keep track of how long they take you so that you can accurately estimate your time for future tasks.

4. Make Time for Each Task.
Assign time slots during your day for accomplishing each task. If you don?t have enough time slots in the day you may need to change some meetings or scheduled events to meet your top priorities.

5. Complete Each Task.
Systematically approach each task in order of priority and don?t go onto the next task until the previous one is complete. Multitasking often leads to both tasks taking longer overall than focussing on one thing at a time.

6. Evaluate Your Day.
Anything not completed in a day should go on your next day?s list of priorities.

7. Follow this routine religiously.
If you can end each day knowing you?ve accomplished the six most critical steps you?ll be well on your way to mastering your to-do list, your time and your energy.

If you use discipline and determination it will guide you to success. These strategies are what are followed by many of the most successful people in the world and can help you be successful as well.

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Source: http://carolynandersonmd.com/blog/the-top-7-time-management-secrets-of-billionaires

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Chiefs from mass-shooting towns to meet with Obama

FILE - In this Jan. 16, 2013, file photo, President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden, talks about proposals to reduce gun violence at the White House in Washington. Obama has called for a ban on military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines and is pushing other policies in the wake of the mass shooting last month at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn. In response, gun-rights advocates have accused Obama and others of ignoring the Second Amendment rights of Americans. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

FILE - In this Jan. 16, 2013, file photo, President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden, talks about proposals to reduce gun violence at the White House in Washington. Obama has called for a ban on military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines and is pushing other policies in the wake of the mass shooting last month at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn. In response, gun-rights advocates have accused Obama and others of ignoring the Second Amendment rights of Americans. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama will meet with police chiefs from three communities that have experienced mass shootings, part of his administration's push to address gun violence.

Obama is drawing attention to the worst shootings of 2012, inviting the police chiefs from: Aurora, Colo., where 12 were killed in July; Oak Creek, Wis., where six died in a Sikh temple assault: and Newtown, Conn., scene of the most recent mass tragedy that left 20 first-graders dead.

A White House official says representatives from the Major Cities Chiefs Association and the Major County Sheriffs Association will also participate in Monday's White House meeting.

Vice President Joe Biden, Attorney General Eric Holder and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano will attend.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the meeting publicly.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-28-Obama-Guns/id-cd0ad48e2fe543279cea592e19a63488

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Around the Web?

If you need a break from reading about the SAG Awards, check out Monday’s links: Pediatricians issue first-ever diabetes guidelines for children – TIME.com Mom dislikes daughter who reminds her of ex-husband – BabyCenter.com ESSAY: Why my dog made me worry about being a parent – HuffPost Parents New prenatal test gives parents more information [...]

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/XsvFavc3ifU/

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Gymnastics team advocates breast cancer awareness | ASU News ...

Sophomore Natasha Sundby scored the Sun Devil's first 9.900 of the season for her floor routine at the Jan. 25 meet against UCLA. The gymnasts wore pink leotards to promote breast cancer awareness. (Photo by Sam Rosenbaum)

Sophomore Natasha Sundby scored the Sun Devil?s first 9.900 of the season for her floor routine at the Jan. 25 meet against UCLA. The gymnasts wore pink leotards to promote breast cancer awareness. (Photo by Sam Rosenbaum)

Gymnastics, more than perhaps any other sport, exposes an athlete?s entire body to exacting scrutiny.

A gymnast?s task is to perform seemingly impossible, physics-defying feats of strength and grace. Then they are judged on the placement and balance of every joint, muscle and appendage.

The form and shape of a gymnast?s body is not only visible to all but is constantly subjected to excruciating appraisal.

The gymnast, therefore, must be extremely aware of her own body. The ASU gymnastics team hoped to promote an even more important kind of body awareness Friday night. At their Pink Meet, the gymnasts sought to champion the life-saving importance of breast cancer awareness.

The unusually young Sun Devil squad welcomed No. 4 UCLA to Wells Fargo Arena Friday night and was coming off one of its best performances in recent memory. The team hoped to continue proving themselves against some of the best competition the country has to offer.

This meet meant more to the Gym Devils than the average meet. It was a chance to do something important.

?We have the ability to be on a platform and have people looking up to us,? assistant coach Kari Ward said, ?Anytime we can advocate support for such a great cause, it?s really special.?

Coach Ward, a former gymnast at ASU, knows how important it is to get tested.

Annabeth Eberle, a former gymnast at the University of Utah against whom Ward competed, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2010 when she was only 27.

Because she got checked, the cancer was diagnosed early. When the Sun Devils visited Salt Lake City in February 2011, Eberle was honored at a breast cancer awareness meet named in her honor. According to Ward, Eberle was ?doing great.?

The Gym Devils were excited to wear new pink leotards, but were also happy to have the chance to honor people affected by cancer. The gymnasts wore the name of someone who had been touched by the disease on the back of their warm-up jackets.

Sophomore Natelle Gentile wore the name of her grandmother, Fortunata Gentile, for whom she was named.

?My dad said she?d had the cancer before they came here (from Italy),? Gentile said.

Though Fortunata died before Natelle was born, it was important to the sophomore to get a chance to honor her namesake.

Cancer awareness also hits close to home for Maggie Emmons, the sports information director for the team and one of the organizers of the Pink Meet.

?My dad wouldn?t be here if not for preventative care,? Emmons said. ?This is about more than just breast cancer; we want to raise awareness for everyone that being tested is important.?

Emmons also works for the women?s golf team and spoke emotionally about the impact associate head golf coach Missy Farr-Kaye has on the cause. Heather Farr, Farr-Kaye?s sisterand a Hall of Fame golfer at ASU, died of breast cancer at 28. Farr-Kaye herself is a two-time breast cancer survivor.

?She?s such an inspiration,? Emmons said of her sister. ?She was so strong, going through so much.?

Coach Farr-Kaye addresses the cause of awareness from many angles.

?Every team does a great job doing different ?pink-outs,? and being really supportive of breast cancer awareness,? Farr-Kaye said. ?I try to be a bit of an ambassador when I can, as a survivor, and let people know that you can beat the disease and move forward. That?s what my message has been, and I share that with my team and with the other athletes I come across.?

Farr-Kaye was diagnosed with breast cancer for the second time five years ago in the middle of her 11-year tenure with ASU.

?I was 21 when my sister was diagnosed, and now being a survivor of it, you try to figure out why and what good could possibly come from this,? Farr-Kaye said. ?You?ve got to figure out what to do positively from a very tragic situation, and I thought one thing I can do is send a message to people and be a face of survival.?

For the gymnasts, Friday?s Pink Meet was a reminder to themselves how important it is to be as aware of your body, both on and off the mat.

?

Reach the reporter at cuyler.meade@asu.edu

Source: http://www.statepress.com/2013/01/27/gymnastics-team-advocates-breast-cancer-awareness/

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Asian shares up, cautious before Fed, U.S. data

TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian shares rose on Tuesday after solid U.S. data, but investors remained cautious ahead of more U.S. economic reports and a Federal Reserve policy decision later in the week that may offer clues to the Fed's stimulus plans.

The MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.miapj0000pus> was up 0.3 percent.

Australian shares <.axjo> rallied 0.8 percent to a fresh 21-month high led by shares in the financials sectors as the U.S. S&P 500 index closed above 1,500 for the first time since 2007. Australian markets were closed on Monday for a holiday.

South Korean shares <.ks11> opened up 0.3 percent after touching an 8-week low the day before.

The benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.spx> eased slightly on Monday after an eight-day winning run but held above 1,500, after closing above it on Friday for the first time in more than five years.

Risk appetite has been improving overall with U.S. earnings generally solid. A rise in a gauge of planned U.S. business spending in December added to a recent run of positive global economic data, and signs of easing financial stress in the euro zone. Euro zone blue chips touched fresh 18-month peaks on Monday.

More solid U.S. growth indicators would, however, fuel speculation the Fed may mull pulling back on aggressive easing stimulus. The Fed ends a two-day policy meeting on Wednesday. The first estimate of U.S. fourth-quarter gross domestic product will be released on Wednesday, followed by non-farm payrolls on Friday.

"Ahead of key events, markets are likely to stay in ranges. But with yields on U.S. Treasury and German government bonds inching higher, one might say investors may be shifting funds to riskier assets from safe-havens," said Yuji Saito, director of foreign exchange at Credit Agricole in Tokyo.

"That's part of the reason why the euro has stayed firm," he said. Saito said while a rise in U.S. yields underpins the dollar against the yen, they were likely to be capped with end-month selling from exporters and options lined up between 90.50 and 91.50 yen.

The benchmark U.S. 10-year note briefly pierced 2 percent on Monday for the first time since last April.

Japan's Nikkei stock average <.n225> opened down 0.7 percent after striking a fresh 32-month high above 11,000 on Monday. <.t/>

The dollar fell 0.3 percent to 90.53 yen after touching 91.32 on Monday, its highest level since June 2010, while the euro also eased 0.3 percent to 121.75 yen from Monday's high of 122.91, its highest point since April.

(Editing by Eric Meijer)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asian-shares-cautious-fed-u-data-021048785--finance.html

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Misconceptions about a popular pet treat

Jan. 28, 2013 ? A popular dog treat could be adding more calories than pet owners realize, and possibly be contaminated by bacteria, according to a study published this month by researchers at the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University and the University of Guelph.

The treat in question: the "bully" or "pizzle stick." The American and Canadian researchers analyzed the caloric density and bacterial contamination of these popular items, made from the uncooked, dried penis of a bull or steer. They also administered a survey to pet owners to assess their knowledge of these treats.

The study, published in the January 2013 issue of the Canadian Veterinary Journal, examined 26 bully sticks purchased from retailers in the United States and Canada and made by different manufacturers.

A random subset of the 26 bully sticks was tested for caloric content. These bully sticks tested contained between nine to 22 calories per inch, meaning the average six inch stick packed 88 calories--nine percent of the daily calorie requirements for a 50-pound dog, and 30 percent of the daily calorie requirements for a 10-pound dog.

"While calorie information isn't currently required on pet treats or most pet foods, these findings reinforce that veterinarians and pet owners need to be aware of pet treats like these bully sticks as a source of calories in a dog's diet," said Lisa M. Freeman, DVM, PhD, DACVN, professor of nutrition at TCSVM who is board-certified by the American College of Veterinary Nutrition.

Freeman was first author on the paper. Co-authors were J. Scott Weese, professor in the Department of Pathobiology at the University of Guelph, and Nicol Janecko, a research associate at the Canadian university.

"With obesity in pets on the rise, it is important for pet owners to factor in not only their dog's food, but also treats and table food," Freeman added.

All 26 treats were tested for bacterial contaminants. One (4 percent) of the sticks was contaminated with Clostridium difficile; one (four percent) was contaminated with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), a type of staph bacteria that is resistant to certain antibiotics; and seven (27 percent) were contaminated with Escherichia coli, including one tetracycline-resistant sample.

The number of treats sampled was small and not all of these bacterial strains have been shown to infect humans. However, the researchers advise all pet owners to wash their hands after touching such treats, as they would with any raw meat or raw meat diets. The very young, elderly, pregnant, immunocompromised and other high-risk individuals should avoid all contact with raw animal-product based treats and raw meat diets, note the scientists.

To learn more about veterinarian and pet owner perceptions of dog foods and treats, the research team developed a 20-question Web-based survey. The survey was posted online for public participation for 60 days and all responses were anonymous. It was completed by 852 adults from 44 states and six countries. Most respondents were female dog owners.

"We were surprised at the clear misconceptions pet owners and veterinarians have with pet foods and many of the popular raw animal-product based pet treats currently on the market," said Freeman. "For example, 71 percent of people feeding bully sticks to their pets stated they avoid by-products in pet foods, yet bully sticks are, for all intents and purposes, an animal by-product."

Another surprising finding was the large number of people who did not know what bully sticks actually were. A higher proportion of veterinarians (62 percent) were able to correctly identify the source of bully sticks as bull penis compared to general respondents (44 percent). Twenty-three percent of the respondents fed their dogs bully sticks.

Further research with a larger sample size is needed to determine whether the calorie content and contamination rate found in this study is representative of all bully sticks, or other types of pet treats, according to the authors.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Tufts University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Lisa M. Freeman, Nicol Janecko, J. Scott Weese. Nutritional and microbial analysis of bully sticks and survey of opinions about pet treats. Canadian Veterinary Journal, January 2013

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/living_well/~3/mAJUX0F5Meo/130128082912.htm

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Azerbaijan police arrest youths at anti-government protest

BAKU (Reuters) - Police arrested about 40 activists demonstrating in Azerbaijan's capital on Saturday against President Ilham Aliyev's government and voicing support for residents of a northern town where protests were crushed this week.

More than 100 protesters gathered in central Baku, some chanting "Freedom!" and calling for the resignation of Aliyev, who succeeded his father in 2003 and has tolerated little dissent in the oil-producing former Soviet republic.

Police swiftly stopped the protest, forcing demonstrators out of a park and then arresting some in the street.

The protest was triggered by unrest in Ismailli, about 200 km (125 miles) northwest of Baku, where police used teargas and water cannon on Thursday to disperse hundreds of protesters demanding the resignation of a regional leader. Cars were torched and a hotel set ablaze in a night of rioting.

The protests and rioting in the small town reflect frustration at what some Azeris see as an overbearing government, corruption and a big divide between rich and poor in the mostly Muslim Caspian Sea nation of nine million.

Western governments and human rights groups accuse Aliyev of rigging elections and clamping down on dissent, and he is expected to win a new presidential term in October.

Azerbaijan produces oil and gas and is part of a route for energy supplies to Europe that bypasses Russia.

(Reporting by Nailia Bagirova; Writing by Margarita Antidze; Editing by Louise Ireland and Steve Gutterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/azerbaijan-police-arrest-youths-anti-government-protest-154428795.html

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Gymnastics team advocates breast cancer awareness | ASU News ...

Sophomore Natasha Sundby scored the Sun Devil's first 9.900 of the season for her floor routine at the Jan. 25 meet against UCLA. The gymnasts wore pink leotards to promote breast cancer awareness. (Photo by Sam Rosenbaum)

Sophomore Natasha Sundby scored the Sun Devil?s first 9.900 of the season for her floor routine at the Jan. 25 meet against UCLA. The gymnasts wore pink leotards to promote breast cancer awareness. (Photo by Sam Rosenbaum)

Gymnastics, more than perhaps any other sport, exposes an athlete?s entire body to exacting scrutiny.

A gymnast?s task is to perform seemingly impossible, physics-defying feats of strength and grace. Then they are judged on the placement and balance of every joint, muscle and appendage.

The form and shape of a gymnast?s body is not only visible to all but is constantly subjected to excruciating appraisal.

The gymnast, therefore, must be extremely aware of her own body. The ASU gymnastics team hoped to promote an even more important kind of body awareness Friday night. At their Pink Meet, the gymnasts sought to champion the life-saving importance of breast cancer awareness.

The unusually young Sun Devil squad welcomed No. 4 UCLA to Wells Fargo Arena Friday night and was coming off one of its best performances in recent memory. The team hoped to continue proving themselves against some of the best competition the country has to offer.

This meet meant more to the Gym Devils than the average meet. It was a chance to do something important.

?We have the ability to be on a platform and have people looking up to us,? assistant coach Kari Ward said, ?Anytime we can advocate support for such a great cause, it?s really special.?

Coach Ward, a former gymnast at ASU, knows how important it is to get tested.

Annabeth Eberle, a former gymnast at the University of Utah against whom Ward competed, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2010 when she was only 27.

Because she got checked, the cancer was diagnosed early. When the Sun Devils visited Salt Lake City in February 2011, Eberle was honored at a breast cancer awareness meet named in her honor. According to Ward, Eberle was ?doing great.?

The Gym Devils were excited to wear new pink leotards, but were also happy to have the chance to honor people affected by cancer. The gymnasts wore the name of someone who had been touched by the disease on the back of their warm-up jackets.

Sophomore Natelle Gentile wore the name of her grandmother, Fortunata Gentile, for whom she was named.

?My dad said she?d had the cancer before they came here (from Italy),? Gentile said.

Though Fortunata died before Natelle was born, it was important to the sophomore to get a chance to honor her namesake.

Cancer awareness also hits close to home for Maggie Emmons, the sports information director for the team and one of the organizers of the Pink Meet.

?My dad wouldn?t be here if not for preventative care,? Emmons said. ?This is about more than just breast cancer; we want to raise awareness for everyone that being tested is important.?

Emmons also works for the women?s golf team and spoke emotionally about the impact associate head golf coach Missy Farr-Kaye has on the cause. Heather Farr, Farr-Kaye?s sisterand a Hall of Fame golfer at ASU, died of breast cancer at 28. Farr-Kaye herself is a two-time breast cancer survivor.

?She?s such an inspiration,? Emmons said of her sister. ?She was so strong, going through so much.?

Coach Farr-Kaye addresses the cause of awareness from many angles.

?Every team does a great job doing different ?pink-outs,? and being really supportive of breast cancer awareness,? Farr-Kaye said. ?I try to be a bit of an ambassador when I can, as a survivor, and let people know that you can beat the disease and move forward. That?s what my message has been, and I share that with my team and with the other athletes I come across.?

Farr-Kaye was diagnosed with breast cancer for the second time five years ago in the middle of her 11-year tenure with ASU.

?I was 21 when my sister was diagnosed, and now being a survivor of it, you try to figure out why and what good could possibly come from this,? Farr-Kaye said. ?You?ve got to figure out what to do positively from a very tragic situation, and I thought one thing I can do is send a message to people and be a face of survival.?

For the gymnasts, Friday?s Pink Meet was a reminder to themselves how important it is to be as aware of your body, both on and off the mat.

?

Reach the reporter at cuyler.meade@asu.edu

Source: http://www.statepress.com/2013/01/27/gymnastics-team-advocates-breast-cancer-awareness/

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Casey Anthony files for bankruptcy protection

By Gil Aegerter, Staff Writer, NBC News

Casey Anthony has filed for bankruptcy protection in Orlando, Fla.

Pool / Getty Images

Anthony owes about $792,000 -- most of it to her defense attorney, according to a Chapter 7 petition filed Friday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, The Associated Press reported.

She also faces three civil lawsuits stemming from the disappearance of her daughter, Caylee Marie, ?the Orlando Sentinel reported.?The 2-year-old girl was reported missing in July 2008 and her body was found that December near the home of Casey Anthony's parents in the Orlando area.


Anthony was found not guilty of murder in July 2011 but was convicted of lying about the child's disappearance. She was sentenced to time served, and on Friday an appeals court struck down two of the lying convictions.

Anthony claimed that a babysitter had kidnapped Caylee, and a woman with the same name is suing for defamation, as is the former meter reader who found the body -- he says Anthony's attorneys damaged him by painting him as a possible killer.

The third suit is by Texas EquuSearch, a search and rescue organization, which says it spent more than $100,000 searching for Caylee.

Anthony's bankruptcy filing said she had only $1,084; here are her main debts, according to the Sentinel report:

  • About $500,000 to defense attorney Jose Baez
  • $145,660.21:?Orange County Sheriff's Office
  • $68,540: Internal Revenue Service
  • $61,505: Florida Department of Law Enforcement
  • $10,283.90: to the Metropolitan Bureau of Investigation?

?

?

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/26/16717383-casey-anthony-files-for-chapter-7-bankruptcy-in-florida?lite

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Israel threatens Syria strike if rebels get chemical arms

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Any sign that Syria's grip on its chemical weapons is slipping as it battles armed rebels could trigger Israeli military strikes, Israel's vice premier said on Sunday.

Silvan Shalom confirmed a media report that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had last week convened a meeting of security chiefs to discuss the civil war in Syria and the state of its suspected chemical arsenal.

Israel and NATO countries say Syria has stocks of chemical warfare agents at four sites. Syria is cagey about whether it has such arms but says if it had it would keep them secure and use them only to fend off foreign attack.

The Israeli meeting on Wednesday had not been publicly announced and was seen as unusual as it came while votes were being counted from Israel's parliamentary election the day before, which Netanyahu's party list won narrowly.

Should Lebanon's Hezbollah guerrillas or rebels battling forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad obtain Syria's chemical weapons, Shalom told Israel's Army Radio: "It would dramatically change the capabilities of those organizations."

Such a development would be "a crossing of all red lines that would require a different approach, including even preventive operations," he said, alluding to military intervention for which Israeli generals have said plans have been readied.

"The concept, in principle, is that this (chemical weapons transfer) must not happen," Shalom said. "The moment we begin to understand that such a thing is liable to happen, we will have to make decisions."

Addressing his cabinet on Sunday, Netanyahu said he intended to put together "the broadest and most stable government as possible in order, first of all, to meet the significant security threats that face the State of Israel".

Difficult coalition talks could be ahead for Netanyahu with factions representing widely different sectors of the population.

"COMING APART"

In his public remarks at the cabinet session, Netanyahu pointed to "what is happening in Iran and its proxies and at what is happening in other areas, with the deadly weapons in Syria, which is increasingly coming apart.

"In the east, north and south, everything is in ferment and we must be prepared, strong and determined in the face of all possible developments," Netanyahu said, in apparent reference to Iran, Syria and Egypt.

Raising the regional stakes, Tehran, among Assad's few allies and itself long the subject of Israeli military threats over its nuclear program, said on Saturday it would deem any attack on Syria an attack on Iran.

Interviewed on Army Radio, Civil Defence Minister Avi Dichter said Syria was on the verge of collapse. But asked whether Israel perceived an imminent threat, Dichter said: "No, not yet. I suppose that when things pose a danger to us, the State of Israel will know about it."

France, among the most vocal backers of Syria's rebels, said last week there were no signs Assad was about to be overthrown.

An Israeli government security adviser told Reuters on Sunday Syria had taken new prominence in strategic planning "because of the imminence of the threat. There the WMDs (weapons of mass destruction) are ready and could be turned against us at short notice."

Syria is widely believed to have built up the arsenal to offset Israel's reputed nuclear weapons, among other reasons.

(Writing by Dan Williams; Editing by Jeffrey Heller, Mark Heinrich and Janet Lawrence)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-vows-syria-strike-sign-chemical-arms-transfer-090941147--finance.html

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Albany&#39;s Excelsior Pub adds beers, hours - Dowd on Drinks - Bill ...

ALBANY ? Mondays will be a little livelier for aficionados of New York beers and spirits. Effective next week, The Excelsior Pub at Cafe 217 will be open Mondays through Saturdays, an expansion of its current schedule.

Excelsior Pub at Caf? 217 in Albany, previously open Tuesday through Sunday ? except for a recent one-week winter break, will be open on Mondays as well starting next week.

The hours now will be 4 p.m. to midnight Monday-Thursday, 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. Friday, 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Saturday and noon to 3 p.m. Sunday.

Owner Jason Bowers is in the process of expanding his beer line with more New York brews not usually found in this market ? such as the Hop Warrior Imperial IPA from Rooster Fish Brewing in Watkins Glen and Whale Brown Ale from Community Beer Works in Buffalo he announced on his Facebook page.

The Excelsior ? the name is the state motto, and reflective of the New York-only drink offerings ? is located at 12? Delaware Avenue. Phone: 462-0050.



Go here for the region?s best local food & drinks events calendar.

Source: http://blog.timesunion.com/dowdondrinks/albanys-excelsior-pub-adds-beers-hours/13570/

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Health care limits leave some students with few options (San Jose Mercury News)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/279609439?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Athina et hayat en chair et en Os?La Positive Attitude! | Self ...

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

95% Chasing Ice

All Critics (64) | Top Critics (21) | Fresh (59) | Rotten (3)

Global Warming? "Seeing is believing."

The most important documentary of the year.

"Chasing Ice" is a grand adventure, a visual amazement and a powerful warning.

If you're looking for eye-popping evidence that the world's glaciers are melting, don't miss the small-scale but spectacular documentary, Chasing Ice.

The rapid disappearance of ice mountains, filmed over a period of years, is compressed through time-lapse technology into minutes and seconds. The speeded-up effect is harrowing and also, disturbingly, eerily beautiful.

The movie might have given us a bit less of Balog and a bit more of the startling sequences he produced.

Chasing Ice will open your eyes to a world you've never seen before and it will make you think. But whether any of us can change anything is a different matter altogether.

While skeptics continue to doubt global warming is a man-made phenomenon - Rush Limbaugh called warnings about it "garbage science" - "Chasing Ice" leaves little doubt it is occurring.

It's an absorbing and vital watch.

It's like watching our world disappear.

A few scientists pop their heads in here, a few charts are deployed, but Chasing Ice is powered primarily by the imagery, stark, irrefutable evidence that the planet is warming, not in one or two isolated places but everywhere.

"Chasing Ice" is a beautiful film to watch, especially on the big screen. But the documentary's visual pleasures come with a heavy dose of guilt.

It's sobering stuff but the film's impact is somewhat diminished by Orlowski's reverential profile of Balog, who continues to crusade despite the toll his endeavours have taken on his body.

The documentary feels a little slight but the images speak for themselves ...

Is this about the hazards of global warming or the awesomeness of James Balog? Not entirely sure...

If any film can convert the climate-change sceptics, Chasing Ice would be it: here, seeing really is believing.

While more detailed scientific analysis and greater discussion of impacts would have been welcome, the film's visual rhetoric is solid.

National Geographic photographer James Balog illustrates climate change with time-lapsed records of glacial retreat.

A project of heroic, Herzogian endeavour. Mad, you might say. But probably not as mad as what the rest of us are doing about climate change: namely almost nothing.

No quotes approved yet for Chasing Ice. Logged in users can submit quotes.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/chasing_ice_2012/

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Source: http://forums.ferra.ru/index.php?showtopic=54180

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Shipping Science: Building a Boat That Can Carry Cargo

A Heavy Payload: How do ships hold such heavy cargo and still stay afloat? Learn about mass, volume and density in this shipping science activity. Image: George Resteck

  • How does a Venus flytrap know when to snap shut? Can it actually feel an insect?s tiny, spindly legs? And how do cherry blossoms know when to bloom? Can they...

    Read More??

Key concepts
Water
Density
Physics
Hydrodynamics
Fluid dynamics

Introduction
Have you ever wondered how a ship made of steel can float? If you drop a steel bolt into a bucket of water, the bolt quickly sinks to the bottom. Then how can a steel ship float? And better yet, how can a steel ship carry a heavy load without sinking? It has to do with the density of the ship (including its cargo) relative to the density of water. In this activity, you'll make little "boats" out of aluminum foil to explore how their size and shape affects the amount of weight they carry and how this relates to water density.

Background
What determines whether an object floats or sinks? It's the density (mass per unit of volume) of the object compared with the density of the liquid it is in. If the object is denser than the fluid, the object will sink. If the object is less dense, then it will float.

With a steel-hulled ship, it is the shape of the hull that determines how well it floats and how much of a load it can handle. On an empty ship with a steel hull enclosing a volume of air, the ship's density is equal to the sum of the mass of the steel hull and the mass of the enclosed air, all divided by the hull's volume: The ship floats because its density is less than the density of water. But when cargo or other weight is added to the ship, its density now becomes the sum of the mass of the steel hull, enclosed air and cargo, all divided by the hull's volume. If too much weight is added, the ship?s density becomes greater than that of the water, and it sinks. Excess cargo would need to be thrown overboard in a hurry or it's time to abandon ship!

Materials
? Aluminum foil
? Ruler
? Tape
? Calculator
? Scrap piece of paper and pen or pencil
? Bucket, tub, sink or dishpan
? Water
? Pennies. You may need as many as 200, depending on the size and shape of the boats you make.
? Rag or paper towels
? Dry rice and measuring cup (optional)

Preparation
? Cut two squares of aluminum foil, making one square with dimensions that are twice that of the other square. For example, you could make one square that is 30 by 30 centimeters (one by one foot), and make the second square 15 by 15 centimeters (six by six inches).
? Fold the two aluminum foil squares into two different boat hulls. Try to make them the same shape. For example, you could make them both have two pointed ends (like canoes) or you could make them square or rectangular with straight edges that come up on the sides (more like a barge).
? Make finishing touches to the boat hulls. Make sure they don't have any leaks. If needed, use a little tape to make them stronger. Flatten the hull bottoms. On each, try to make sure the rim is the same height going all around the hull edges. Why do you think this is important?
? Calculate the volume of each boat hull. If both hulls are square or rectangular, you can measure the length, width and height of each and multiply these dimensions together to get its total volume. If parts of the hull have an irregular shape, measure the volume piece-wise and then add these volumes together. Use triangles to approximate any areas of the hull that are curved or angled. What is the volume of each hull? Write this down.
? Alternatively, you can use dry rice to calculate the volume of each boat hull. To do this, carefully fill each hull with dry rice so that the rice is level with the top of the hull. Being careful not to damage the hull, transfer the dry rice into a measuring cup. What is the volume of each hull using the rice? Write this down.
? Fill the bucket, tub, sink, or dishpan with some water.

Procedure
? Take one of the boat hulls and carefully float it in the container of water deep enough to completely submerge the boat.
? Gently add one penny at a time. To prevent the hull from tipping, carefully balance the load as you add pennies (left to right, front to back?or port to starboard, fore to aft, if you're feeling nautical).
? Keep adding pennies until the hull finally sinks.
? Carefully take out the sunken hull and place it and the pennies on a rag or paper towels. Dump any excess water back into the container.
? Count how many pennies the hull could support before sinking (the penny that sank the hull does not count). How many pennies could it support? Write this number down.
? Repeat this process with the other hull. Be sure to only add dry pennies. Why do you think using dry pennies (instead of wet ones) is important?
? Could the larger hull support a lot more pennies than the smaller one?
? Make sure that the volume you calculated for each boat is in cubic centimeters (cm3). Convert it if necessary and write it down. (Cubic centimeters are the same as milliliters, or mL.)
? Convert the number of pennies each hull could support to grams. To do this, multiply the number of pennies by 2.5 grams (the weight of a single penny). How many grams could each hull support? Write this number down for each hull.
? For each hull, divide the number of grams it could support by its volume in cubic centimeters. This roughly gives you the hull's density. What was the density of each hull right before sinking? How do you think this relates to the density of water?
? Extra: In this activity you compared boat hulls that had two different sizes but you could repeat this activity trying a wider range of shapes and sizes of boat hulls. Do you get the same results if you use aluminum foil boat hulls that have a different shape? Do you see a pattern in your results?
? Extra: You roughly calculated the density of water in this activity, but your calculation could be made even more accurate. Thinking about what factors affected your calculation, develop a way to more accurately determine the density of water, such as by including the weight of the boat hulls, adding something smaller than pennies to measure how much weight the hulls can carry, and more accurately determining the volume of the hulls. How close can you get your calculations to the actual density of water?
? Extra: Repeat this activity but this time use liquids (or semisolids) other than water, such as cooking oil, liquid detergent or even snow. (Check with an adult to make sure it is alright if you use household liquids for your activity.) Make sure not to use any dangerous chemicals, such as household cleaning solutions. If you do not want to use much of the liquid, you can dilute it with water or use a small container (just wide enough to fit your boat hull in) and fill it so it is just a little deeper than the height of the hull?so that the hull can sink. What are the densities of other liquids and semisolids? How do their densities compare with that of water?


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=38a4c789dfb9c0b65b59e617314ccb03

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Court says Obama appointments violate constitution

Richard Cordray stands left as President Barack Obama announces in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013, that he will re-nominate Cordray to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a role that he has held for the last year under a recess appointment, and nominate Mary Joe White to lead the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC). (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Richard Cordray stands left as President Barack Obama announces in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013, that he will re-nominate Cordray to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a role that he has held for the last year under a recess appointment, and nominate Mary Joe White to lead the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC). (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama violated the Constitution when he bypassed the Senate last year to appoint three members of the National Labor Relations Board, a federal appeals court ruled Friday in a far-reaching decision that could severely limit a chief executive's powers to make recess appointments.

The court's decision marked a victory for Republicans and business groups critical of the agency. If it stands, it could invalidate hundreds of board decisions over the past year, including some that make it easier for unions to organize.

The three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit said that contrary to the administration's claim, the Senate was not in recess at the time Obama filled the vacancies on Jan. 4, 2012.

It also held that presidents have the authority to bypass the Senate in filling vacancies only when they occur during a recess, which it said occurs only between the end of the first year of a two-year Congress and when lawmakers convene for the second year.

White House press secretary Jay Carney said the administration strongly disagrees with the decision and that the NLRB would continue to conduct business as usual, despite calls by some Republicans for the board members to resign.

"The decision is novel and unprecedented," Carney said. "It contradicts 150 years of practice by Democratic and Republican administrations."

Under the court's decision, 285 recess appointments made by presidents between 1867 and 2004 would be invalid.

The Justice Department hinted that the administration would ask the Supreme Court to overturn the decision, which was rendered by three conservative judges appointed by Republican presidents. "We disagree with the court's ruling and believe that the president's recess appointments are constitutionally sound," the statement said.

The court acknowledged that the ruling conflicts with what some other federal appeals courts have held about when recess appointments are valid, which only added to the likelihood of an appeal to the high court.

The ruling also threw into question the legitimacy of Obama's recess appointment of Richard Cordray to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Cordray's appointment, made on the same date, has been challenged in a separate case.

Carney insisted the court's ruling affects only a single case before the labor board and would have no bearing on Cordray's appointment. Obama on Thursday renominated Cordray for the job.

Obama made the recess appointments after Senate Republicans blocked his choices for an agency they contended was biased in favor of unions. Obama claims he acted properly because the Senate was away for the holidays on a 20-day recess. The Constitution allows for such appointments without Senate approval when Congress is in recess.

But during that time, GOP lawmakers argued, the Senate technically had stayed in session because it was gaveled in and out every few days for so-called pro forma sessions.

GOP lawmakers used the tactic ? as Democrats had done in the past ? specifically to prevent the president from using his recess power to install members to the labor board and the consumer board. They had also vigorously opposed the nomination of Cordray. The White House argued that the pro forma sessions ? some lasting less than a minute ? were a sham.

The three-judge panel flatly rejected arguments from the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, which claimed that the president has discretion to decide that the Senate is unavailable to perform its advice and consent function.

"Allowing the president to define the scope of his own appointment power would eviscerate the Constitution's separation of powers," Chief Judge David Sentelle wrote in the 46-page ruling. He was appointed by President Ronald Reagan.

The court ruled that during one of those pro forma sessions on Jan. 3, 2012, the Senate officially convened its second session of the 112th Congress, as required by the Constitution.

Sentelle's opinion was joined by Judge Thomas Griffith, appointed to the court by President George W. Bush, and Karen LeCraft Henderson, who was appointed by President George H.W. Bush.

"With this ruling, the D.C. Circuit has soundly rejected the Obama administration's flimsy interpretation of the law, and (it) will go a long way toward restoring the constitutional separation of powers," said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah.

GOP House Speaker John Boehner welcomed the ruling as "a victory for accountability in government."

If the ruling stands, it would invalidate more than 600 board decisions issued over the past year. It also would leave the five-member labor board with just one validly appointed member, effectively shutting it down. The board is allowed to issue decisions only when it has at least three sitting members.

Obama used the recess appointment to install Deputy Labor Secretary Sharon Block, union lawyer Richard Griffin and NLRB counsel Terence Flynn to fill vacancies on the labor board, giving it a full contingent for the first time in more than a year. Block and Griffin are Democrats, while Flynn is a Republican. Flynn stepped down from the board last year.

All three vacancies on the labor board had been open for months before Obama acted to fill them.

"I think this is a very important decision about the separation of powers," said Carl Tobias, a constitutional law professor at Virginia's University of Richmond. "The court's reading has limited the president's ability to counter the obstruction of appointments by a minority in the Senate that has been pretty egregious in the Obama administration."

"Today's circuit court decision is not only a radical departure from precedent, it ignores the fact that President Obama had no choice but to act," said Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa. "Throughout his presidency, Republicans have employed unprecedented partisan delay tactics and filibusters to prevent confirmation of nominees to lead the NLRB, thus crippling the board's legal authority to act."

If Obama's recess appointment of Cordray to the newly created consumer board is eventually ruled invalid, it could nullify all the regulations the consumer board has issued, many of which affect the mortgage business.

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Follow Sam Hananel on Twitter: http://twitter.com/SamHananelAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-01-25-Obama-Recess%20Appointments/id-0a71c37597e946c3855c199e7612ca51

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