Thursday, January 31, 2013

Empathy varies by age and gender: Women in their 50s are tops

Jan. 30, 2013 ? According to a new study of more than 75,000 adults, women in that age group are more empathic than men of the same age and than younger or older people.

"Overall, late middle-aged adults were higher in both of the aspects of empathy that we measured," says Sara Konrath, co-author of an article on age and empathy forthcoming in the Journals of Gerontology: Psychological and Social Sciences.

"They reported that they were more likely to react emotionally to the experiences of others, and they were also more likely to try to understand how things looked from the perspective of others."

For the study, researchers Ed O'Brien, Konrath and Linda Hagen at the University of Michigan and Daniel Gr?hn at North Carolina State University analyzed data on empathy from three separate large samples of American adults, two of which were taken from the nationally representative General Social Survey.

They found consistent evidence of an inverted U-shaped pattern of empathy across the adult life span, with younger and older adults reporting less empathy and middle-aged adults reporting more.

According to O'Brien, this pattern may result because increasing levels of cognitive abilities and experience improve emotional functioning during the first part of the adult life span, while cognitive declines diminish emotional functioning in the second half.

But more research is needed in order to understand whether this pattern is really the result of an individual's age, or whether it is a generational effect reflecting the socialization of adults who are now in late middle age.

"Americans born in the 1950s and '60s -- the middle-aged people in our samples -- were raised during historic social movements, from civil rights to various antiwar countercultures," the authors explain. "It may be that today's middle-aged adults report higher empathy than other cohorts because they grew up during periods of important societal changes that emphasized the feelings and perspectives of other groups."

Earlier research by O'Brien, Konrath and colleagues found declines in empathy and higher levels of narcissism among young people today as compared to earlier generations of young adults.

O'Brien and Konrath plan to conduct additional research on empathy, to explore whether people can be trained to show more empathy using new electronic media, for example. "Given the fundamental role of empathy in everyday social life and its relationship to many important social activities such as volunteering and donating to charities, it's important to learn as much as we can about what factors increase and decrease empathic responding," says Konrath.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Michigan. The original article was written by Diane Swanbrow.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. E. O'Brien, S. H. Konrath, D. Gruhn, A. L. Hagen. Empathic Concern and Perspective Taking: Linear and Quadratic Effects of Age Across the Adult Life Span. The Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1093/geronb/gbs055

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/gyFcc_UYhn0/130130184324.htm

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British Virgin Islands national report prepared for the IDNDR mid-term review and the 1994 World Conference on Natural Disaster Reduction, Yokohama, Japan, 23-27 May 1994

This report presents the institutional and legal framework for disaster risk reduction in British Virgin Islands, and describes its common disaster risks and natural hazards, such as hurricane, earthquake, tsunami, land slide and flood. It outlines the strategies, plans, projects and activities related to disaster prevention and risk management.

The report provides an evaluation of country's progress, achievements and challenges in disaster risk reduction during the first half of the International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction (IDNDR), and highlights suggested activities and plans for the rest of IDNDR.

Keywords

  • Themes:Disaster Risk Management, Governance
  • Hazards:Cyclone, Earthquake, Flood, Land Slide, Tsunami
  • Countries/Regions:British Virgin Islands

  • Short URL:http://preventionweb.net/go/30863

Source: http://www.preventionweb.net/english/professional/publications/v.php?id=30863

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Pathway for membrane building blocks

Jan. 30, 2013 ? Biomembranes consist of a mosaic of individual, densely packed lipid molecules. These molecules are formed inside the cells. But how do these building blocks move to the correct part of the membrane? Researchers from Technische Universit?t M?nchen (TUM) have discovered a mechanism to show how this is done.

The lipid molecules of membranes, also known as phospholipids, are composed of two elements: A hydrophilic head and two long-chain fatty acids. The molecules form a bilayer in the membrane, with all of the heads pointing outwards and the fatty acid chains hanging in a zip-like interlay position.

Biomembranes are constantly reorganized or renewed, for example whenever cells divide. The cell is constantly creating new phospholipids that have to align themselves -- which they do in both layers of the biomembrane. However, cells only produce phospholipids on one side of the biomembrane. From there, they need to be transported to the other half of the bilayer.

A helping hand through the membrane

The problem is that the hydrophilic and lipophilic parts of the molecule repel each other. "The molecules can anchor themselves in one of the two membrane layers with their lipophilic tail," explains Prof. Dieter Langosch of the TUM Chair of Biopolymer Chemistry. "Translocation to the second layer is not possible because the hydrophilic heads cannot pass through the lipophilic fatty acid chains."

The key to establishing order in the membranes lies in enzymes that transport the molecules to their correct location in the "second layer." Scientists have been searching for such enzymes -- known as flippases -- for many years. But now Prof. Langosch and his team have made a breakthrough. They experimented with synthetic peptides, which transport phospholipids through the membrane. A clever trick

In this process, the researchers came across an indirect transport mechanism. The peptides span both layers of the membrane -- and are able to bind to individual phospholipids. Prof. Langosch explains: "When the peptides bind the molecules, the surrounding membrane is briefly destabilized. The new phospholipids use this opportunity to slip through the barrier of the first lipid layer and flip to the second layer of the membrane."

The researchers now have a clear idea of how flippases work. "Our peptides stretch through the membrane like a corkscrew. If this "alpha-helix" has dynamic elements, it can bind to phospholipids," says Prof. Langosch. "This model will help us to detect the flippases."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Technische Universitaet Muenchen.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Marcella Langer, Rashmi Sah, Anika Veser, Markus G?tlich, Dieter Langosch. Structural Properties of Model Phosphatidylcholine Flippases. Chemistry & Biology, 2013; 20 (1): 63 DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2012.11.006

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/ZMt_sqtudU0/130130101939.htm

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The mayor of Denver has finally made good on his wager with Baltimore Mayor Step...

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NFLPA funds $100 million Harvard study on injury

By Scott Malone

updated 12:19 p.m. ET Jan. 29, 2013

BOSTON - The union that represents U.S. professional football players has given Harvard University a $100 million grant for a study of the range of health problems, from brain damage to heart conditions, that affect current and former players.

Researchers with Harvard Medical School plan to spend a decade studying hundreds of former players who are members of the National Football League Players Association, university officials said on Tuesday. The aim is to develop strategies to limit the long-term damage that players suffer from years of hits on the field.

The recent suicides of a spate of former NFL players, including 12-time Pro Bowl linebacker Junior Seau, have raised concerns about the toll that blows to the head take on the brains of current and former players.

Scientists have found that years of steady, small hits can lead to a condition called chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which at its start can cause victims to have a hard time concentrating on small tasks and eventually can lead to aggression and dementia.

The worries are not limited to the pros, who are part of a $9 billion U.S. industry. Parents of players, from peewee leagues to college, have raised concerns about the game and leagues have changed rules to limit hits to the head.

Those concerns reach all the way to the White House.

"I'm a big football fan, but I have to tell you if I had a son, I'd have to think long and hard before I let him play football," President Barack Obama said in an interview with the New Republic magazine published on Sunday, a week before the Super Bowl championship will be played in New Orleans.

Harvard Medical School Dean Jeffrey Flier said the research would aim to address health concerns at all levels of play.

"Millions of kids and college athletes play football, formally and informally," Flier said in a statement on the school's website. "We cannot afford to ignore the health risks associated with this sport."

Harvard researchers plan to identify a group of at least 1,000 retired NFL players from around the country and focus their study on 100 healthy and 100 unhealthy former players.

The NFL lauded the move.

"We look forward to learning more about the Harvard study and hope that it will play an important role in advancing medical science," league spokesman Brian McCarthy said.

The league faces lawsuits from more than 2,000 former players who say NFL management concealed information about the risk of chronic brain injury to players. It has begun to change the rules of the game to lower the risks, including sharply penalizing the most dangerous helmet-on-helmet hits.

Seau's family sued the NFL this month, saying brain damage he suffered during his 20 years in the league led to his suicide. A study by independent researchers found that Seau, 43, suffered from chronic traumatic encephalopathy - the same debilitating brain disease diagnosed in at least two other former NFL players who committed suicide.

The NFL has said the findings about Seau's brain underscored "the recognized need for additional research to accelerate a fuller understanding of CTE." League teams have donated $30 million to the National Institutes of Health for research.

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2013. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp


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DPS: Former Chiefs general manager Scott Pioli speaks for the first time about witnessing Jovan Belcher's suicide?and admits it is a day he never?will?forget.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/50628168/ns/sports-nfl/

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NYC man found dead, bound with bag over head

By Shimon Prokupecz, NBCNewYork.com

Police are investigating the death of a 48-year-old man who was found tied up with a bag over his head at a home in Harlem Monday morning, a law enforcement official told NBC 4 New York.

Authorities said a woman visiting the home -- either a cleaning person or home health-care aide -- discovered the man in 87 Hamilton Place shortly before 10:30 a.m.

Police sources said the victim, identified as Charles Romo, was found on his knees on the bedroom floor with his hands tied behind his back, his legs tied with a belt and tape around his neck. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

More coverage from NBCNewYork.com

A neighbor told detectives she called police Sunday night after she heard screams from what she thought was an apartment on the first floor, police sources said.

The NYPD responded to her call and found nothing of concern on the first floor. The victim lived on the second floor, which police did not check out because of the nature of the emergency call, police sources told NBC 4 New York.

A medical examiner will determine the cause of death.

The investigation is ongoing.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/29/16750069-nyc-man-found-dead-bound-with-bag-over-his-head?lite

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The Sieve Hypothesis: Clever Study Suggests an Alternate Explanation for the Function of the Human Stomach

You have a stomach. I have a stomach. It is one of our few universals. Humans, mate, sing, talk, and raise their children in many different ways, but we?ve all got stomachs. The question is why.

Stomachs help to digest food; they get the process rolling, boiling and grinding by coating our food in slime, enzymes and acid. This is the textbook explanation and no one is saying it is wrong, but in one of my treasured meanders through the library, I recently stumbled upon a paper suggesting this explanation is incomplete, perhaps woefully so. Just as important to our survival may be the stomach?s role in separating, sieving one might say, bacteria that are good for our guts from those that are bad. The study I found was led by Dr. Orla-Jensen, a retired professor from the Royal Danish Technical College. Orla-Jensen tested this new idea about the stomach by comparing the gut bacteria of young people, healthy older people and older people suffering from dementia. What Orla-Jensen found is potentially a major piece in the puzzle of the ecology of our bodies.

Image 1. A diagram of the human stomach. The stomach may act as a sieve, allowing only some kinds of microbes through to the small intestines.

Orla-Jensen and colleagues began by positing, or perhaps assuming is the better word, that a key function of the stomach is to kill bad bacteria with acid. The acid, they argue, serves as a sieve. It stops bad bacteria, particularly the most opportunistic of pathogens, but it does not stop all bacteria. It lets those beneficial bacteria that have adaptations for dealing with stomach acid?adaptations honed over many thousands of generations?on down the gastrointestinal road. In their model, if the stomach fails to kill bad bacteria, pathogens dominate the intestines. They do so in place of the beneficial microbes that help our bodies to digest food and produce nutrients. And when they do? death or at least the failure to thrive is nearly inevitable.

Orla-Jensen and colleagues knew from earlier work that the pH of the human stomach increases with age; the stomach becomes less acidic. This effect is most acute in individuals over seventy years of age. In these individuals Orla-Jensen predicted that the stomach?s effectiveness as a killer of bad microbes might be compromised. In turn, the intestines, recipients of everything that leaves the stomach, living or dead, might become dominated by pathogenic species such as the weedy and deadly Clostridium dificile or by oral species, that while beneficial in the mouth can become a pathogen in the gut. It was a simple enough prediction, but perhaps too simple. The biota of the gut is complex. It can contain thousands of species and is influenced by many, many factors which have proven in many ways intractable. Could the stomach?s pH really matter enough to make a measurable difference? As I read Orla-Jensen?s paper, I was skeptical, but I was curious enough to read through to the results. I sat down on the floor in the library and prepared to stay a while.

Image 2. Micrograph of Clostridium dificile. Image courtesy of CDC/ Lois S. Wiggs (PHIL #6260), 2004.

To test their hypothesis, Orla-Jensen and colleagues cultured bacteria they had collected from fecal samples of ninety human participants, one third of whom were between 30 and 40 years old and two thirds of whom were over seventy. They then compared the microbes found in the samples from these different age groups. Again, they would expect that in the older individuals that the bad bacteria and oral bacteria should be more common and, in their abundance, displace the good necessary bacteria, such as Bifidobacterium.

Remarkably, the authors? predictions from the sieve hypotheses held up. I have reproduced and slightly modified their main table below. Nine percent of the individuals over seventy had more than a million cells of the bad news?Clostridum bacteria per gram of feces; none of the thirty to forty-year-olds did. What was more, a third of the individuals over seventy had more than a billion cells per gram of feces of the oral bacteria, Streptococcus salivarius. Again, none of the thirty to forty-year-olds did. But were these pathogenic and oral bacteria doing well enough to actually compromise the success of good bacteria in the gut? Yes. While all of the thirty to forty year olds had at least a million cells of the good gut bacteria Bifidobacterium per gram of sample, less than half of the individuals over seventy did.

Interestingly, the guts of those individuals over seventy years of age who had dementia were in the worst shape, by far. Nearly each and every one of their guts was dominated by Clostridium and oral bacteria. Other studies seem to lend support to these general findings, albeit from different angles. A study comparing healthy individuals and individuals with low stomach acidity found that those with low stomach acidity were less likely to have Bifidobacterium even though their total density of intestinal bacteria, particularly the pathogens, increased. Another study found that individuals with low stomach acidity tend to be more likely to suffer from diarrhea, as would be expected if their guts were being taken over by pathogens.

The ?differences seen here as a function of age are much more pronounced than those seen in another study, recently published in the journal Nature. The Nature article compares the gut microbes of more than ?five hundred individuals of different ages and ethnicities. In the Nature study the authors found little effect of age on gut microbes after the first few years of life (during which there was a large effect as newborns slowly acquired adult microbes). However, the Nature study only considered four individuals over seventy years of age (they also did not specifically look for shifts in beneficial versus problematic species, perhaps they will in the future). Orla-Jensen?s work suggests that it is precisely the very old individuals in whom the differences begin to be pronounced. ?Sometimes it takes the perspective of many studies and time to see the full picture.?This is probably where I should point out that the Orla-Jensen study I?m discussing was published in 1948. Interesting ideas can get lost in unread scientific articles; many, perhaps most, are. Orla-Jensen?s paper has only rarely been cited and never in the context of the discussion of the function of the stomach or even in the context of aging and the microbial wilderness of our bodies.

Table 1. Reproduced (with updates) from Orla-Jensen et al., 1948. Sample size for each group = 30 individuals. The author of this paper, Prof. Orla-Jensen was 77 at the time of the publication of this paper in 1948 and so had a personal interest in these results. One wonders if he sampled himself.

Percent of individuals with > than 1 billion cells of each bacteria per gram of feces, or, in parentheses, percent of individuals with > 1 million cells per gram.
Volunteers Mutualist Bifidobacterium Pathogen Clostridium Oral bacteria, Streptococcus salivarius
Aged 30-40 (Healthy) 57? (100) 0 0
> 70 years (Healthy) 25 (44) 9 31
> 70 years (w/ Dementia) 7 (9) 48 35

More than sixty-five years later it is now up to us to figure out what other predictions the sieve hypothesis might make <sup>2/<sup>. Perhaps the most obvious prediction is that as one travels the body, from the skin to the mouth to the stomach and on into the intestines, that one should encounter, at each step, diminishing subsets of microbial lineages. Is this true? It seems hard to believe. After all, a huge number of studies have proudly announced the great diversity of microbes in the gut, a terrible diversity. Let?s look.

The best study I know of included samples from mouth and gut, and considered which taxa of microbes were found in the different habitats. The diversity of major lineages drops by half as you go from the mouth to the stomach AND the lineages present in the gut, particularly the colon, are a subset of those in the stomach which are a subset of those in the mouth (see Figure 2). Comparing the results of this studies with those of others suggests the mouth itself also serves as a kind of filter, winnowing the species that land on the skin and lips or in the mouth to the subset that are most beneficial. From this subset, the stomach further cleaves.

If the sieve hypothesis holds, there must be additional predictions. I have not thought this through terribly well, but I think I would probably expect differences in the stomachs of animals eating different foods. Animals that eat foods that are more likely to include pathogens ought to have filters that are more finely tuned to weeding out bad microbes; they ought, I think, to err on the side of killing too many. This does appear to be the case for some vultures. The stomach of the white-backed vulture has a pH of 1! Conversely it seems plausible to predict that animals that eat diets less likely to lead them to pathogens, fruit eaters for example, should be expected to relax the sieve, open it up a little to make sure that many good microbes make it through. ?I don?t know that it has been tested. There must be more predictions for the differences one expects among species. A broad survey of the evolution of the stomach seems in order.

Image 3. White backed vultures feeding on a wildebeest. These vultures need to very actively fight the pathogens in the dead meat on which they indulge. One way they do so is by having very, very, acidic stomachs. Photo by?Magnus Kjaergaard.

Modern living also presents us with another testable prediction about the stomach and its effects on microbes. Bariatric surgery is an ever more common medical intervention in which the size of a patient?s stomach is reduced so as to reduce the amount of food he or she can eat in one sitting. The surgery also has the consequence, however, of increasing the pH in the stomachs of those who have the surgery, making their stomachs less acidic. If the sieve hypothesis is right these individuals ought to have gut bacteria that look more like those of seventy years old than those of thirty year olds. They do. Recently a study has found that good Bifidobacterium species become more rare after bariatric surgery while oral bacteria (in this case Prevotella) and? E. coli, which can be a pathogen, become more common. These results seem to be what the sieve hypothesis would predict.

I am sure there are more predictions. I?ll leave you to them. The good news is that if there are more predictions now is a great time to look, to test them. The study of the microbes of our body is now hip, as sexy as a field of study that often involves the word fecal can be (see Image 4 or check out your own sexy fecal bugs at American Gut). New data are published every day. If we can develop good predictions they can be tested. We might finally figure out what the stomach does, or rather the complex mix of its roles, its churning melange of duties. No one denies that the stomach helps to break down proteins, it just might not be its most important job.

Image 4. Microbiologist Jonathan Eisen wearing his microbiome. Image courtesy of Jonathan Eisen.

Meanwhile, there is an interesting coda to this story. In addition to considering the difference between old and young individuals, Orla-Jensen, as you might remember, considered the difference between healthy individuals over seventy and individuals over seventy with dementia. The individuals with dementia had even more pathogens and oral microbes in their guts than did the healthy seventy-year-olds. This is interesting, but what is the cause and what is the effect here? Could a poorly functioning stomach lead to a pathogen heavy microbe community in the gut and could that gut community in turn lead to dementia??Could our minds really fail because our stomachs do? A few recent studies have begun to explore the possibility that dementia might result from infection, but it is WAY too soon to say anything conclusive. One is left to imagine the mechanism behind such a decline. I have some ideas, but I?ll need to think them over some more. Meanwhile, you can offer your hypotheses too, and I?ll go back to the library and see what other gems I can find, old studies that are as revolutionary as the new ones you read about in the press, studies that whether right or wrong confirm just how little we know and how slow and circular progress can be.

Footnotes (more to be added)

1- They did not sequence the genes of these microbes?now a common technique?and so their results represent just part of what was going on in the sampled guts, a few kinds of common trees in a diverse forest, and yet it was probably a reasonable measure of those trees.

2- Which, I will confess, I?ve named here. Orla-Jensen and colleagues thought the idea so obvious as to not even deserve a name.

?

?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=3ed07578c573a96e6eed86c777d90172

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Things To Avoid When Dealing With Payday Loans | Free Finance ...

Things To Avoid When Dealing With Payday Loans

Financial problems can sometimes require immediate attention. If only there were some kind of loan that people could get that allowed them to get money quickly. Fortunately, such a loan does exist, and it?s called the payday loan. The following article contains all kinds of advice and tips about payday loans that you might need.

Be selective in who you tell that you are getting a payday loan. Many hold a very negative view of the industry, and might look down on you for having to deal with a payday lender. You have enough stress as it is during a payday loan, so do not add to it.

Many payday loan companies do not give you the option of paying the entire loan back at once. They put you on an automatic payment plan that you owe interest on. Never go with a lender like that. Make sure that you find a company that will let you pay them back in one lump sum.

When researching payday loan companies, do not ever consider a company who hides their interest rates, fees, and penalties. The law requires that all payday loan companies reveal all the relevant information, before a person applies for a loan. Companies that don?t provide this information could be attempting to trick you, into agreeing to pay huge interest rates.

Payday loans are short-term loans and should only be used for unexpected expenses. These loans should not be used to pay household bills or ordinary living expenses. If you use a payday loan for any of these expenses, you run the risk of defaulting on your payday loan or other monthly bills.

Find out the laws in your state regarding payday loans. Some lenders try to get away with higher interest rates, penalties, or various fees they they are not legally allowed to charge you. Many people are just grateful for the loan, and do not question these things, which makes it easy for lenders to continued getting away with them.

Do not use the services of a payday loan company unless you have exhausted all of your other options. When you do take out the loan, make sure you will have money available to pay back the loan when it is due, otherwise you may end up paying extremely high interest and fees.

In conclusion, financial matters can sometimes require that they be taken care of in an urgent manner. For such situations, a quick loan may be needed, such as a payday loan. Simply remember the payday loan tips and advice from earlier in this article to get a payday loan for your needs.

Source: http://freefinancearticles.info/things-to-avoid-when-dealing-with-payday-loans-2

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Kuwait allocates KD95m to support construction loan beneficiaries ...

Posted by staff reporter
Monday, January 28 - 2013 at 05:56 UAE local time (GMT+4)

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Source: http://www.ameinfo.com/kuwait-allocates-kd95m-support-construction-loan-327255

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Britain unveils high-speed railway plans

Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne tours Manchester Piccadilly train Station in Manchester, England with Dyan Crowther, Route Managing Director of Network Rail, left, and Alison Monroe, CEO of HS2, Monday Jan. 28, 2013. The British government on Monday unveiled details of new high-speed rail lines linking London to cities in northern England with trains traveling up to 225 miles an hour (360 kph). The government says the project, known as High Speed 2, will be the first new railway built north of London for more than a century, and will be an economic and environmental boon. But opponents claim the plan is too expensive and will ruin tracts of picturesque countryside. (AP Photo/PA, Christopher Furlong) UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE

Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne tours Manchester Piccadilly train Station in Manchester, England with Dyan Crowther, Route Managing Director of Network Rail, left, and Alison Monroe, CEO of HS2, Monday Jan. 28, 2013. The British government on Monday unveiled details of new high-speed rail lines linking London to cities in northern England with trains traveling up to 225 miles an hour (360 kph). The government says the project, known as High Speed 2, will be the first new railway built north of London for more than a century, and will be an economic and environmental boon. But opponents claim the plan is too expensive and will ruin tracts of picturesque countryside. (AP Photo/PA, Christopher Furlong) UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE

Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, center, talks to workers during a tour of the train wheel manufacturers Lucchini UK, at Trafford Park, Manchester, England, Monday Jan. 28, 2013. The British government on Monday unveiled details of new high-speed rail lines linking London to cities in northern England with trains traveling up to 225 miles an hour (360 kph). The government says the project, known as High Speed 2, will be the first new railway built north of London for more than a century, and will be an economic and environmental boon. But opponents claim the plan is too expensive and will ruin tracts of picturesque countryside. (AP Photo/PA, Christopher Furlong) UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE

(AP) ? The British government on Monday unveiled details of new high-speed rail lines linking London to cities in northern England with trains traveling up to 225 miles an hour (360 kph).

The government says the project, known as High Speed 2, will be the first new railway built north of London for more than a century, and will be an economic and environmental boon. But opponents claim the plan is too expensive and will ruin tracts of picturesque countryside.

The first 140-mile (225-kilometer) stretch of the line, announced last year, will link London to Birmingham, England's second-largest city. The Y-shaped section announced Monday will extend to the northern cities of Manchester and Leeds.

Construction of the first section of the line is due to start in 2017 and be completed by 2026. The second phase is to be done by 2032.

Officials say the 32.7 billion-pound ($51 billion) project will create at least 100,000 jobs and cut journey times almost in half, covering the 200 miles (320 kilometers) between London and Manchester in an hour and eight minutes.

Treasury chief George Osborne said the railway would be "the engine for growth in the north and the Midlands of this country" ? and worth it, despite the opposition.

"If our predecessors hadn't decided to build the railways in the Victorian times or the motorways in the middle part of the 20th century, then we wouldn't have those things today," Osborne told the BBC.

"So you've got to commit to these projects, even though they take many years and, yes, they are expensive, but they are also an investment in the economy that will then create the money to enable us to afford our NHS (health service) and our education system and so on," he said.

High Speed 1, which linked London to the tunnel under the English Channel, was completed in 2007.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-01-28-Britain-High%20Speed%20Rail/id-da81c2794e664708a87232e2895d94f1

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Interview: Steven Haynes, Communications Officer | The Libertine

The Libertine has interviewed the new members of the Liberal Youth exec on a range of topics, in order to keep you in the loop. Here is the first in the series, an interview with our new Communications Officer, Steven Haynes (and my new boss).

1) What is the first thing you will do in office?

The first thing I?m going to look at is how we?re using the LY website. The website is going to be the first point of contact many people have with the organisation and it needs to be 1) actually working and 2) reflective of the activities that Liberal Youth is pursuing.?

I also want to start turning the website into a resource in and of itself for members of LY. Some training modules covering the basics of campaigning, how to run effective email campaigns and fresher?s stalls are the sorts of things I want to see on there.?

Then it?s moving onto the general audit of how we?re going about communications with members and working out how we can make people get involved more.

2) Is there anything you would like to say to the other candidate(s)? Is there anyone else you would like to thank, or pay tribute to?

Keep your chin up RON! Someday soon you?ll win!

3) What do you think is the main challenge facing Liberal Youth?

The main challenge facing Liberal Youth is the lack of engagement with members. To deal with that we need to turn the organisation into something that people want to seek out. Hence why I think we need training modules and advice on the website as they?re practical things that people can use which not only help them but build an image of LY being a useful organisation to belong to.?

4) Turnout has risen in this election ? how do we take advantage of this and increase involvement in Liberal Youth?

To take advantage of the higher turnout involves us being quick off of the mark and sending out communications informing people of results of the election ( more people have voted so more people have an interest in the result automatically) and then we need to quickly have something for them to get involved with whilst we still have their attention.?

5) How do you see Liberal Youth acting in relation to the main party?

LY is autonomous of the main party and should spend its time campaigning on issues that are important to its members. That said, for me I?m a Liberal Democrat first and a member of Liberal Youth second and as important as campaigning on things our members want is I also think we need to be campaigning for the Lib Dems as a whole as well. We need them, and they should need us. If we can build up a mutual relationship we?ll be more effective and more successful.

6) Tuition Fees.

Opening up the argument on tuition fees is to open up the argument on how universities are funded. Across the nation, universities are making cuts to their teaching budgets already and to create uncertainty about how much money they will be getting is just going to aggravate the situation. We should move on from tuition fees as it?s just a political noose around our neck and to provide universities with some certainty about how much money they?re going to be getting over the next decade or so.

If Liberal Youth and the Liberal Democrats want to help students then there a multiple ways to do it. We can find ways to ensure that students are getting value for money from their courses, that Universities are using fees for books in the library rather than Vice Chancellor?s pay rises. We should definitely (regardless of what we decide to do about tuition fees ) look into ways of lowering the costs of living at university as many maintenance loans and grants don?t even cover the cost of halls. Overall though I really do think we need to move on from tuition fees. Scrapping them just isn?t achievable. The Tories won?t do it, and Labour, even in opposition, have only said they would lower them to 6k ( thus causing funding short falls and more cuts to courses). Sometimes you have to pick and choose the battles you fight, and if the battle is going to open up old wounds with no real benefit it?s best to make a strategic withdrawal. Renewing our commitment to scrapping tuition fees is a battle we can?t win and offers us very little benefit. We should walk away. A lot of people may not like that response but you asked for my opinion and there it is in black and white.

7) How do you see the exec relating to members, local branches, regions and devolved nations?

The relationship between the Federal Exec and everyone else should be that of a parent who?s just sent their kids off to university. As much as we might want to phone up every day and check they aren?t existing solely on pot-noodles, our job isn?t to micromanage, it?s to help people get set up on their own and to build their own networks and connections so they can campaign and recruit more effectively in their areas. Then if they have an issue, we can help. Fostering independent branches and unions should be the goal as it?ll breed a much better and more active liberal youth for everyone.

8) How will we know your term was a success?

If I don?t get kicked out I?ll consider my term a success. Seriously though, as my main focus is just trying to improve communications and the website then judge me on that. I?m not going to set out a specific metric and say that if I haven?t double click through rates from emails then my term will be a failure. Engagement, communications strategies and campaigning are all long term things. If the person who comes after me has a good foundation to communicate with the membership then I?ll consider my job a success. Whether other people would agree with that is up to them.

Steven Haynes is our new Communications Officer.

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Source: http://lylibertine.wordpress.com/2013/01/28/interview-steven-haynes-communications-officer/

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

The Funeral Director: The Heart of a Family&#39;s Experience : Funeral ...

You are here: Home / Editorials / The Funeral Director: The Heart of a Family?s Experience





Technology continues to change our industry. The equipment and processes we use are more advanced. Options we can offer our families ? from web-based viewings to QR codes on headstone ? were unheard of just a handful of years ago.

Yet one fundamental service we provide to families is what they will most remember. Our caring, sympathetic, wise support is something technology will never replace. It is the reason the funeral director is the pulse of a family?s experience when faced with the death of a loved one.

?People believe funeral directors care for the dead. We know that we are caring for the living,? observes licensed funeral director and embalmer Jane Ludlow of Thomas-Justin Funeral Home in Cincinnati, Ohio. It?s a message she lives every day ? and one she shares with those new to the profession, as she did recently as the commencement speaker at her alma mater, Cincinnati College of Mortuary Science. She urged the graduates to keep in mind that choosing how they deal with families should be as important as choosing the right fluids for embalming. ?For us, the fear and mystery of death have subsided, but not for client families who have seen their children, parents, husbands and wives, brothers and sisters die.?

Ludlow points out that families need a funeral ?director? who will direct them with knowledge, understanding and a calm confidence. ?We must show them how to take one step. Then show them how to take one more,? she reminds. ?Before they realize it, we will have started them on their way. We will have directed them toward their healing and we will have lived up to our oath.?

Marsha Chance, funeral director and family service advisor at Memorial Park Funeral Home and Cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee, agrees. ?I think of myself as a shepherd, taking families from where they are to where they need to be, and being a shoulder they can lean on throughout the process.?

Her experience of suddenly losing her young husband gives her a 360-degree perspective. ?Although I was in the industry, when my husband died I was like every other grieving person, uncertain which steps to take next,? Chance explain. ?It?s amazing how you go back to zero when something rocks your world.? Today, many families find comfort and a special bond when she says, ?I sat where you?re sitting. I really do understand what you?re going through.? It took a while for her to reach the point where she could share her story and now she sees it as a way to bond with people genuinely and honestly. ?People want to make a human connection, to recognize that we are comrades on the same battlefield. I was always sympathetic. Now I?m empathetic.?

Norman Berry, a licensed funeral director and founder of Berry Funeral Home and Crematory in Elberton, Georgia, recognizes that due to his small-town location he often extends his support in different ways than his colleagues in larger markets. ?As a family-owned funeral home and crematory, we answer all of our calls personally, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year,? comments Berry. ?Our client families aren?t comfortable getting a recorded message ? they want to connect with someone immediately. We can be ready within 30 minutes.? And sometimes those middle-of-the-night calls are responses to families located several towns away, some as far as Atlanta.

?Our families have been hit hard by the economy and their funds are limited. We keep our profit margins slim, so we are almost always significantly less expensive than our competitors. And that?s important to us,? says Berry. If people say they don?t have the money, he works with them, delaying the disposition until funds are available. Berry added a crematory to his business a year-and-a-half ago and many families are selecting direct cremation as a cost-effective option. And no matter what the circumstances, he buries children under 12 at his cost, often supplying extra touches at his own expense, like bouquets of colorful balloons in the child?s favorite colors.

?I make a point of avoiding words that are sometimes harsh for families to hear, like embalming, and I personally prepare all of the bodies for viewing,? he says. When first entering the business, Berry went to beauty college to learn makeup techniques that result in a natural look. And if he has to, he?ll even style hair, but recommends using the deceased?s regular beautician. He chuckles remembering how his male friends laughed when he enrolled, but the knowledge has paid off.

While recognizing that they have helped families through a most difficult time with support, assistance and guidance is satisfying, funeral directors can be faced with challenges when offering their help, too. Some families and individuals come with preformed attitudes about the death-care profession. ?People sometimes are surprised that we are sympathetic, living, breathing people with normal emotions,? says Chance. Others who are bereaved come with anger and frustration. ?I understand that they are angry to be in the situation, particularly when it?s a difficult case, like a violent or accidental death, the death of a child or other tragedy, so I don?t take it personally.?

?Everyone deserves to be remembered.? That?s Chance?s message as she guides her families through the difficult process of making choices. It?s a message that comes from her heart.
While technology continues to provide innovative ways to do business, the heart of our industry is, literally, our heart. How we support and guide families on the road to healing will always be our most necessary ? and appreciated ? service. FBA

Cal Wilkerson is V.P. Of Sales & Marketing for U.S. Cremation Equipment, based in Lakeland, Florida, manufacturers of the Classic line of high-performance human cremators. He has worked in the cremation equipment industry for 35 years.

Source: http://www.funeralbusinessadvisor.com/?p=7204

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NYC mayor tops $1B in gifts to Johns Hopkins Univ.

(AP) ? New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is giving $350 million to alma mater Johns Hopkins University, pushing his lifetime giving to the private Baltimore university past $1 billion, the university said Saturday.

University officials believe Bloomberg, who earned his fortune creating the global financial services firm Bloomberg LP, is now the first person to give more than $1 billion to a single U.S. university.

Most of the latest gift, $250 million, will go toward a variety of cross-disciplinary subjects, including research on water resources, health care, global health, the science of learning and urban revitalization.

The remaining $100 million will go to need-based financial aid for undergraduate students, awarding 2,600 Bloomberg scholarships in the next 10 years.

"Johns Hopkins University has been an important part of my life since I first set foot on campus more than five decades ago," Bloomberg said in a statement released by the university. "Each dollar I have given has been well-spent improving the institution and, just as importantly, making its education available to students who might otherwise not be able to afford it."

The mayor has stayed closely involved with the university where he graduated in 1964, including stints on its board of trustees from 1996 to 2002 and as chairman of Johns Hopkins Initiative fundraising campaign. Among his past gifts was $120 million toward the construction of a children's section at The John Hopkins Hospital in honor of his late mother.

"This latest initiative allows us to greatly accelerate our investment in talented people and bring them together in a highly creative and dynamic atmosphere," university president Ronald J. Daniels said in a statement. "It illustrates Mike's passion for fixing big problems quickly and efficiently."

___

Online:

NYC Mayor's website: http://www.nyc.gov/mayor

John Hopkins University: http://www.jhu.edu/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-26-Bloomberg-Johns%20Hopkins/id-b4d07945e6c145a1b343eff702e29b14

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Senators Nearing Agreement On Broad Immigration Reform Proposal

The Washington Post:

A working group of senators from both parties is nearing agreement on broad principles for overhauling the nation's immigration laws, representing the most substantive bipartisan effort toward major legislation in years.

Read the whole story at The Washington Post

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/26/senators-nearing-agreemen_n_2555783.html

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Honeywell profit tops Wall Street view on margin boost

(Reuters) - Honeywell International Inc posted fourth-quarter earnings just above Wall Street estimates, reflecting the diversified U.S. manufacturer's campaign to boost profit margins in the face of sluggish sales growth.

The maker of cockpit electronics and systems to manage the climate and security of large buildings said on Friday that earnings came to $251 million, or 32 cents per share. For the year-earlier period, the company booked a loss of $310 million, or 40 cents per share.

Factoring out accounting items related to the company's pension plan, the profit was $1.10 per share, topping the analysts' average forecast of $1.09, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Overall profit margins rose to 15.6 percent of sales from 15.1 percent a year earlier as Chief Executive Officer Dave Cote has been pushing to boost productivity across the company's four divisions, including consolidating businesses into fewer locations.

Revenue rose 1 percent to $9.58 billion from $9.47 billion a year earlier.

The company's performance materials unit, whose products include chemicals and equipment used in oil and gas production, notched the strongest sales growth in the quarter, up 8 percent. At the transportation systems unit, which makes products that include automobile turbochargers, sales fell 11 percent, reflecting weak European demand.

The Morris Township, New Jersey-based company confirmed its full-year profit forecast of $4.75 to $4.95 per share and said it expected earnings to rise 6 percent to 11 percent in the first quarter.

Honeywell shares have risen about 18.5 percent over the past year, outpacing the 13.6 percent rise of the broad Standard & Poor's 500 index <.spx>.

(Reporting by Scott Malone; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/honeywell-profit-tops-wall-street-view-margin-boost-123336205--finance.html

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Dayton budget funds innovative scholarships for low-income ...

Buried in Gov. Mark Dayton $37.9 billion proposed budget is a creative idea to improve the lives of the state?s most educationally vulnerable children: state-funded scholarships for preschoolers from low-income families.

It?s an idea early on proposed by Art Rolnick, former research director at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, pushed by advocates for the poor for years and that has shown to be successful in a limited pilot program.

Dayton on Tuesday asked legislators for $44 million over two years for the early-learning scholarships for preschoolers, a move that?s drawing praise from an education-reform group and advocates for the poor.

?This is farther than we?ve seen any governor in recent history go,?? said Anita Patel, vice president racial justice and public policy at the YWCA of Minneapolis.

Ericca Maas, who heads Parent Aware for School Readiness, said she was happy to see Dayton's budget included scholarships, which she described as a proven idea and pointed out that?children are waiting. She stressed the need for high-quality programs "to make sure we get maximum return on taxpayer investment.?

Still, the numbers in the governor?s budget fall far below the need, say advocates, who want quality learning opportunities for all the state?s needy 3- and 4-year-old children.

The importance of early childhood education has long been recognized, but the political will and financing to implement programs for all children in Minnesota is building slowly.

?First we want to say how happy we are that the governor took this step and recognized the need for early childhood education,?? said Frank Forsberg, chairman of the Executive Committee of MinneMinds, a statewide coalition of foundations, non-profits and businesses banded together to ask for a learning boost for preschoolers whose families are at or below 185 percent of the poverty line.

?Definitely a step in the right direction,?? concluded Daniel Sellers, executive director of MinnCAN, an education reform group that is also a member of MinneMinds (pronounced minnie-minds).

Missing an opportunity

But the experts agree the governor?s proposal doesn?t come close to meeting the needs of Minnesota?s low-income preschoolers ? MinneMinds sought $185.2 million over the biennium ? and some argue the state is missing an opportunity for big payoffs later.

They cite research that shows that for every $1 spent on high-quality preschool programs, $16 is saved down the line because youngsters enter school ready to learn rather than falling behind the learning curve. Advocates point to a Minnesota Early Learning Foundation report released in 2011 on the benefits high-quality preschool programs and emphasize that up to 90 percent of brain development occurs by age 5.

With proper preparation, they say, children are more likely to graduate from high school and college, acquire good jobs and become good citizens.

That?s why Sellers? organization is standing by the coalition?s initial request. ?By investing more now we can have even bigger returns,?? Sellers said.

Support for the idea has been growing for years. In? the early 2000s, representatives from business and nonprofit leaders formed the Minnesota Early Learning Foundation (MELF) to research? how to cost-effectively prepare children for kindergarten, relying in part on the work and recommendations of Rolnick and Rob Grunewald in a Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis report, which supported early learning scholarships. Learning advocates called for development of an educational rating system as well.

In 2011, MELF and a bipartisan group legislators backed legislation incorporating scholarships and standards. The Legislature appropriated some funding, but it was the Dayton administration that implemented a standards rating system.??????

Competition for money

But like every budget, there?s competition for a piece of the pie. Dayton has proposed for the 2014-2015 budget $40 million for optional all-day kindergarten, ?$20 million for increased access to quality child care as well as the $44 million for early learning scholarships.

?This is a debate between three good options,? Sellers said. All three are important investments, he said, but MinnCAN argues that early action and tying resources to accountability is most critical and that more money should go to preschool scholarships as advocated by MinneMinds.

Under the group?s proposal, which would receive funding in the Dayton budget, parents apply based on income and select the child-care or early-education provider they want for their child. But they must choose from certain ?quality?? learning programs.

That means only early education programs, childcare providers and preschools receiving certification from Parent Aware, a kind of early education seal of approval system and a program in the state Office of Early Learning.? Programs are rated along high standards: stimulating learning environments, age-appropriate curriculums, teacher training and parent communication.?

Under a pilot program, Toniesha Thompson was given a scholarship to pay for her daughter Talaysia?s childcare at New Horizon Academy in Minneapolis, a center with Parent Aware credentials.

The first two weeks the child was there, the then-3-year-old learned her numbers and letters and started singing nursery rhymes, mom says. When the family lived in Texas, she and her baby sister had spent their days with grandma and adults. Now they spend their days interacting with other children, playing games and learning and have become very outgoing.

?Thanks to the scholarship, I?ve been able to keep up with rent, pay bills and put some money aside,?? said Thompson, formerly homeless in Minneapolis, but now in transitional housing as she gets on her feet. She works as a cook at her children?s childcare center and is studying to become a nurse.

Thompson?s other child, Natalia, 2, is also at the center and she hopes there is funding to pay her tuition as well.?

Source: http://www.minnpost.com/community-sketchbook/2013/01/dayton-budget-funds-innovative-scholarships-low-income-preschoolers

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Death penalty for 21 for Egypt soccer violence

CAIRO (AP) ? An Egyptian court sentenced 21 people to death on charges related to one of the world's deadliest incidents of soccer violence, which killed 74 mostly teenage fans of Egypt's most popular sports club last year.

The verdict comes after a day of clashes between security forces and protesters opposed to Egypt's Islamist President Mohammed Morsi that left seven dead.

Fans of al-Ahly, whose stands were attacked by rival club Al-Masry in the Feb. 1 incident in the Mediterranean city of Port Said, had promised more violence if the accused did not receive death sentences.

Families of the victims shouted "Allahu Akbar!," or God is great, after the judge read out his verdict. One man fainted, while others wailed and cried in disbelief as they carried pictures of the young men killed in the soccer riot.

Judge Sobhi Abdel-Maguid said in his statement read live on state TV that he would announce the verdict for the remaining 52 defendants on March 9.

Among those on trial are nine security officials.

Many Ultras, or die-hard soccer fans, have taken a leading role in protests over the past two years. Both Al-Ahly Ultras and Al-Masry Ultras widely believe that ex-members of the ousted regime of Hosni Mubarak helped instigate the attack, and that the police at the very least were responsible for gross negligence.

It is not clear what kind of evidence, if any, was presented to the court to back up claims that the attack had been orchestrated by regime officials.

As is customary in Egypt, the death sentences will be sent to the nation's top religious authority, the Grand Mufti, for approval, though the court has final say on the matter.

All of the defendants ? who were not present in the courtroom Saturday for security reasons ? have the right to appeal the verdict.

The melee was the world's deadliest soccer violence in 15 years.

In the days leading up to the verdict, Al-Ahly fans warned of bloodshed and "retribution" if death sentences were not handed down. Hundreds of Al-Ahly fans gathered outside the Cairo sports club in anticipation of the verdict, chanting against the police and the government.

"The police are thugs!" yelled relatives of the deceased inside the courtroom before the judge took the bench.

The violence began after the Port Said home team won the Feb. 1 match, 3-1. Al-Masry fans stormed the pitch after the game ended, attacking Cairo's Al-Ahly fans.

Authorities shut off the stadium lights, plunging it into darkness. In the exit corridor, the fleeing crowd pressed against a chained gate until it broke open. Many were crushed under the crowd of people trying to flee.

Survivors of the riot described a nightmarish scene in the stadium. Police stood by doing nothing, they said, as fans of Al-Masry attacked supporters of the top Cairo club stabbing them and throwing them off bleachers.

Al-Ahly survivors said supporters of Al-Masry carved the words "Port Said" into their bodies and undressed them while beating them with iron bars.

While there has long been bad blood between the two rival teams, many blamed police for failing to perform usual searches for weapons at the stadium.

The soccer fans, known as Ultras, are among Egypt's rowdiest and are proud of their hatred for the police, who were the backbone of Mubarak's authoritarian rule. The Ultras then directed their chants against the military rulers who took over after Mubarak's ouster in 2011 until Morsi came to power in elections last June.

The Ultras from Egypt's sports clubs were engaged in deadly clashes with police near the Interior Ministry headquarters in Cairo that killed 42 people less than three months before the soccer melee in Port Said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/death-penalty-21-egypt-soccer-violence-091706473.html

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Friday, January 25, 2013

'American Pie' singer fined for speeding in Maine

In this Juy 3, 2012 file photo provided by the Las Vegas News Bureau, Don McLean performs at the Las Vegas Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. McLean has been fined $400 for driving his Chrysler too fast through a school zone in Maine and has paid the levy. He had contested the charge in September, saying school zone warning lights weren't flashing. He had requested a trial. Police said during a 40-minute proceeding in Rockland District Court on Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013, the warning lights were flashing. Judge Patricia Worth found McLean had been speeding in a school zone in Rockport. But she lowered what would be a $515 fine if uncontested to $400. McLean immediately paid up. McLean lives in nearby Camden, along Maine's coast. (Photo/Las Vegas News Bureau, Darrin Bush)

In this Juy 3, 2012 file photo provided by the Las Vegas News Bureau, Don McLean performs at the Las Vegas Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. McLean has been fined $400 for driving his Chrysler too fast through a school zone in Maine and has paid the levy. He had contested the charge in September, saying school zone warning lights weren't flashing. He had requested a trial. Police said during a 40-minute proceeding in Rockland District Court on Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013, the warning lights were flashing. Judge Patricia Worth found McLean had been speeding in a school zone in Rockport. But she lowered what would be a $515 fine if uncontested to $400. McLean immediately paid up. McLean lives in nearby Camden, along Maine's coast. (Photo/Las Vegas News Bureau, Darrin Bush)

(AP) ? "American Pie" singer Don McLean has been fined $400 for driving his Chrysler too fast through a Maine school zone and has paid the levy.

McLean contested the charge in September, saying school zone warning lights weren't flashing. Police said in Rockland District Court on Thursday they were flashing.

The Bangor Daily News reports police say McLean was driving 43 mph when the limit was 15.

A judge found McLean was speeding in the Rockport school zone but lowered what would be a $515 fine if uncontested to $400.

McLean immediately paid up.

McLean lives in nearby Camden, along Maine's coast. He burst into popularity in 1971 with his hit "American Pie," about the deaths of Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper in a plane crash on Feb. 3, 1959 ? The Day the Music Died.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-01-24-People-Don%20McLean/id-7395092ec3124b63b76c00116004fdde

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Lena Dunham says "Girls" season 3 starts shooting in March

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - HBO has yet to announce whether "Girls" has been renewed for a third season, but that's okay, because Lena Dunham may have done it for them.

The writer, director and star of the critically-acclaimed comedy told Alec Baldwin during his WNYC podcast, "Here's the Thing," that she is preparing to start shooting the next season in March.

"I just finished season two," the Golden Globe-winning actress said on Monday. "We're starting at the end of March. I'm so excited."

And much to delight of million of the 1.6 total overall viewers that tuned in to watch three airings of the premiere on January 13, Dunham says the episode order may have been increased from 10 to 12.

"Well, we've been doing 10," she continued. "I think between you, me and McGee, I think we might do 12 next year."

HBO wouldn't officially confirm the renewal to TheWrap, but Dunham's interview makes it sound like she will call the premium cable network home for years to come. She admits it's "not clear" how many seasons of "Girls" she is contractually obligated to continue writing and directing, but says she's locked in as an actor for six years.

"HBO contractually has me I think as an actor for six years but as a writer and director - I should pay more attention to my deals, but I'm just so excited to have my job," she said. "I just go, ?Okay, whatever you say.'"

Another thing she should start getting excited about is the possibility of not just talking to Baldwin - one of her idols - but working with him, too.

After she revealed a third season, the "30 Rock" star was quick to add: "I'll be available. I'll come and play your therapist."

"That would be the most fun thing in the world," she responded before later adding: "Working with you is one of my longstanding dreams."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lena-dunham-says-girls-season-3-starts-shooting-204822205.html

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Friday Bliss

Friday Bliss

LeAnn Rimes Entertainment Tonight interview videoLeAnn Rimes Sports Different Hairstyles? [The Frisky] J.J. Abrams Slated to Direct The New “Star Wars” [HollyWire] Danny Gokey Is Officially a Dad [Right Celebrity] Tina Turner to Give Up US Citizenship [The Celebrity Cafe] Lindsay Lohan & Pauly D Suck Face? [The Blemish] Taylor Swift Not Shy Anymore [The Huffington Post?] Angelina Jolie & ...

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/01/friday-bliss-6/

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Anonymous members jailed for card company attacks

(AP) ? A 22-year-old member of the Anonymous movement has been jailed for 18 months for taking park in high-profile cyberattacks on several major financial companies' computer systems.

Self-described "hacktivist" Christopher Weatherhead was convicted last month of conspiracy to impair the operation of computers. The attacks hit the sites of MasterCard, Visa, PayPal and several others.

Prosecutors said Weatherhead and his fellow conspirators targeted companies in the music industry involved in combating Internet piracy and companies that had stopped processing online donations to the secret-busting site WikiLeaks.

One co-defendant, 28-year-old Ashley Rhodes, was jailed for seven months. Another, 24-year-old Peter Gibson, received a suspended sentence.

The cybercrime spree focused attention on Anonymous, a loose-knit collection of Web-savvy activists and Internet pranksters.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-01-24-Britain-Anonymous/id-d5faf509232140c1bbed1f0176ff748d

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Apple TV would signal future innovation

7 hrs.

Somebody pass Apple the remote ? Wall Street wants the channel changed.

Skittish investors sent Apple stock down 12?percent Thursday, one day after the computer giant?s quarterly revenue came in below estimates, and some analysts worried that weaker demand for its products was an indication that the company?s innovative prowess died with former CEO Steve Jobs.

?In any other context, the idea of punishing a company that delivered an 18 percent year-over-year increase, bringing quarterly revenue to $54.5 billion, would be absurd, but Apple, in a way, is a victim of its own success. Investors now expect the company to come in and reinvent entire practices and product categories, as it did with listening to music and cell phones, and they expect the next candidate for an iMakeover to be the television.

?We don?t think the old game plan is working,? Keith Bachman, analyst at BMO Capital Markets, wrote in a research note Thursday, lowering his 12-month target price from $640 to $580.

Related:?Why?stocks?rallied?even?while?Apple?got?crushed

While analysts tend to have more or less a clear consensus about the hurdles to entering the television market, they?re not unified around a clear idea of what "Apple TV" would come to mean. Whether or not they believe Apple management has a vision and the means to execute it shape their longer-term view of the company?s future.

?If products we hoped for like an iOS-based TV, and significant enhancements to platform components like Siri and iCloud don?t appear to be in store for 2013, we would lose confidence in the pace of innovation at Apple,? Goldman Sachs analyst Bill Shope wrote, lowering his 12-month target price from $760 to $660.

Analysts also voiced more prosaic, near-term concerns in response to Apple?s report and forward-looking guidance: A faster timeline for introducing new products and a slate of offerings that includes cheaper devices both could eat into Apple?s profit margin. ?I think that the challenge of the company would be present today with or without Jobs,? Doug Kass, president of Seabreeze Partners Management, said in an interview with CNBC on Tuesday.

But these factors wouldn?t matter as much if Wall Street believed that Tim Cook has the Next Big Thing up his sleeve. On the subject of TV, Cook was emphatic but vague on yesterday?s conference call. He touted the two?million-plus unit sales of the Apple TV set-top box and told analysts, ?I have said in the past this is an area of intense interest for us and it remains that, and I tend to believe that there is a lot we can contribute in this space.?

In an interview with NBC?s Brian Williams in December, Cook also expounded on TV, saying, ?It?s a market that we see that has been left behind.?

?It?s definitely the next area where investors are looking in terms of innovation,? said Brian Colello, a senior equity analyst at Morningstar.

The TV industry doesn?t necessarily need ? or want ? Apple, though. ?The difficulty is that the vast majority of TV content is owned by a small handful of companies who?s primary business model is bundling and cable [and] satellite distribution,? Andy Hargreaves, an analyst at Pacific Crest Securities, said via email. ?Those companies have little interest in contributing content to a service that could disrupt their primary business model.?

When Apple reinvented the way we listen to music, it presented the ailing record industry with a solution to flagging sales and rampant piracy. When it turned the smartphone from an executive tool to a go-everywhere gadget, mobile carriers came around to the realization that they could create a whole new revenue stream by selling data plans to casual users.

Today, Americans have more choice than ever when it comes to their TV-viewing habits: They can digitally record a show to watch later, access streaming content from sources like Hulu or Netflix, get premium sports or movie content via subscriptions stacked onto their cable bundle and so on.

It?s a jumble of options that can be hard to sort and search through, and often requires juggling multiple remote controls and services. Smart TVs that attempt to corral this overflow of content are on the market, but they?re not user-friendly enough to be appealing to the masses, Colello said. ?There have been some improvements but nothing is seamless yet, so Apple has an opportunity to close the door and make that a seamless interface,? he said.

Gene Munster, an analyst at Piper Jaffrey, also thinks a focus on TV content delivery could be Apple?s silver bullet. ?The question is, how can Apple improve the user experience without disrupting the amount of money the content providers are making,? he said. ?They can do things around content that can make the experience much different,? he said. In theory, a viewer only would have to go to a single platform and use one, intuitive remote control ? maybe one that understands plain English ? to search for or schedule shows to watch.

Munster thinks Apple plans to go beyond the set-top box. ?Our feeling is, and we feel strongly about this, is that it?s an actual television... given Apple?s DNA of design as a feature, plus the only way to truly fix the remote control problem is to put it all in one panel,? he said.

Trip Chowdhry, managing director of equity research at Global Equities Research, suggested Apple could make use of new display technology to develop TVs with ?ultra? or ?4HD? high-definition resolution.

It?s an intriguing idea, but Colello said Apple doesn?t have the luxury of time on its side. ?Apple does not have several years to do this,? he said. ?I think the stock tells you that investors are antsy already.? TV is the best category for Apple to redeem itself with a new blockbuster, he said. ?It would be an important signal after Steve Jobs? passing that innovation still exists at the company.?

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/apple-tv-would-give-investors-important-signal-future-innovation-1C8106563

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