বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৮ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Economic News: Ask Matt: Options for tracking your portfolio ...

The Dow Jones industrial average crossed 14,000 Feb. 1. Can the run continue?(Photo: Spencer Platt Getty Images)

Story Highlights

  • Dow tops 14,000 for first time since October 2007
  • 14,000 is big, round number where bull market stalled 5 years ago
  • Rally suggests sentiment turning positive after years of gloom

NEW YORK ? When it comes to big, round numbers with investment significance, 14,000 is as big as it gets for the Dow Jones industrial average.

Indeed, Dow 14,000 is back in play and in the headlines after the iconic 117-year-old blue chip index briefly topped that lofty milestone Friday for the first time since October 2007. The move pushed the world?s best-known stock gauge to its best level since the 2008 financial crisis and left it just shy of its Oct. 9, 2007, all-time high of 14,164.53.

Around 10 a.m. ET the Dow was up roughly 140 points and popped over 14,000 for a minute, extending its 2013 gains to 6.8% and boosting its return from the bear market low in March 2009 to 114%.

STOCKS FRIDAY: Jobs report ignites rally

The Dow?s heady rush to levels not seen in more than five years, and potentially to heights it has never seen before, has elicited feelings of renewed hope and cautious optimism on Wall Street.

The sense of optimism comes from the fact that the Dow?s rise is reflecting a belief that economies, in the U.S. and around the world, are in a better place and on the road to recovery.

The lingering skepticism on the part of some investors comes from the knowledge that Dow 14,000 is an area where the stock market topped out in 2007 and a level that has acted more like a ceiling for stock prices, rather than a floor.

In fact, the Dow only closed above 14,000 on nine trading days in 2007, including its first-ever close above that psychologically important number on July 19, 2007.

It is not an overstatement to say that Dow 14,000 is the biggest round number the Dow has ever had to try to climb in its long history.

?Rarified territory is a good way to describe it,? says Jamie Farmer, managing director at S&P Dow Jones Indices.

And the thinner the air, the tougher the slog.

?We are back to levels where the market has had trouble sustaining highs in the past,? says Richard Moroney, editor of Dow Theory Forecasts newsletter.

But records are meant to be broken, and there are reasons why the Dow has been rising and a case to be made that the rally has room to run, and a new record high is within reach.

The Dow?s move up, Farmer says, has been driven by a growing belief that headwinds, such as the sub-par economy, the November elections, fiscal issues and Europe?s debt woes, are diminishing. In short, it says things are getting better.

?What?s driving the market narrative right now is a burgeoning sense of recovery and confidence,? says Farmer. ?The Dow is emitting a signal that sentiment is on the rise.?

The Dow?s long reputation for reflecting the national mood and acting as a leading economic indicator also bodes well, he says.

?The Dow provides historical touchstones,? says Farmer. ?When Americans hear the number of points the Dow is up or down, their minds immediately translate that. The 14,000 number has a reference quality to it and has enormous value in itself.?

One benefit of the Dow?s positive news is that investors who have been sitting out the rally, either in cash or bonds, might start funneling more of that so-called ?safe money? back into stocks, says Moroney.

?If we can bust out to a new high it will add to the pain trade for those people who are underinvested in stocks,? says Moroney.

The Dow also looks attractive from a valuation standpoint, as the stock market is now trading at a slightly cheaper price-to-earnings ratio than it was at its prior top in 2007 and sports a P-E that is 50% below where it was during the prior peak in 2000, according to S&P Capital IQ data.

Another plus is investors are far less exuberant than they were back in 2007, when stocks and real estate were flying high.

While a correction can?t be ruled out, the fact the Dow is at five-year highs suggests it is decision time for investors.

?You can?t focus on the fact that you missed the rally,? says Moroney. ?The fact that the Dow was at 6,547 in early 2009 is not relevant. The question is what do you want to do today??

Moroney says stocks offer a better alternative than bonds and cash.

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Source: http://www.birchindigo.com/economic-news-ask-matt-options-for-tracking-your-portfolio/

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বুধবার, ২৭ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Secrets We Keep From Our Kids

Jerry Mahoney is a stay-at-home gay dad blogger (SAHGDB) who writes about what an awesome and/or horrible parent he is on his site Mommy Man: Adventures of a Gay Superdad, which you should totally read. His family includes him, his partner, Drew, and a couple of meddling 3 1/2 year-old twins.

Hey guys, it?s me, Daddy, and I?m only writing this post because you can?t read, you don?t know what a blog is and because you?re still in that developmental sweet spot where you take everything I tell you at face value.

Suckers.

Your old man is full of secrets, things that could destroy my authority if you ever found out.? Here are 10 highly classified facts that I will take to my grave? or at least wait to tell you until you have kids of your own.

secret

1.? TV is a reward for me, not you.

There?s a reason I never promise you TV for being good.? When you?re behaving, I don?t?need?to turn on the TV.? Overall, you guys are terrific company? but when you?re not, that?s when TV comes to my rescue.? Those 22 blissful minutes ofYo Gabba Gabba?are my reward for getting through the crying, whining, fighting meltdown madness that?s become a recurring feature of your toddlerhood.

Here?s the big secret: if you want more TV, you should act out more.? You know how sometimes I?ll pop popcorn and we?ll have a ?movie day?, where we get to watch all of?Beauty & The Beast?orToy Story?from beginning to end?

When that happens, you?ve been BAAAAAAAAAD.

You can never know this, of course, because that would encourage you to misbehave.? So I have to be clever about it.? I always make sure to calm you down first, so you don?t know that I?m only turning on the TV because I?m on the verge of tearing off your Tickle Me Elmo?s head with my teeth.

?

2.? While you?re napping, I shove my face full of chocolate chip cookies for two hours straight.

You don?t see me eat much, do you?? It?s not because I don?t require sustenance like every other human being, though if it adds to your sense that Daddy is some kind of awesome superhuman, I?m fine with that.? No, the real reason I never eat in front of you is because when you?re watching, I need to model good eating habits.? You think I like eating vegetables and chewing slowly?? Phooey!

I spend every moment in your presence suppressing my natural urge to shovel peanut butter M&Ms through my maw by the fistful.? When you?re asleep, oh boy, do I make up for lost time.? I practically funnel chocolate sauce directly down my throat.? I watch lots of TV, too, and I sit as close to the screen as I want.

?

3. ?I fall for your crocodile tears about 90% of the time.

I don?t know whose side of the family it comes from, but I?d be willing to bet that you two have some Meryl Streep in your blood.? Your performances are unparalleled.? You are gripping emotional powerhouses, both of you, able to summon cascades of tears at will.? I feel like I should be tossing bouquets of flowers at your feet, or at least teaching you to act out?Uncle Vanya?so your talents can be put to good use.

Even when I?m sure you?re faking, I get sucked into the performance.? I want to give you that second cookie you?re demanding only because I don?t have an Oscar to hand over instead.

Seriously, I don?t know how you do it.? You cry over the most trivial things, but still, you get me to believe that nothing matters more in the world than you getting a turn with the ?good? xylophone.

I don?t want to spoil you by always giving in, but I don?t want to stifle your theatrical gifts either.

Bravo, kids.? Brav.? O.

?

4.? I don?t know how we?re going to pay for your college.

I?m really grateful you guys have no concept of money, because if you knew what college costs versus how much money we have in the bank, you?d wake up crying at night even more than you already do.

Let?s put it in terms of Play-Doh.? If you add together all the various sources of Play-Doh at our disposal ? the cans in the craft cabinet, the little mini tubs that came with the Cookie Monster Letter Lunch set, a few unopened packages we keep stashed in the closet for rainy days ? it?s a comfortable amount.

Now picture?all the Play-Doh in the world.? That?s what a year of college is going to cost by the time you guys are filling out your applications.? I?m not exaggerating.? Our Play-Doh supply would barely cover one semester of independent study credits at that college in Texas that gets all the oil subsidies.? We?re screwed.

I mean, sure, we have a few years.? We?ll keep stashing away Play-Doh in the meantime, but don?t get your hopes up.

?

5.? I find your speech impediments adorable.

I?ve written here before about?how much I hate baby talk, and I stand by that.? Grownups trying to sound like kids are idiotic.? But secretly, I love hearing little kids try to sound like grownups, and failing.

I love Sutton?s slight lisp, and I get a kick out of the way Bennett drops his ?S? from the start of words (?Daddy, ?utton wants a ?nack!?)? These things remind me, as you?re growing up, that you?re still going to be little kids for a while.

I know better than to encourage poor speech habits, of course.? I do the right thing, suppressing my smiles and correcting you gently, so you?ll learn to speak properly.? But secretly, whenever you mangle the English language, I?m thinking, ?Aww!?

?

6.? Your other Grandpa, my dad, is dead.

Sorry, this one?s kind of a downer.? I?ve shown you pictures of my dad, and I?ve told you a bit about him, but I?m really grateful that you?re still too young to ask the big question: ?How come we?ve never met him??? To explain that, I?d have to tell you about death.? Then you?d figure out the really big secret, that daddies can die.

Ugh, I just can?t have that talk with you.? And it?s not just about you not being ready.? I?m not ready either.? I don?t know when I will be.

When we talk about your mystery Grandpa, I tell you the good things, and then I change the subject.? I know I won?t be able to get away with that forever, but for now, that?s the best plan I have.

Grandpa loved kids, by the way.? You would?ve had so much fun with him.

?

7.? ?F#&%?, ?S*@#?, A$$#@!&?.

You know that Madonna song we love to sing along to?? You?ve probably noticed how I always turn down the volume when M.I.A.?s rap part comes on.? Let?s just say there are a few vocabulary words which may come in handy later in life, but which I?m glad you haven?t picked up on just yet.

?

8.? I was an even pickier eater at your age than you are.

I spend way more energy than any sane person should trying to get you kids to eat things you don?t want to.? Even your junk food diet is limited.? C?mon, why can?t you see how awesome Taco Bell is?

Here?s the truth, though: If I?m always encouraging you to try new foods, it?s mostly because I don?t want you to end up like me.? I?m living proof you can live to the age of 14 eating nothing but peanut butter sandwiches and pretzels.

Sure, at some point my tastes got a bit more exotic (i.e., Taco Bell), but I?m hoping that, unlike me, you?ll have at least sampled each of the four food groups before you reach puberty.

?

9.? Someday, I?m going to go back to work.

I know you don?t understand work.? That?s why you?ll sometimes cry in the middle of the afternoon and demand to pick Daddy up at the train station, as if he?s just waiting there all day for us to swing by.

Work takes daddies away from their kids, that?s all you really grasp of the concept.? Well, this may come as a shock to you, but before you were born, I used to work, too.? Staying home with you is better than any job I?ve ever had, and it?s worth every sacrifice Daddy and I have had to make.? It?s not going to last forever, though.? In the future, you won?t need me as much, at least not as much as we?ll need the second income.

A few months ago, I was in the running for a job, one that would?ve been too good to pass up. ?I?m not going to lie, I was excited about the prospect.? I was also heartbroken.? I imagined what it would be like to tell you I was going back to work, that you would now have two daddies you hardly ever saw.

Then you?d cry about how much you missed both of us, to a person we hired to take care of you all day.

?

10.? You guys are my best friends.

I used to think people who were BFFs with their kids were terrifically sad.? Now, I kind of get it.? No offense to any of my grown-up friends, but you?re way cooler than any of them.

Yes, I need adult conversation once in a while.? I need to talk about politics and celebrity scandals and last night?s?Breaking Bad.? But in general, your reluctant, unfocused recounting of your school day is better than any of that.? Really?? Billy spilled his juice at snack time?? Tell me more!

Again,?you can never know this, because the only thing sadder than you being my best friends would be if I were yours.? You don?t need a graying old doofus roughly 14 times your age as a buddy.? You need me as a parent.? My job isn?t to play trains with you and Billy after school, it?s to serve you juice? and to send Billy?s parents the cleaning bill when he spills it all over you.

F#&%in? Billy.

Source: http://www.scarymommy.com/secrets-we-keep-from-our-kids/

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৬ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

A Massacre of Negligence

In 2010, the United Nations sent a group of soldiers from Nepal on a largely U.S.-financed peacekeeping mission in post-quake Haiti. But the U.N. neglected to adequately screen the mission?s soldiers for cholera, a disease that was raging in Nepal at the time but that Haiti had never experienced. Shortly after the soldiers moved to the U.N. base in Haiti located upstream from a major river system, Haitians began to contract the disease at an alarming rate, sickening more than 647,000 Haitians and taking more than 8,000 lives. Since then, U.N. leaders have attempted to deny the organization?s role in the epidemic and last week declared claims brought by Haitian families in the wake of the epidemic null and void. Read Jonathan Katz?s full story about the U.N. fiasco here.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=1b8c74d2de774a363a1d6ed4d2c01431

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New device to monitor fetal heart development

Feb. 25, 2013 ? Technology developed at The University of Nottingham has been used in a breakthrough study aimed at developing the first comprehensive model of a fully functioning fetal heart.

The abdominal fetal ECG device, designed originally by academics in the University's Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering and on commercial sale throughout the world since 2008 through the University spin-out company Monica Healthcare Ltd, has been used to observe living fetal hearts of babies in their mothers' wombs.

The collaborative study led by experts at The University of Leeds has discovered that the walls of the human heart are a disorganised jumble of tissue until relatively late in pregnancy -- with development much slower compared to other mammals.

Professor Barrie Hayes-Gill, Professor of Electronic Systems and Medical Devices at The University of Nottingham and joint founder and research director at Monica Healthcare said: "It's absolutely fantastic to see our device being used to detect fetal ECG morphology (i.e. ECG shape) in a non-invasive manner from the surface of the maternal abdomen. In this study the Monica device has been specifically deployed to observe the development of the fetal heart as it goes through gestation.

The fetal heart monitor is a portable, non-invasive device which attaches to the mother's abdomen and measures the electrical activity from the heart of the baby inside her womb. It is currently being used worldwide to monitor fetal heart rates during labour and delivery.

The device uses complex algorithms to correctly identify signals related to the fetal heart rate (FHR) using sensitive ECG-style electrodes. This method of using electrophysiological signals differs from current external monitoring devices that collect FHR and uterine activity data based on physical changes (e.g. change in reflected sound waves and changes on strain gauge) that may cause problems in data interpretation.

The monitor is simple to use, beltless, requires no wires to connect to the display or printer. There is also no need for the constant re-positioning of transducers, which is required with older technology and the mother is free to walk around if necessary.

As part of their study, which has been published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface Focus, the team from the University of Leeds used the device to administer a weekly fetal ECG recording from 18 weeks until just before delivery.

The data from this, alongside two different MRI scans from the hearts of dead fetuses, was incorporated into a 3D computerised model built up using information about the structure, shape and size of the different components of the heart.

Early results suggest that the human heart may develop on a different timeline from other mammals. While the tissue in the walls of a pig heart develops a highly organised structure at a relatively early stage of a fetus' development, their work suggests there is little organisation in the human heart's cells until 20 weeks into pregnancy. Despite this, the human heart has a regular heartbeat from about 22 days.

Developing an accurate, computerised simulation of the fetal heart is critical to understanding normal heart developments in the womb and, eventually, to opening new ways of detecting and dealing with some functional abnormalities early in pregnancy.

Dr Eleftheria Pervolaraki, lead researcher on the project at the University of Leeds' School of Biomedical Sciences, said: "For a heart to be beating effectively, we thought you needed a smoothly changing orientation of the muscle cells through the walls of the heart chambers. Such an organisation is seen in the hearts of all healthy adult mammals.

"Fetal hearts in other mammals such as pigs, which we have been using as models, show such an organisation even early in gestation, with a smooth change in cell orientation going through the heart wall. But what we actually found is that such organisation was not detectable in the human fetus before 20 weeks," she said.

Professor Arun Holden, from The University of Leeds' School of Biomedical Sciences, said: "The development of the fetal human heart is on a totally different timeline, a slower timeline, from the model that was being used before. This upsets our assumptions and raises new questions. Since the wall of the heart is structurally disorganised, we might expect to find arrhythmias, which are a bad sign in an adult. It may well be that in the early stages of development of the heart arrhythmias are not necessarily pathological and that there is no need to panic if we find them. Alternatively, we could find that the disorganisation in the tissue does not actually lead to arrhythmia."

A detailed computer model of the activity and architecture of the developing heart will help make sense of the limited information doctors can obtain about the fetus using non-invasive monitoring of a pregnant woman.

Professor Holden said: "It is different from dealing with an adult, where you can look at the geometry of an individual's heart using MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) or CT (Computerised Tomography) scans. You can't squirt x-rays at a fetus and we also currently tend to avoid MRI, so we need a model into which we can put the information we do have access to."

He added: "Effectively, at the moment, fetal ECGs are not really used. The textbooks descriptions of the development of the human heart are still founded on animal models and 19th century collections of abnormalities in museums. If you are trying to detect abnormal activity in fetal hearts, you are only talking about third trimester and postnatal care of premature babies. By looking at how the human heart actually develops in real life and creating a quantitative, descriptive model of its architecture and activity from the start of a pregnancy to birth, you are expanding electrocardiology into the fetus."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Nottingham.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. E. Pervolaraki, R. A. Anderson, A. P. Benson, B. Hayes-Gill, A. V. Holden, B. J. R. Moore, M. N. Paley, H. Zhang. Antenatal architecture and activity of the human heart. Interface Focus, 2013; 3 (2): 20120065 DOI: 10.1098/rsfs.2012.0065

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/~3/EMcB8fNUsCE/130225102534.htm

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Alcatel Idol X hands-on (video)

Alcatel Idol X handson video

Alcatel converted its One Touch Idol line from a duo to a trio with today's launch of yet another set at Mobile World Congress: the Idol X. While not quite as thin as its 6.45mm-thin Idol Ultra sibling, at 7mm thick with a tiny 2.4mm bezel it is definitely is about as small as a 5" set can get. The Idol X's giant 1080p IPS display is fantastic to look at and Jelly Bean is snappy driven by a quad core MediaTek MT6589 1.2GHz CPU. Like many of Alcatel's other sets the range of config option varies by market and the same is true here as we'll see both 13 and 8-megapixel variants -- both with 1080p front facing cameras -- and dual or single-SIM, with the single variety getting a bonus microSD slot. While the Idol X is not equipped with LTE it does have 42Mbps HSPA+ connectivity, quad-band GSM and offers dual-band UMTS in both 900MHz / 2100MHz or 850MHz / 2100MHz frequencies.

Alcatel's all about mass market, it isn't chasing the likes of Apple or Samsung but rather is quite happy to simply make "devices for people." So while 2012 marked its first foray into smartphones, judging by what we've seen so far in 2013 from them it seems they've nailed affordability while maintaining a surprising amount of quality, a great combination. Join Myriam just after the break for a quick video tour.

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/24/alcatel-idol-x-hands-on-video/

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রবিবার, ২৪ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

UFC 157 prelims: Dennis Bermudez, Matt Grice deliver Fight of the Year candidate

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- UFC 157's preliminary card started with a bang and ended with a snoozer on Saturday.

Dennis Bermudez took a tight split decision in a fight that will go down as a fight of the year candidate. He won it 29-28, 28-29, 29-28 over Matt Grice.

Bermudez fell into full mount early in the round and rained punches down on Grice's head, but Grice got out and came back late in the round by leveling Bermudez with a left hook.

But it's the third round of the fight that the MMA world will remember. Bermudez threw everything but the kitchen sink at Grice, but Grice hung in. He continued to throw kicks and punches at Bermudez right up until the horn sounded and a grateful crowd in Anaheim came to its feet.

?That was insane. Somewhere around the second round I woke up and thought 'Oh, I?m in a fight, I think I am in California somewhere'," Bermudez said. "If he?d given me a reason, maybe I would have quit. I had that battle inside me where I maybe could have [quit] but I won that battle and from there got back into the fight."

Brendan Schaub used takedowns, and little else, to beat Lavar Johnson 30-27 on all the judges cards in the final fight of the prelims. With the crowd booing, Schaub repeatedly took down Johnson, who had little takedown defense.

Michael Chiesa continued his unbeaten streak with a rear naked choked of Anton Kuivanen. Chiesa rolled through to get into perfect position. He sunk in a rear naked choke that turned Kuivanen's face red. Kuivanen tapped at 2:29 in the second round.

Sam Stout managed another decision win, taking the split 29-28, 28-29 over Caros Fodor. 14 of his fights have ended with judges cards being read, and this decision put his record to 19-8.

Kenny Robertson made quick work of Brock Jardine. He stopped him with a knee bar at 2:57 in the first round.

"Sometime you gotta go with what you are handed. He was on top of me but didn?t have a great posture," Robertson said after the fight. "I saw the opening, so I grabbed his leg and hyper-extended it and he verbally submitted. I?ll take it. It is a first round win in the UFC."

For the card's opener, Nah-Shon Burrell and Yuri Villefort put on a thrilling bout that ended with Burrell taking the decision 30-27, 29-28, 29-28. Villefort had a strong first round, grabbing Burrell for two different submission attempts. But Burrell fought back in the second round, busting up Villefort's face with smart boxing. In the final round, Villefort grabbed a heel hook, but left his face open. Burrell used the opportunity to punch Villefort several time.

After the thriller by Burrell and Villefort, Neil Magny and Jon Manley's bout was a let down for the crowd in Anaheim. They spent much of the bout in a clinch, with Manley trying for a takedown that never came. Magny took the bout with better striking as the bout wore on.

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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/ufc-157-prelims-dennis-bermudez-matt-grice-deliver-033448621--mma.html

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Capital Sports Management Inc. Unveils Lineup for 2013 Ottawa Senators Summer Hockey Camps

Sports & Recreation ? Posted by OttawaStart on February 23, 2013
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Capital Sports Management Inc. (CSMI) announced today that both the Bell and Cavanagh Sensplex are now accepting registrations for each of their 32 different summer camps.

Beginning on Monday, July 8, and running for eight consecutive weeks, Ottawa Senators Summer Hockey Camps are designed to provide participants with a fun, hard-working environment where they will improve their abilities and level of enjoyment in hockey.

Held exclusively at the Bell Sensplex, with the exception of the Aug. 12-16 performance and power skating camp based at the Cavanagh Sensplex, each of the week-long camps will blend high-tempo on-ice drills with fun and valuable off-ice activities to maximize the physical and mental development of each participant. Camps are available to male and female players of all abilities from non-competitive levels to elite. Position-specific camps are also available, including the return of Senators goaltending coach Rick Wamsley's annual camp.

New this summer, a shooting and puck control camp will be offered from July 15-19, as well as an additional week of camps that will run Aug. 26-30.

"This year's camp lineup offers more variety than ever before," said CSMI programs manager Andy Bryan. "In continuing to combine top-level instruction with all of the amenities of one of the region's best facilities, we look forward to providing a second to none summer hockey experience for all of our participants".

Detailed information on each of the available camps can be found here: http://www.bellsensplex.ca/programs-summer-hockey-camps.php

The first session of camp runs from July 8-12, with the last session taking place from Aug. 26-30. The majority of last year's summer hockey camps sold out with a record number of participants (nearly 1,200 area youth) spending a portion of their summer honing hockey-related skills. The camps featured guest appearances from Mark Borowiecki, Todd White, Mika Zibanejad, Marc Methot, Corey Cowick and Jakub Culek.




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    Warren pair spearhead support for cancer care

    Rockport ? Leah Wilcox and Talia Willis, sixth-grade students at Warren Community School were concerned about families in their community they knew who were impacted by cancer. So with the support of their teachers, administrators, friends and ...

    Source: http://knox.villagesoup.com/p/warren-pair-spearhead-support-for-cancer-care/966651?source=rss

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    Painting asteroids could nudge them away from Earth

    To protect Earth from space rock threat, a scientist recommended spray painting an asteroid to alter the amount of sunlight reflected by it, thereby changing its trajectory.

    By Mike Wall,?space.com / February 22, 2013

    An artist's illustration of an asteroid flying near Earth.

    Texas A&M University

    Enlarge

    The dramatic space rock events of last week highlighted the need in many people's minds for a viable asteroid-deflection strategy, and one scientist thinks he has a good candidate ? paint.

    Skip to next paragraph

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    ' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

    '; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // --> There is research that is off the wall, some off the charts and some off the planet, such as what a Texas A&M University aerospace and physics professor is exploring. It's a plan to deflect a killer asteroid by using paint, and the science behind it is absolutely rock solid, so to speak, so much so that NASA is getting involved and wants to know much more.

    On Friday (Feb. 15), the 130-foot (40 meters)?asteroid 2012 DA14?gave Earth a historically close shave, missing the planet by just 17,200 miles (27,000 kilometers). Hours earlier, a 55-foot (17 m) object exploded over the Russian city of Chelyabinsk, damaging thousands of buildings and injuring 1,200 people.

    The?asteroid?encounters served as a reminder that Earth sits in the middle of a cosmic shooting gallery, scientists say, and that destructive impacts are inevitable in the future unless humanity takes action.

    One form of action could involve dusting a threatening asteroid with a thin coat of paint. The paint would change the amount of sunlight reflected by the space rock, potentially nudging it away from Earth through the accumulated push provided by many thermal photons as they radiate from the asteroid's surface. (This force is called the Yarkovsky effect, after the Russian engineer who first described it around the turn of the 20th century.) [Photos: Asteroids in Deep Space]

    The scheme would use powdered paint, which the sun's rays would then cure into a smooth coating. The paint would probably have to be applied long before any potential impact ? years or decades, perhaps ? to give the Yarkovsky effect enough time to make a difference.

    "I have to admit the concept does sound strange, but the odds are very high that such a plan would be successful and would be relatively inexpensive," Dave Hyland, of Texas A&M?University, said in a statement. "The science behind the theory is sound. We need to test it in space."

    NASA is interested in Hyland's idea and has approached the researcher to discuss developing such a space test, Texas A&M officials said.

    Hyland is not the only scientist who thinks paint could save Earth from a cataclysmic impact. Last year, an MIT graduate?student?proposed launching a spacecraft that would?bombard a threatening asteroid with paint-filled pellets. The idea won the 2012 Move an Asteroid Technical Paper Competition, which was sponsored by the United Nations' Space Generation Advisory Council.

    Whatever?deflection strategies?researchers devise, the first step toward safeguarding the Earth is to detect and map the orbits of potentially hazardous objects, Hyland said. One million or more asteroids are thought to lurk in near-Earth space, but just 9,600 of them have been discovered to date.

    "The smaller ones like DA14 are not discovered as soon as others, and they could still cause a lot of damage should they hit Earth," Hyland said. "It is really important for our long-term survival that we concentrate much more effort discovering and tracking them, and developing as many useful?technologies?as possible for deflecting them."

    Follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter?@michaeldwall?or SPACE.com?@Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook?and?Google+.?

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/WivFPKMOAmI/Painting-asteroids-could-nudge-them-away-from-Earth

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    শুক্রবার, ২২ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

    Bioversity International announces incoming Director General

    21 Feb 2013 - Rome, Italy.

    Bioversity International announces the appointment of Ms M. Ann Tutwiler as incoming Director General.

    Tutwiler, currently the Special Representative of the Director-General to the UN/Geneva and World Economic Forum of the Food & Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, brings extensive leadership and agricultural development expertise to Bioversity International. She joins Bioversity as Director General on 15 July.

    ?Ms Tutwiler is an outstanding candidate to take over the leadership of Bioversity International at a very exciting time for the organization,? says Dr. Paul Zuckerman, Chair of the Bioversity Board of Trustees. ?For nearly 40 years, Bioversity has played a key role in agriculture and conservation. The organization is working on innovative solutions to some of the most vital world issues ? malnutrition, climate change, poverty ? by connecting research with smallholder farmer and forest communities. Ms Tutwiler will help expand our partnerships and networks and continue to push for innovation in research. She is a leader in the field and I am certain her knowledge of the issues Bioversity is addressing will serve us well.?

    Tutwiler succeeds Dr Emile Frison, who has led Bioversity International for two full terms since August 2003.

    ?Under Dr Frison?s leadership, Bioversity has developed a clear set of strategic priorities and a research agenda that the organization will continue to carry forward. He successfully guided the organization through a significant reform process to reinforce its position as a leading research institution. I sincerely thank Dr Frison for his many contributions, and I congratulate Ms Tutwiler on her appointment,? continues Zuckerman.

    Tutwiler has almost 30 years of experience in agricultural policy and development working in the public and private sectors. She served as Deputy Director-General, Knowledge, at FAO from January 2011 through November 2012, where she coordinated development of cohesive Rome food agency positions on Rio+20 for FAO with the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the World Food Programme (WFP) and Bioversity International.

    As a member of senior management at FAO, she managed five technical departments including Agriculture & Consumer Protection, Natural Resources Management & Environment, Forestry, Fisheries & Aquaculture, Economic & Social Development and Office of Knowledge Exchange, Research & Extension. From June 2009 to January 2011, she worked in the Office of the Secretary for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, leading and coordinating USDA?s participation in the President?s Feed the Future initiative among other responsibilities. Previously, she served as Senior Advisor of International Affairs for the U.S. Agency for International Development, where she recommended reforms to USAID programs in relation to international development in Africa. She was managing director of agricultural markets at The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation from 2006 to 2009.

    She holds degrees in Agribusiness from Purdue University and Harvard Business School, a master?s degree from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, and a bachelor?s degree from Davidson College, where she received the John W. Kuykendall Award for Community Service in 2005.

    As the Director General, Tutwiler will be responsible for leading Bioversity International, forging effective research partnerships and overseeing the organization?s strategic priorities and research agenda.

    ?I?m excited to lead Bioversity International into the future,? said Tutwiler. ?The new strategic priorities and ambitious research agenda provide an excellent foundation to improve nutrition, livelihoods and sustainability and enabling productive and healthy ecosystems. I look forward to helping Bioversity deliver critical research for development outcomes, in close partnership with investors, researchers, governments, the private sector, smallholder farmers and forest communities.?

    Bioversity International is a research-for-development organization working with partners worldwide to use and conserve agricultural and forest biodiversity for improved livelihoods, nutrition, sustainability and productive and resilient ecosystems. Bioversity International is working towards a world in which smallholder farming communities in developing countries of Africa, Asia and the Americas are thriving and sustainable.?

    Bioversity International is a member of the CGIAR Consortium, a global partnership that unites organizations engaged in research for a food secure future. CGIAR research is dedicated to reducing rural poverty, increasing food security, improving human health and nutrition, and ensuring more sustainable management of natural resources. It is carried out by the 15 centres who are members of the CGIAR Consortium in close collaboration with hundreds of partner organizations, including national and regional research institutes, civil society organizations, academia, and the private sector.

    For more information, please contact:
    Bioversity International Office of the Director General
    Tel: (39) 066118202

    For media enquiries, please email:
    Bioversity International Head of Communications
    ?k.khire(at)cgiar.org

    Source: http://www.bioversityinternational.org/index.php?id=7350

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    THE RISING VOICE OF GUN OWNERSHIP IS FEMALE

    USA :: Gun Control ??::?? Print this Article
    THE RISING VOICE OF GUN OWNERSHIP IS FEMALE
    02-21-2013 3:02 pm - Erica Goode- NY Times
    PAINESVILLE, Ohio Mary Ann Froebe stood feet apart with knees slightly bent and aimed the .22-caliber Ruger semiautomatic.

    Youve got some adrenaline running through you right now, said Esther Beris, the coordinator of the northeastern Ohio chapter of A Girl and a Gun Womens Shooting League. Its O.K., just relax.

    Ms. Froebe, 42, a small-business owner who described herself as a virgin gun shooter, concentrated and pulled the trigger. It was awesome, she said, her face flushed, after emptying the 10-round magazine. The sense of control, of being in charge of me.

    In the debate over firearms regulations, the voices of gun owners have largely been those of men. But at firing ranges across the country, a growing number of women are learning to use firearms and honing their skills.

    Womens participation in shooting sports has surged over the last decade, increasing by 51.5 percent for target shooting from 2001 to 2011, to just over 5 million women, and by 41.8 percent for hunting, according to the National Sporting Goods Association.

    Gun sales to women have risen in concert. In a survey last year by the National Shooting Sports Foundation, 73 percent of gun dealers said the number of female customers had gone up in 2011, as had a majority of retailers surveyed in the two previous years.

    Manufacturers have increasingly geared advertising toward women, marketing special firearms models with smaller frames, custom colors (pink is a favorite), and accessories like the concealed carry salmon kiss leather handbag offered by Cobra Firearms or the leopard shooting gloves and Bullet Rosette jewelry sold by Sweet Shot (Look cute while you shoot! is the companys motto).

    Womens shooting clubs have also proliferated not just in small towns like Painesville, but also in Atlanta, Houston, even Manhattan, where a womens gun club meets regularly at a firing range in Chelsea, a neighborhood better known for art galleries.

    On a recent Friday, Ms. Froebe and eight other women attended the Painesville shooting leagues inaugural Breakfast and Bullets gathering at Perkins Family Restaurant for brunch and then moved on to Atwells Shooting Range. There, Ms. Beris taught them how to hold and load a handgun safely and then coached them on the range.

    Though they may share a fierce belief in the Second Amendment with their male counterparts, female gun owners often learn to shoot for different reasons, their interest in and proficiency with firearms not just a hobby or a means for self-defense, but a statement of independence and personal power.

    Tina Wilson-Cohen, a former Secret Service agent who founded She Can Shoot, a womens league with 10 chapters and 3,000 members across the country, said 90 percent of women who joined did so because theyve been a victim at one point of their life, of stalking or date rape or domestic violence, or they have just felt so vulnerable, and they want to feel competent and like they can protect themselves.

    Firearms also often carry a different meaning for women than for men, who grow up with Hollywood images of guns that tell them this is what a real man looks like and thats how a real man acts, and its kind of delusional, really, Ms. Wilson-Cohen said.

    We dont see women acting like this, she said. It doesnt have that bad-ass mentality attached to it.

    Yet women who shoot recreationally often find themselves confronting the misconceptions of the non-gun-owning public, said Mary Stange, a professor of womens studies and religion at Skidmore College and a co-author of Gun Women: Firearms and Feminism in Contemporary America.

    She said that when Nancy Lanza was identified as the owner of the guns her son Adam used to kill 20 children and 6 adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in December, some seemed to blame her. Ms. Lanza, who owned at least five firearms, including a Bushmaster AR-15-style rifle used in the shooting, was labeled in a headline as a gun-crazed mother and was described in some accounts as stockpiling an arsenal.

    What strikes me is the way that, rather than really trying to understand what may have been going on, there is this tendency to want to latch on to conventional arguments and stereotypical images, Professor Stange said. Theres this idea that women are more affiliative, more peace loving, more pacifistic, which should then make women as a group gun averse.

    It is difficult to pinpoint how many gun owners in the United States are women the federal government does not break down background checks by demographic, and most manufacturers do not release information on sales. But Peggy Tartaro, the editor of Women and Guns magazine, a nonprofit publication of the Second Amendment Foundation, said she had found estimates varying from 12 million to 17 million.

    They cross the political spectrum. Professor Stange, who hunts regularly and owns several rifles and shotguns, describes herself as a liberal Democrat.

    Of those who attended the breakfast in Painesville, Ms. Froebe votes Republican. Terri Herbert, 57, a retired special education teacher who said the nephew of a close friend had been killed in a school shooting, is a registered Democrat. She favors background checks on private sales but opposes a ban on military-style semiautomatic rifles or high-capacity magazines. Im not sure gun control is the answer, she said.

    Tamara Wysocki, 52, a caterer, said she wanted a handgun for protection at her business, but would not keep a gun at home. If you have a gun and they have a gun, somebodys bound to get shot, she said.

    Ms. Tartaro, the magazine editor, said that womens interest in guns began increasing in the 1980s, when women began moving into previously male-dominated professions like law enforcement and the military and began taking charge of their own finances and living arrangements. It makes sense that as you think about your financial security and your kids security, the whole idea of personal protection and home defense comes in, she said.

    Smith & Wesson, which in 1989 introduced a LadySmith line of revolvers, was the first manufacturer to recognize the potential of the womens market, Ms. Tartaro said, but other gun makers soon followed. And the attitudes of men gradually changed, she said.

    Maybe 25 years ago, if you put on your power suit with your floppy bow and marched yourself into a gun club and said, Where do I sign up, boys? you might have gotten a couple of funny looks, Ms. Tartaro said. But now they might say: Hey, sit down. What are you interested in? Ill show you mine if you show me yours.

    Advocates of tighter firearms regulations have argued in the past that advertising by gun manufacturers manipulates women into buying guns for protection. An advertisement by Colt in the 1990s showed a mother tucking a child into bed Self-protection is more than your right ... its your responsibility, the ad said and academics argued in 1991 in The Whittier Law Review that such ads were intended to trick women.

    But Ms. Tartaro bridles at the idea that women are not smart enough to decide for themselves whether to buy a gun. After the article appeared, her publication went on the counterattack, running a cover line that said, Are You Too Stupid to Read This Magazine?

    Yet even some of the most ardent female gun enthusiasts said the industry had made a misstep in concluding that all women shooters like pink.

    Professor Stange called gun makers obsession with the color infantilizing. Ms. Wilson-Cohen said that a large majority of females sort of feel like its a slap in the face to assume that a pink gun will draw them in.

    For her part, Ms. Tartaro said, I dont personally care for it.

    But she added that she knew a woman who had a different take, saying, Its not my favorite color, but I bought it because now my husband never touches it.

    -------------------------------
    Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/11/us/rising-voice-of-gun-
    ownership-is-female.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

    Source: http://www.libertynewsonline.com/article_301_32885.php

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    বৃহস্পতিবার, ২১ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

    'Super-pod' of 100,000 dolphins spotted off California (APFN)

    'Super-pod' of 100,000 dolphins spotted off California coast (Video)

    Jaymi Heimbuch
    Science / Natural Sciences
    February 19, 2013

    Wow. It's not often one gets to witness a pod of dolphins numbering in the thousands! This "super-pod" of dolphins was spotted off the coast of California. According to the Telegraph, "Captain Joe Dutra of Hornblower Cruises told local media that the boat tour followed the pod for more than an hour."

    And according to NBC Bay Area, "[Dutra] said the pod was more than 7 miles long and 5 miles wide. Guests aboard the boat started screaming and pointing when they first saw the school of adult and juvenile common dolphins. Dutra estimated there were about 100,000 dolphins swimming in the area."

    It is an event that happened once last January off of Dana Point, California, as well as once around the same time and place the year before, which means it could be a migratory pattern, with many pods of dolphins coming together based on an abundance of food.

    Source: http://disc.yourwebapps.com/discussion.cgi?disc=149495;article=144189

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    Kids Born after Infertility at Risk of Cancer?

    February 21, 2013

    A study presented at the Fertility Society of Australia conference late in 2012 says children born to mothers who struggled with infertility have a 17% increased risk of developing adult or childhood cancer compared to women without fertility problems, but this data isn't suggesting what you might think.

    Scientists from the Danish Cancer Society Research Center and Copenhagen University, led by Principal Investigator Dr. Marie Hargreave, found an increased risk for childhood leukemia, skin cancer, urinary tract cancer, and cancer of the endocrine glands. No other cancers were found statistically significant, which means there isn?t a strong enough association between a mother?s infertility and other types of cancer.

    Dr. Hargreave especially noted that while studies have attempted to prove correlation between fertility drugs and fertility treatment to various types of cancer, the data was inconsistent and could not demonstrate a definitive risk. "Furthermore, if negative effects of assisted reproductive technology are present, they could be related to the underlying infertility rather than the procedure itself,? Hargreave stated. The conditions that cause infertility in the mother could also be the cause of cancer in her offspring, rather than fertility treatment being the cause of cancer.

    One theory says the association between a mother?s infertility and her child?s risk of cancer could be the result of a drug, diethylstilbestrol, that the mother was exposed to in utero. Diethylstilboestrol, or ?Des?, was prescribed to prevent miscarriage in the 1950s and 1960s (similar to the use of Dexamethasone "Dex" for miscarriage prevention today), but reports are surfacing in recent news that female offspring conceived in that generation are suffering infertility and cancer as a result.

    Reassuringly, scientists note that the data analyzed in this study was from offspring born since 1963--nearly two decades before IVF came to Denmark, meaning much of this data was collected before IVF was even available. Advances in the field of reproductive medicine have resulted in more than five million in vitro fertilization (IVF) births and more recent studies are showing IVF babies are happy in adulthood and enjoy good physical health.

    There is a definite need for research on the health outcomes of children born to parents with infertility and of fertility treatment. This does not suggest that fertility treatment will cause cancer, but should raise awareness of the overall risk of cancer as it pertains to the infertility diagnosis itself.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/FertilityAuthority/~3/SWtY_XObkI8/kids-born-after-infertility-risk-cancer

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    Early human burials varied widely but most were simple

    Early human burials varied widely but most were simple [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Feb-2013
    [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

    Contact: David Kelly
    david.kelly@ucdenver.edu
    303-315-6374
    University of Colorado Denver

    Fewer women than men buried

    DENVER (Feb. 21, 2013) A new study from the University of Colorado Denver shows that the earliest human burial practices in Eurasia varied widely, with some graves lavish and ornate while the vast majority were fairly plain.

    "We don't know why some of these burials were so ornate, but what's striking is that they postdate the arrival of modern humans in Eurasia by almost 10,000 years," said Julien Riel-Salvatore, Ph.D., assistant professor of anthropology at CU Denver and lead author of the study. "When they appear around 30,000 years ago some are lavish but many aren't and over time the most elaborate ones almost disappear. So, the behavior of humans does not always go from simple to complex; it often waxes and wanes in terms of its complexity depending on the conditions people live under."

    The study, which examined 85 burials from the Upper Paleolithic period, found that men were buried more often than women. Infants were buried only sporadically, if at all in later periods, a difference that could be related to changes in subsistence, climate and the ability to keep babies alive, Riel-Salvatore said.

    It also showed that a few ornate burials in Russia, Italy and the Czech Republic dating back nearly 30,000 years are anomalies, and not representative of most early Homo sapiens burial practices in Eurasia.

    "The problem is that these burials are so rare there's just over three per thousand years for all of Eurasia that it's difficult to draw clear conclusions about what they meant to their societies," said Riel-Salvatore.

    In fact, the majority of the burials were fairly plain and included mostly items of daily life as opposed to ornate burial goods. In that way, many were similar to Neanderthal graves. Both early humans and Neanderthals put bodies into pits sometimes with household items. During the Upper Paleolithic, this included ornaments worn by the deceased while they were alive. When present, ornaments of stone, teeth and shells are often found on the heads and torsos of the dead rather than the lower body, consistent with how they were likely worn in life.

    "Some researchers have used burial practices to separate modern humans from Neanderthals," said Riel-Salvatore. "But we are challenging the orthodoxy that all modern human burials were necessarily more sophisticated than those of Neanderthals."

    Many scientists believe that the capacity for symbolic behavior separates humans from Neanderthals, who disappeared about 35,000 years ago.

    "It's thought to be an expression of abstract thinking" Riel-Salvatore said. "But as research progresses we are finding evidence that Neanderthals engaged in practices generally considered characteristic of modern humans."

    Riel-Salvatore is an expert on early modern humans and Neanderthals. His last study proposed that, contrary to popular belief, early humans didn't wipe out Neanderthals but interbred with them, swamping them genetically. Another of his studies demonstrated that Neanderthals in southern Italy adapted, innovated and created technology before contact with modern humans, something previously considered unlikely.

    This latest study, "Upper Paleolithic mortuary practices in Eurasia: A critical look at the burial record" co-authored with Claudine Gravel-Miguel (Arizona State University), will be published in The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Death and Burial in April.

    It reveals intriguing variation in early human burial customs between 10,000 and 35,000 years ago. And this study raises the question of why there was so much variability in early human burial practices.

    "There seems to be little rhyme or reason to it," Riel-Salvatore said. "The main point here is that we need to be careful of using exceptional examples of ornate burials to characterize Upper Paleolithic burial practices as a whole."

    ###


    [ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

    ?


    AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


    Early human burials varied widely but most were simple [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Feb-2013
    [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

    Contact: David Kelly
    david.kelly@ucdenver.edu
    303-315-6374
    University of Colorado Denver

    Fewer women than men buried

    DENVER (Feb. 21, 2013) A new study from the University of Colorado Denver shows that the earliest human burial practices in Eurasia varied widely, with some graves lavish and ornate while the vast majority were fairly plain.

    "We don't know why some of these burials were so ornate, but what's striking is that they postdate the arrival of modern humans in Eurasia by almost 10,000 years," said Julien Riel-Salvatore, Ph.D., assistant professor of anthropology at CU Denver and lead author of the study. "When they appear around 30,000 years ago some are lavish but many aren't and over time the most elaborate ones almost disappear. So, the behavior of humans does not always go from simple to complex; it often waxes and wanes in terms of its complexity depending on the conditions people live under."

    The study, which examined 85 burials from the Upper Paleolithic period, found that men were buried more often than women. Infants were buried only sporadically, if at all in later periods, a difference that could be related to changes in subsistence, climate and the ability to keep babies alive, Riel-Salvatore said.

    It also showed that a few ornate burials in Russia, Italy and the Czech Republic dating back nearly 30,000 years are anomalies, and not representative of most early Homo sapiens burial practices in Eurasia.

    "The problem is that these burials are so rare there's just over three per thousand years for all of Eurasia that it's difficult to draw clear conclusions about what they meant to their societies," said Riel-Salvatore.

    In fact, the majority of the burials were fairly plain and included mostly items of daily life as opposed to ornate burial goods. In that way, many were similar to Neanderthal graves. Both early humans and Neanderthals put bodies into pits sometimes with household items. During the Upper Paleolithic, this included ornaments worn by the deceased while they were alive. When present, ornaments of stone, teeth and shells are often found on the heads and torsos of the dead rather than the lower body, consistent with how they were likely worn in life.

    "Some researchers have used burial practices to separate modern humans from Neanderthals," said Riel-Salvatore. "But we are challenging the orthodoxy that all modern human burials were necessarily more sophisticated than those of Neanderthals."

    Many scientists believe that the capacity for symbolic behavior separates humans from Neanderthals, who disappeared about 35,000 years ago.

    "It's thought to be an expression of abstract thinking" Riel-Salvatore said. "But as research progresses we are finding evidence that Neanderthals engaged in practices generally considered characteristic of modern humans."

    Riel-Salvatore is an expert on early modern humans and Neanderthals. His last study proposed that, contrary to popular belief, early humans didn't wipe out Neanderthals but interbred with them, swamping them genetically. Another of his studies demonstrated that Neanderthals in southern Italy adapted, innovated and created technology before contact with modern humans, something previously considered unlikely.

    This latest study, "Upper Paleolithic mortuary practices in Eurasia: A critical look at the burial record" co-authored with Claudine Gravel-Miguel (Arizona State University), will be published in The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Death and Burial in April.

    It reveals intriguing variation in early human burial customs between 10,000 and 35,000 years ago. And this study raises the question of why there was so much variability in early human burial practices.

    "There seems to be little rhyme or reason to it," Riel-Salvatore said. "The main point here is that we need to be careful of using exceptional examples of ornate burials to characterize Upper Paleolithic burial practices as a whole."

    ###


    [ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

    ?


    AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


    Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-02/uocd-ehb022013.php

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    Cranbury Church Documents Bible's Impact on America

    PFT: Player input sought on rules about low blocks

    NFL Players Association Annual State of the Union Press ConferenceGetty Images

    The NFLPA just held a conference call with the national media, and while they lacked concrete news on issues such as HGH testing or what the salary cap will be for the coming year, the one thing that?s abundantly clear is the two sides still don?t trust each other any farther than they can throw each other.

    NFLPA president Domonique Foxworth said on the topic of HGH testing that players were willing to ?expose themselves to an imperfect test,? but balked at the lack of an appeal in the current NFL proposal.

    In response, league spokesman Greg Aiello just tweeted ?Not true+he knows it.?

    The lack of trust was mentioned several times during nearly an hour-long call, specifically on the topic of HGH testing (which both sides agree to in theory, but can?t figure out how to implement).

    Much of that lack of trust seems to stem directly from Commissioner Roger Goodell?s handling of the bounty case.

    ?If (players) don?t trust anyone on Park Avenue, it?s hard to get anything done,? Foxworth said. ?If I wanted to get them to trust Roger, I couldn?t.?

    Much of this is simply the saber-rattling that happens when labor unions and employers discuss things. NFLPA assistant executive director of external affairs?George Atallah mentioned issues concerning equipment and training for youth football programs as examples of agreement between the sides.

    But until the two sides can agree on something important at the adult level, it?s unclear if anything will ever be resolved.

    Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/19/competition-committee-seeking-players-input-on-low-block-rules/related/

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    বুধবার, ২০ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

    Notification for admission to PhD in Biochemistry of Manipur University

    N O T I F I C A T I O N
    Dated, the 18th February 2013

    No.MU/ADM-4(AP)/91-BC: As a reminder of the earlier notification dated 25th January 2013, it is notified to all concerned that the screening written test for admission in PhD in Biochemistry will be held on the 22nd February 2013 at 12.30 pm in the premises of the university. All other information, including the list of eligible candidates for appearing at the screening written test, can be seen on the notice board of the department. The eligible candidates must collect the admit cards during office hour on or before 21st February 2013.

    (Dr. L. Rupachandra Singh)
    Professor & Head

    Copy for information to:
    (i) The Assistant Registrar to VC, MU
    (ii) The Registrar, MU
    (iii) Dean, School of Life Sciences, MU
    (iv) Departmental Notice Board
    (v) Print and electronic media for kind publication/announcement

    Categories: Announcements | Permalink

    Source: http://kanglaonline.com/2013/02/notification-for-admission-to-phd-in-biochemistry-of-manipur-university/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=notification-for-admission-to-phd-in-biochemistry-of-manipur-university

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    Is This Redesign Enough to Make You Care About Yahoo Again?

    We've been hearing rumors of a big, game-changing Yahoo redesign since Marissa Mayer came on board as CEO, so hold onto your butts because it's finally here. The new Yahoo has an customizable infinite scroll newsfeed! It has Facebook integration! And more! But is it enough to make you give a hoot about Yahoo again? If you ever did to begin with? More »


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    Multimillion-dollar diamond heist in Brussels

    BRUSSELS (AP) ? Eight masked gunmen forced their way through the security fence at Brussels' international airport, drove onto the tarmac and snatched some $50 million worth of diamonds from the hold of a Swiss-bound plane without firing a shot.

    The gang responsible for one of the biggest diamond heists in recent years used two black vehicles with a flashing blue police lights in their daring raid late Monday, said Anja Bijnens, spokeswoman for the Brussels prosecutor's office.

    "They tried to pass themselves off as police officers," Bijnens said Tuesday. The robbers, who wore outfits resembling dark police clothing, got away with 120 parcels, mostly containing diamonds but some also holding precious metals.

    Police said they found a burnt-out minivan believed to be involved in the robbery near the airport later Monday night.

    The heist was estimated at some $50 million in diamonds, said Caroline De Wolf of the Antwerp World Diamond Center. "What we are talking about is obviously a gigantic sum," De Wolf said.

    The robbers forced their way through a perimeter fence, at a place where two work sites obstructed a clear view, Bijnens said. There were no details about how the hole was opened but airport authorities said it must have taken more than simply blasting through it with a vehicle.

    The robbers drove up to the Swiss passenger plane some 20 minutes before departure time, brandishing their machine guns. Then they methodically broke into the hold, which was accessed from outside, to choose their loot.

    Passengers were unable to see the drama beneath them, said Bijnens.

    The robbers finished their clinical operation with a high-speed departure through the same hole in the fence, completing the spectacular theft within barely five minutes, Bijnens said.

    Airport spokesman Jan Van Der Cruijsse could not explain how the area could be so vulnerable to theft. "We abide by the most stringent rules," he said.

    The Swiss flight, bound for Zurich and operated by Helvetic Airways, was canceled.

    A decade ago the port city of Antwerp, the world capital of diamond-cutting, was the scene of what was probably one of the biggest diamond heists in history, when robbers took precious stones, jewels, gold and securities from the high-security vaults at Antwerp's Diamond Center, yielding loot that police in 2003 estimated to be worth about $100 million at the time.

    Monday's heist though was a fresh blow to the Antwerp industrial diamond center which prides itself on security and discretion.

    "This is causing quite some unrest," said De Wolf. "It was incredible how easy it all went. This is worrying in terms of competitiveness, since other diamond centers are ready to pounce and take over our position."

    Antwerp's Diamond Center stands in the heart of the high-surveillance diamond district where police and hundreds of cameras work around the clock, and security has been beefed up further since the spectacular 2003 robbery. Shipments to the airport leave aboard armored trucks on an almost daily basis.

    The shipment was not extraordinary, since on any given day, some $200 million in polished and rough stones go through the Antwerp diamond center.

    Monday's parcels contained rough and polished stones heading for Switzerland, where many of the 120 parcels were intended for different handlers.

    The insurance for air transport ? handled sometimes by airlines themselves or external insurance companies ? is usually relatively cheap because it's considered to be the safest way of transporting small high value items, logistics experts say.

    Unlike a car or a truck, an airplane cannot be waylaid by robbers once it's on its way, and it is considered to be very secure before the departure and after the plane's arrival because the aircraft is always within the confines of an airport ? which are normally highly secured.

    Philip Baum, an aviation security consultant in Britain, said the robbery was worrying ? not because the fence was breached, but because the response did not appear to have been immediate. That, he said, raised questions as to whether alarms were ringing in the right places.

    "It does seem very worrying that someone can actually have the time to drive two vehicles onto the airport, effect the robbery, and drive out without being intercepted," Baum said.

    ___

    Juergen Baetz and Don Melvin contributed to this report from Brussels.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/multimillion-dollar-diamond-heist-brussels-105956646.html

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