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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Q_Pj7qO2zhQ/
sam young ncaa bracket ramon sessions portland trail blazers nba trade blagojevich new mexico state
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CM Ranch, Dubois Wyoming
The CM Ranch was established in 1927 by Charles Moore, the son of a trader who lived on the Shoshone Indian reservation. After switching ownership hands several times, the property became open to guests longing to experience life on a ranch. The unique location of the CM Ranch treats viewers to geologic exposures in the glacial valley which result in an extraordinary display.
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The Alisal Guest Ranch
Located in the heart of Santa Barbara?s Wine Country, Alisal Guest Ranch boasts fifty miles of riding trails, scenic canyons, and sprawling meadows full of wildlife. For those guests who enjoy golfing, the ranch has developed a challenging 18-hold course. This working ranch has an activity to interest everyone.
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Mountain Sky Guest Ranch
Mountain Sky Guest Ranch located in southwestern Montana and first opened as a dude ranch in 1929.? The ranch is nestled within more than 8,000 acres of beautiful, rugged countryside and backs up to the vast and pristine Gallatin National forest.?Its secluded spot is known for its majestic scenery, peaceful atmosphere and outdoor adventure.
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Vista Verde Guest Ranch
Vista Verde Ranch offers an All-Inclusive Colorado Resort Ranch experience with fine food, diverse activities, luxurious accommodations and personal service in a spectacular setting. Offering Talented instructors, quality horses, first class facilities and a commitment to excellence the Vista Verde Horse Program is a great way to get into, or get back into, equine activities.?
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Bar H. Bar Ranch?
The Bar H Bar is tucked away in Southeastern Idaho at the foot of majestic snow capped peaks and amidst fields of glorious aspen and pines. Time spent at the Bar H Bar offers something different from the typical getaway, as you become a guest at the owning family?s full-time home and experience what it?s like to spend time Cattle Ranching while even getting in a little hard work. You?ll truly enjoy the real ranch life.
Source: http://www.hobbyfarmblog.com/uncategorized/ranches/
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For those of us who do not consume coffee or caffeine and want a change from herbals teas for a hot drink, you will love this! If you are like me, and you want a steaming mug of a low-calorie, low-carb, caffeine-free, satisfying warm drink on cold mornings, join me in a creamy, rich ?cuppa.? ?The rich cinnamon will warm you up, the stevia ?and homemade vanilla extract will satisfy your sweet tooth and the homemade almond-chia milk will sustain you for hours.?Measurements?are approximate and according to your tastes.
Measure a mug-full (or 2 or 3) of milk.??You can use any dairy or non-dairy milk that you prefer.
I use my homemade almond-chia milk. Pour the milk into a small saucepan.
Add stevia to taste, any type you prefer.
Add homemade vanilla extract, about 1 teaspoon (or more to taste).
Sprinkle with organic cinnamon (again, to taste). Stir well.
Warm gently over low heat until nice and hot. Pour into your mug.
Sip slowly, enjoying the rich flavors while watching the gorgeous morning unfolding before you, giving thanks for being alive to enjoy it.
Source: http://blog.realfoodliving.com/2012/10/24/cold-morning-try-a-warm-drink/
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From our friends up North comes the gift of tween Ryan Gosling giving a television interview in his mother country of Canada.
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Parents in a southern California community are considering legal action over the constitutionality of a form of yoga being taught to their children, which they claim is introducing religion into public schools.
Last month, half of the students attending classes in the Encinitas Union School District K-6 elementary schools in San Diego North County began taking Ashtanga (Sanskrit for "eight-limbed") yoga for 30 minutes twice per week. In January, the other half will begin the lessons.
Concerned parents have now retained constitutional first amendment attorney Dean Broyles, who says that Ashtanga yoga is a religious form of yoga, and that religious aspects have been introduced into the schools.
"The poses and positions are acknowledged by Ashtanga and Hindi yoga as forms of worship and prayers to Hindu deities," he told ABC News. "They have a spiritual and religious meaning behind them."
Broyles said that although he was at first skeptical that there were truly religious belief and practices being taught to kids, the more he investigated and spoke with parents, the more he realized it was a constitutional issue.
Broyles says that he brought up the matter at a Encinitas Union School District (EUSD) trustees meeting, along with 60 concerned parents, on October 9. Now the EUSD trustees will be reviewing whether the grant money violates the religious freedom of students and parents.
The yoga, which is being taught in all nine of the schools in the district, is being funded by a $533,000 grant from the Jois Foundation, a nonprofit that promotes Ashtanga yoga across the world. All of the instructors teaching the students are certified and trained by the Jois Foundation in Ashtanga yoga.
Broyles points to hedge-fund billionaire Paul Tudor Jones and his wife Sonia Jones, who is a known dedicated disciple of Sri Pattabhi Jois, the recently deceased master of Ashtanga yoga, as the money behind the EUSD yoga program. The district's program will be studied by the University of Virginia and University of San Diego to look at benefits of Ashtanga yoga, as outlined in a letter sent to parents by EUSD Superintendent Tim Baird.
"The study will look at the way that public school systems can impact student learning, health, positive relationships, and overall wellness through the implementation of a holistic approach to student wellness," Baird said in the letter.
Calls placed by ABC News to Superintendent Baird were not immediately returned.
The Tudor Joneses, Broyles says, were instrumental in the founding of the Jois Foundation and put up the money for the EUSD Ashtanga yoga grant. He says that parents are now not only questioning Hindu religion entering their schools, but the validity if this study being undertaken.
"We think that children are being used as guinea pigs," he said. "Following the money, you see what's going on ? It would be like a charismatic Christian organization funding classes in worship and praise, and also funding a research center at a public university that is studying whether this is an effective form of exercise."
Broyles says that it has been argued that the in-school yoga programs have been stripped of their spirituality. But he says that kids in EUSD are being exposed to Hindu thought and belief within the school.
"On the wall there was a poster that showed the Ashtanga, or 8-limbed deity. There are words showing what the limbs are," he said. "The ultimate goal is to be absorbed into the universe, which is called Samadhi. They had a poster depicting that. Fundamentally it is a Hindu religion being taught through Ashtanga yoga."
Children are also being taught eastern meditation techniques to calm themselves, where one clears the mind of all thoughts, poses that were imparted by Hindu deities, and in one class were trained in drawing mandalas, according to Broyles.
Parents also raised specific concerns about the program aside from the religious aspects, saying that the fact that kids are taking 60 minutes of the 100 mins per week allotted for physical education to do yoga is inappropriate. Broyles said that for 40 minutes per week the kids are not getting PE, and that they're not offering anything for kids that are opting out of the program.
Broyles says that there are some yoga enthusiasts in favor of the program; he says that people in the district don't really understand eastern mysticism, yoga's roots in Hinduism, and what's being taught.
"If we were introducing Christian worship of bowing, there would be outcry in the community," he said. "It's dangerous to kids."
Also ReadSource: http://news.yahoo.com/suit-eyed-over-yoga-public-schools-184622594--abc-news-topstories.html
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The IT marketplace is becoming more competitive every passing day. Innovation and successful new developments make it necessary for other organizations and entrepreneurs to find ways to keep up. VMware technology and practitioners are now in high demand as organizations frequently employ them to deliver innovation and service to their ambitions in the face of intense competition.
As a result of high demand, VMware practitioners are being employed at all levels, and they must seek professional development that enables them to evolve with the industry.
VMware VCP certification can provide this professional development. Receive VCP Cloud and Desktop training to help you build the necessary skills for effective design, operation, and evolution within a cloud environment.
Becoming a distinguished VMware practitioner is about more than learning efficient, cost-effective, and accurate technology management. It is about learning the transformative capabilities of IT at every level of every business. That is why the VMware VCP certification program does not simply train you in IT design, installation, and management. It immerses you in technology to enable you to gain the innovative and advanced thinking to create, operate, and maintain a constantly evolving IT environment to adapt to the future of a business with ease. With a VMware VCP certification, your potential for success becomes limitless.
It is a fast-track program that allows you to begin from your current level and progress from there. It eliminates unnecessary training for things that you have already mastered and only works to train you for the things that you want to learn. This means quick career progression and less time away from your current job.
If you have the desire to truly transform your future, the VMware VCP certification program is right for you. With programs that make it simple to acquire advanced skills quickly, such as the VCP Cloud program and the VCP Desktop program, role-based training is utilized to provide theoretical and practical education that can be employed in real-life situations.
The VCP-Cloud certification proves your knowledge of installation, configuration, and administration of a Cloud using vCloud Director. With this certification, you demonstrate your ability to extend data virtualization throughout the cloud with vApps, VDCs, and service catalogs. You also demonstrate your ability to administer cloud networking and storage. The VCP-Cloud certification is designed to build on the necessary skills and knowledge for installation, deployment, scaling, and management of vSphere environments, as well as solid foundation a cloud infrastructure, including public/private/hybrid clouds, multi-tenancy, and cloud security.
The VCP-Cloud certification can be gained by passing the IaaS exam after being a VMware Certified Professional 5 ? Datacenter Virtualization or by attending a qualifying course and passing the VCP-Cloud exam.
The VCP-Desktop (VCP-DT) certification allows you to demonstrate your ability to install and configure the VMware View environment and enable View Client users. With this certification, you prove your ability to configure the vSphere environment, as well as an understanding of core components of VMware in relation to networking and storage. Proficiency in datacenter design methodologies must also be demonstrated.
To gain a VCP4-DT certification for vSphere4, you must first take the suggested courses and then pass the VCP4-DT exam. To gain a VCP5-DT certification for vSphere5, you must pass the VCP5-DT exam.
Receiving a VCP-Cloud, VCP4-DT, or VCP5-DT certificate provides industry recognition, a VCP-Cloud logo for business cards and websites, invitations to beta classes and exams, access to the VCP Portal, and discounted admission to VMworld.
So, if you are looking to advance your career and increase your competitiveness in the IT virtualization job market, you do not need to look any further for career training. VMware VCP certification is exactly what you are looking for and there are options for training in clasroom as well as computer-based / online options. It will provide you with the necessary training you need to prove your expertise and learn to evolve with the IT industry.
For more information or to learn how to enroll in a VMware VCP certification program, simply visit http://mylearn.vmware.com/portals/certification/ or get information on the VMWare VCP certification training online got to: http://www.trainace.com/courses/vmwarebootcamp/
Be the first to like this.
Source: http://northernvirginiatechnology.com/2012/10/24/about-the-vmware-vcp-certification/
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Eliminate boredom at meetings blogging -- quick one -- Bruce Bartlett on Mitt Romney's (silly) claim that the individual mandate for health insurance is unnecessary because people can get the care they need at emergency rooms:
The Health Mandate Romney Still Supports, by Bruce Bartlett, Commentary, NY Times: Republicans ... are adamantly opposed to government paying for health care or a mandate requiring people to buy health insurance. At the same time, they recognize that they cannot say ... that if a dying person shows up at an emergency room without insurance, that person will be left to die in the street. Thus they support a little-known mandate requiring hospitals to treat the uninsured, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act.
Often referred to as Emtala, the bill ... was signed into law by Ronald Reagan... It was enacted because, previously, people had in fact been left to die in the street... Since then, Republicans have routinely cited Emtala as a key reason that the United States already has de facto national health insurance...
In fact, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act isn?t even remotely a substitute for health insurance... It does not demand that all hospitals care for whoever walks in, only those who require urgent care to avoid serious injury or life-threatening consequences. Only hospitals that both participate in Medicare and have emergency rooms are covered by the law...
A new report ... found that hospitals continue to engage in a practice known as ?patient dumping? ? turning away uninsured patients from emergency rooms despite the law. One reason they are able to do so is because in 2003 the George W. Bush administration eased the rules regarding Emtala. ...
The ... mandate on hospitals ... is a very inadequate and inefficient substitute for health insurance ? something Mr. Romney used to acknowledge ? and every bit as much a violation of Republican principles, which oppose unfunded mandates, as the individual mandate that they abhor.
Posted by Mark Thoma on Tuesday, October 23, 2012 at 10:01 AM in Economics, Health Care?| Permalink? Comments?(7)
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LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The Walt Disney Co. is defending its newest princess following a backlash over her Hispanic-influenced ethnicity.
A new character named Sofia will star in the TV movie "Sofia the First: Once Upon a Princess" airing Nov. 18 on the Disney Channel and Disney Junior. Hispanic advocacy groups have questioned whether the fair-skinned, blue-eyed young princess is an accurate representation of the Hispanic population and wondered why Disney isn't doing more to promote its first princess with Hispanic-inspired roots.
"They seem to be backpedaling," said Lisa Navarrete, spokeswoman for the National Council of La Raza. "They've done such a good job in the past when they've introduced Native American, African-American and Asian princesses. They made a big deal out of it, and there was a lot of fanfare, but now they're sort of scrambling. It's unusual because Disney has been very good about Latino diversity."
Craig Gerber, co-executive producer of "Sofia the First," clarified in a Facebook post on Friday that Sofia is "a mixed-heritage princess in a fairytale world." He said her mother and birth father respectively hail from kingdoms inspired by Spain and Scandinavia, though Sofia was born and raised in Enchancia, a "make-believe 'melting pot' kingdom" patterned after the British Isles.
Sofia is voiced by Caucasian "Modern Family" actress Ariel Winter, and her mother is played by Hispanic "Grey's Anatomy" actress Sara Ramirez.
The film and a subsequent TV series will follow the young princess as she adjusts to royal life after her mother marries the king of Enchancia.
"Sofia considers herself a normal Enchancian girl like any other," said Gerber. "Her mixed heritage and blended family are a reflection of what many children today experience."
Inez Gonzalez, executive vice president of the National Hispanic Media Coalition, said Monday that the organization wanted to meet with Disney to discuss "Sofia the First."
"Sofia's world reflects the ethnically diverse world we live in, but it is not our world," said Nancy Kanter, senior vice president of original programming for Disney Junior. "It is a fairytale and storybook world that we hope will help spur a child's imagination. It's one where we can have flying horses, schools led by fairies, songs that have a Latin beat and towns with markets like those found in North Africa."
Kanter added that the "Sofia the First" series set to debut next year would include storylines about a holiday called Wassailia, which is reminiscent of a Scandinavian Christmas; and the characters would go on a picnic in Wei-Ling, an Asian-inspired kingdom.
Marcela Davison Aviles, president of the Mexican Heritage Corporation, said that calling Sofia a Latina princess is "not an accurate use of the term as many in our community understand its meaning." Davison Aviles has worked with Disney on the TV series "Handy Manny," which features a bilingual Hispanic handyman character. She added that "Disney leadership embraces the complexity, diversity and beauty" of the Hispanic community.
"I'll bet folks at the company are using this as a teachable moment to improve on that effort," said Davison Aviles. "I'm looking forward to meeting Sofia and to Disney's future efforts to illuminate our diverse melting pot, including the varied colors which thread our tapestry of Latino identity."
Over the past two decades, Disney has introduced such culturally diverse female protagonists as Jasmine, Pocahontas, Mulan, Merida and Tiana, the African-American princess from 2009's "Princess and the Frog." Disney's 2000 animated film "The Emperor's New Groove" and its subsequent spin-offs were set amid the Incan Empire in South America.
"Little girls look to these characters to see themselves represented," said Navarrete. "If they don't see themselves, it makes a difference. It would be nice to see Disney make a full-out push for a Latina princess, whether it's 'Sofia the First' or not."
___
The Disney Channel and Disney Junior are owned by The Walt Disney Co.
___
Follow AP Entertainment Writer Derrik J. Lang on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/derrikjlang.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/disney-defends-hispanic-influenced-princess-222719393.html
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WASHINGTON (AP) ? Younger Americans in their late 30s are now the group most likely to doubt they will be financially secure after retirement, a major shift from three years ago when baby boomers nearing retirement age expressed the greatest worry.
The survey findings by the Pew Research Center, released Monday, reflect the impact of a weak economic recovery beginning in 2009 that has shown stock market gains while housing values remain decimated.
As a whole, retirement worries rose across all age groups ? roughly 38 percent of U.S. adults say they are "not too" or "not at all" confident that they will have sufficiently sized financial nest eggs, according to the independent research group. That's up from 25 percent in 2009.
But the concerns are increasing the greatest among younger adults approaching middle age, whose equity in their homes represents most of their net worth. About 49 percent of those ages 35-44 said they had little or no confidence that they will have enough money for retirement, more than double the 20 percent share in that age group who said so in 2009.
Baby boomers born between 1946 and 1964 also reported having more retirement anxieties than before, but now to a lesser degree compared to their younger counterparts. About 43 percent of Americans ages 45-54 expressed little or no trust in their retirement security, up from 33 percent in 2009. Among Americans ages 55-64, the share expressing little or no confidence was 39 percent, up from 26 percent.
Broken down by smaller groups, the Pew analysis found that retirement worries peaked among adults in their late 30s; a majority, or 53 percent, of Americans ages 36 to 40 lacked confidence that they will have large enough nest eggs. Just three years ago, it was baby boomers ages 51 to 55 who had the most anxiety over whether their income and assets would be sufficient.
Richard Morin, a senior editor at Pew who co-authored the report, said the shift in attitudes was somewhat surprising.
"I think most people would expect those on the cusp of retirement ? ages 55 to 64 ? would be the most concerned about financing their retirement, (so) the finding that the peak is now occurring among adults roughly 20 years younger is notable," he said. "Moreover, the wealth data showing those approaching or in early middle age had lost the most in the past decade suggests that their concerns are not misplaced."
Morin said that it is hard to predict whether 30-somethings will continue to express the most retirement worries in the years to come, but said it was a "real possibility" given that housing values aren't expected to fully recover anytime soon.
The latest findings come as the presidential campaigns focus most often on retirement issues such as Social Security and Medicare when appealing to older voters. In recent weeks, President Barack Obama has pounded Republican challenger Mitt Romney and his running mate, Rep. Paul Ryan, saying their plan to replace Medicare with vouchers won't keep up with health care costs. Ryan has sought to reassure seniors by saying that he and Romney won't alter Medicare for those in or near retirement.
An Associated Press-LifeGoesStrong.com poll in late 2011 also found that concerns about retirement were increasing across all age groups, a reflection of the continuing hard economic times.
According to the Pew report, the inflation-adjusted net worth of Americans ages 35 to 44 fell roughly 56 percent from 2001 to 2010, the sharpest decline for any age group and more than double the 22 percent rate of decline for boomers ages 55 to 64. Net worth, also referred to as wealth, is the sum of all assets such as a house, car, stocks and 401(k)s, minus the sum of all debts including mortgage, credit card debt, car and tuition loans.
In dollars, the median wealth of Americans ages 35 to 44 fell by $56,029 to $43,698 over the past decade. In contrast, those ages 45 to 54 and 55 to 64 lost about $50,000. The median wealth of those 65 and older over the past decade increased slightly ? the only age group to experience a gain.
The 35 to 44 age group has been hit the hardest in terms of wealth because they were the ones most likely to have purchased a home at bubble prices during the housing boom, only to see values shrivel in the housing bust. This younger to middle-aged group also largely stayed out of the stock market from 2001 to 2010 and as a result missed out on the stock run-up that began in 2009, according to Pew's analysis of Federal Reserve data.
The S&P 500 index peaked above 1,500 in October 2007 but then fell to a closing low of 676.53 in March 2009. It has risen significantly since then, closing above 1,200 in December 2010 and is now back above 1,400.
Broken down by education and income, adults holding a high school diploma or less were less likely to express confidence in their retirement finances than college graduates, 53 percent vs. 71 percent. Those with family incomes of less than $50,000 also were less confident compared to those making $100,000 or more, 51 percent vs. 79 percent.
The Pew study is based on interviews with 2,508 adults by cell phone or landline from July 16 to 26, as well as an analysis of the Survey of Consumer Finances, which is sponsored by the Federal Reserve. The Pew poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.8 percentage points, larger for subgroups. The AP-LifeGoesStrong.com poll was conducted Oct. 5-12, 2011, by Knowledge Networks of Palo Alto, Calif.
___
AP Deputy Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report.
___
Online:
Link to Pew report: http://tinyurl.com/96295h5
AP-LifeGoesStrong.com poll from 2011: http://tinyurl.com/8v8qrwh
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Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images.
This article arises from Future Tense, a partnership of Slate, the New America Foundation, and Arizona State University. On the evening of Wednesday, Oct. 24, Future Tense and Scientific American will be hosting an event in New York City on building resilient cities. To learn more and to RSVP, visit the New America Foundation website.
If you've successfully flushed a toilet recently, then you appreciate (at least subconsciously) the workings of a good sewer system. Waste disappears, no matter what time of day or night, or what the weather's like.
But weather is actually a challenge for a sewer system, especially precipitation. That New York City?s sewers can handle the waste of more than 8 million residents on a daily basis?plus the occasional downpour or major storm like Hurricane Irene?is a testament to its resilience.
How does New York do it? Simple: combined sewer outflows. When there's simply too much water in the sewers for the city's wastewater treatment plants to cope, the proverbial flood gates are opened and rainfall mixed with sewage flows into area waterways, such as Newtown Creek or the Gowanus Canal.
That's great for keeping sewage from finding other places to go?like back up into your toilet. But it's less good for places that consistently see such overflows, like the Gowanus Canal. The canal, affectionately called "Lavender Lake" by locals for the multi-hued sheen of its near constant water pollution, carries a raging case of gonorrhea thanks to all that outflow as well as some of the most toxic sludge in the country. In fact, an industrial legacy paired with these "combined sewer outflows" has been enough to turn the canal into a Superfund site?or one of the nation's most polluted localities.
That isn't exactly sustainable. Especially once you consider that downpours and the like are predicted to be on the increase as a result of climate change, as are little threats like sea level rise that could turn outflows into inflows.
In fact, though resilience and sustainability?two of the hottest buzzwords in urban planning?are used practically interchangeably, they are in fact in some tension with each other. A resilient system bounces back from challenges, unharmed, and a big part of building in resilience includes building in ways to fail safely, such as the combined sewer outflows. So, for example, the blackout of 2003 showed how the U.S. power grid remains less than resilient to challenges like untrimmed trees and power lines sagging in the heat. An example of a more resilient technological system is the Internet here in America, where if one route for data fails, another is found.
Sustainability, on the other hand, means efficiency, at least in part, as designers strive to strike a balance between human needs and environmental impacts. This century, the world's megacities will swell to become gigalopolises?vast tracts of urbanized land, like the metropolitan corridor between Boston and Washington, D.C., or the predicted one between Hangzhou and Shenyang. Efficiency in the construction of infrastructure will be vital as the world attempts to build in the next few decades the same amount of urban infrastructure we've cobbled together over the last several millennia. Does that mean foregoing a built-in margin of safety? The Internet may be resilient in the United States, but a reliance on single lines of connection to the rest of the world has disconnected countries across Africa, from Egypt to Uganda. Imagine the same thing happening to an ?efficient? sewer system.
Some of the most obvious ways to become more resilient are not sustainable. For example, if you are concerned about reliable electricity, you can increase the resilience of your local grid by buying a diesel generator, or two, or more. In effect, that's what the Googles, Facebooks, and Twitters of the world do. But extra diesel generators are certainly not an efficient, or particularly sustainable, way to create electricity. It's not ideal for the environment to be burning all that extra diesel, with attendant air pollution and the like.
Fortunately, there are ways to think more creatively about how to achieve the same resilience. So, instead of buying a couple big extra generators, a thousand small generators on rooftops might be better, as in the case of solar power on homes. Or programs that reduce the overall demand for power?reducing the stress on the existing electrical grid?can help avoid issues like the 2003 blackout.
Some 5 billion people are projected to live in urban areas by 2030. These cities of the future?most of them cities of today, like New York?will have to cope with climate change, sea level rise, increasing demand for electricity and the logistics of 5 billion peoples' sewage, among other things. New York, at least, has been working on a plan to cope with climate change since 2007, thanks to subtle reminders like an August thunderstorm that year that shut down the city's subway system during morning rush hour. Climate change is predicted to increase the severity of such downpours. That's just as true for heartland cities like Louisville, Ky., which has seen four weather-related disasters in as many years, spurring the development of a climate change adaptation plan, and even up-and-coming cities around the world, such as Surat in India, which is using money from the Rockefeller Foundation to better plan for a history and future of flooding.
As for those combined sewer outflows, well, a little greenery goes a long way. Roofs planted with vegetation, streets that end in rain gardens, even permeable pavement can all go a long way toward making the New York City sewer system both more resilient and more sustainable. In the end, any enduring city must be resilient to a whole host of challenges?from floods and fire to economic collapse?in order to last for the long-term. And what could be more sustainable than that?
This article also appeared on the website of Scientific American.
Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=0c08da49cf22ded8c5331763cecb7565
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From The International Business Times?..
Intervention stopped early in NIH-funded study of weight loss in overweight and obese adults with type 2 diabetes after finding no harm, but no cardiovascular benefits
An intensive diet and exercise program resulting in weight loss does not reduce cardiovascular events such as heart attack and stroke in people with longstanding type 2 diabetes, according to a study supported by the National Institutes of Health
The Look AHEAD (Action for Health in Diabetes) study tested whether a lifestyle intervention resulting in weight loss would reduce rates of heart disease, stroke, and cardiovascular-related deaths in overweight and obese people with type 2 diabetes, a group at increased risk for these events.
Researchers at 16 centers across the United States worked with 5,145 people, with half randomly assigned to receive an intensive lifestyle intervention and the other half to a general program of diabetes support and education. Both groups received routine medical care from their own health care providers.
Although the intervention did not reduce cardiovascular events, Look AHEAD has shown other important health benefits of the lifestyle intervention, including decreasing sleep apnea, reducing the need for diabetes medications, helping to maintain physical mobility, and improving quality of life. Previous Look AHEAD findings are available at www.lookaheadtrial.org.
?Look AHEAD found that people who are obese and have type 2 diabetes can lose weight and maintain their weight loss with a lifestyle intervention,? said Dr. Rena Wing, chair of the Look AHEAD study and professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown University. ?Although the study found weight loss had many positive health benefits for people with type 2 diabetes, the weight loss did not reduce the number of cardiovascular events.?
Data are currently being analyzed to fully understand the cardiovascular disease results. Investigators are preparing a report of the findings for a peer-reviewed publication.
To read the full story?..Click here
Source: http://www.lensaunders.com/wp/?p=5796
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October 21st, 2012 by admin
Every Mathematics tutor must have good qualities to be hired. There are quite a number of pointers that a parent would use in hiring a tutor. One, a good tutor must be very patient and flexible. Not every student could be able to understand so fast; hence, the tutor has to be slower than he or she would expect. The tutor must also be able to present a topic in a number of different ways to enable the student to fully understand the concept. It is also vital that a tutor be a good listener. The student may have a point or question to pass across.
During classes, the tutor should be able to create an interactive moment which enables him or her to identify whether the student understood fully or not. A maths tutor Melbourne must be very realistic not expecting too much from the student. Some of the students may not perform as expected. When laying out goals and targets, a tutor must be able to read and identify the capability of the student. Humility is also very vital. The tutor does not know everything. Choose a tutor who is able to ask assistance from other members of the faculty without feeling demoralized. Professionalism must also be embraced. One must choose a tutor who has what it takes to tutor ones child. The tutor is also expected to keep a professional record on the progress of the student. Choose a tutor that can be trusted even when you are not there to supervise.
Many students in Australia need mathematics tutors. Mathematics is a major subject and many times students have challenges in tackling the questions. Some of the students get too shy to ask questions in class; hence, making them not performing well. In Australia, tutoring and coaching of mathematics can be done either through online or offline basis. Students who are able to pay tutors are able to go through the tutors profile and hire them at a cost. Mathematics is a vital subject; hence, a student in Australia cannot afford to fail. A student in need of a tutor has the ability go online and select one from the various sites offered. One of the useful websites would be firsttutors.com.
This enables the student find the best teacher throughout the country. The tutors can teach the students at their own residence, home and more so at their own convenient time. There are various levels of Mathematics tuition in the entire continent of Australia. The lowest level is primary. This is offered to the young children who have just started learning. The next level is secondary, for much older students. There are also students who need the GCSE level tutoring, A-level tutoring and even University level. Lastly, there is the casual learner who is offered the opportunity to improve his or her mathematical skills. Every level of growth of a person can benefit from mathematics tuition. As long as the student stays positive, he or she is able to benefit greatly from the tutoring.
For more details about how to find a maths tutor Melbourne provider, please visit http://www.awpremiertutoring.com.au/subjects/maths/
Posted in Latest News About Education
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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/average-u-retail-gas-prices-drop-8-cents-200454766--sector.html
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ScienceDaily (Oct. 21, 2012) ? A new study suggests that solar geoengineering can be tailored to reduce inequality or to manage specific risks like the loss of Arctic sea ice. By tailoring geoengineering efforts by region and by need, a new model promises to maximize the effectiveness of solar radiation management while mitigating its potential side effects and risks.
Developed by a team of leading researchers, the study was published in the November issue of Nature Climate Change.
Solar geoengineering, the goal of which is to offset the global warming caused by greenhouse gases, involves reflecting sunlight back into space. By increasing the concentrations of aerosols in the stratosphere or by creating low-altitude marine clouds, the as-yet hypothetical solar geoengineering projects would scatter incoming solar heat away from Earth's surface.
Critics of geoengineering have long warned that such a global intervention would have unequal effects around the world and could result in unforeseen consequences. They argue that the potential gains may not be worth the risk.
Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Physics at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and Professor of Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School. "Instead, we can be thoughtful about various tradeoffs to achieve more selective results, such as the trade-off between minimizing global climate changes and minimizing residual changes at the worst-off location."
The study -- developed in collaboration with Douglas G. MacMartin of the California Institute of Technology, Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institution for Science, and Ben Kravitz, formerly of Carnegie and now at the Department of Energy -- explores the feasibility of using solar geoengineering to counter the loss of Arctic sea ice.
"There has been a lot of loose talk about region-specific climate modification. By contrast, our research uses a more systematic approach to understand how geoengineering might be used to limit a specific impact. We found that tailored solar geoengineering might limit Arctic sea ice loss with several times less total solar shading than would be needed in a uniform case."
Generally speaking, greenhouse gases tend to suppress precipitation, and an offsetting reduction in the amount of sunlight absorbed by Earth would not restore this precipitation. Both greenhouse gases and aerosols affect the distribution of heat and rain on this planet, but they change the temperature and precipitation in different ways in different places. The researchers suggest that varying the amount of sunlight deflected away from Earth both regionally and seasonally could combat some of this problem.
"These results indicate that varying geoengineering efforts by region and over different periods of time could potentially improve the effectiveness of solar geoengineering and reduce climate impacts in at-risk areas," says co-author Ken Caldeira, Senior Scientist in the Department of Global Ecology at the Carnegie Institution for Science.
The researchers note that while their study used a state-of-the-art model, any real-world estimates of the possible impact of solar radiation management would need to take into account various uncertainties. Further, any interference in Earth's climate system, whether intentional or unintentional, is likely to produce unanticipated outcomes.
"While more work needs to be done, we have a strong model that indicates that solar geoengineering might be used in a far more nuanced manner than the uniform one-size-fits-all implementation that is often assumed. One might say that one need not think of it as a single global thermostat. This gives us hope that if we ever do need to implement engineered solutions to combat global warming, that we would do so with a bit more confidence and a great ability to test it and control it."
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Source: http://www.redberryrecruitment.co.uk/2012/10/19/sales-manager-2/
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ScienceDaily (Oct. 19, 2012) ? Three Simon Fraser University scientists are among six researchers who've made a discovery that could help revolutionize antibiotic treatment of deadly bacteria.
Lisa Craig, Christopher Ford and Subramaniapillai Kolappan, SFU researchers in molecular biology and biochemistry, have explained how Vibrio cholerae became a deadly pathogen thousands of years ago.
V. cholerae causes the diarrheal disease cholera, which is endemic in many developing countries and can emerge in regions devastated by war and natural disasters. An outbreak following the 2010 earthquake in Haiti has killed at least 7,500 people.
Two genes within V. cholerae's genome make it toxic and deadly. The bacterium acquired these genes when a bacterial virus or bacteriophage called CTX-phi infected it.
The SFU researchers and their colleagues at the University of Oslo and Harvard Medical School propose that a Trojan horse-like mechanism within V. cholerae enabled CTX-phi to invade it.
The CTX-phi latches onto a long, hair-like pilus filament floating on the surface of V. cholerae. The filament then retracts, pulling the toxin-gene-carrying CTX-phi inside the bacterium where it binds to TolA, a protein in the bacterial wall.
The process transforms V. cholerae into a deadly human pathogen.
The Journal of Biological Chemistry has just published a paper written by the researchers describing the atomic structures of the CTX-phi protein pIII alone and bound to V. cholera TolA.
The authors recommend that pilus filaments be explored further as a transport mechanism to deliver antibiotics into a bacterium.
"We'd be exploiting the pilus retraction mechanism to introduce antibiotics directly into a cell, bypassing its outer membrane barrier," explains Craig. The SFU associate professor is an expert on the role that pili play in bacterial infections.
"We do have antibiotics for V. cholerae, but these antibiotics also kill beneficial bacteria in the gut. The idea of using pili as a Trojan horse for antibiotic delivery is new and allows us to specifically and effectively target a given bacterial pathogen."
Craig says her team's discovery of V. cholerae's retractable pili is made all the more exciting by the simplicity of its workings. "We know that other deadly bacteria have retractable pili but it'll be much easier to isolate how the mechanism can be used to uptake antibiotics in Vibrio cholerae."
Craig says using pili as an antibiotic delivery mechanism to treat Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a deadly bacterial respiratory infection that hits mainly people with Cystic Fibrosis, could save many lives.
Christopher Ford is a research associate in Craig's lab. Subramaniapillai Kolappan, one of Craig's master's students, recently graduated from SFU.
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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/genes/~3/SzRoXT-Pbqg/121019153239.htm
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E. Donnall Thomas, a physician who pioneered the use of bone marrow transplants in leukemia patients and later won the 1990 Nobel Prize in medicine, has died in Seattle at age 92.
The Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center announced the death Saturday. A spokesman said the cause was heart disease.
Thomas' work is among the greatest success stories in the treatment of cancer. Bone marrow transplantation and its sister therapy, blood stem cell transplantation, have improved the survival rates for some blood cancers to upward of 90 percent from almost zero.
This year, about 60,000 transplants will be performed worldwide, according to the Hutchinson Center.
"Imagine coming up with an idea, making it a reality and touching that many lives," said Dr. Fred Appelbaum, Thomas' friend and the director of the center's Clinical Research Division.
Thomas took after his father and became a doctor after getting his medical degree from Harvard. In 1956, he performed the first human bone marrow transplant.
Thomas, along with a small team of fellow researchers, including his wife Dottie, pursued transplantations throughout the 1960s and 1970s despite skepticism from the medical establishment.
They sought to cure blood cancers by destroying a patient's diseased bone marrow with near-lethal doses of radiation and chemotherapy and then rescuing the patient by transplanting healthy marrow. The aim was to establish a functioning and cancer-free blood and immune system.
The procedure would go on to become the standard treatment for many sufferers of leukemia and lymphoma.
"He was brilliant, he was incredibly generous and he was quick to deflect praise from himself to the individuals around him," Appelbaum said.
"At the same time, while he was quiet and modest, he was stubborn," he added. "He believed in what he was doing and he was going to make it happen. It's hard to imagine today how hard it was to make this reality because it was against the prevailing medical wisdom."
Thomas joined the University of Washington faculty in 1963. In 1974, he became the first director of medical oncology at the Hutchinson Center. It is now one of the world's top cancer treatment and research institutions.
Thomas also edited the first two editions of the bone marrow transplantations reference book, "Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation," which would become a bible for the field.
"To the world, Don Thomas will forever be known as the father of bone marrow transplantation, but to his colleagues at Fred Hutch he will be remembered as a friend, colleague, mentor and pioneer," Larry Corey, president of the research center, said in a statement.
Thomas is survived by his wife, two sons and a daughter.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/father-bone-marrow-transplant-dead-92-231041856.html
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A 3-year-old boy suffered puncture wounds to his face when he was bitten by a dog in Lower Hutt this afternoon.
Emergency services were called to the scene of the attack in Taita about 2.55pm, an ambulance communications spokeswoman said.
The boy had suffered moderate facial injuries and was taken to Hutt Hospital for treatment, the spokeswoman said.
Inspector Shane Cotter said the toddler?s family were ??baby-sitting?? their friend's boxer-cross dog.
??The kids were playing with the dog in the backyard and the dog sort of snapped and bit the child on the face.
??There was quite a bit of bleeding.??
Cotter said the dog had bitten the toddler once or twice ??rather than a five minute going over??.
Animal control were investigating and it was unknown what would happen to the dog, he said.
- ? Fairfax NZ News
Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/7840178/Toddler-injured-after-dog-bites-face
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BEYANON, Syria (AP) ? Anyone who tries to slip out of the Shiite villages of Zahraa and Nubl is risking his life. Sunni rebel snipers stand ready to gun down anyone who dares. Roads are blocked with barricades and checkpoints.
For more than three months, Syria's rebels have imposed a smothering siege on the villages, home to around 35,000 people, maintaining they are a den of pro-regime gunmen responsible for killing and kidnapping Sunnis from nearby towns.
The bitterness and reprisals between neighbors illustrate how the civil war has torn apart the longtime coexistence among ethnic and religious groups in Syria. And it points to the perils of sectarian divisions that lie ahead for the nation of 21 million as the war worsens.
Zahraa and Nubl make up a small pocket of Shiites, mostly regime loyalists, in this overwhelmingly Sunni region in the northern countryside of Aleppo province. The siege has its roots in months of tensions since the Sunni-led revolt against President Bashar Assad began in March 2011. Sunnis in the area say pro-regime gunmen, known as Shabiha, operated from the two villages, attacking nearby towns as they rose up against Assad.
The violence fueled a cycle of tit-for-tat killings and kidnappings and tore apart the social fabric between the sects.
Then in July, rebels overwhelmed most of Aleppo province, driving out government forces and taking control of the region's towns and villages. The tables were turned: Many Assad loyalists fled to Zahraa and Nubl for refuge, and the rebels clamped down their siege, seeking revenge.
Perhaps more than anyone, Bashar al-Hajji feels the impact of the rift. A native of Beyanon, a Sunni village of 5,000 across the main north-south highway from Zahraa and Nubl, he's the only Sunni in town who's married to a Shiite. His wife of five years is from Zahraa.
"I am caught between the two sides," said al-Hajji, a 28-year-old mechanic who is not just Sunni but follows the sect's most conservative school, Salafism.
His wife's family shuns him and is persistently telling her to leave him and come home to Zahraa.
"They know that I am a Salafi, and they think it is permitted for me to kill Shiites," said al-Hajji, sitting in the yard of the family's home in Beyanon.
"Well, if this is the case, I don't have to go far to kill one," he said, nodding toward his house.
Al-Hajji limps from a gunshot wound he suffered in February, when a gang of Shiites from Zahraa beat and kidnapped him.
"Only when my family and others kidnapped about 20 of their own and threatened to kill them was I released," he said. He showed a photograph taken after his release, his face bruised and a deep cut across his cheek.
He pointed to a neighborhood of Zahraa in the distance and said it had been home to pro-regime snipers and machine gun nests that shot at "everything that moves" in Beyanon.
"They killed and wounded so many of us, we had to block the road," he said.
A friend, Khaled Mohammed Saraj, a 29-year-old carpenter, was kidnapped by Shiites in July while driving near Zahraa at 6 a.m.
"They kept me in an underground room for six days," recounted the father of two. Three others were also held there, he said, though their captors did not abuse them. They were eventually released in a prisoner exchange.
Now dirt mounds ? and in some cases slabs of limestone ? block the roads leading into Zahraa and Nubl. Rebels have set up checkpoints, and snipers are positioned in empty buildings. Zahraa has its own snipers, on a hill overlooking the road, and they open fire on anyone they see trying to get into the village, fearful of rebel attacks. The barricades were the closest The Associated Press was able to get to the two villages.
In the distance, Syria's national flag ? now the symbol of Assad's regime ? was flying from a water tower in Zahraa, unlike the rebel flags raised in Sunni towns. The Shiites in Zahraa and Nubl are coping with the siege by relying on supplies from a friendly Kurdish village on the other side. But they cannot venture further than that for fear of being killed or kidnapped. Government helicopters land there twice a day, bringing in supplies.
For Beyanon and a cluster of nearby Sunni villages ? Hayan, Retan, Haritan and Mayer ? the feud means they can no longer go into the two larger Shiite villages, or have access to their restaurants, better-stocked grocery stores, mechanics and doctors. The two villages have the area's only high school, along with a vocational institute.
"Our villages are poor. Zahraa and Nubl are rich and have so much that we don't have," said al-Hajji, one of six siblings born to a retired military man with 30 years of service in the air force as an aircraft mechanic.
The tears in the social fabric are nationwide. Syria's multiple sects, religions and ethnicities long coexisted ? not always completely in tune, but usually more harmoniously than in neighboring Lebanon. The country is predominantly Sunni Muslim, while Shiites make up a tiny proportion, less than 5 percent, though exact numbers are not known.
The most serious split is between Sunnis and Alawites, an offshoot sect of Shiism that makes up about 15 percent of the population and dominates Assad's regime. Assad and his family are Alawites and elevated their community to top military and government positions.
Like the Alawites, Syria's small Shiite community has largely sided with Assad's regime, as has the small Christian minority, which fears the rise of Sunni fundamentalists if Assad falls.
"Syria has sustained sectarian scars that will simply take a long time to heal," said Loai Hussein, an opposition political activist. "There has been a great deal of polarization, some of which is encouraged by neighboring countries."
There have been countless cases of tit-for-tat slayings between Sunnis and Alawites or Shiites across much of the country. In the main cities, mixed Alawite-Sunni neighborhoods are fast disappearing, as residents of one sect are driven out by the other or flee to areas where their community is the majority.
In neighboring Idlib province, which has been the scene of heavy fighting, a Shiite leader from the village of Kifaraya said his son-in-law was kidnapped seven months ago by Sunnis.
"I hope it is all part of the war and that it will go away when it is over and we can live together again in peace," said Abu Abdullah Hassaneh. "I am not pointing an accusing finger at anyone. It is haram (religiously prohibited) to do so."
In a wider context, Syria's sectarian fault lines reflect a divide in the region. Shiite powerhouses Iran and Hezbollah have backed Syria, while Sunni Egypt, Saudi Arabia and their smaller Arab allies have aided the rebels and called on Assad to step down. Syria's rebels accuse Hezbollah guerrillas and Iraqi Shiite hard-liners of fighting alongside Assad's forces, though they offer no proof.
While Syrian opposition politicians in exile speak of inclusion and equality in a post-Assad Syria, the Sunni rebels on the ground bitterly talk of the need to exact retribution against Alawites they say victimized them for decades.
Al-Hajji and fighters of the rebel Free Syrian Army insist they will lift the siege on Zahraa and Nubl if the government forces and Shabiha surrender.
But their desire for vengeance shows through. They say the Shiite villagers are doing more than providing sanctuary for the regime loyalists and accuse them of taking part in kidnappings and sniping at Sunnis.
Al-Hajji's wife's brother was wounded in a recent firefight with Sunnis, he said, but her family said nothing of his injury. They are also evasive when she asks them about conditions in the two villages.
Al-Hajji's 62-year-old father, Abdou al-Hajji, adopts a conciliatory tone when speaking about the divides. He notes how Sunnis "embraced" Shiites who fled Lebanon during Hezbollah's war with Israel in 2006.
"We have long lived in peace alongside the Shiites," the elder al-Hajji said. "We shared joy in weddings and grief in funerals."
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-sunni-rebels-besiege-shiite-villages-193533327.html
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