Thursday, February 28, 2013

Nut-cracking monkeys use tools skillfully

Barth Wright

A bearded capuchin monkey uses a rock to crack open a nut placed on an "anvil."

By Stephanie Pappas
LiveScience

Nut-cracking monkeys don't just use tools. They use tools with skill.

That's the conclusion of a new study that finds similar tool-use strategies between humans and Brazil's bearded capuchin monkeys, which use rocks to smash nuts for snacks. Both monkeys and humans given the nut-smashing task take the time to place the nuts in their most stable position on a stone or log "anvil," the study found, keeping the tasty morsels from rolling away.

That means the monkeys are able to not only use tools, but to use them with finesse. This ability may be a precursor to humans' ability to adapt tools to different circumstances and to use them smoothly under varying conditions.


"Any one individual can accommodate stones of different sizes, anvils of different angles and material and nuts of different shapes and sizes," said study leader Dorothy Fragaszy, a primate researcher at the University of Georgia, adding, "In fact, some of these nuts people can't crack."

Nut-crackers
Bearded capuchin monkeys were the first non-ape primates to be discovered using tools in the wild. They crack tough nuts by placing them on pitted boulders or logs and then hitting them hard with other large rocks. [8 Humanlike Behaviors of Primates]

Barth Wright

Bearded capuchin monkeys place nuts in their most stable positions before cracking them.

"They are slamming (the rock) on that nut," Fragaszy told LiveScience. "It's very impressive when you see it."

Fragaszy and her colleagues wanted to get a better idea of how skilled capuchins are at nut-cracking. In particular, they noticed the monkeys have an odd habit of tapping the nuts multiple times against the pits in a log?before putting them down. Perhaps, they thought, the tapping was a way to tell how stable the nut might be.

To find out, the researchers brought palm nuts to a population of capuchin monkeys in Fazenda Boa Vista in Brazil. The monkeys are wild, but habituated to human presence. Ten of the monkeys "volunteered" for the study by gathering the nuts and cracking them with stones as big as their heads as the researchers videotaped.

Before handing over the nuts, however, the scientists rolled them along the floor to find their flat sides, which they marked with a line. They also marked the other axis of the nut with color-coded pens so they could identify how the monkeys placed the nuts in the video.

Savvy tool use
The results revealed that the monkeys consistently placed the nuts in the most stable position. Out of 302 nut-cracking attempts, 253 started with the line marking the nut's stable axis facing up. Monkeys varied only slightly in their ability to ideally place the nut, doing so between 71 percent and 94 percent of the time depending on the individual. [See Video of the Monkey Attempts]

Next, the researchers ran an identical test with humans. Seven male and seven female volunteers were given nuts and told to crack them with stones, just as the capuchin monkeys do. The humans were blindfolded during the task, because the researchers suspected that the monkeys could place the nuts by feel and wanted to find out if humans could, too.

On average, the humans also placed the nuts in the most stable position, doing so on about 71 percent of tries. Unlike capuchins, however, they didn't knock the nuts against the?sides of the pit very frequently. Instead, humans tended to roll the nuts around in their hands, feeling their shape. Humans have much larger hands than bearded capuchins, the researchers wrote Wednesday?in the journal PLOS ONE, which could explain the different strategies.

The results suggest that humans and monkeys share the ability to use tools skillfully, with minimal effort for maximum effect, the researchers wrote.

"It's skill in the way that we use that word to talk about human skills," Fragaszy said. "It's a goal-directed activity. It's done fluidly. It's done flexibly."

Correction for 2:10 p.m. ET Feb. 28: An earlier version of this story, including a photo caption, implied that the monkeys used only stones as their anvils. A log anvil can be used as well, and that's what the researchers used for their experiment.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas?or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook?and Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.?

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Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/27/17122532-those-nut-cracking-monkeys-they-use-tools-with-finesse?lite

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Barnes & Noble posts 3Q loss as Nook costs mount

(AP) ? The digital business is weighing on Barnes & Noble Inc., the largest traditional U.S. bookseller.

The company posted on Thursday a loss in the fiscal third quarter, hurt by weak sales during the all-important holiday quarter for its Nook e-book readers as well as at its bookstores. Nook revenue fell 26 percent, and the company has begun cutting costs at the unit due to the sharp decline.

Barnes & Noble, based in New York, has been struggling to find its place as more readers have shifted to electronic books and competition has grown from discount stores and online rivals. The company, which has 689 bookstores in 50 states as well as 674 college bookstores, has invested heavily in its Nook e-book readers and a digital library to try to carve out a niche in the current retail landscape.

The company's founder, chairman and largest shareholder, Leonard Riggio, plans to offer to buy the physical bookstores and website of Barnes & Noble, but not the Nook unit. No terms or other details have been announced. On Thursday, the company said it has appointed board members to evaluate a proposal when it's made and the potential value of the retail business.

In the fiscal third quarter through Jan. 26, the New York company posted a loss of $6.1 million, or 18 cents per share. The company blamed the loss in part on charges stemming from weaker-than-expected sales of Nook e-readers during the holiday shopping season. Analysts had expected a profit of 53 cents per share.

In the same period the year before, the New York company posted a profit of $52 million, or 71 cents per share.

Revenue fell 9 percent to $2.22 billion ? analysts polled by FactSet predicted a more modest decline, to $2.4 billion.

Revenue from its retail unit ? which includes its bookstores and website ? fell 10 percent to $1.51 billion. Revenue in stores open in at least one year fell 7.3 percent. Store closings and lower online sales also hurt results. Excluding Nook sales, revenue in stores open at least one year fell 2.2 percent.

Revenue from the chain's college bookstore unit fell nearly 2 percent to $517 million.

Nook revenue fell 26 percent to $316 million as the company sold fewer e-readers. Barnes & Noble company recorded $21 million in returns due to weak demand during the holiday season, and $15 million in allowances for promotions. Digital content sales rose almost 7 percent during the quarter.

The Nook unit has attracted investors ? Microsoft owns 16.8 percent, while U.K. publisher and education company Pearson has a 5 percent stake. But aside from investor funding, the unit has been losing money. CEO William Lynch addressed the problems with the unit in a statement.

"Coming off the holiday shortfall, we're in the process of making some adjustments to our strategy as we continue to pursue the exciting growth opportunities ahead for us in the consumer and digital education content markets," he said.

But he added that the chain remains committed to its tablet and e-reader business.

For fiscal 2013, the company expects revenue in stores open at least one year to fall in the low- to mid-single digit range. Revenue in stores open at least one year in its college bookstores are expected to fall by a low single digit percentage.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-28-Earns-Barnes%20and%20Noble/id-8da2990b4d384c22ba9573ce9027ed17

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U.S. considers sending aid to Syrian rebels: report

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House is considering a shift in policy toward the nearly two-year-long conflict in Syria, and may send the rebels body armor and armed vehicles, and possibly provide military training, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday, citing U.S. and European officials.

Secretary of State John Kerry was expected to discuss the proposed policy change with officials during his nine-nation tour of European and Arab capitals, the newspaper said. U.S. officials remain opposed to sending weapons to the rebels, it said.

Kerry is to meet Syrian opposition leaders at a "Friends of Syria" conference in Rome on Thursday.

On Monday in London, Kerry said President Barack Obama was evaluating more steps to "fulfill our obligation to innocent people," but did not give details or say whether Washington was reconsidering whether to arm the rebels. "We are determined that the Syrian oppositions is not going to be dangling in the wind," he said.

Kerry also said the continued violence in Syria, which the United Nations estimates has killed 70,000 people, represented further evidence that it was time for Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad to relinquish his post. At the same time, Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague called for support for Syria's opposition to be increased significantly in order to help bring the protracted conflict to an end.

The United States has provided millions of dollars for food, medical care and clothing for Syrians and refugees, but has not sent aid directly to the rebels or the political opposition.

(Writing by Jackie Frank; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-considers-sending-aid-syrian-rebels-report-035120597.html

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ITV to pay special dividend as earnings rise

LONDON (Reuters) - ITV , Britain's largest free-to-air broadcaster, said a push to grow non-advertising revenue meant it was able to pay a 156 million pound ($236 million) special dividend after full-year earnings rose 13 percent.

"We want to reward all our shareholders equally and to reward shareholders who are staying with us as we grow," chief executive Adam Crozier told reporters on Wednesday.

ITV, home to soap opera "Coronation Street", period drama "Downton Abbey" and variety show "Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway", said having ended 2012 with 206 million pounds net cash it would pay a special dividend of 4 pence per share as well as a 2.6 pence full-year dividend.

Crozier, CEO since 2010, has been weaning ITV off its dependence on revenue from a weak advertising market, seeking greater revenue streams from television production, online, pay and interactive businesses. "ITV is transforming into a more robust, efficient and balanced company," he said.

ITV said adjusted 2012 earnings rose 13 percent to 520 million pounds on revenue up 3 percent to 2.20 billion. Adjusted earnings per share rose 16 percent to 9.2 pence, compared with a forecast for 8.7 pence, according to Reuters data.

Shares in ITV hit a 12-month high at 125.4 pence last week, partly because of speculation the recently agreed takeover of Virgin Media by Liberty Global might trigger an approach for ITV from a private equity firm.

Crozier said ITV had not received any approaches.

The stock was down 2 percent at 117.6 pence at 1113 GMT, valuing the business at 4.6 billion pounds.

"There should be scope for minor EPS upgrades post the investor meeting. Some of this is possibly already baked in, with the shares up 50 percent in the last few months," Panmure Gordon analyst Alex DeGroote said.

ITV's non-advertising revenue rose 12 percent to 1.04 billion pounds, helped by its production division, ITV Studios, increasing revenue 16 percent and online, pay and interactive revenue rising 26 percent.

Crozier said growth at ITV Studios growth was driven by investment in programmes such as its award winning exposure of the Jimmy Savile sex scandal and a period drama charting the life and times of U.S. tycoon Harry Gordon Selfridge - "Mr Selfridge" has been sold to 35 countries and recommissioned.

Though ITV's net advertising revenue (NAR) in 2012 was flat, the company said it outperformed the wider television market.

It reported a positive start to 2013 with first-quarter advertising expected to be up 5 percent, driven by demand from retail as well as telecoms and broadband providers.

Crozier said that although ITV's share of viewing fell 3 percent in 2012 because of major one-off events - the London Olympics and Paralympics, and Queen Elizabeth's Jubilee, he did not expect it to hit the firm's advertising performance in 2013.

"The advertising deals we have secured for 2013 and beyond support that view," he said.

Crozier said ITV will follow up December's purchase of a majority stake in U.S. reality programme maker Gurney Productions with further acquisitions "if the right opportunities come along".

($1 = 0.6608 pound)

(Editing by Dan Lalor)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/itv-pay-special-dividend-earnings-rise-120452975--finance.html

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A look at the deadliest hot air balloon accidents

Tuesday's crash of a hot air balloon near Egypt's ancient city of Luxor, killing 19 tourists, surpasses what ballooning experts believed to have been the deadliest accident in the sport's 200-year history, a 1989 crash in Australia that left 13 dead.

Some of the worst accidents involving recreational hot air balloons:

? Feb. 26, 2013: A hot air balloon flying over Luxor, in southern Egypt, caught fire and plunged 300 meters (1,000 feet) to the ground, crashing into a sugar cane field and killing at least 19 foreign tourists.

? Aug. 23, 2012: Six people died and 26 were injured when a hot air balloon carrying 32 people, mostly tourists including some children, caught fire and crashed near the Slovenian capital of Ljubljana.

? Jan. 07, 2012: A hot air balloon struck power lines near Carterton, New Zealand and exploded, crashing to the ground and killing all 11 people on board.

? Oct. 14, 2009: Four Dutch tourists were killed in Guangxi, China, after pilots lost control and their hot air balloon burst into flames and crashed.

? Aug. 26, 2001: Six people including a child were killed when their hot air balloon touched a power line at Verrens-Arvey, in southwestern France.

? June 17, 1999: Four passengers were killed when their hot air balloon hit a power line near Ibbenburen, Germany.

? Jan. 31, 1996: Five people died in the Bernese Alps, Switzerland when their hot air balloon crashed into a mountainside at a height of 2,400 meters (8,000 feet).

? Aug. 8, 1993: Six people were killed when their balloon hit a power line near Aspen, Colorado, tearing off the basket and sending it plunging 30 meters (100 feet) to the ground.

? Dec. 11, 1990: Four people died near downtown Columbus, Ohio, after their hot air balloon hit a television tower and deflated.

? Oct. 6, 1990: Four people were killed in a balloon crash at Gaenserndorf, near Vienna.

? Aug. 13, 1989: Thirteen people were killed when their hot air balloon collided with another over the Australian outback near the town of Alice Springs. The two balloons were flying at an altitude of 600 meters (2,000 feet) when one plunged to the ground after the collision.

? Oct. 3, 1982: An explosion on board a hot air balloon carrying 9 people at a festival in Albuquerque, New Mexico killed four people and injured five.

? Aug. 6, 1981: Five people were killed and one seriously injured when a hot air balloon caught fire after touching electrical wires and crashed in a suburb of Chicago.

? 1785: Two Frenchmen attempting to cross the English Channel in a hot-air balloon were killed when their balloon caught fire and crashed, in possibly the first fatal aviation accident.

Sources: AP reporting and news reports. Compiled by AP News Researcher Jennifer Farrar.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/look-deadliest-hot-air-balloon-accidents-174018300.html

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Pharmacist sentenced to 2 years Pa. steroids case

(AP) ? A pharmacist has been sentenced to 2? years in federal prison after pleading guilty to helping a former Pittsburgh Steelers team doctor illegally distribute anabolic steroids in an investigation spun off from a national crackdown on the performance enhancing drugs.

William Sadowski, 47, of Robinson Township, pleaded guilty in November to conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute anabolic steroids and human growth hormones, or HGH, and was sentenced Tuesday by Senior U.S. District Judge Maurice Cohill Jr.

Sadowski has acknowledged helping Dr. Richard Rydze illegally distribute the body-building substances and other drugs used to prevent their negative side effects or, at least, mask their use. On Tuesday, the married father of two told the judge he let greed and profit cloud his judgment.

"I started worrying more about the bottom line than doing the right thing the right way," Sadowski said, tearfully.

Rydze, 62, has denied wrongdoing, pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial in the alleged steroids conspiracy that began a few months after the Steelers cut him from their medical staff in 2007 after more than two decades.

The team and Rydze have previously said he didn't supply steroids to Steelers players, though the investigation that targeted Rydze and Sadowski spun off from a national probe that included Applied Pharmacy Services in Mobile, Ala., which was identified as a supplier in U.S. Sen. George Mitchell's landmark 2007 report on steroid use in Major League Baseball.

The Alabama pharmacy was raided in August 2006 and shut down by the federal Drug Enforcement Agency. Its customer list included baseball players, including Gary Matthews Jr., some World Wrestling Entertainment personalities, and former heavyweight boxing champ Evander Holyfield, who has denied using steroids, let alone obtaining them from APS. The Alabama raid resulted in the conviction of five staff pharmacists, and several doctors across the country who obtained steroids illegally through the pharmacy.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Kall argued that Sadowski deserved prison to deter other pharmacists, and because he knew he was operating his Pittsburgh-based ANEWrx pharmacy illegally.

"He was essentially living a double life," Kall said, referring to 20 friends and family members there to support Sadowski.

Among other things, Kall said Sadowski "took over" the Alabama pharmacy's business once it shut down. Sadowski also faces sentencing March 4 in Allegheny County Common Pleas Court for filing fraudulent Medicare claims at a previous pharmacy, Kall said.

Sadowski's defense attorney in that case, James Wymard, attended the federal court sentencing and said he's hopeful Sadowski's sentence on those charges, filed by the Pennsylvania attorney general's office, will run concurrent to the federal sentence.

Federal prosecutors said Sadowski's pharmacy was licensed to dispense prescription drugs in at least 44 states and that he hired a registered nurse, John Gavin, 51, to "research the status of criminal prosecutions across the county for illegal distribution of anabolic steroids and HGH." Sadowski's pharmacy allegedly developed drug combinations, or "stacks," that included steroids, HGH and other substances ? many used to legitimately treat breast cancer and other maladies ? that, when taken with the steroids, were meant to prevent their undesirable side effects.

Gavin has previously pleaded guilty and is scheduled for sentencing March 26.

Rydze's patient base was so broad in Pittsburgh that federal authorities took the unusual step of having FBI agents from Ohio investigate. Kall, the prosecutor who handled Tuesday's sentencing, is also based in Cleveland, where U.S. Attorney's spokesman Michael Tobin declined comment on the sentencing.

Among other things, Rydze had a contract to perform physicals for the agents who worked at the Pittsburgh FBI office, and at least one staff member in the U.S. Attorney's Office in Pittsburgh was a patient of Rydze's. Neither that person nor any FBI agent is accused of obtaining steroids from the doctor.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-02-26-US-Doctor-Steroids-Indictment/id-588082ec8148458caa3288bf351ec716

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

PSA: Kindle iOS app users should not update to version 3.6.1

PSA iOS Kindle users should not update to version 361

This one's coming straight from the horse's mouth. Amazon is acknowledging a "known issue" with version 3.6.1 of its Kindle app for iOS -- the company is recommending that current users avoid the latest update, which hit the App Store today. According to TUAW, the new version may completely erase a user's book library. How this passed the e-book giant's QA team is anyone's guess, but until a revision hits the cloud, we suggest you stay away.

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Via: TUAW

Source: Amazon (iTunes)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/jkBDhgHZ9HM/

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With The Open, ZTE Aims To Get The Young And Adventurous Fired Up For Firefox OS

zte-open2ZTE's press conference yesterday didn?t really reveal anything we didn't already know, but it at least gave us the opportunity to play with the Chinese OEM's first Firefox OS-powered smartphone. The cost-conscious Open is apparently meant for "young people who are adventurers and want to try something new" (according to He Shiyou, head of ZTE's Mobile Devices Division anyway), but how is it?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/8CiW5l6tJ_I/

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Guy Fieri Restaurant Review: As Bad as Advertised? - Food Fanatic

Last November The New York Times published a review of Guy Fieri?s new Times Square restaurant, Guy?s American Kitchen & Bar, that was so scathing many believe it hit below the belt; it read like an exercise in hyperbole. However, living a mere hour from New York City, I was intrigued.

Truth be told, I?ve never been a huge fan of Guy Fieri. The Food Network star is best known for his spiky blonde hair, addiction to sunglasses and confusing fashion choices. But I have made a few of his recipes, and admittedly, they?ve been pretty tasty.

So back to the NYT article? I read it, reread it and then had some friends read it too - it was THAT brutal. With no prior affinity towards Guy, I still felt like I needed to give him a hug and a neck nuzzle.

Pete Wells, the author of the NYT review used words like, ?nuclear waste?, ?inedible? and ?oil-sogged?? which instead of turning me off to Guy?s, intrigued me. I asked myself: ?Could it really be THAT bad??

Challenge accepted, Mr. Wells.

I talked a foodie friend of mine to come along for the ride. She gladly accepted, also having made a few of Guy?s recipes with great success. We milled over the menu for weeks online before the day we drove into the city.

We arrived in Times Square for an early lunch, right after opening at about 11:45, ? and the place was empty.

We were welcomed by a hostess of average congeniality and seated at a table towards the front of the restaurant, near the bar area.

Looking around, the restaurant is pretty similar to basically any suburban chain restaurant you?ve ever been to, just on a larger scale. Our server was friendly and greeted us promptly.

After reading about the Watermelon Margarita that ?glows like nuclear waste? I scanned the menu to place my order. It appears that glowing margarita has been removed from the drink list, however.

My friend and I both settled on Blueberry Mojitos ? they were light on the alcohol, but overall, tasty and not overly sweet.

I do have to mention that I was a little underwhelmed by the selection of specialty drinks on the menu. With a bar the size of the one they have, you would think that they would have lots of interesting concoctions. Count that as disappointment numero uno.

After scanning the appetizer list, we agreed on the California Egg Rolls as our starter. They were good, albeit slightly uninspired. The menu in itself is a lesson in well-spun adjectives. At first glance everything sounds major! But then, reading a bit further, you see through the jaunty on-purpose misspellings (Provolone Stix) and realize he is just selling you Fried Cheese.

I guess I expected more.

We decided we?d stick to simplicity and sandwiches for our main lunch course. Now, I?ll tell you I went back and forth on whether to order an entr?e or a sandwich. But in all honesty, I wasn?t drawn to any of the entrees. They were fairly typical (and boring) like steaks, ribs, and salmon.

I settled on ?Unyawns Cajun Chicken Ciabatta?. It?s described as ?Grilled Cajun-spiced chicken breast with a slathering of Donkey sauce, shredded cabbage, and sliced tomato on garlic-butter toasted ciabatta?.

The food came out in a timely fashion, but my sandwich, while acceptable, wasn?t special in any way. I had to ask what ?Unyawns? meant in the title. The server said that the ?Onion Ciabatta bread? was what the sandwich was served on. Very confusing, even he admitted so.

The ?slathering? of Donkey sauce was more like a wisp. Before we go any further, get your mind out of the gutter. Donkey Sauce is a spicy-ish mayo. I did ask for more, which the server brought out for me. Honestly, it wasn?t very spicy, and much more mayo-ey than anything else. Donkey Sauce FAIL.

My friend ordered ?The Big Dipper?, which was a basically a French Dip sandwich. It was good. Not great. Sensing a theme here?

The portions are huge, which was to be expected, for sure. Despite being full, we decided to give Guy?s desserts a try. The server said they are all made in-house, fresh every day.

We chose the ?Salted Whiskey Caramel Fool,? which was described as ?Sea salt whiskey caramel sauce, macerated strawberries, toasted house made pound cake, fresh whipped cream and hazelnut brittle.? It was listed as a ?Guy?s Signature Dish?, and again didn?t live up to my expectations of a signature dish.

Sounds like a feast for the taste buds, yes? Well, it was essentially a parfait. Annnnd it was just ok.

Here?s the thing. I really, REALLY wanted to like Guy?s American Kitchen. Like, really. I mean, I read the NYT review and still went, hoping that Mr. Wells just had his britches in a wad. And while I didn?t find the food or experience nearly as offensive as Wells did, I won?t be rushing back.

If you happened to be going there and invited me along, I would go with you and try something new. But I certainly wouldn?t recommend it, especially when New York City has so many other amazing options from which to choose.

I expected Guy to raise the bar a little bit from the Friday?s around the corner.

Source: http://www.foodfanatic.com/2013/02/guy-fieri-restaurant-review-as-bad-as-advertised/

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'Identity Thief' Wins Box Office During Oscars Weekend

While Melissa McCarthy was presenting at Sunday night's show, she also took back the #1 spot at the box office.
By Ryan J. Downey


Melissa McCarthy in "Identity Thief"
Photo: Universal Pictures

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1702538/identity-thief-oscars-weekend-box-office.jhtml

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Chromebook Pixel review: another impractical marvel from Google

DNP Chromebook Pixel review another impractical marvel

We've had a bit of a love / hate relationship with the Google Chromebook since the first one crossed our laps back in 2011 -- the Samsung Series 5. We loved the concept, but hated the very limited functionality provided by your $500 investment. Since then, the series of barebones laptops has progressed, and so too has the barebones OS they run, leading to our current favorite of the bunch: the 2012 Samsung Chromebook.

In that laptop's review, we concluded that "$249 seems like an appropriate price for this sort of device." So, then, imagine our chagrin when Google unveiled a very similar sort of device, but one that comes with a premium. A very hefty premium. It's a high-end, halo sort of product with incredible build quality, an incredible screen and an incredible price. Is a Chromebook that starts at more than five times the cost of its strongest competition even worth considering? Let's do the math.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/25/chromebook-pixel-review/

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Your health: perfect and intact?

A Christian Science perspective.

By Lyle Young / February 26, 2013

Your health is perfect and intact ? no matter how you may feel, look, or sound.

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Now, before you conclude that this is a preposterous statement, let me explain.

The conventional way of thinking is that life is material, that we develop over time, having our own thoughts and bodies ? and thus our own state of health ? all of which are governed by genes and by our life experience. According to this way of thinking, we live biologically and are governed by organic laws that dictate that illness is normal and self-evident reality. Logically then, at best we try to manipulate the body with surgery or drugs or with less invasive methods such as physiotherapy or change of diet.

But instead of considering that all that I?ve just described is reality, could it be that it?s actually a state of consciousness, a way of thinking that we may have unwittingly adopted but that we can consciously change?

The founder of the Monitor, Mary Baker Eddy, contributed not only to journalism but also to health and health care. Sick for years, she teetered between living and dying. But in the Bible, her solace, she saw that the healings of Jesus were not miraculous but a natural expression of his understanding of the true nature of health. In the 1860s, when she was in her late 40s, she came to understand her way out of the health theories prevalent at that time. This restored her health, allowing her to serve society vigorously for another four decades. She began to teach this understanding, both in person and through her books. (Her main work, ?Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,? was first published in 1875.) Soon, many of her students were practicing this method of healing, and teaching others, too. Her method of healing is not faith healing as it?s popularly known. Rather, it?s based on deep spiritual insights about the nature of identity, insights that Mrs. Eddy found in the Old and New Testaments of the Bible.

Eddy, a keen observer of human thinking, identified the kinds of thoughts that lead to illness. She saw that sickness is an unnatural, unconscious deviation from the perfection of God and of each one of us as His image and likeness. She came upon a place in thought at which individuals adopt a concept of themselves that leads either to discord and sickness or to holiness and health. She discovered that everyone can become aware of their thoughts and respond obediently to thoughts from God, those thoughts being spiritual, pure, and healthy. For her, mental self-awareness is key ? just as knowing how you?re spending money is essential to sound personal finance.

Most especially, Eddy discovered in the Bible that there?s a reliable source for healthy thoughts ? God, the one divine Mind ? that knows each of us, God?s children, as spiritual, perfect, free, and well. This fundamental truth, though not visible physically, gives each of us a strong platform from which to claim and even demonstrate that we are healthy.

Try this: Instead of assuming that you?re largely a set of body parts that can become ill, feel your oneness with this purely good, infinite Mind as its spiritual reflection. Start from the standpoint that your health is intact because goodness and wellness are inherent in this one infinite God that you reflect. This way of thinking has made a vast difference in my life, giving me both a more moral approach to living and better health. It can do the same for you.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/2inm-XDvkws/Your-health-perfect-and-intact

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Listing Fail: Two Not-So-'Sparkling' Homes | AOL Real Estate


Home with 'sparkling' pool

Unless your home has Swarovski crystals studding its walls or dangling from glass chandeliers in every room, we'd strongly suggest against calling it "sparkling." Still, it's a descriptor that's used frequently, albeit erroneously, in many listings and it annoys us as much as "stunning" and "cavernous."

Take, for example, this listing in Phoenix (pictured above). We have two issues with this home, which has, as described, a "sparkling POOL!" One, just because it's filled with water does not mean it is "sparkling." Two, even if the pool were sparkling like a diamond earring, you wouldn't even notice thanks to the dirty, unfinished backyard surrounding it! (Though we will say that, relative to the home's unpleasing backyard, the pool appears somewhat luminous -- as would anything.)

Then there's this listing in Louisville, Ky. (pictured above). The listing describes a "sparkling home" with "fresh paint." While we don't doubt the home is freshly painted, unless the paint is infused with glitter or reflective properties, we don't see how this home "sparkles" in the least.

Thanks to our pals at Curbed for the tips!

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Source: http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2013/02/25/listing-fail-two-not-so-sparkling-homes/

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A Day in the Life of the Republican Party?s Search for Newness (TIME)

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Kanye West disses Jay-Z, Timberlake onstage

By Brandi Fowler, E! Online

Kanye West has never been one to bite his tongue, but diss Jay-Z ... that's a different story.?Putting the duo's 2011-2012 "Watch the Throne" tour to the side, the loquacious rapper hit the stage during his show in London Saturday and sounded off about Jay-Z and Justin Timberlake's "Suit & Tie."

Pregnant Kim Kardashian says Kanye West has taught me the value of privacy

"I got love for Hov, but I ain't f------- with that 'Suit &Tie,'" Kim Kardashian's baby daddy told the crowd as an instrumental "Clique" played in the background, which features him and Jay-Z.

And that was just the beginning of Kanye's rant about the music industry.

(Note: Video contains swearing.)

"I hate business people," West rapped, according to Billboard. "People get on the phone with me and tell me, 'What kind of business can you do, though? What type of business are you doing? What's the numbers? How much did you sell? What's the radio spins? How much shampoo can you sell with your face on it and sh--. Remind me again why we in this sh---. Can you remind me again why we in this sh--? Since when (is) making music about getting rich? Since when was making art about getting rich? ... Remind me again why we in this sh--."

Oh, yes, there was even more during the 10-minute rapped speech.

Pregnant Kim Kardashian and Kanye West celebrate Valentine's Day with romantic dinner

"Can I sell a drink for you, please?" West continued. "So you can help me put on a better show. Please corporations. Can you please support me? I swear I'm a nice n---- now. I swear I'll put the pink polo back on. I swear to you. Please. Just for three million dollars. I need it so bad. I need a new pool in my backyard. I tell my fans your sh-- is cool. And if they believe in me they should also believe in you. What's my public rating now? Are they liking me again? They forgot about the whole Beyonce thing right? Okay, cool."

Last week, Jay-Z and Timberlake officially announced that they will embark on a tour together, performing in 12 cities this summer.

Something tells us West won't be making an appearance.

It's tough keeping up with Kimye. Check out the couple's best pics!

Related content:

Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/25/17086425-kanye-west-disses-jay-z-justin-timberlake-corporations-onstage?lite

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All condemn pending budget cuts, spread blame

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The White House and Republicans kept up the unrelenting mudslinging Sunday over who's to blame for roundly condemned budget cuts set to take effect at week's end, with the administration detailing the potential fallout in each state and governors worrying about the mess.

But as leaders rushed past each other to decry the potentially devastating and seemingly inevitable cuts, they also criticized their counterparts for their roles in introducing, implementing and obstructing the $85 billion budget mechanism that could affect everything from commercial flights to classrooms to meat inspections. The GOP's leading line of criticism hinged on blaming President Barack Obama's aides for introducing the budget trigger in the first place, while the administration's allies were determined to illustrate the consequences of the cuts as the product of Republican stubbornness.

Former Republican National Committee chairman Haley Barbour, aware the political outcome may be predicated on who is to blame, half-jokingly said Sunday, "Well, if it was a bad idea, it was the president's idea."

Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., said there was little hope to dodge the cuts "unless the Republicans are willing to compromise and do a balanced approach."

No so fast, Republicans interjected.

"I think the American people are tired of the blame game," said Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H.

Yet just a moment before, she was blaming Obama for putting the country on the brink of massive spending cuts that were initially designed to be so unacceptable that Congress would strike a grand bargain to avoid them.

Obama nodded to the squabble during his weekly radio and Internet address.

"Unfortunately, it appears that Republicans in Congress have decided that instead of compromising ? instead of asking anything of the wealthiest Americans ? they would rather let these cuts fall squarely on the middle class," Obama said Saturday, in his last weekly address before the deadline.

"We just need Republicans in Washington to come around," Obama added. "Because we need their help to finish the job of reducing our deficit in a smart way that doesn't hurt our economy or our people."

With Friday's deadline nearing, few in the nation's capital were optimistic that a realistic alternative could be found and all sought to cast the political process itself as the culprit. If Congress does not step in, a top-to-bottom series of cuts will be spread across domestic and defense agencies in a way that would fundamentally change how government serves its people.

Obama senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer told reporters the GOP is "so focused on not giving the president another win" that they will cost thousands of jobs. To back up their point, the White House released state-by-state tallies for how many dollars and jobs the budget cuts would mean to each state.

"The Republicans are making a policy choice that these cuts are better than eliminating loopholes," Pfeiffer said.

And, yes, those cuts will hurt. They would slash from domestic and defense spending alike, leading to furloughs for hundreds of thousands of government workers and contractors.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has said the cuts would harm the readiness of U.S. fighting forces. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said travelers could see delayed flights. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said 70,000 fewer children from low-income families would have access to Head Start programs. And furloughed meat inspectors could leave plants idled.

In Virginia, for instance, 90,000 Defense Department civilian employees could be furloughed, including nurses at Army hospitals, said Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va. He also said ship-repair contractors could lay off 300 of their 450 employees.

"There is no reason that this has to happen. We just need to find a balanced approach," Kaine said.

White House officials also pointed to Ohio as another state that would be hit hard: $25.1 million in education spending and another $22 million for students with disabilities. Some 2,500 children from low-income families would also be removed from Head Start programs.

Officials said their analysis showed Kentucky would lose $93,000 in federal funding for a domestic abuse program, meaning 400 fewer victims being served in Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's home state. Georgia, meanwhile, would face a $286,000 budget cut to its children's health programs, meaning almost 4,200 fewer children would receive vaccinations against measles and whooping cough.

White House officials said Nevada would face military furloughs totaling $12.1 million in reduced pay, a $424,000 cut to pay for meals for seniors and an almost $2 million reduction for clean air and water programs.

The White House compiled the state-by-state reports from federal agencies and its own budget office. The numbers reflect the impact of the cuts this year. Unless Congress acts by Friday, $85 billion in cuts are set to take effect from March to September.

As to whether states could move money around to cover shortfalls, the White House said that depends on state budget structures and the specific programs. The White House did not have a list of which states or programs might have flexibility.

Republican leaders were not impressed by the reports for the 50 states and the District of Columbia.

"The White House needs to spend less time explaining to the press how bad the sequester will be and more time actually working to stop it," said Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio.

Some governors said the impasse was just the latest crisis in Washington that is keeping businesses from hiring and undermining the ability of state leaders to develop their own spending plans.

"It's senseless and it doesn't need to happen," said Gov. Martin O'Malley, D-Md., during the annual meeting of the National Governors Association over the weekend.

"And it's a damn shame, because we've actually had the fastest rate of jobs recovery of any state in our region. And this really threatens to hurt a lot of families in our state and kind of flat-line our job growth for the next several months," O'Malley said.

Obama did not mention the budget cuts in remarks before his dinner with the governors Sunday evening at the White House; he is expected to address the issue in a speech Monday morning to the same group. But time is running out and hope is waning.

Connecticut Gov. Dan Malloy said it is past time for both sides to sit down to help dodge cuts that will hurt all states' budgets.

"Come to the table, everyone. Everybody. Let's work this thing out. Let's be adults," said Malloy, a Democrat.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., called the defense cuts "unconscionable" and urged Obama to call lawmakers to the White House or the presidential retreat of Camp David for a last-minute budget summit.

"I won't put all the blame all on the president of the United States. But the president leads. The president should be calling us over somewhere ? Camp David, the White House, somewhere ? and us sitting down and trying to avert these cuts," McCain said.

LaHood, who served as a Republican representing Illinois in the U.S. House, urged his colleagues to watch Steven Spielberg's film about President Abraham Lincoln's political skills.

"Everybody around here ought to go take a look at the 'Lincoln' movie, where they did very hard things by working together, talking together and compromising," said LaHood. "That's what's needed here."

LaHood and Duncan were the only representatives from the administration to appear on Sunday shows. The White House did not book any of its senior aides.

Barbour, Malloy and McCain appeared on CNN's "State of the Union." McCaskill was interviewed on "Fox News Sunday." Ayotte, Duncan and Kaine spoke with CBS' "Face the Nation." LaHood appeared on both CNN and NBC.

___

Follow Philip Elliott on Twitter: https://twitter.com/philip_elliott

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/condemn-pending-budget-cuts-spread-blame-211746860--finance.html

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Kevin Michael Connolly, Legless Man, Surfs In 'Armed & Ready,' Debuting Feb. 26 On Travel Channel (VIDEO)

Like many people into extreme sports, Kevin Michael Connolly enjoys taking chances with his life.

However, two things separate him from the usual extreme sportsman: Legs. He was born without them.

Despite that, Connolly's parents refused to coddle him. He grew up floating on rivers and climbing mountain in his home state of Montana, preferring to use a skateboard instead of a wheelchair.

The 27-year-old started skiing when he was 10 and was good enough to win a silver medal in the 2007 X Games using a special "monoski," according to ABC News.

Connolly followed that up with a bronze medal in 2010 and now he is tackling other physical challenges on a new Travel Channel series, "Armed & Ready," debuting Feb. 26. On the show he'll be surfing, cliff diving and even jousting.

"Jousting was the most challenging for me," Connolly told The Huffington Post. "What's the first thing you do? Straddle the horse. Falling off the horse while being hit by a lance was my biggest fear."

Another challenge was cliff diving, because the most important thing when diving off a cliff is to push the body away from the cliff as far as possible, something most people do with their legs.

"I have to push myself off with my arms and then, in a split-second, put my arms in front to prevent my head from crashing in the water from 45 feet up in the air," he said.

KEVIN MICHAEL CONNOLLY: ARMED & READY (Story continues below)

  • Kevin Michael Connolly: Armed & Ready

    Kevin Michael Connolly, 27, is a photographer and filmmaker who was born with no legs.

  • Kevin Michael Connolly: Armed & Ready

    Despite having no legs, Connolly grew up climbing mountains and even won a silver medal for skiing in the 2007 X Games.

  • Kevin Michael Connolly: Armed & Ready

    Now Connolly is the star of "Armed & Ready," a Travel Channel series where he takes on challenges daunting for anyone -- such as jousting.

  • Kevin Michael Connolly: Armed & Ready

    His favorite challenge was a parabolic flight with NASA that broke zero gravity. Connolly brought his his skateboard so he could do more spins than Tony Hawk.

  • Kevin Michael Connolly: Armed & Ready

    Connolly's situation often requires last minute adaptations in order for him to complete a challenge.

  • Kevin Michael Connolly: Armed & Ready

    Connolly is a filmmaker and photographer whose most famous work is the <em>The Rolling Exhibition,</em> an art exhibit of over 33,000 photos documenting the stares and reactions he got from other people around the world.

  • Kevin Michael Connolly: Armed & Ready

    Connolly has been skateboarding since 2005 and prefers it to riding around in a wheelchair.

  • Kevin Michael Connolly: Armed & Ready

    Although the fact that Connolly has no legs is crucial to the show, he doesn't make a big deal about it, preferring to "show, not tell."

  • Kevin Michael Connolly

    Connolly has filmed six episodes of the show and hopes other limbless people who want to attempt extreme stunts <a href="http://kevinmichaelconnolly.com/">contact him at his website </a> for information on the adaptive devices that made some of his challenges possible.


In order for Connolly to attempt some stunts, such as jousting or wakeboarding, he and the people around him have to create adaptive devices. For instance, in one of the episodes, he wakeboards using a standard board modified with, among other things, a turkey roasting pan.

He hopes that what he learned while creating these athletic adaptions on the fly will help others in similar predicaments.

"I hope we get a ton of viewers," Connolly admitted. "But, especially, certain viewers who could use this knowledge."

Connolly first came to the attention of Travel Channel executives because of an earlier project, The Rolling Exhibition, an art exhibit of more than 33,000 photos documenting the stares and reactions he got from other people around the world, and his memoir, "Double Take."

However, Connolly, who has been approached for other shows before didn't want the show to totally focus on the fact that he doesn't have legs.

"I believe you should show, not tell," Connolly said. "By undertaking these extreme sports and constructing the special equipment, it adds an element of challenge and danger that people can see."

Connolly got to embark on some exclusive challenges that may not be available to most people, limbs or no limbs.

"My favorite challenge was taking a parabolic flight with NASA," Connolly said. "We broke zero gravity and I brought my skateboard so I could do more spins than Tony Hawk."

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/25/kevin-michael-connelly-armed--ready_n_2756918.html

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High school graduation rate up sharply, but red flags abound

(Reuters) - For the first time in decades, the United States is making steady gains in the number of high school students earning diplomas, putting it on pace to reach a 90 percent graduation rate by 2020, according to a new analysis released Monday.

But the good news comes with a big asterisk: students with learning disabilities and limited fluency in English face long odds to finish high school, with graduation rates for those groups as low as 25 percent in some states, the analysis found. Minority students also continue to fall well behind their white peers, with about one-third of African-American students and 29 percent of Hispanic students dropping out before graduation.

The "Building a Grad Nation" report - which was co-authored by Robert Balfanz, a leading scholar of dropout rates at Johns Hopkins University - found strong improvements in graduation rates in a diverse collection of states including Tennessee, Louisiana, Alaska, California, Texas and New York. The national graduation rate jumped from 71.7 percent in 2001 to 78.2 percent in 2010, with the pace of improvement accelerating in the past few years.

"For the first time in 40 years, we have seen significant, sustained improvement," said John Bridgeland, a co-author of the study and the chief executive of Civic Enterprises, a public policy group in Washington, D.C.

Iowa, Vermont and Wisconsin lead the nation with graduation rates close to 90 percent, according to the report, which used data from 2010 and 2011. At the bottom of the heap: Nevada and New Mexico, where barely six in 10 high school freshmen can expect to earn a diploma within four years. Idaho, Kentucky and Oklahoma didn't use the same formula for calculating rates as other states and thus were not included in the report.

Those who have been successful in raising graduation rates credit a range of tactics:

* Launching new schools designed to train kids for booming career fields, so they can see a direct connection between math class and future earnings

* Offering flexible academic schedules and well-supervised online courses so students with jobs or babies can earn credits as their time permits

* Hiring counselors to review every student's transcript, identify missing credits and get as many as possible back on track

* Improving reading instruction and requiring kids who struggle with comprehension to give up some electives for intensive tutoring

* Sending emissaries door-to-door to hound chronic truants into returning to class

"Increasing the graduation rate has to be a purposeful exercise, something you're driven to do every day," said Terry Grier, superintendent of public schools in Houston, Texas, where the graduation rate has jumped from 64.3 percent to 78.5 percent since 2007. "More and more, you're seeing people across the country get it."

Yet the report's authors warn that the momentum could still stall.

POTENTIAL LIMITING FACTORS

Nearly every state will soon be rolling out curricula tied to the Common Core standards, which aim to bring more rigor to math and language arts instruction. Many will require students to pass exams tied to those higher standards to graduate, which could push lead to more failures and higher drop-out rates, the report suggests.

The authors also warn that some states, such as Kentucky, New Mexico and Florida, plan to grade high schools in large measure by student test scores and participation in advanced courses, with the graduation rate accounting for less than 20 percent of the school's grade. That could give principals an incentive to push out failing students and focus on high-achievers, rather than helping the stragglers work toward their diplomas.

Another concern: some states, such as Texas, do not count students as dropouts if they say they are leaving to be home-schooled or to transfer to a private school. The report notes that thousands of those students are significantly behind in credits and suggests that many may be dropping out without admitting it.

Perhaps the biggest threat to momentum, however, is the lagging performance of disadvantaged students, the report's authors said.

In Nevada, for instance, just 23 percent of students with disabilities, 29 percent of those with limited English skills and 43 percent of African-American students earned their diplomas in 2011.

Even generally high-performing states such Wisconsin, Massachusetts and Connecticut have strikingly poor records with some minority students. Minnesota has the biggest gaps: The graduation rate for African-American and Hispanic students hovered around 50 percent in 2011, compared to 84 percent for white students.

"We need to look at these disparities head on," said Brenda Cassellius, Minnesota's Education Commissioner.

Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton, a Democrat, has proposed $640 million in new education funding, including an effort to better integrate schools in hopes of boosting performance for minority students, Cassellius said.

Elsewhere, state officials plan to bring down the dropout rate by fundamentally rethinking the way school works.

In Oregon, where the graduation rate was 68 percent in 2011, Chief Education Officer Rudy Crew aims to stop measuring student progress by credit hours and start focusing on how kids can demonstrate mastery of key concepts - whether or not they've sat through a full year of classes.

The state's graduation rate - and the poor performance of minority students - "is untenable, unsustainable, and frankly highly dangerous," weakening the economy by leaving so many students unprepared for college or career, Crew said.

(Reporting by Stephanie Simon in Boston; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/high-school-graduation-rate-sharply-red-flags-abound-132007779.html

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Ibn Batutta: Morocco&#39;s famous medieval traveler | Morocco World ...

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Source: http://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2013/02/79877/ibn-batutta-moroccos-famous-medieval-traveler/

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

NJ's biggest utility outlines plans to stormproof

New Jersey's largest utility company wants to spend nearly $4 billion over the next decade to stormproof its electric and gas system after Superstorm Sandy's high winds and devastating surge knocked out power to nearly all its customers last October.

PSE&G on Wednesday filed a proposal outlining plans to raise or bunker electrical substations in flood-prone spots, line old cast-iron gas lines with plastic and make other changes designed to prevent the kind of outages that affected most of New Jersey after Sandy struck.

"We could make incremental repairs," PSE&G Chairman Ralph Izzo said on a conference call, "or we could be truly prepared and make long-term investments."

He said it made sense to be bold now because, with two electricity surcharges due to expire over the next few years, the money can be raised without raising customers' bills.

Labor and business groups quickly announced support for the plan, which would need to be approved by the state Board of Public Utilities. Consumer advocates had reservations about the financial aspects.

Jennifer Kim, state director for the liberal consumer protection and environmental organization New Jersey Public Interest Research Group, said she doubts the claim that ratepayers won't see their bills rise. She also said she wants to make sure the project is closely examined and the company pays for some costs out of what it has already collected from customers.

"Shouldn't some of this stuff have been taken care of already?" she asked.

New Jersey, like other places, recently has seen more frequent and more damaging storms, including Tropical Storm Irene and an ice storm in 2011. During Superstorm Sandy, the state's worst natural disaster, 2 million of PSE&G's 2.2 million customers lost power as trees took down power lines and substations flooded. The company says 800,000 would not have been knocked out if the proposed upgrades were in place and the rest would have had service returned sooner.

For instance, company officials said the Newark Liberty Airport would have had a shorter shutdown after Sandy if the Newark electrical substation had been protected from flooding.

PSE&G serves about three-fourths of New Jersey electrical customers, including many in the Philadelphia and New York City suburbs.

The company said ratepayers would see no increases or small ones on their bills because of the two surcharges due to come off bills in the next few years. Thanks to lower natural gas supply costs, Izzo said, the average residential customer with gas and electric service pays about $2,400 per year to the company, $600 less than in 2008. He said the aim is that the bills would not rise because of the proposed project.

But the estimates do not include $250 million to $300 million the company needs to pay for repairs for damage caused by Sandy. It's unclear how those repair costs might be passed on to customers.

Generally, there's an incentive for investor-owned regulated utilities like PSE&G to invest in large projects such as power plants, transmission lines and substations because that's how they can best increase profits for shareholders.

Regulators allow utilities to earn a greater rate of return, typically around 10 percent, for big capital-intensive projects than for simply delivering electricity. The reason is that regulators need to give utilities an incentive to invest in big-ticket items that could improve the system. New Jersey does not have a set rate of return on infrastructure investments but rather decides them on a case-by-case basis.

___

AP Business Writer Jonathan Fahey in New York contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/njs-biggest-utility-outlines-plans-stormproof-073106186--finance.html

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Gene Mutation&#39;s Benefit for Ovarian Cancer Patients May Not Last ...

TUESDAY Feb. 19, 2013 -- Although women diagnosed with ovarian cancer who carry a BRCA gene mutation have a short-term survival advantage, this benefit is not reflected in the long-term, according to a new study.

"Of those women diagnosed with invasive ovarian cancer in the United States and Canada, approximately 35 percent are expected to be long-term survivors and ultimately cured," Thomas Sellers, director of the Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Fla., said in a center news release. "We sought to estimate the 10-year survival for women with ovarian cancer -- with and without the mutations -- to determine whether or not the observed short-term survival benefit for those with the mutations was associated with a better prospect for cure."

In conducting the study, the researchers examined the long-term survival of more than 1,600 women with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene mutation diagnosed with invasive ovarian cancer. The women were followed for up to 15 years.

In the three years after a diagnosis of invasive ovarian cancer, the researchers found a BRCA gene mutation was linked to a better prognosis. For women without a BRCA mutation, the most deaths occurred about two years after they were diagnosed. For mutation carriers, however, the most deaths occurred about 3.5 years after diagnosis. The researchers suggested this could reflect a short-term survival advantage for BRCA carriers.

A decade after diagnosis, though, that benefit seemed to have faded, and BRCA gene mutation carriers had no survival benefit, revealed the study published recently in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

"Our results on long-term survival differed somewhat from those in earlier studies that found a short-term survival advantage for women with BRCA mutations," said Dr. Tuya Pal, an associate member of the Moffitt cancer epidemiology program, in the news release. "However, our results for short-term survival were similar to previous studies. Our study found the survival advantage at five years for women with stage 3 cancers at 55 percent for BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers combined, versus 39 percent for non-carriers."

The researchers said more studies are needed to investigate how new treatments for BRCA mutation carriers with ovarian cancer will affect their long-term survival.

"We believe there is insufficient evidence to counsel women with ovarian cancer and a BRCA mutation that they should expect their long-term survival to be better than that of non-carriers, or that tailored treatments reflect the differences in survival," the study's authors wrote.

The researchers noted that only one of the 309 women who survived more than 12 years after being diagnosed died within the study time frame. They suggested that a 12-year survival "seems a reasonable surrogate for cure."

An inherited BRCA gene mutation is carried by 13 percent of women with ovarian cancer, according to the release. These women have a lifetime risk of up to 44 percent for developing the disease. In contrast, the risk of ovarian cancer for the general population is just 2 percent.

More information

The U.S. National Cancer Institute provides facts on BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene mutation.

Posted: February 2013

View comments

Source: http://www.drugs.com/news/gene-mutation-s-benefit-ovarian-cancer-patients-may-not-last-study-43210.html

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Teachers train teachers, with promising results

Stephen Smith / American Public Media

Jennifer Larsen guides her third-grade class through a story-telling exercise at Edison Elementary School in Long Beach, Calif. She's one of three teachers at the school who coach other teachers on teaching writing.

By Stephen Smith for The Hechinger Report

Jandella Faulkner crouches beside a table of busy third-graders in Jennifer Larsen?s class at Edison Elementary School. The students have pencils in hand, outlines spread around them, and a story about penguins and otters in progress.

Faulkner stands to call across the room: ?Loving how this group is already talking, Ms. Larsen.? ?Then she swoops down on another table of young authors.

Jandella Faulkner is a teaching coach in the Long Beach, Calif., school district. Her job is to train a select group of teachers at Edison Elementary, including Jennifer Larsen, in a new literacy curriculum called Write From The Beginning. ?It?s part of a district-wide training system that relies on teachers working with each other to improve classroom practices. So, with Faulkner?s help, Larsen and the other site coaches at Edison train their colleagues at the school how to use Write From The Beginning in their own classrooms.

Many American school districts rely heavily on outside experts, professional conferences and traveling consultants to conduct on-the-job training (also known as professional development). New York City, the nation?s largest school district, spent about $100 million last year on professional development consultants. In most cases, there?s little evidence to show whether the outside groups are helping schools improve, says Pamela Grossman, a professor at Stanford University?s Graduate School of Education.


?There is a lot of money spent on professional development that does not really support teachers in learning how to improve,? Grossman says.

Long Beach creates its own training teams. For years, the Long Beach Unified School District has had one of the nation's best-regarded professional development programs for new and veteran teachers, according to Stephanie Hirsh, executive director of Learning Forward, a national nonprofit organization focused on teacher education.

?Our system is really invested in building internal capacity,? says Jill Baker, the district?s assistant superintendent for elementary and K-8, and chief academic officer. ?What that means is teachers become leaders and trainers. We?re not bringing someone in from the outside. We?re teaching teachers within to go back to their school sites to train others.?

'Ahead of the curve'
Professional development is seen as a critical component of many education reform initiatives. National studies show that good training programs are especially important in high-poverty districts like Long Beach, according to Learning Forward. With some 84,000 students, Long Beach is California?s third-largest district. Most of the students are from families of color. Some 70 percent qualify for free or reduced lunch, an indication that families live at or below the poverty level.

Education experts say that good, independent research on what constitutes professional development for teachers is relatively scarce. Even so, more than $1 billion is spent on teachers? on-the-job training each year in the United States, according to an analysis of data collected by the U.S. Department of Education.

The Long Beach district is ?ahead of the curve,? Pamela Grossman says. ?Professional development that?s embedded in teaching and embedded in practice is likely to have more impact on what teachers do,? Grossman says. ?A model where coaches are familiar with the schools, the districts and the curriculum ? and are therefore able to offer fairly tailored coaching ? has a better chance of moving practice along.?

Long Beach administrators credit the Write From The Beginning curriculum ? and the teacher training that accompanies it ? with turning around dismal test scores at many of the participating schools. District figures show that schools scoring at or below 20 percent proficiency in state writing tests have boosted their numbers above 50 percent since 2007. Some once-struggling schools have posted writing test results above 80 percent.

Long Beach administrators say there have been no independent, peer-reviewed studies of its professional development program. But the district has been a winner, and a five-time finalist, of the prestigious Broad Prize, given by the California-based Broad Foundation to recognize urban school districts that improve student academic performance and narrow achievement gaps between poor and more affluent students. The Broad Foundation cited the district?s professional development program as an essential element in Long Beach?s ability to outperform other high-poverty school districts in student achievement. ?(Disclaimer: the Broad Foundation is among the funders of The Hechinger Report.)

Stephen Smith / American Public Media

Third graders at Signal Hill Elementary work on a writing assignment.

Writing 'so difficult to teach'
At Signal Hill Elementary, another Long Beach school, Principal Lauren Price points out that elementary school teachers must master a range of subjects, while middle and high school teachers specialize in single subject areas. Professional development is ?essential? to keep teachers up to speed, she says. ?Every year, researchers are learning more about the way kids learn and grow and develop,? Price says. ?There are new and different ways to do things.?

The principal at Edison Elementary enlisted Jennifer Larsen and her colleagues, Kevin Quinn and Ruby Gaytan, to be the Edison site coaches for writing. They?re veteran teachers; all have been in the classroom 15 years or more. Each member gets 48 hours of training in the curriculum, starting with a summer workshop. Faulkner visits their classrooms about once a month. The Write From The Beginning curriculum was developed by Thinking Maps, a North Carolina education company.

?Writing was something that had been neglected for so many years because it was so difficult to teach,? Larsen says. ?I saw this as something the kids really need.? Long Beach writing teachers are being trained to use graphical organizers ? the so-called ?thinking maps? ? to help students organize their thoughts, describe characters, marshal evidence, come up with key words and plot other writing elements.

Fourth-grade teacher Ruby Gaytan points to a thinking map projected on her classroom wall with a list of qualities that describe Ivan, a character her students are writing about.? He wants to sell salt but is thwarted by a greedy king. ?How to describe Ivan? ?

?Broke, no money!? one student calls out.

?Determined!? another declares.

Gaytan directs her students to use their freshly minted list of adjectives in Ivan?s story of struggle. ?If you can think it ...,? Gaytan prompts.

?You can say it,? the class responds in unison.

Gaytan says the off-hours training she gets with the writing curriculum keeps her fresh in the classroom. ?The majority of teachers love to learn, that?s why we teach. It keeps me motivated,? Gaytan says.

Eye on Common Core standards
Kevin Quinn, also a fourth-grade teacher, says the training will help teachers stay ?ahead of the game,? as Common Core State Standards are adopted by California schools in 2014.? The Common Core curriculum puts a heavy emphasis on student achievement in writing.

Larsen says the curriculum and the coaching have made her both a better writer, and a better writing teacher. ??I?m more aware when I?m reading aloud to the kids of all the great descriptions and the vivid language in every text,? Larsen says. ?When I model writing for them, I express myself better.?

Coaches and teachers get paid for the time they spend on professional development, but Quinn and others describe it as ?minimal compensation.? Meanwhile, the budget woes and accompanying teacher layoffs of recent years mean that Larsen, Gaytan and Quinn face classrooms of 30 children every day instead of 20.

?Whereas the majority of our staff wants to participate in the professional development, there is a lot of burnout,? Quinn says. ?My workload has increased, my accountability has increased, but my discretionary time has not increased. So it becomes very difficult.?

Lisa Worsham, the head of English curriculum for K-5 schools in Long Beach, acknowledges that teachers are under stress. But she says professional development can help overcome the sense of isolation a busy teacher can feel. ?There are a lot of us in the building, but we show up for work, we close our door, we teach all day, we?re exhausted, we leave the classroom and go home,? Worsham says. Without signing up for training, ?there?s not a lot of opportunity to sit down with five other teachers and collaborate,? she says.

In addition to the in-class training, local site coaches meet four times a year with Jandella Faulkner at the district?s training center. Faulkner?s classroom is stocked with flip charts, baskets of colorful markers and a small mountain of sticky notes ? the raw materials of professional development workshops. A tall and magnetic figure, Faulkner encourages a group of nine site coaches to swap stories about what is working ? and what?s floundering ? back in their respective schools.

Faulkner holds up a training notebook. ?When do you have the time to open up this binder and say, ?what does my site need?? This is your time to do it,? she declares.

Coaches as politicians
Coaching one?s colleagues can be a politically tricky enterprise. ?It?s about having a rapport, really forming a relationship with each individual teacher,? says Jeff Lamperts of Willard Elementary.

Cheryl Hubert of Starr King Elementary, another site coach, says being a teacher in the local trenches gives her more credibility with her peers than some outside consultant who parachutes in. ?They know who I am,? Hubert says. ?They feel more comfortable with me than someone from a business [where they] think, what are they selling??

Faulkner says many Long Beach teachers are eager to take up the new writing techniques that she?s helping to spread across the district. But not all. ?We have teachers at the end of their careers say, ?I?m not trying anything new.? And convincing them to try something is a huge challenge,? Faulkner says.

At Lindsey Middle School, the language arts staff is using a similar literacy curriculum called Write For The Future And Beyond. The local site coaches at Lindsey get released from class nine days during a year for training. The district also sends teaching coaches to the school for in-class visits once a month or more, depending on how well the writing program takes hold, according to Stacy Casanave, a middle school literacy coach.

Lindsey teacher Shauna Hutchinson says the fat curriculum binder looked overwhelming at first. ?But once you went to training they broke it down for you,? she says.

Another facet of the Long Beach professional development program is a close, long-standing relationship with the College of Education at California State University, Long Beach. School personnel help with teaching and research at Cal State. Students at Cal State do their student-teaching in Long Beach schools.

Historically, most of the district?s beginning teachers have been Cal State graduates, according to Jill Baker, the district?s assistant superintendent. The district requires newly minted teachers to go through a prescribed on-the-job training program in their first years. But California?s fiscal crisis and the Great Recession have caused the Long Beach school district to slash hundreds of millions of dollars from its budget, laying off hundreds of teachers and cutting programs. Newer teachers were the first to go. Few beginners get hired.

Long Beach spends $5.4 million a year on professional development, less than 1 percent of the district?s $691 million budget. Professional development was cut nearly in half during and after the recession. In fiscal year 2006-07, 4,546 employees attended 11,763 training sessions. In fiscal 2011-12, 1,945 employees attended 6,982 sessions. Baker says the district has focused teacher training on areas that can have the most impact on how students learn. These include writing, mathematics and school behavior programs. There is less opportunity for individual teachers to select workshops or training programs in other areas such as creative arts and social studies.

?We?ve had to take a lot of things that we liked to do in the past and really narrow it down to what your students are showing us they need,? Baker says. ?Professional development for teachers, and for principals as well, has been at the core of the work that we?ve done that has garnered results. ?It?s part of the district culture, and it continues to work over time.?

This story was reported by Stephen Smith of American Public Media, in collaboration with The Hechinger Report, a non-profit, foundation-funded education news site based at Teachers College, Columbia University.

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/19/16994847-teachers-training-teachers-it-works-in-california-school-district?lite

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