রবিবার, ৩০ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

California bans gay "conversion" therapy for minors

SACRAMENTO (Reuters) - Governor Jerry Brown has signed a bill banning a controversial therapy that aims to reverse homosexuality in minors, his office announced on Sunday, making California the first state to ban a practice many say is psychologically damaging.

The move marked a major victory for gay rights advocates who say so-called conversion therapy, also called reparative therapy, has no medical basis because homosexuality is not a disorder.

Brown said in a short message on Twitter that he supported the bill because it "bans non-scientific 'therapies' that have driven young people to depression and suicide."

The bill's sponsor, state Senator Ted Lieu, a Democrat from Torrance, said the law was a gesture of remembrance for a man who committed suicide after undergoing the therapy.

The measure prohibits children and teens under 18 from undergoing sexual orientation change efforts. It received support from the California Psychological Association and the California Board of Behavioral Sciences, among others.

"LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) youth will now be protected from a practice that has not only been debunked as junk science, but has been proven to have drastically negative effects on their well-being," Human Rights Campaign President Chad Griffin said in a statement.

He urged other states to follow California's lead.

Lieu said the psychiatrist who pioneered the therapy, Dr. Robert Spitzer, has since renounced it and has apologized to the gay and lesbian community.

"If anyone had any doubts such practices were evil, they need only listen to accounts of victims who went through this abusive practice," Lieu said in a statement.

During the legislature's consideration of the bill, people who had undergone the therapy as minors testified about why they wanted the practice banned.

"As a young teen, the anti-gay practice of so-called conversion therapy destroyed my life and tore apart my family," witness Ryan Kendall told legislators.

Several openly gay legislators gave emotional speeches in support of the measure, sharing how they were bullied because of their sexual orientation as youths.

All major medical and mental health organizations including the American Medical Association and the American Psychiatric Association have denounced the practice, supporters said.

Opponents said the bill encroached on the rights of parents to make choices for their children. They also said politicians should not regulate what they considered to be a matter for medical boards to decide.

The measure will take effect on January 1.

(Reporting by Mary Slosson; Editing by Jackie Frank and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-bans-gay-conversion-therapy-minors-165737891.html

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Eating Cherries Lowers Your Gout Attack Risk - Arthritis ... - Health.am

Eating cherries over a two-day period reduced the risk of gout attacks by 35%, according to a new study led by Boston University (BU) in the US that is being published in the journal Arthritis & Rheumatism.

Lead author Yuqing Zhang, Professor of Medicine and Public Health at BU, says in a press statement:

?Our findings indicate that consuming cherries or cherry extract lowers the risk of gout attack.?

Estimates suggest about 8.3 million adults in the US have gout, an inflammatory arthritis that occurs when uric acid crystals form in the joints, causing great pain and swelling.

There are several standard treatments, but with these gout attacks tend to re-occur, so researchers and patients are on the look-out for alternatives. Cherries have been mentioned as having urate-lowering and inflammation-reducing properties, but there have been no rigorous studies of whether they can reduce the risk of gout attacks.

For their case-crossover study, Zhang and colleagues recruited 633 people with gout and followed them online for a year. 88% of participants were white, had an average age of 54, and 78% of them were male. They answered questions about gout onset, symptoms, risk factors, medications, and whether they ate cherries or took cherry extract, and for how long.

The researchers classed any cherry intake in servings, with one serving being half a cup, or 10 to 12 cherries.

When they analyzed the participant responses, they found of those who had eaten cherries in one form or another, 35% ate fresh cherries, 2% took cherry extract, and 5% consumed both.

They also counted 1,247 gout attacks over the one-year follow-up, 92% of which were in the joint at the base of the big toe.

They compared the cherry consumption against the gout attack incidence, and found those participants who ate cherries for two days, had a 35% lower risk of gout attacks or flares compared to participants who did not have them at all.

They also found that the threat of gout flares fell by as much as 75% when cherry intake was combine with allopurinol, a drug that lowers uric acid levels, compared to not taking the drug or having the cherries.

These benefits persisted even after taking into account factors that can affect gout risk, such as gender, obesity (BMI), purine intake (in foods that can increase gout risk), plus use of alcohol, diuretics and anti-gout medications.

Zhang says:

?The gout flare risk continued to decrease with increasing cherry consumption, up to three servings over two days.?

He and his colleagues found cherry intakes above this number of servings did not give any additional benefit.

In an accompanying editorial, Allan Gelber from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, and Daniel Solomon from Brigham and Women?s Hospital and Harvard University Medical School in Boston, say the study is significant because it looks at diet and the risk of gout flares recurring.

But while these findings are promising, they urge patients who currently suffer from gout not to ?abandon standard therapies?.

They agree with the study authors that further randomized clinical trials should now be done to confirm the findings.

As does Alan Silman, professor and medical director of Arthritis Research UK.

He says in a press statement from the charity that he welcomes the findings, because for some time there has been talk of fruits like cherries being of benefit to people with gout and rheumatoid arthritis, both of which occur with chronic inflammation.

The study shows good evidence that perhaps cherries, together with traditional drugs that reduce uric acid, could significantly lower the risk of painful gout attacks, and, ?it has been suggested that antioxidant compounds found in cherries may be natural inhibitors of enzymes which are targeted by common anti-inflammatory medications such as ibuprofen? says Silman.

?Eating cherries, in fact, is not dissimilar to taking ibuprofen on a daily basis. However, we?d like to see additional clinical trials to further investigate and provide confirmation of this effect,? he adds.

###

Written by Catharine Paddock PhD
?Cherry Consumption and the Risk of Recurrent Gout Attacks?; Yuqing Zhang, Tuhina Neogi, Clara Chen, Christine Chaisson, David Hunter, Hyon K. Choi; Arthritis & Rheumatism, anticipated online publication 28 September 2012; DOI: 10.1002/art.34677; Additional sources: Wiley-Blackwell, Arthritis Research UK.

Provided by ArmMed Media




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Source: http://www.health.am/ab/more/eating-cherries-lowers-your-gout-attack-risk/

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Update: After Katz apology, Edmonton mayor says next step is public discussion with council

EDMONTON ? In the wake of a letter to Edmontonians from Oilers owner Daryl Katz, Mayor Stephen Mandel said team officials must now come to city hall and talk publicly about the new arena deal they want.

Mandel made the comments Saturday night after Katz published a full-page ad in the Edmonton Journal and Edmonton Sun apologizing to citizens and Oilers fans for botched negotiations over the proposed downtown arena.

Mandel said he was informed Friday that there would be a letter in the papers, but did not know what it would say. Earlier this week, Mandel set an Oct. 17 deadline for someone from the Katz Group to detail at an open council meeting what the Oilers? franchise needs to reach a final agreement on building, financing and operating the arena.

?What?s important is on the 17th for Katz and his team to come to city council to go over a way in which we can do an acceptable deal for all people,? Mandel said when asked for his reaction to Katz?s letter. ?That?s really what I?m concerned about.?

Mandel, who had just greeted runners at the starting line of the Alberta Sports & Recreation Association for the Blind?s Night Sight run, said it was not his place to comment on what Katz said or didn?t say.

The letter begins with Katz telling fans that he owes them an explanation for his methods. ?I took for granted your support and your love of the Oilers,? he wrote. ?

He goes on to say ?That was wrong, and I apologize.?

?

Katz apology letter

Coun. Don Iveson said the apology is warranted.

?Many people are saying it?s not good enough, but we had to start somewhere,? Iveson said.

?That?s what I mean by a positive development. But, and there is a but, this just opens the door for the next conversation we still need to have, which is what does the Katz Group want and what?s their justification? That needs to happen.?

Katz?s letter comes five days after he sparked a powerful backlash among Edmonton residents by making a trip to Seattle, a city that hopes to secure an NHL franchise.

Katz, along with former Oilers star Wayne Gretzky, team executives Kevin Lowe and Craig MacTavish and club president Patrick LaForge, visited Seattle, Wash., on Monday ? the same day Seattle city council approved a wealthy hedge-fund manager?s plan for a new, $490-million arena.

Iveson, who voted against the arena framework, said he supports Mandel?s Oct. 17 deadline for the Katz Group to publicly tell council what they are looking for.

?This opens the door,? Iveson said. ?This is a very positive, but very small, step in the right direction. There?s still a lot of work to do for the Katz Group to come to an understanding with our public that will allow us to move forward.?

The Katz Group and the city have been negotiating the details of a new arena deal, but in the past weeks, the talks broke down. Council held a closed-door meeting to discuss new issues raised by the Katz Group, including that the price tag had gone up to $475 million.

Other proposals by the Katz Group included an ongoing $6-million subsidy to help with operating costs and hopes the city will move employees to an office tower to be built adjacent to the arena.

Councillors rejected the company?s request for more public money.

In his letter, Katz said, ?In hindsight, I have underestimated the degree to which it would be up to us to make the case for public funding.?

A Katz Group spokesman said they won?t comment further.

Coun. Kerry Diotte agreed the letter is a good first step, but said there is much work still to do.

?Show me the figures of what the Oilers need to be sustainable,? Diotte said. ?I haven?t seen any figures. If they?re losing money, let?s see the figures. If they?re making money, let?s see the figures.

?This is public money, so discussions about it should be in public,? he said. ?If this is an investment for our city, I want to see what the return is.?

As with most of the debate connected to the downtown arena project, public opinion ranged widely on whether the apology was sincere and whether it should change anything with the negotiations.

Shopping downtown Saturday, Kent Timanson said he thought Katz?s letter was a smart thing to do.

?It?s a PR move obviously, but at the same time, you can?t be mad at someone once they apologize,? said Timanson, a Sherwood Park resident who was wearing an Oilers T-shirt.

He said he thought Katz was honest about his shortcomings in the letter, but that the Oilers owner will need to be more sensitive to public reaction in the future. ?I think ultimately that he wants to keep the team here,? he said. ?This whole thing was just a bit of a power play and it backfired on him and a lot of fans are ticked off at him.?

Elaine Yip, a 20-year-old who was taking in some of the Alberta Culture Day activities behind the Stanley A. Milner Library, said she is an Oilers fan, but had soured on the idea of a downtown arena in recent months when it appeared Katz was trying to get more out of the city. Reading his Saturday letter swayed her opinion slightly. ?It appears like he is trying to be more open minded, or at least appear to be more open,? Yip said. ?I personally do want to be optimistic about it.?

Chris Seewalt said he did not think Katz had anything to apologize for, although he recognized that might be an unpopular sentiment among some Edmontonians.

?It?s his team,? the 31-year-old Edmonton resident said. ?In my opinion, he?s well within his rights to look at all his options. I?m a fan of this team, but at the end of the day, it?s a business.?

Adam Finn, chairman of the University of Alberta School of Business marketing department, said Katz had to apologize for a series of steps, such as his high-profile Seattle trip, that irritated Oilers fans and many other Edmonton residents.

?Obviously, he?s got to do something, and the strong apology is something you can do as a start-off.?

Making a full-page apology in mass-market papers is not unusual for a company facing problems, Finn said, noting Maple Leaf Foods took similar action during the 2008 listeria outbreak that forced a recall of its products.

It?s important for Katz to take a second step and become more open and honest about what he needs, recognizing he is negotiating with a local government, not another private business, Finn said.

Kenneth Wong, a faculty member at Queen?s University?s School of Business who specializes in marketing, said Katz needed to respond to the sense of betrayal felt by Oilers fans who have supported an underperforming team for years.

?I think this is a classic example of an entrepreneur encountering both the bureaucracy of city hall, and the philosophical constraints and issues that centre on any public arena debate,? Wong said.

?With the benefit of 20-20 hindsight, he?s probably thinking, ?Of course people are upset.? ?

With files from Journal staff

sodonnell@edmontonjournal.com

Twitter.com/scodonnell

Does he mean it? Edmonton residents divided on Daryl Katz?s

apology.

Source: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/sports/hockey/edmonton-oilers/After+Katz+apology+Edmonton+mayor+says/7320204/story.html

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Slingbox 350 and 500 show up unannounced in Best Buy, flaunt 1080p and built-in WiFi

Slingbox 350 and 500 show unannounced in Best Buy, flaunt 1080p and builtin WiFi

You might say Dave Zatz just had a happy accident. While he was hunting for the as yet unofficial Logitech Harmony Touch in Best Buy, he discovered the Slingbox 350 and 500 -- two more living room gadgets that have yet to receive an official introduction. The placeshifting hubs both look to be major improvements over the aging Slingbox Pro HD and Solo, making 1080p streaming available as long as the connection is up to snuff. Those who spring for the 500 should also get long overdue support for WiFi without having to use a wireless bridge, although they may miss the Pro HD's ATSC tuner. Outside of the networking, Sling Media is making expansion its upsell angle: the 500 supports USB media sharing and HDMI, while the 350 has to make do with whatever can pipe through its component and composite jacks. Zatz was unfortunately foiled in an attempt to buy one of the new Slingboxes and couldn't get final pricing, but Best Buy's suggestion to try again around mid-October hints that we won't have long to wait for a much-needed upgrade to our remote TV viewing.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/30/slingbox-350-and-500-show-up-unannounced-in-best-buy-flaunt-1080p/

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Divided town a challenge to Myanmar democracy bid

SITTWE, Myanmar (AP) ? There are no Muslim faithful in most of this crumbling town's main mosques anymore, no Muslim students at its university.

They're gone from the market, missing from the port, too terrified to walk on just about any street downtown.

Three-and-a-half months after some of the bloodiest clashes in a generation between Myanmar's ethnic Rakhine Buddhists and stateless Muslims known as Rohingya left the western town of Sittwe in flames, nobody is quite sure when ? or even if ? the Rohingya will be allowed to resume the lives they once lived here.

The conflict has fundamentally altered the demographic landscape of this coastal state capital, giving way to a disturbing policy of government-backed segregation that contrasts starkly with the democratic reforms Myanmar's leadership has promised the world since half a century of military rule ended last year.

While the Rakhine can move freely, some 75,000 Rohingya have effectively been confined to a series of rural displaced camps outside Sittwe and a single downtown district they dare not leave for fear of being attacked.

For the town's Muslim population, it's a life of exclusion that's separate, and anything but equal.

"We're living like prisoners here," said Thant Sin, a Rohingya shopkeeper who has been holed up since June in the last Rohingya-dominated quarter of central Sittwe that wasn't burned down.

Too afraid to leave, the 47-year-old cannot work anyway. The blue wooden doors of his shuttered pharmaceutical stall sit abandoned inside the city's main market ? a place only Rakhine are now allowed to enter.

The crisis in western Myanmar goes back decades and is rooted in a highly controversial dispute over where the region's Muslim inhabitants are really from. Although many Rohingya have lived in Myanmar for generations, they are widely denigrated here as foreigners ? intruders who came from neighboring Bangladesh to steal scarce land.

The U.N. estimates their number at 800,000. But the government does not count them as one of the country's 135 ethnic groups, and so ? like Bangladesh ? denies them citizenship. Human rights groups say racism also plays a role: Many Rohingya, who speak a distinct Bengali dialect and resemble Muslim Bangladeshis, have darker skin and are heavily discriminated against.

In late May, tensions boiled over after the rape and murder of a Rakhine woman, allegedly by three Rohingya, in a town south of Sittwe. By mid-June, skirmishes between rival mobs carrying swords, spears and iron rods erupted across the region. Conservative estimates put the death toll at around 100 statewide, with 5,000 homes burned along with dozens of mosques and monasteries.

Sittwe suffered more damage than most, and today blackened tracts of rubble-strewn land filled with knotted tree stumps are scattered everywhere. The largest, called Narzi, was home to 10,000 Muslims.

Human Rights Watch accused security forces of colluding with Rakhine mobs at the height of the mayhem, opening fire on Rohingya even as they struggled to douse the flames of their burning homes.

Speaking to a delegation of visiting American diplomats earlier this month, Border Affairs Minister Lt. Gen. Thein Htay described Sittwe's new status quo. Drawing his finger across a city map, he said there are now "lines that cannot be crossed" by either side, or else "there will be aggression ... there will be disputes."

"It's not what we want," he added with a polite smile. "But this is the reality we face."

While police and soldiers are protecting mosques and guarding Rohingya in camps, there is much they cannot control. One group of 300 local Buddhist leaders, for example, issued pamphlets urging the Rakhine not to do business with the Rohingya or even talk to them. It is the only way, they say, to avert violence.

Inside Sittwe's once mixed municipal hospital, a separate ward has been established to serve Muslim patients only; on a recent day, it was filled with just four patients whose families said they could only get there with police escorts.

At the town's university, only Rakhine now attend. And at the main market, plastic identity cards are needed to enter: pink for shopkeepers, yellow for customers, none for Rohingya.

The crisis has posed one of the most serious challenges yet to Thein Sein's nascent government, which declared a state of emergency and warned the unrest could threaten the country's nascent transition toward democracy if it spread.

Although the clashes have been contained and an independent commission has been appointed to study the conflict and recommend solutions, the government has shown little political will to go further.

The Rohingya are a deeply unpopular cause in Myanmar, where even opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi and former political prisoners imprisoned by the army have failed to speak out on their behalf. In July, Thein Sein himself suggested the Rohingya should be sent to any other country willing to take them.

"In that context, we're seeing them segregated into squalid camps, fleeing the country, and in some cases being rounded up and imprisoned," said Matthew Smith, a researcher for Human Rights Watch who authored a recent report for the New York-based group on the latest unrest.

In places like Sittwe, "there is a risk of permanent segregation," Smith said. "None of this bodes well for the prospects of a multi-ethnic democracy."

In the meantime, the government's own statistics indicate the crisis is worsening ? at least for the Rohingya.

While the total number of displaced Rakhine statewide has declined from about 24,000 at the start of the crisis to 5,600 today, the number of displaced Rohingya has risen from 52,000 to 70,000, mostly in camps just outside Sittwe.

The government has blamed the rise on Rohingya it says didn't lose homes but who are eager to gain access to aid handouts. Insecurity is also likely a factor, though. Amnesty International has accused authorities of detaining hundreds of Rohingya in a post-conflict crackdown aimed almost exclusively at Muslims. And in August, 3,500 people were displaced after new clashes saw nearly 600 homes burned in the town of Kyauktaw, according to the U.N.

Elsewhere in Rakhine state, the army has resumed forced labor against Muslims, ordering villagers to cultivate the military's paddy fields, act as porters and rebuild destroyed homes, according to a report by the Arakan Project, an activist group.

In Sittwe, mutual fear and distrust runs so high that 7,000 Rohingya crammed inside a dilapidated quarter called Aung Mingalar have not set foot outside it since June. It's the last Muslim-inhabited block downtown, a tiny place that takes about five minutes to cross by foot.

Thant Sin, the Rohingya shopkeeper who lives in Aung Mingalar, said that the government delivers supplies of rice, but that getting almost everything else requires exorbitant bribes and connections. There is just one mosque. There are no clinics, medical care or schools, and Thant Sin is worried his savings will run out in weeks.

The married father of five has been unable to open his market stall since authorities ordered it shut three months ago. One told him, "This for the Rakhine now," he recalled.

"All we want to do is go back to work," he said. "The government is doing nothing to help us get our lives back."

All four roads into Aung Mingalar are guarded by police, and outside, past the roadblocks of barbed wire and wood that divide the district from the rest of town, Rakhine walk freely ? sometimes yelling racial slurs or hurling stones from slingshots.

Across the street, a 57-year-old Rakhine, Aye Myint, leaned back in a rusted metal chair and peered at a group of bearded Muslim men in Aung Mingalar.

"I feel nothing for those people now," he said. "After what happened ... they cannot be trusted anymore. To tell the truth, we want them out of here."

Hla Thain, the attorney general of Rakhine state, denied there was any official policy of forced segregation, saying security forces are deployed to protect both sides, not keep them apart. But he acknowledged that there were not enough police or soldiers to make the two communities feel safe, and that huge obstacles to reconciliation remain.

"We want them to live together, that is our goal, but we can't force people to change," he said. "Anger is still running high. Neither side can forget that they lost family members, their homes."

For now, he said, the government is studying every possibility to make life "normal" again. For example: having Rakhine students attend university in the morning, while Rohingya go each afternoon.

Thein Htay, the border minister, was more blunt.

"We may have to build another market center, another trading center, another port" for the Rohingya, he said, because it will be "very difficult otherwise."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/divided-town-challenge-myanmar-democracy-bid-050321188.html

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Ex-finance minister to challenge Merkel in 2013

BERLIN (AP) ? Germany's main opposition party is set to nominate former Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck, who helped pilot the country through the 2008-9 financial crisis, as Chancellor Angela Merkel's challenger in elections next year.

Officials with the center-left Social Democrats wouldn't immediately confirm reports Friday in several German media outlets that the leadership had decided on Steinbrueck, 65. But the party scheduled an afternoon news conference and former Cabinet colleague Brigitte Zypries wrote on Facebook: "it's true, it's going to be him."

The choice of Steinbrueck ? one of three candidates who has been discussed for months as criticism mounted of the party's failure to settle on a challenger ? kicks off in earnest the race for the chancellery in parliamentary elections expected this time next year.

Steinbrueck earlier this week presented a plan for "taming financial markets," flagging that as a prominent issue in the party's campaign.

But polls suggest that, while Steinbrueck is relatively well-placed to attract swing voters, the Social Democrats face an uphill struggle to unseat the popular Merkel, 58, Germany's leader since 2005.

The party consistently trails her conservative Christian Democrats, and surveys show no majority for their hoped-for coalition with the Green party.

They're keen to avoid ending up as Merkel's junior partner in another "grand coalition" of right and left, the combination in which Steinbrueck served as finance minister from 2005 to 2009.

A significant source of Merkel's popularity is her handling of the eurozone debt crisis, and that's been making it hard for the Social Democrats to land blows on her. They and the Greens have criticized Merkel for what they decry as a too-little, too-late response ? before invariably supporting her plans in Parliament.

Steinbrueck has a reputation for plain speaking, which hasn't always made him popular with fellow Social Democrats. As a minister, he once remarked of his party that "we're coming over to people as crybabies" in the face of Merkel's popularity.

In 2009, he called for governments to use "the whip" against neighboring Switzerland in the fight against tax evasion and said the Alpine nation faced the threat of the "cavalry."

His successor, Wolfgang Schaeuble, has taken a more diplomatic approach, negotiating a deal with Switzerland. But with the election in sight, the Social Democrats have vowed not to let it through Parliament's upper house, where Merkel's coalition lacks a majority.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ex-finance-minister-challenge-merkel-2013-090438153--finance.html

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Messy House Ministry and Living My Words ? MomLife Today

Yesterday I had to practice what I preached.? Again.

A neighbor stopped by while I worked in the yard. Her daughter is a friend of eldest?s, so I invited them inside. I warned the mom, ?The house is a wreck. A huge messy mess. I?m just going to treat you like family right off the bat, OK??

She laughed. ?We are family.?

?Then come in. And watch your step.?

Entering the disaster zone with her fresh eyes, though, was soooo challenging! I hadn?t realized it was that bad. Unfinished laundry piled on all available surfaces in the family room. Puzzles and game covered the dining table. Rachel?s nest of papers loomed in the corner. Books stacked on the toy chest and spilled toward the trampoline.

And the kitchen? You cannot imagine! Dishes ran rampant in and around the sink. Plus, I was in the middle of removing wallpaper from the kitchen, so wallpaper scraps sat in sad heaps all around the room amidst the steamer and all its accessories.

Worse, everything was in half-stages of completion. My ADD was in full swing today. The kids were so rowdy that I had escaped my inside tasks and started mowing the lawn to get some peace and quiet, if that tells you anything about the day. Even the lawn had high spots where I had gotten distracted and moved to another task.

All this went into inviting a neighbor into my house for the first time. She handled it like a champ, though. She found the only empty chair and sat, talking to me as I dripped sweat on the kitchen floor?it?s hot in Texas in August.

I sighed and shook my head. ?You?ll probably tell your daughter never, ever to eat anything at my house. Ever. I?m so sorry it?s such a mess. Believe it or not, I used to be a perfectionist. My?article, ?Messy House Ministry,? was published after a moment just like this when I had to learn to be hospitable even though I was far from perfect.?

She let loose a wonderful, musical laugh. ?Honey, you are BUSY.?

In the end, she invited me to her house, which was BEAUTIFUL BTW, and gave me some yum-o chicken salad. The important thing, though, was that I made a new friend, one that is OK with my imperfections and will hopefully be comfortable sharing her life with me. The embarrassment does lessen with time, but I still don?t like letting people see me in all my imperfect glory.

God, though, loves us even while we are far from perfect. I feel that showing my true self, rather than a magazine facsimile, helps people feel more comfortable around me.

How about you?

?

Source: http://www.momlifetoday.com/2012/09/messy-house-ministry-and-living-my-words/

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Mooning over the night sky's marvels

NASA / JPL-Caltech / SSI

NASA's Cassini orbiter captured this view of Saturn on June 15, from a distance of about 1.8 million miles (2.9 million kilometers). The rings' shadow runs across the planet's sunlit side. The speck in the lower left corner is Enceladus, a 313-mile-wide (504-kilometer-wide) moon of Saturn.

By Alan Boyle

NASA's Cassini sent back this big, beautiful, black-and-white picture of Saturn ? but what's that little white speck in the corner?

The image, unveiled by Cassini's imaging team on Monday, shows tiny Enceladus at lower left. It's just 313 miles wide (504 kilometers wide), and yet it shines brightly from a distance of 2 million miles or so. Enceladus is arguably as intriguing as Saturn, and here's why: The icy moon has geysers of water spouting up from cracks in its surface, suggesting that there's a deep ocean and perhaps even some sort of life down below.


To get a more imaginative view of Enceladus, check out this posting on the io9 blog, featuring an illustration from?"Planetfall: New Solar System Visions," a big, beautiful, full-color coffee-table book by Michael Benson. NPR's Robert Krulwich showed off the same image earlier this month on his?Krulwich Wonders blog.

Enceladus is just one of the moons of the solar system that's been soaking up the spotlight lately: Also this month, NASA's Curiosity rover watched Mars' two moons, Phobos and Deimos, pass over the sun's disk during a series of mini-eclipses. The rover won't see such a sight again for 11 months or so. Here's a smooth animation of Deimos' transit?from Nahum Chazarra on UnmannedSpaceflight.com. And if you haven't seen it already, you'll want to catch up with the sight of a crescent Phobos in Mars' dusky sky.?

Shine on, Harvest Moon
Our own moon is definitely worth watching over the next few days: Saturday brings a "Harvest Moon" ? that is, the full moon that's closest to the September equinox.?That's traditionally a good moon to bring in the harvest by, since it lights up the whole night for late-working farmers.

The Harvest Moon also can serve as a guidepost for finding the planet Uranus in the night sky, although the moon's glare interferes with the view this weekend. If you'd like some extra help, the Slooh Space Camera?is planning a couple of online viewing parties over the weekend ? with Uranus as the guest of honor. Video feeds will be coming in to the Slooh website from a variety of observatories, and a panel of experts will provide commentary. The first show begins at 7 p.m. ET on Saturday, with an encore performance at 10.

Next week, the moon continues to act as a guide, as Sky & Telescope's Alan M. MacRobert explains. On Oct. 3, the moon lingers near the Pleiades star cluster. The next night, it sits near the bright red star Aldebaran in the constellation Taurus. And on Oct. 5, the waning moon hangs out with Jupiter, starting around 10 p.m.

This weekend is also a good time to look for the International Space Station as well as the European Space Agency's Automated Transfer Vehicle, which undocked from the station today. To find out when and where to look, check out NASA's satellite sighting database.

Where in the Cosmos
Cassini's picture of Saturn and Enceladus served as today's "Where in the Cosmos" picture puzzle on the Cosmic Log Facebook page. It took just a few minutes for Ian Slota to solve the riddle and report that the speck in the picture was Enceladus. As a reward, I'm sending Ian a pair of big, beautiful, cardboard 3-D glasses, courtesy of Microsoft Research's WorldWide Telescope project. Those glasses will come in handy for seeing 3-D pictures of Saturn's moons. Click the "like" button for the Cosmic Log Facebook page, and you too may be a winner in next week's "Where in the Cosmos" game.


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page to your Google+ circles. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://photoblog.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/28/14143393-mooning-over-the-night-skys-marvels?lite

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My Town: College Volunteer Day | FOX8.com ? Cleveland news ...

ursuline_header_logo

PEPPER PIKE, Ohio ? Ursuline College is coordinating a community-wide College Volunteer Day.

The event takes place Saturday, October 6 from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m.

The objective of College Volunteer Day is to bring together alumnae, students, trustees, faculty and staff on a select day to serve the community through active participation for various agencies.

The chosen agencies are MedWish, Hospice of the Western Reserve, The Cleveland Foodbank, Rescue Village ? Geauga Humane Society, Habitat for Humanity and St. Angela Center ? Ursuline Motherhouse

The goal of this event is to provide the college community with an opportunity to give back and serve those in need.

Click here for more information about College Volunteer Day, including a volunteer information sheet and registration form.

Source: http://fox8.com/2012/09/28/my-town-college-volunteer-day/

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Our Arts and Crafts Home: It's a Miracle!

It finally happened, nearly 8 months after an original closing date Frankie FINALLY was able to close on a house! Last January we found this really neat house seen here. That find was too easy so random unforeseen drama ensued which you can read about here. No one was ever able to track her down. The agent finally got a hold of her son who only said "I don't know anything about it." Hmm, despite being the 3rd party I can sense the family tension. There were so many neat pieces of furniture and features in that house it makes me sad to think about it still sitting there and falling into disrepair fast as the roof was showing its age.
Anyways, last May we came across a lovely Victorian which I wanted to buy, Mark said no so I talked Frankie into making an offer. He made a ridiculously low offer, they accepted and we have been patiently? waiting through several pushed back closing dates (it was a short sale) to get inside, scrub it down and move his Lego and G.I.Joe hoard out of my basement. I plan on helping him decorate (to my taste) and then when he is tired of it I will buy it from him and it will be all ready for me to move my stuff in. Mwahaha. Fortunately we seem to have about the same taste so he'll never realize whats happening...except I told him my plan already.

(assessor's website photo which is why it's tagged 2006)

Thanks to the addition off the back the garage is attached! Plus there is a cute little (what I envision as) a potting shed bumped off the side. He plans on painting the house something other than white which will bring out all of the different trim details.

I will start the tour with the? front door/entry.

The entry still has fancy crown molding. (The other ceilings have been lowered so we are unsure if the other rooms had/still have it)

The house has plenty of fancy light fixtures to satisfy my obsession and it begins in the entry. (You'll have to click to enlarge it and I'll have to see if I can get a better photo).

Fancy hat hooks also adorn the wall.

We went through the house to clear the clutter the previous owners left behind and this was the result (except for the baby and diaper bag). They also left all of their old cleaning supplies so that was nice along with a new door for the garage and tile for the upstairs bathroom.

A lot of it is going to the donation pile but there were a lot of fun crafty items my mom and I are going to divide.?

Ha! I don't know why he makes me laugh. I'm taking him if Frankie doesn't need him!?

The dining room and fixture in the living room are probably from the 50's when the house was renovated/added onto but I still think they are nifty. Note the cameo on the porcelain.

There are lots of antique wall sconces throughout.?

?Most of the doors have these spectacular Victorian door knobs.

The kitchen is/will be fantastic. The cupboards need some sprucing up but are nice, vintage and there are lots of them (there are more on other walls.)

I came across reproduction versions of these at Rejuvenation? and they were titled Whale Tales. Which apparently has another meaning involving something you see frequently on People of Walmart.

More cupboard space! This used to be the pantry? maid's room? but now it is a shortcut hallway to the "new" bathroom. I know I would be removing the doors and putting all of my vintage kitchen knick knacks on display in here.??

Another fancy fixture. Maybe the original dining room light which got moved to the smaller room due to the fact it only has 2 bulbs? It seems kind of big to be crammed back in this little room.

This is part of the remainder of the original back stair case. It was flipped with the basement stairs (you can see the original shadow on the wall to the left) so unfortunately it would be a pain to restore. It makes for 2 nice closets though.

Moving upstairs. This picture doesn't do these justice as they are about 4 ft wide.?

Original pedestal sink, medicine cabinet and claw foot tub.

AND he got an original toilet darn it!

The Art Deco fixture above the sink.

Cute linen area. The ceiling has been lowered so much that another cupboard is hiding over the ceiling tiles (the door is in the basement.)

Not only does he have one kitchen with nice retro cabinets but since the house used to be apartments, the upstairs kitchen also remains.

The countertops are a little dusty but look to be in good shape.

The upstairs half of the original back staircase.

And last but not least. Not only does he get a completely original 1910 bathroom, but since the house was added onto in the 50's, it also has a pink bathroom in the addition! The best of both eras!

We can't leave out the matching tub.All are in great shape - the tub just needs a good scrubbing. We found a new white toilet and pedestal sink in the basement so I think we just barely saved this bathroom from a generic fate.

Source: http://markandcaras.blogspot.com/2012/09/its-miracle.html

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iPhone 5, Galaxy S III cost lower than $1 per year to charge

iPhone 5, Galaxy S III cost lower than $1 per year to charge

If you?re ordering an iPhone 5, you?re possibly paying a great deal of cash for the handset. That?s specifically true when you?re getting the telephone straight from Apple without a two-year contract, because the expense of the 16GB model is set at $ 649 ? plus that?s the smallest pricey model about provide. That absolutely isn?t inexpensive, however, there?s 1 aspect of the iPhone 5 which isn?t pricey at all: the expense to charge it.

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The people at Opower ran several tests plus determined which the iPhone 5 just costs an estimated 41 cents per year to charge. Getting a little more certain, they utilized the Watts Up Pro Consumption Power Meter to figure out how much electricity the iPhone 5 consumes whenever charging from 0% to 100%. When they had those results, it just took a little of math to figure out how much it may expense customers to charge their iPhone 5 per year.

The test assumes which these iPhone 5 consumers are charging their shiny new handset when daily, that isn?t unreasonable considering the iPhone 5?s beefier power compared to previous iPhones. Simply for kicks, the Opower team additionally tested the Galaxy S III plus determined it costs 53 cents per year to charge Samsung?s flagship. Why the discrepancy involving the 2 handsets? The Galaxy S III attributes a bigger power than the iPhone 5, meaning it takes a little more electricity to totally charge it.

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Still, the difference amongst the 2 is negligible, particularly because the expense is spread out over an whole year. It?s somewhat surprising which the expense to charge a mobile is really low, nevertheless Opower equally reminds you which the force use is very substantial whenever you take all smartphone consumers into account. That?s set to strengthen a lot inside the close future too, because it?s estimated which by 2016, a whopping 1 billion persons all over the world can have smartphones. Should you have a few minutes, make sure to read by Opower?s whole report, because it?s all fairly fascinating. What do we think of the small test?

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Source: http://www.dailygadgets.net/iphone-5-galaxy-s-iii-cost-lower-than-1-per-year-to-charge/13864/

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TENNderCare Covers Tots, Kids, and Teens in Tennessee ...

by Jen Thorpe | More from this Blogger

handprints Every state has its own Medicaid program. Some portion of that program is typically designed to cover newborns, children, and teenagers. In Tennessee, this program is called TENNderCare. It covers tots, kids, teenagers, and those under 21 years of age.

Medicaid is a public, or government run, form of health insurance. It provides health insurance coverage for individuals and families who are low-income and who cannot afford to buy a health plan from a private insurance company. Funding for Medicaid comes from both the federal government and also from the government of an individual state.

In Tennessee, the Medicaid program is called TennCare. It is administered by the Tennessee Department of Human Services. Some states call the part of Medicaid that covers children CHIP. In Tennessee, the program is called TENNderCare. It covers children who come from low-income families from birth through age 21. It covers children who are already covered by TennCare (the state's primary Medicaid program).

TENNderCare provides checkups and health care services to make sure that babies, children, teens, and young adults receive the health care that they need. Dental coverage is included through TennDent.

The state of Tennessee uses this helpful phrase: "Check in, Check up, Check back". Checkups are provide for free. This includes checkups for vision, hearing, dental, and mental health. You can find resources that explain more about what age a child should have certain checkups done through the TENNderCare website.

Not every state covers mental health for kids, but Tennessee does. It includes Behavioral Health Services. TENNderCare can help if your child is having trouble with Behavioral Problems (including anger management), ADD/ADHD, Alcohol or drug abuse, eating disorders, or mental health issues (including major depression, schizophrenia, bi-polar, etc.).

TennCare also will covers services that are "medically necessary". This can include medical care, dental services, prescriptions, transportation to health care providers, hospital services, x-rays, physical therapy, speech therapy, or occupational therapy, and mental health services.

Children under the age of 21 who are eligible for TENNderCare will be automatically assigned to a Health Plan. The one they are assigned to is determined by the area of Tennessee that the child lives in. There is one plan for dental care through TENNderCare, and it is called TennDent. This is the same no matter where in Tennessee an eligible child happens to live.

To apply for TennCare, or other Medicaid programs, a person can visit their local Department of Human Services. Or, they can call to have an application sent to them. The application can be mailed out after it is completed. It is also possible to apply online.

Image by ezioman on Flickr

JenThorpe`s avatar

I am currently writing for the Insurance, Deals, Genealogy, and Special Needs blogs.I have also written for the Parenting,Money, Homeschooling, Preschool, Health, Food and Weightloss blogs.

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Source: http://insurance.families.com/blog/tenndercare-covers-tots-kids-and-teens-in-tennessee

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Up to 700,000 Syrians could flee by year-end: UNHCR

GENEVA (Reuters) - The number of refugees fleeing Syria could reach 700,000 by the end of the year, the U.N. refugee agency said on Thursday, almost four times its previous forecast.

About 294,000 refugees fleeing 18 months of conflict in Syria have crossed into four neighboring countries - Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon and Turkey - or await registration there, it said.

"This is a significant outflow taking place, 100,000 people in August, 60,000 in September and at the moment 2,000 or 3,000 per day or night," Panos Moumtzis, regional refugee coordinator for the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR, told a news briefing.

About 5,000-6,000 Syrians have reached other parts of north Africa, mainly Egypt, while other refugees are turning up in southern Europe, including Cyprus and Greece, he said.

The previous forecast of 185,000 refugees was surpassed in August.

U.N. aid agencies and humanitarian partners issued a funding appeal of $487.9 million to help meet the needs of the rapidly growing outflow from Syria.

(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/700-000-syrians-could-flee-end-u-n-092806143.html

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Daily Kos: Is Taxing Capital Income Fair?

By Mike Konczal, originally posted on Next New Deal.

Click here to subscribe to the Roosevelt Institute's weekly newsletter.

In light of Mitt Romney's recent tax returns, the economic blogosphere has been kicking around the issue of capital taxation. Ryan Chittum at Columbia Journalism Review has an excellent overview of what people have been writing with?"The capital gains preference."?This is a response to Dylan Matthews?and Matt Yglesias, who each present arguments from economists that capital gains taxes should be lower than other taxes, even potentially set at zero percent.

Many economic arguments are about tradeoffs, but the argument for the zero tax rate of savings, also similar to the arguments for a consumption tax, is usually phrased as an argument about fairness.?In order to frame the fairness argument, economists bring up a story of two similar individuals with one as a saver and one as a spender. Yglesias has the framework in his post:

You imagine two prosperous but not outrageously so working people living somewhere?two doctors, say, living in nearby small towns. They're both pulling in incomes in the low six figures. One doctor chooses to spend basically 100 percent of his income on expensive non-durables. He goes on annual vacations to expensive cities and eats in a lot of fancy restaurants. The other doctor is much more frugal, not traveling much and eating modestly. Instead, he spends a lot of his money on hiring people to build buildings around town. Those buildings become houses, offices, retail stores, factories, etc. In other words, they're capital. And capital earns a return, so over time the second doctor comes to have a much higher income than the first doctor. [...]

In the world where investment income is taxed like labor income, the first doctor says to the second "man you're a sucker?not only are you deferring enjoyment of the fruits of your labor (boring) but when the money you've saved comes back to you, it gets taxed all over again. Live in the now. ?And the thinking is that world number one where people with valuable skills take a large share of their labor income and transform it into capital goods is ultimately a richer world...

Taxing savings by having an income tax punishes the Saver Doctor relative to the Spender Doctor. If you just taxed what they consumed, they would be treated equally.

Yglesias leans on the idea that we'll be a richer world without taxing savings, because people will respond to the incentives against savings here. I don't believe the research bears this out. I'm not an expert, but?I believe the impact, if any, is small.?In their excellent summary book on taxation,?Taxing Ourselves?(2004, 3rd edition),?Joel Slemrod and Jon Bakija conclude that a?"large number of studies have attempted to address these problems to some degree, and they generally come to the conclusion that saving is not very responsive to incentives."

But if the efficiency argument is weak evidence, the fairness argument is assumed to make the case, and make it for zero percent taxation. It is unfair to tax the Saver Doctor even a penny more than the Spender Doctor. Scott Sumner gives a similar example at The Economist:?"The proper tax rate on capital income is zero [...]?To see why this is so, consider twin brothers who each make $100,000 in wage income. Most people would regard these two people as equally well off, even if one freely chose to consume his income now, while the other chose to consume later. But not advocates of the income tax. They insist the more patient twin brother is 'richer' and deserves to be taxed at a higher income tax rate." Gilles Saint-Paul?argues in?the same forum that fairness requires that we shouldn't "penalise future consumption relative to current consumption."

In Joanathan Gruber's popular undergraduate textbook?Public Finance and Public Policy,?the two people are actually Homer Simpson and Ned Flanders!

Consider two individuals, Homer and Ned, who are identical except for their preferences for saving. Both live for two periods, earning $100 in the first period and nothing in the second period. Homer is impatient: he wants to consume his entire income in the first period and nothing in the second period. Ned is more patient; he wants to consume in both periods. Initially, they are both subject to an income tax, which taxes all labor earnings and interest income at 50%.The interest rate earned on savings is 10%. [...] ?In present discounted value (PDV) terms, Homer pays only $50 in taxes across both periods, but Ned pays $51.11. Thus,?savers such as Ned are penalized in an income tax regime.This tax treatment of savings is both horizontally inequitable (because Ned is taxed more simply for making a different choice) and inefficient because it may reduce the incentive to save (because savings leads to higher tax payments).

Let's stick with Homer and Ned. Is this fairness argument against the "inequitable" treatment of Ned either impressive or conclusive? I'd argue no. I'm going to rely on arguments from Barbara Fried's excellent "Fairness and the Consumption Tax"?for the following to identify some problems, and I'd recommend her essay if you are interested in learning more.

The first issue is the assumption that Homer and Ned should pay in accordance with their consumption, or that equal spenders should have equal tax burdens, or, technically, that the present value of their tax burdens should be identical. This?presupposes what is up for debate, which is what the appropriate tax base is. If the tax base is explicit wealth, then income from savings should also be taxed. There are significant advantages to owning wealth, including security, peace of mind, power, the ability to direct private investment, political control, and much more. It isn't clear why these shouldn't be part of the tax base.

A second issue is that it assumes that all income from savings is the result of delayed compensation, when much of it doesn't even come from the individuals themselves. We don't know how much of the United States' capital stock comes from the gifts, bequests, or inheritance that constitute intergenerational transfer,?though averages of studiessay about 50 percent. Fairness arguments become a lot more complicated here.

?

A third issue is the assumption that, since Homer and Ned are equally ranked in well-being in a no-tax world, they should be equally ranked after any tax comes into play. This equal ranking is the engine behind a lot of the fairness arguments -- as Gruber says, we don't want to penalize Ned for "making a different choice." Since a tax on savings would fall on Ned the Saver but not Homer the Spender, they would no longer be equally ranked, as Homer would end up better off than Ned with an income tax.?It isn't clear how much savers would be disadvantaged relative to spenders, as some of that tax will fall to borrowers. But the general point remains.

?

But even granting this, a new question arises: why do we care about maintaining equal ranking from a "no-tax" world, and why would it be unfair to change it? This is only a claim to fairness if Homer and Ned, or savers and spenders more generally, have a claim to their relative ranking in a "no-tax" world. It's not clear that they do. They certainly don't under an entitlement theory, as the value the saver gets in this example is just the random quirk of his or her preference structure. It also presumes that the ranking in a "no-tax" world was just in-and-of-itself and thus worth preserving, which requires a lot of libertarian heavy lifting.

?

It also presumes a myth of ownership, or the idea that you can conceptualize the economy without the government or that tax policy isn't just one of many ways that the government affects interest rates. Sumner and Yglesias, for instance, believe the Federal Reserve should do some major things to raise nominal GDP, which would have a dramatic effect on the relative ranking of savers and spenders compared to a non-Federal Reserve world. How are they any different from this tax policy, other than the fact that they justify it within a larger set of social institutions, especially ones that produce the patterned world?of full employment?

?

A?fourth?thing to consider is the issue of generalizing this critique to other examples. Another way of reading the fairness issue in the example is that since both Homer and Ned start off equal, and had equal capability to generate wealth, they should have an equal tax burden, akin to an?endowment or faculty tax.

?

If a tax on savings is removed, taxes on wages would have to go up. Now imagine that, in addition to Homer and Ned, there's Barney at time zero. Barney hates working but loves leisure, so he doesn't work at all but enjoys just as much utility as Homer and Ned when they consume their net present value of $100. Raising taxes on wages leaves Homer and Ned equally well off but punishes them both relative to Barney. Should taxes on wages therefore be set to maintain their ordering? Would we have to abolish taxes on consumption then? If so, then it isn't clear we can have a coherent tax policy period.

?

But we could have a coherent tax policy, especially if we focus on what kind of economy we want to build and use tax policy as one of many levers, working in concert with all the others, to create it.

Mike Konczal is a Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute.

Source: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/09/28/1137498/-Is-Taxing-Capital-Income-Fair

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Confused of New Jersey : British Expat Discussion Forum

Forum Jump

Source: http://britishexpats.com/forum/showthread.php?t=773071

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News in Brief: Japanese lab lays claim to element 113

Chemical catfight looms over naming rights

Web edition : Thursday, September 27th, 2012

Bombarding a bismuth target with a blisteringly fast stream of zinc ions has yielded strong evidence for element 113, a Japanese team reports online September 27 in the Journal of the Physical Society of Japan. The report is the second claim on element 113 by the Japanese team and will eventually be evaluated along with competing claims by a Russian-U.S. team.?

Researchers first caught a glimpse of the element in 2003 (SN: 2/07/2004, p. 84), when a Russian-U.S. team witnessed 113 in the aftermath of collisions that produced element 115. As the short-lived element 115 disintegrated, it cast off the two-proton/two-neutron combination known as an alpha particle. The loss of two protons bumped its atomic number down to 113. The team, from the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California also reported creating 113 in 2007 by bombarding neptunium with calcium.

Now researchers at the RIKEN Linear Accelerator Facility in Japan report creating 113 and cleanly document its disintegration. The team hopes that establishing this decay chain will give it the prestigious naming rights to the element, but the Russian-U.S. team also reported a decay chain in the 2007 results. Until naming rights are determined by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, which could take years, the element will continue to be known as ununtrium, the IUPAC stand-in name meaning one-one-three.


Found in: Chemistry and Molecules

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/345434/title/News_in_Brief_Japanese_lab_lays_claim_to_element_113

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Costa Mesa Man, 37, Gets Life For Fatally Shooting Ex-Wife, Her ...

Robert Allan Lehmann (courtesy OC District Attorney's Office)

Robert Allan Lehmann (courtesy OC District Attorney?s Office)

SANTA ANA (CBS)??? A Costa Mesa man who gunned down his ex-wife and her father execution-style was convicted Friday of first-degree murder.

Robert Allan Lehmann, 37, shook his head and muttered to himself when he heard the jury?s verdict, which followed about two hours of deliberations, Deputy District Attorney Matt Murphy said.

?We had an excellent jury and they did the right thing,? the prosecutor said.

Lehmann shot and killed the pair after drawn out court hearings involving the educational needs of his daughter, who has special need.

The panel found true special circumstance allegations of lying in wait ? which applied only to his ex-wife ? and multiple murders, Murphy said. Lehmann will be sentenced to life in prison without parole on Nov. 2.

Defense attorney Jeremy Goldman acknowledged in his opening statement that his client shot and killed the victims, but said Lehmann was in a ?sleepwalking state.? Goldman alleged Lehmann had taken too much anti-anxiety medication and downed the drugs with beer.

Goldman argued that his client should be convicted of involuntary manslaughter, not first-degree murder, for killing 32-year-old Emily Ford and 62-year-old Russell Ford outside the defendant?s home in Costa Mesa on May 3, 2011.

Lehmann and his ex-wife met in February 2003 and wed when she got pregnant with their daughter, Amanda. The marriage lasted less than a year.

The two shared custody of their child, who was diagnosed with Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome, a rare disorder that affects development of blood vessels and can sometimes lead to one limb being larger than the other, Murphy said. She was later diagnosed with ADHD, the prosecutor said.

Disputes arose between the parents over their daughter?s education, Murphy said, with Amanda?s mother wanting her to be ?mainstreamed? as much as possible, and Lehmann advocating special education classes. The schooling disagreement led the parents to family court about 20 times, he said.

According to Goldman, his client?s child was in ?great risk of being held back? after kindergarten, so Lehmann ?spent tens of thousands of dollars? on attorneys and experts and was granted full control over decisions about the girl?s education in September 2010.

Lehmann decided that his daughter should be taken out of a public school in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District and placed in a child development center at UC Irvine. Another dispute followed over who would pay for the schooling.

His ex-wife ultimately told UCI officials ? who required both parents to be on board ? that she had changed her mind altogether, Goldman said, prompting Lehmann to file a court order on his own because he could no longer afford an attorney.

The shooting happened hours after a court hearing stemming from the schooling dispute.

When Lehmann arrived home, he sent his wife of two years out with his daughter to a local Golden Spoon frozen yogurt shop and got a gun out of a safe in his home, Murphy said. When Emily Ford and her father arrived to pick up the girl, Lehmann opened fire on his ex-wife at his front door, the prosecutor said.

Emily Ford, who had gotten remarried and had a new baby, stumbled back and was then shot in the back as she tried to run away, Murphy said. The defendant subsequently turned the gun on his former father-in-law, shooting him in the arm and then several times in the back when he tried to flee, Murphy said.

The defendant then reloaded the weapon and shot the victims in the back of the head, execution-style, the prosecutor said. A ?mellow? Lehmann then called authorities and had a ?casual conversation with the 911 operator,? Murphy said.

?He sounds a little bit tired? on the call, Murphy said, adding Lehmann also waited for police to arrive.

Goldman countered that Lehmann was in a fog from taking the anti-anxiety medication throughout the day, thought he had lost custody of his daughter and went home and took ?a great deal? more of the drug, Goldman said.

Lehmann testified he did not remember anything about the shootings because he had blacked out, Murphy said.

(?2012 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Wire services contributed to this report.)

Source: http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2012/09/28/costa-mesa-man-37-gets-life-for-fatally-shooting-ex-wife-her-father/

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Smart Photo Import


With so many options for importing your digital photos into your PC?including the one built into the operating system?why would you pay for a separate app for the job? If you do a Web search for "photo import software," Smart Photo Import always shows up at or near the top, and even more than once for download sites that offer it. So I thought I'd take it for a spin. Nothing in the experience really answered the above question in a convincing way.

Smart Import's site claims that it's not just intended for getting new photos from your camera media: It's also about organizing photo files already scattered around your hard drive. And beyond just photos from cameras, it can also use WIA (Windows Image Acquisition) to acquire images from scanners.

Setup/Signup
Smart Photo Import costs 13 euros, or about $18 USD, but you can download and install it as a full-featured free trial. And there's no time limit; paying for the registration just gets you priority support and more comprehensive documentation.

Interface
The app's interface has a shiny chrome-like look that was fashionable among program skins several years ago. You can change the design from the Skin menu to two different choices, though they don't change the look of the buttons. A standard menu bar across the top offers File, View, Action, Tools, Skin, and Help choices. Below are two tab options for PC Drive and WIA (for scanner input).

Functionality
As you'd expect, Smart Photo Import adds an entry to the AutoPlay option that pops up when you insert camera media into a USB slot. Clicking this button populates the app's main window with thumbnails of the photos. You have quite a few options for how these thumbnails are displayed, dropdowns offer captioning by filename, date, size, title, author, and comments. A vertical slider lets you enlarge the thumbnails.

Double clicking on a thumbnail opens the full image. The program had no problem importing native raw image files from my Canon T1i , and it also supports the T2i, but the T3i and T4i aren't yet on its compatibility list. Adobe Camera Raw (used by Lightroom and Photoshop ) already supports those newer models. Also, loading full raw images was a bit slow. But Windows doesn't offer the raw import on its own, and the Adobe products cost considerably more.

When viewing images for import, you can sort by name, date, file size, or type. You can also filter the view to just files of certain types?raw, video, or a custom date range. You can rotate individual or all photos before importing them. You can also choose to have the photos renamed using a description and counter.

But there's quite a lot that you can't do, and that includes things you can do with Windows' included photo importer. You can't rate the photos or apply keyword tags to them. And the pro tools like Lightroom actually let you perform preset photo adjustments before import. And I didn't see any option to ignore duplicates during importing.

To actually import the photos to your PC, you click the COPY button, which can be switched to MOVE, if you don't want to keep the photos on the original media source. A dialog pops up telling you how many files you'll copy and to where, and you then can add a Subject for the folder name and hit CONFIRM.

To test, I tried copying 170 raw files of about 20MB each. During the import, I saw a series of progress bars, with no information as to what the current activity or file being imported was. At one point, I hit Esc to cancel, and to my surprise, there was no confirmation asking whether I really wanted to cancel, just an Aborted message box. Smart Photo Import took about the same amount of time as Windows picture import and Lightroom to import the 170 images?6:30 minutes. Smart Photo Import creates a folder structure under Documents (not Photos) in the format MyPhotos/2012/06/17/project name. Frankly, the free Windows photo importer does just as good a job of organizing created folders by date as Lightroom does.

Scanning with Smart Photo Import is no more intuitive and helpful than importing photos. It was able to turn on my scanner, but it really offered nothing over Windows Fax and Scan, which is actually clearer to use.

The Smartest Way to Import Photos?
Smart Photo Import is a program that probably has outlived its usefulness. Windows' built-in Import pictures and videos feature actually does at least as good a job, and if you're serious about digital photography, you'll get better import features from an app like Adobe Photoshop Lightroom, which offers even more import options and supports more raw camera file formats. But even free options like Picasa or Windows Photo Gallery offer more in the way of organizing your photos. Smart Photo Import does do everything it claims, and doesn't crash; I just can't recommend it when there are better, free options.

More Photo Editing Reviews:

??? Smart Photo Import
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?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/GmUvgA-T7zI/0,2817,2410379,00.asp

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The Slurpee Chronicles: Author K.D. Wilson Lowers the Veil on Homosexuality and Down Low Men in Inspirational New Book

In Wilson?s latest installment, LD is struggling with being raised in a poverty stricken urban community, by a single mother who is uneducated, government aid dependent, and addicted to drugs; all while he is attempting to figure out his sexual orientation and his unwavering attraction to members of the same sex.

Dallas, Texas (PRWEB) September 27, 2012

Told through the eyes of a young homosexual male, The Slurpee Chronicles proves that through tolerance and truth, anything is possible.

Using hard-hitting literature to tackle some of life?s biggest controversies, writer K.D. Wilson is delighted to announce the launch of his latest book, ?The Slurpee Chronicles: Giving You the Tea?.

Official Series Synopsis:

The Slurpee Chronicles: Giving You The Tea is a timeless story of acceptance and love within the LGBT community. Told through the eyes of La?Darious (LD), a young homosexual male, author K.D. Wilson lowers the veil on such controversial issues as homophobia, sexually transmitted diseases, and the underground world of down low men. It?s a roller coaster ride through one man?s experience of learning to understand himself and the life he was given.

This is a story that transcends sexual preference, race, and gender to remind us all that through tolerance and truth, anything is possible.

In Wilson?s latest installment, LD is struggling with being raised in a poverty stricken urban community, by a single mother who is uneducated, government aid dependent, and addicted to drugs; all while he is attempting to figure out his sexual orientation and his unwavering attraction to members of the same sex.

Throughout The Slurpee Chronicles: Giving You The Tea, LD goes through a range of emotions and extremely vivid/descriptive sexual encounters, hoping to eventually find someone that can give him the one thing his parents haven't been able to, love.

As the author explains, the book serves an important dual purpose.

?The Slurpee Chronicles is entertaining as well as informative. It sheds light on the underground world of down low men in the urban communities throughout the globe. It highlights the excitement, as well as the dangers that homosexual men encounter while being involved with members of the same sex, who are not public about their sexual desires,? says Wilson, a United States Navy veteran.

He continues, ?It also highlights the health concerns that many women throughout these communities face from being intimate with men who are on the down low unbeknownst to them.?

Since its release, the book has received a consistent string of five-star reviews.

?I began reading this book and literally put everything aside until it was complete,? says Melissa M, reviewing the book for Amazon.

Another reader, K.T. Jordan, was equally as impressed.

?This book was a definite hit, I loved it! Just as I'd attempt to put it down, there came that good old "tea" again. Great price for some great reading!?.

With so much success on his hands, fans of Wilson?s work await the next installment of ?The Chronicles? with baited breath.

Until then, The Slurpee Chronicles: Giving You the Tea, published by CreateSpace, is available for purchase from Amazon.com.

For more information, please check out the book?s official website: http://www.theslurpeechronicles.com

Further information can also be found on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/theauthorkd

About the Author:

K. D. Wilson is currently pursuing his bachelor?s degree from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. He is a United States Navy Veteran with a combined total of nine years serving his beloved country. K.D. has also spent one year in Iraq serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

His first book, The Slurpee Chronicles: Giving You The Tea, was self-published in April 2012.

K.D. Wilson grew up and currently lives in Dallas, Texas. He is the host of Tuesday Night Tea, a weekly Tuesday night discussion panel that highlights issues relating to sex, and relationships. In his spare time, you can find K.D. reading, playing with his dog, or writing manuscripts for the next installment of The Slurpee Chronicles series.

Contact


K. D. Wilson


214-206-5253


slurpeechronicles(at)yahoo(dot)com

K. D. Wilson
The Slurpee Chronicles
214-206-5253
Email Information

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/slurpee-chronicles-author-k-d-wilson-lowers-veil-120207403.html

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