Sunday, March 31, 2013

travel & leisure: An Excellent Glance at Yarra Valley Organized Tours

By Bria V. Dezenzo

Melbourne Australia is one of the world's leading tourist hot spots. Supplying these types of activities as Beneficial Ocean Road, Mount Hotham snowfields, the Grampian Mountains, very good wind surfing and breathtaking landscapes; it is not complicated to decide on lots to view and do in this gorgeous part of the globe.

Regardless of whether you have a desire for indoors or outdoors, you will find great amounts of thrilling elements right at your fingertips (and in any type of weather conditions) around the Melbourne region. Yarra valley winery tours are definitely proving well-known as well as fast turning into something to attempt to do when going to Victoria.

If you are moving to the Melbourne region and are also trying to find for exciting things to complete aside from surfing, beaches and world class dining, you can also find rarer activities on offer, including the Yarra Valley wine tours.

Throughout the Yarra Valley wine organized tours, you possibly can visit Yering Station and also Roachford Winery for cellar door wine sampling. You will discover guides who will inform you on the proper process to try and sample the bottles of wine. You will discover some of the very best dining establishments within the area where you could go for your best special treats as well as the top wine beverages.

As of the present, many tour corporations have gone through a quick growth with the number of vacationers and smaller parties lining up to feel Melbourne wine tours; which typically explore unbelievably numerous wineries within the short driving getaway in the metropolis.

The Yarra Valley is unquestionably the country's most ancient and most excellent wine spot, promoting striking landscapes, interesting people and, needless to say, remarkable wines. Yarra Valley wine tours can provide a number of award-winning locations that you can discover including Domaine Chandon, Yerring Station and Rochford Wineries.

One of the very best Australian vineyards within the area, Yarra Valley Wineries makes some of the highest rated wines in the world. Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Gris, Shiraz and Riesling also are produced jointly by the Yarra Valley Wineries. Every vineyard in the community has their particular specialty but the cool climate makes it very well suited to making chardonnay, pinot noir and sparkling wine.

Wineries Yarra Valley offers the chance to try out a few of the very best wines and relax in Yarra vineyards. I am certain that you and your loved ones will have a truly remarkable time.

Source: http://bidding-travel.blogspot.com/2013/03/an-excellent-glance-at-yarra-valley.html

Chris Dorner 1800 Flowers walking dead The Pope bruno mars the Grammys 2013 State of the Union 2013

Friday, March 29, 2013

How Psychology is Used in Advertising | Channel N

A cute and educational animated short film about ?Psychology and Advertising.? Using images and style from the 1950s, the cartoon character ?Little Timmy? learns lessons about direct and indirect messages, the psychology of colours, and more.

Sweet, funny, clever, and you?ll likely have fun while learning a few things about how marketers persuade you to buy products.

Sandra Kiume is a mental health advocate from Vancouver, Canada, and the founder of @unsuicide. Along with maintaining Channel N, she contributes to World of Psychology.

Like this author?
Catch up on other posts by Sandra Kiume (or subscribe to their feed).



????Last reviewed: 28 Mar 2013

APA Reference
Kiume, S. (2013). How Psychology is Used in Advertising. Psych Central. Retrieved on March 29, 2013, from http://blogs.psychcentral.com/channeln/2013/03/how-psychology-is-used-in-advertising/

?

Source: http://blogs.psychcentral.com/channeln/2013/03/how-psychology-is-used-in-advertising/

Victor Cruz nfl standings Vicki Soto Adam Lanza fox news obama cnbc

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Google adds street views inside Japan nuclear zone

(AP) ? Concrete rubble litters streets lined with shuttered shops and dark windows. A collapsed roof juts from the ground. A ship sits stranded on a stretch of dirt flattened when the tsunami roared across the coastline. There isn't a person in sight.

Google Street View is giving the world a rare glimpse into one of Japan's eerie ghost towns, created when the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami sparked a nuclear disaster that has left the area uninhabitable.

The technology pieces together digital images captured by Google's fleet of camera-equipped vehicles and allows viewers to take virtual tours of locations around the world, including faraway spots like the South Pole and fantastic landscapes like the Grand Canyon.

Now it is taking people inside Japan's nuclear no-go zone, to the city of Namie, whose 21,000 residents have been unable to return to live since they fled the radiation spewing from the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant two years ago.

Koto Naganuma, 32, who lost her home in the tsunami, said some people find it too painful to see the places that were so familiar yet are now so out of reach.

She has only gone back once, a year ago, and for a few minutes.

"I'm looking forward to it. I'm excited I can take a look at those places that are so dear to me," said Naganuma. "It would be hard, too. No one is going to be there."

Namie Mayor Tamotsu Baba said memories came flooding back as he looked at the images shot by Google earlier this month.

He spotted an area where an autumn festival used to be held and another of an elementary school that was once packed with schoolchildren.

"Those of us in the older generation feel that we received this town from our forbearers, and we feel great pain that we cannot pass it down to our children," he said in a post on his blog.

"We want this Street View imagery to become a permanent record of what happened to Namie-machi in the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster."

Street View was started in 2007, and now provides images from more than 3,000 cities across 48 countries, as well as parts of the Arctic and Antarctica.

___

Online: Namie Street View link: http://goo.gl/maps/iFIWD

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at www.twitter.com/yurikageyama

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-03-27-Japan-Nuclear%20Images/id-0e3c3131eb6c4520b549fe54acd534a0

case mccoy case mccoy UFC 155 Jack Klugman merry Christmas a christmas story twas the night before christmas

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Behind Turkish-Israeli reconciliation, concerns about Syria

The deal will help rebuild intelligence links between Turkey and Israel. The Turks do not want to be caught off guard by any use or transfer of chemical weapons in nearby Syria.?

By Christa Case Bryant,?Staff writer, Scott Peterson,?Staff writer / March 24, 2013

Syrian refugees cross the border to Turkey in this December file photo.

Muhammed Muheisen/AP

Enlarge

Jerusalem; and Istanbul, Turkey

Israel and Turkey have gotten back together after nearly three years, not so much because they?re in love but because of mutual concern that Syrian chemical weapons could fall into the wrong hands.?

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + 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'; // -->

The renewal of full diplomatic ties between Israel and Turkey, brought about March 22 with strong US pressure, will enable the estranged allies to better thwart jihadi groups who have penetrated Syria and prevent them from acquiring weapons of mass destruction. In a region roiled by upheaval and rising concern about Syria, the reconciliation marks a welcome step of progress ? one that caught many by surprise.

?We?re all very excited?. The first thing to do is to sit together ? probably not just one on one, but with Americans in the room ? and share intelligence,? says an Israeli official, adding that Jordan will also be brought into the discussions about how to secure Syria?s borders. ?As for us, we?re not in the business of sending ground troops to Syria. But other types of action may be possible, such as destroying certain targets from the air.??

The potential for such cooperation was enough to woo a recalcitrant Turkey to agree to normalize relations after the May 2010 Mavi Mamara incident, in which Israeli naval commandos killed nine Turks ? one of them a Turkish-American ??when they raided a flotilla attempting to break Israel?s economic blockade of Gaza.

?Turkey?s intelligence assets are not anywhere near Israeli intelligence assets,? says Michael Koplow, an analyst of Turkish and Israeli affairs at the Israel Institute in Washington, who recently returned from a two-week trip to Turkey.

?The Turks don?t want to be caught with chemical weapons deployed in Aleppo, which is only 50 miles from Turkish border, and not know about it ahead of time,? says Mr. Koplow, author of the blog?Ottomans and Zionists. ?It?s at a point where they need the Israelis? cooperation.?

US pressure brings reconciliation

After the Mavi Mamara incident, Turkey recalled its ambassador to Israel and demanded that Israel apologize for the deaths and end its blockade on the Hamas-run Gaza Strip. Israel refused, saying the deaths came when its commandos were assaulted by activists on the ship, and continued to seal off Gaza to prevent weapons from getting into the hands of Hamas. Turkey expelled the Israeli ambassador.

The Americans have long pressured both countries to reconcile. Heightened diplomatic efforts in the few weeks ahead of President Obama?s visit to Israel paid off just before he left on March 22. He reportedly called Erdogan himself, then passed the phone to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who admitted ?a number of operational mistakes? by Israel?s military and conveyed Israel?s ?apology to the Turkish people for any mistakes that might have led to the loss of life or injury? and agreed to provide compensation, according to a statement from the prime minister?s office. ?Prime Minister Netanyahu also noted that Israel had substantially lifted the restrictions on the entry of civilian goods into the Palestinian territories, including Gaza, and that this would continue as long as calm prevailed.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/lcYMs1OGJko/Behind-Turkish-Israeli-reconciliation-concerns-about-Syria

shark tank john wall gordon hayward gas prices rising stars challenge star trek 2 kathy ireland

Monday, March 25, 2013

T. Boone Pickens: Let's Rethink the Strategic Petroleum Reserve

It's been almost five years since we set out to get America the energy plan it deserves. One thing hasn't changed: the need for aggressive and effective energy leadership in Washington. For the last four decades, Republicans and Democrats alike have fallen short in this regard. Long story short -- we have no national energy plan.

Instead, there has been a proliferation of stop-gap measures that are nothing more than a band-aid approach. One of the best examples is the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, some 727 million barrels of crude oil that we have squirreled away in salt caverns beneath several states.

Does this make any sense? I sure don't think so. Watch this video for more of my thoughts on this issue.

?

Follow T. Boone Pickens on Twitter: www.twitter.com/pickensplan

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/t-boone-pickens/strategic-petroleum-reserve_b_2945326.html

Kayla Harrison Mars landing Gabby Douglas John Orozco Garrett Reid shawn johnson Tony Sly

Sunday, March 24, 2013

New pope opens Holy Week at Vatican on Palm Sunday

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Pope Francis celebrated his first Palm Sunday Mass in St. Peter's Square, encouraging people to be humble and young at heart and promising to go to a youth jamboree in Brazil in July, while the faithful enthusiastically waved olive branches and braided palm fronds.

The square overflowed with a crowd estimated by the Vatican at 250,000 people. Pilgrims, tourists and Romans jostled each other in an eager effort glimpse Francis as they joined the new pope at the start of solemn Holy Week ceremonies, which lead up to Easter, Christianity's most important day.

Keeping with his spontaneous style, the first pope from Latin America broke away several times from the text of his prepared homily to encourage the faithful to lead simple lives and resist the temptation to be sad when life's obstacles inevitably come their way.

"Don't let yourselves be robbed of hope! Don't let yourselves be robbed of hope!" Francis told the crowd, in an apparent reference to the economic difficulties people are grappling with as they try to find adequate work amid a poor job market in much of the world.

At the end of the two-hour Mass, Francis took off his red vestments, and wearing his plain white cassock and skull cap, climbed into an open-topped popemobile to circle through the excited crowd. He leaned out to shake hands, kissed and patted the heads of infants passed to him by bodyguards, and often gave children the thumbs-up sign.

His security detail seemed to be reluctantly dealing with this get-close-to-the-people pontiff, scrambling around the vehicle to pick up this child or that one. At one point, the chief bodyguard, Domenico Giani, was sent back to the mother of a child he had greeted to convey a message from the pontiff, and the ever-tense Giani broke into a smile after his mission was accomplished.

Francis even climbed down from the vehicle, kissed a woman in the crowd and chatted briefly with her, and another man in the crowd leaned over a barrier to squeeze the pontiff on a shoulder ? an unheard of familiarity in the previous pontificate of the reserved Benedict XVI.

In keeping with his stress on giving examples of humility, Francis kissed the hand of an elderly woman who had outstretched an arm to him.

"There is no doubt that there will be a new spring for the church, a renewal" with this pope, said Sister Emma, an Argentine nun in the crowd.

Palm Sunday recalls Jesus' entry into Jerusalem but its Gospel also recounts how he was betrayed by one of his apostles and ultimately sentenced to death on a cross.

Francis presided over the Mass at an altar sheltered by a white canopy on the steps of St. Peter's Basilica.

Recalling the triumphant welcome into Jerusalem, Francis said Jesus "awakened so many hopes in the heart, above all among humble, simple, poor, forgotten people, those who don't matter in the eyes of the world."

Cardinals, many of them among the electors who chose him to be the Roman Catholic church's first Latin American pope, sat on chairs during the ceremony held under hazy skies on a breezy day. He quoted from Benedict when he told the cardinals that while they are "princes" of the church, their leader is the crucified Christ, a further admonition against attachment to temporal power.

The pope ticked off a litany of evils afflicting the world, including wars, "economic conflicts that hit the weakest" as well as corruption. In the final stretch of Benedict's papacy, the Vatican was embarrassed by a leak of documents from the papal apartment, indicating corruption, ambition and rivalries among upper ranks of the Holy See's management.

Francis told an off-the-cuff story from his childhood in Argentina. "My grandmother used to tell us children, 'burial shrouds don't have' pockets," the pope said, in a variation of "you can't take it with you."

Since his election on March 13, Francis has put the downtrodden and poor at the center of his mission as pope, keeping with the priorities of his Jesuit tradition.

In his homily, Francis said Christian joy "isn't born from possessing a lot of things but from having met" Jesus. That same joy should keep people young, he said.

"Even at 70, 80, the heart doesn't age" if one is inspired by Christian joy, said the 76-year-old pontiff.

The pontiff said he was joyfully looking forward to welcoming young people to Rio de Janiero for the Catholic Church's World Youth Day. So far, that is the first foreign trip on the calendar of Francis' new papacy. "I'm coming in July," Francis said in remarks after Mass from the esplanade of the basilica.

During Mass, at the point when the Gospel recounts the moment of Jesus' death, many faithful knelt on hard cobblestones paving the square, and Francis knelt on a wooden kneeler.

A few young olive trees were inserted in dirt placed around the central obelisk in the square.

Holy Week will see at least one break from tradition with this new papacy. Instead of washing priests' feet in a basilica in a symbolic gesture of humility on Holy Thursday, Francis will wash the feet of young inmates at a juvenile detention center in Rome. Other appointments in public will include the Way of the Cross procession at the Colosseum on Good Friday night. Next Sunday, Francis will celebrate Easter Mass in the square.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-opens-holy-week-vatican-palm-sunday-092522798.html

bars lindzi cox bachelor finale courtney robertson ben flajnik hunger games premiere red meat

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Obama Blurs Line Between Law Enforcement And Military - OpEd ...

SWAT

By Jim Kouri -- (March 22, 2013)

While some law enforcement commanders and officers welcome federal assistance during emergencies, others are less enthusiastic about having military personnel involved in operations within their jurisdictions. They believe President Barack Obama and others in government wish to blur the line between policing and warfighting, several experts said following a congressional hearing on Wednesday, March 20.

U.S. Northern Command claims it is working with its partners to improve its ability to support civil authorities during disaster responses, and is now better postured to do so through a new construct that improves coordination among the forces involved, the Northcom commander told Congress during Wednesday?s hearing.

Pointing to the command?s role when Hurricane Sandy dealt a devastating blow to the Atlantic coast in October, Army Gen. Charles H. Jacoby told the House Armed Services Committee that NORTHCOM gained valuable insights and experience that will pay off in the future, according to Donna Mills of the American Forces Press Service.

In a report released to the US Congress recently, analysts assessed what they termed ?preparedness tests? between the US military and government agencies at the federal, state and local levels.

U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM) exercises to test preparedness to perform its homeland defense and civil support missions. The Government Accountability Office was asked to assess the extent to which NORTHCOM is consistent with Department of Defense guidelines for training and exercise requirement involving interagency partners and states in its exercises.

NORTHCOM?s exercise program is generally consistent with the requirements of DOD?s Joint Training System, but its exercise reporting is inconsistent. Since the command was established in 2002, NORTHCOM has conducted 13 large-scale exercises and generally completed exercise summary reports within the required time frame.

However, those reports did not consistently include certain information, such as areas needing improvement, because NORTHCOM lacks guidance that specifies exercise reports? content and format, potentially impacting its ability to meet internal standards for planning and execution of joint exercises, and to compare and share exercise results over time with interagency partners and states.

?While the rationale for using the US military domestically had been debated for years, President Barack Obama appears intent on using our military at least until he can create his promised ?Civilian Security Force? which he said would be as big and powerful as the military,? said political strategist Mike Baker.

?The fact that the military ? in this instance NORTHCOM ? is being trained to operate with our borders should be setting off alarms throughout this nation. But it?s being ignored even by those who profess to be conservatives,? he said.

Nineteen federal agencies and organizations and 17 states and the District of Columbia have participated in one or more of the seven large-scale exercises that NORTHCOM has conducted since September 2005. However, NORTHCOM faces challenges in involving states in the planning, conduct, and assessment of its exercises, such as adapting its exercise system and practices to involve other federal, state, local, and tribal agencies that do not have the same practices or level of planning resources.

Pointing to the command?s role when Hurricane Sandy dealt a devastating blow to the Atlantic coast in October, Army Gen. Charles H. Jacoby told the House Armed Services Committee that Northcom gained valuable insights and experience that will pay off in the future.

?Hurricane Sandy offered us a glimpse of what a complex catastrophe which spanned several states and regions could look like,? he told the panel. The challenge now, he said, is to build on lessons learned to improve the processes Northcom provides the Federal Emergency Management Agency or other designated lead federal agencies.

Inconsistencies with how NORTHCOM involves states in exercises are occurring in part because NORTHCOM officials lack experience dealing with states and do not have a consistent process for including states in exercises. Without such a process, NORTHCOM increases the risk that its exercises will not provide benefits for all participants, impact the seamless exercise of all levels of government, and potentially affect NORTHCOM?s ability to provide civil support capabilities.

?It is up to the residents of individual states to tell their governors they do not want the federal government intruding on law enforcement and public safety issues,? said former NYPD detective and Marine intelligence officer Sid Frances.

?This is especially true if their governors share the same political philosophy as the President and his minions in Washington,? he added.

Source: http://www.albanytribune.com/22032013-obama-blurs-line-between-law-enforcement-and-military-oped/

fox news obama cnbc dexter dexter ny times paul mccartney

Friday, March 22, 2013

$880 Million For Wildlife Agencies - www.ktts.com

CREATED Mar. 21, 2013

From a press release

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Announces $882.4 Million in User-Generated Funding to State Wildlife Agencies

Hunters, Anglers, and Other Recreational Users Provide Record Support for Critical Conservation Projects

More than $882.4 million in excise tax revenues generated in 2012 by sportsmen and sportswomen will be distributed to state and territorial fish and wildlife agencies to fund fish and wildlife conservation and recreation projects across the nation, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced today.

These funds are made available to all 50 states and territories through the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration and Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration programs. Revenues come from excise taxes generated by the sale of sporting firearms, ammunition, archery equipment, fishing equipment and tackle, and electric outboard motors. Recreational boaters also contribute to the program through fuel taxes on motorboats and small engines.

The Service?s Midwest Region will receive more than $102 million in Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration funds and more than $69 million in Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration funds this year. These funds will be apportioned among the states in the region including: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, and Wisconsin.

?The sporting community has provided the financial and spiritual foundation for wildlife conservation in America for more than 75 years,? said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe. ?Through these programs, hunters, anglers, recreational boaters and target shooters continue to fund vital fish and wildlife management and conservation, recreational boating access, and hunter and aquatic education programs.?

?The financial support from America?s hunting, shooting sports, fishing and boating community through their purchases of excise taxable equipment and hunting and fishing licenses is the lifeblood for funding fish and wildlife conservation; supporting public safety education; and

opening access for outdoor recreation that benefits everyone,? said Jeff Vonk, President of the?Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies and Secretary of the South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks. ?Fish and wildlife can be conserved, protected and restored through science-based management and it is critical that all these taxes collected be apportioned to advance conservation efforts in the field.?

The Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Program apportionment for 2013 totals $522.5 million. The Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Program apportionment for 2013 totals $359.9 million. As a result of the statutorily required sequester, these apportionments have been reduced by 5.1 percent, or approximately $39.2 million. Additional Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration grant funding to the states has also been reduced, for a total sequestration-related reduction of approximately $44 million.

The Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Programs have generated a total of more than $15.3 billion since their inception ? in 1937 in the case of the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Program, and 1950 for the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Program ? to conserve fish and wildlife resources. The recipient fish and wildlife agencies have matched these program funds with more than $5.1 billion. This funding is critical to sustaining healthy fish and wildlife populations and providing opportunities for all to connect with nature.

Funding is paid by manufacturers, producers, and importers, and distributed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service?s Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program to each state and territory. For information on funding by state in the Midwest Region, visit:http://www.fws.gov/home/feature/2013/pdf/Master_apport_table_Final_2013.pdf.

The mission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working with others to conserve, protect and enhance fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people. We are both a leader and trusted partner in fish and wildlife conservation, known for our scientific excellence, stewardship of lands and natural resources, dedicated professionals and commitment to public service. For more information on our work and the people who make it happen, visit?www.fws.gov.

Source: http://www.ktts.com/news/199387601.html

resurrection masters tickets one direction tulsa news scalloped potatoes the ten commandments charlton heston

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Media coverage of poverty: Why 'so little'?

Front page from part three of the eight-day Children in Poverty series from the Springfield News-Leader in Missouri.

By Barbara Raab, Senior Producer, NBC News

"Why is there so little coverage of Americans who are struggling with poverty?"

So begins a thought-provoking essay by Dan Froomkin in Nieman Reports, a respected publication that covers journalism, raising a subject that is getting more ink than usual these days.

In his essay, Froomkin examines what he sees as paltry coverage of America's poor. Citing research from the?Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism, Froomkin reports that poverty coverage takes up less than one percent of the news content in the nation's major news outlets. ?

He and others suggest some possible reasons ("neither advertisers nor readers are likely to demand more coverage, so neither will editors," for one) along with a wealth of ideas that could make compelling stories for readers and viewers.

Froomkin's piece begins with an example of what he'd like to see more of: a major series that ran on the front page of the Springfield News-Leader in Missouri's Ozarks for five consecutive days, focusing each day on a specific problem facing children in Missouri's Ozarks region: "No home," "No shoes," "No food," "No car," and "No peace." It's outstanding work, well worth a read.


Froomkin's article led the public editor (a/k/a ombudsman) of The New York Times?to raise questions about her own newspaper's coverage of poverty, and to let readers know she'd be digging further into that question in coming weeks. Among her initial observations: The Times?reporter who has covered poverty policy for decades thinks the paper "has made an extraordinary commitment" to the subject, but some advocates for the poor beg to differ. We'll be watching for more of this discussion in the weeks ahead.

This past Sunday, some of us woke up to?a?lively viewer call-in segment?on C-Span?s Washington Journal?about hunger in America, and about media coverage of it. A lot of callers had strong feelings about the issue, and about what should be done to attack the poverty problems in the country (as did almost all of the hundreds of commenters on our first blog post for the In Plain Sight project here).

Here is more of what the In Plain Sight team has been watching and reading this week:

  • The Philadelphia Inquirer reports?Philly has the highest rate of deep poverty?? that?s income below half the poverty line ??of big cities in America. That's?perhaps not a surprise, because Philadelphia also has the highest poverty rate ? 28.4 percent ? of any of America?s biggest cities.
  • The Washington Post had?a terrific read?on a Rhode Island town that relies on food stamps to survive. Be sure to check out the accompanying?SNAP Map?breaking down food stamp distribution by state.
  • Is hunger in America a ?myth?? A former Montana state legislator?makes the argument?in an op-ed in the Great Falls Tribune.
  • And here?s?one economist?s argument?against raising the minimum wage.

What are you reading and watching on poverty in America? And what are your thoughts about media coverage of poverty??

Source: http://inplainsight.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/20/17385837-media-coverage-of-poverty-why-so-little?lite

Taylor Kinney Beach Volleyball Olympics 2012 Jessica Ennis Aliya Mustafina Kirk Urso London 2012 Javelin roger federer

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Paul lays out steps to provide permanent legal status for illegal ...



Washington (CNN) - Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky on Tuesday waded deeper into an issue fraught with political opportunity and risks: further clarifying his ideas on immigration reform by laying out steps to eventually provide permanent legal status for the millions of illegal immigrants in the U.S.

"I think the conversation needs to start by acknowledging that we aren't going to deport 12 million illegal immigrants," Paul said.

Sen. Rand Paul appears on "The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer" Tuesday from 5-7 p.m. ET, only on CNN.

The senator has previously made clear his position. Yet a widely-watched announcement will surely put him at odds with many of his own tea party supporters ? and stoke louder claims that Paul is courting Hispanics ahead of a potential 2016 presidential run.

Paul's proposal stands firm on an oft-stated Republican stance: any immigration solution must first involve securing the nation's borders. But it is his insistence on allowing millions of immigrants who came to the U.S. illegally to remain that could hurt his standing with conservatives who criticize such a move as amnesty.

Paul delivered the Tuesday speech to the United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce gathered for sessions in Washington. While policy watchers will study the substance of Paul's proposals, political observers are sure to seize on the audience: a consortium of business leaders and entrepreneurs which bills itself as the nation's largest Hispanic business organization.

Aware of the growing influence of Hispanics in national elections - they overwhelmingly backed President Obama's re-election - Paul began his speech with personal anecdotes of his understanding of their culture and frequent plight.

"I lived, worked, played and grew up alongside Latinos," the Kentucky senator said, recalling his Texas upbringing. "As a teenager I worked alongside immigrants mowing lawns and putting in landscaping around businesses."

"At a young age, I came to understand that it makes a difference whether you are a documented immigrant or an undocumented immigrant, that the existence was not easy for the undocumented but that opportunity in America somehow trumped even the poor living conditions and low pay."

Paul criticized his own party for what he called "harsh rhetoric over immigration" that has "obscured our respect and admiration for immigrants and their contribution to America."

"Republicans have been losing both the respect and votes of a group of people who already identify with many of our beliefs in family and faith, and conservative values," Paul said.

From there, he laid out what he likened to a common-sense immigration plan. A first and critical step: securing the nation's borders.

"It's absolutely vital for both the success of our immigration policy and for the purposes of national security that we do secure our borders," Paul said. "Not to stop most immigrants from coming ? we welcome them and in fact should seek to increase legal immigration."

Paul's proposal would mandate that border and other officials certify border security steps and that Congress would vote on the veracity of those steps for several years.

With that, Paul stated, conservatives would be ready to swallow the notion of millions of illegal immigrants staying in the country.

"If you wish to work, if you wish to live and work in America, then we will find a place for you," Paul said.

His plan would provide work visas for the undocumented, with a Congressional panel determining how many visas would be given each year.

The plan would bring "these workers out of the shadows and into becoming and being taxpaying members of society," Paul said in his speech.

In a recent column for the Washington Times, Paul suggested normalizing about 2 million undocumented citizens per year.

"I would start with Dream Act kids, children brought here illegally as minors. Normalization would get them a temporary Visa but would not put them ahead of anyone already waiting to enter the country. These undocumented persons would now be documented but they would still have to wait in line like everyone else. But their path to permanent legal status would be no faster than those currently waiting in line," Paul wrote.

Many conservatives ? especially tea partiers who support Paul ? call such measures amnesty. In recent elections, some activists have defeated Republicans who have supported plans that would provide an eventual path to citizenship.

Should Paul decide to run for president, his stance could prove problematic. Apparently sensing backlash, Paul addressed the criticism, head on during the speech.

"Conservatives, myself included, are wary of amnesty. In fact, if you read the news already, I'm already being accused of it ? and I haven't even given my speech yet," the senator said. "Amnesty is kind of who wants to make up the definition. But I'd say, what we have now is de facto amnesty."

Paul continued: "The solution doesn't have to be amnesty or deportation. Maybe there's a middle ground that we call probation where those who came illegally ? who did break the law, have a period that they have to go through called a probationary period. My plan will not, though ? this is where I disagree with some in the bipartisan plan ? will not impose a national ID card. It will also not have mandatory e-Verify. I don't mind if there's e-Verify that's maybe related to the tax code somehow. But I don't like the idea of making every business owner a policeman."

The Kentucky Republican's remarks come as Congress and the Obama administration ready to tackle the issue of immigration reform. Shortly after his inauguration, the president made clear it is a high priority for his second term. Additionally, a bipartisan group of senators have been working on a framework for immigration reform that would include an eventual pathway to citizenship.

Source: http://dreamact.info/forum/showthread.php?t=41331

chuck colson ufc 145 results orrin hatch marlon byrd charles colson humber raffi torres

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Deal of the Day: 55% off Ballistic Hard Core (HC) Series Case for iPhone 5

Today Only: Purchase the Ballistic Hard Core (HC) Series Case for iPhone 5 and save $32.99!

The Ballistic Hard Core (HC) Series Case is engineered with five layers of protection, including a built in screen protector, shock absorbent polymer, impact resistant polycarbonate, water resistant mesh over all speakers and an extremely durable rotating holster. This case offers security from drops, fingerprints, scratches, dust, and more.

List Price: $59.99???? Today Only: $27.00

Learn More and Buy Now

Never miss a deal. Sign up for Daily Deal alerts!



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/B2irQInwKbA/story01.htm

Pope John Paul II Galaxy S4 google reader carnival cruise nfl nfl lil wayne

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Insert Coin finalist: Observos environmental monitoring sensors hands-on (video)

Insert Coin finalist Observos remote monitoring sensors handson video

We first heard about Observos a month ago when it became a participant in our Insert Coin semifinals, but it wasn't until the Hexagonal Research product showed up at Engadget Expand that we were able to see working models of its environmentally aware sensors. Each sensor, which is shaped like a hexagon and is about twice as thick as a hockey puck, is capable of monitoring the temperature, humidity and barometric pressure of virtually any object you can think of. For indoor sensors, a small screen on top displays the desired information of the item you're monitoring, but there's no need to keep a close eye on it -- the information can be relayed to a web interface by communicating wirelessly with a base station hooked into your router. (Outdoor sensors are more rugged to handle external weather conditions and don't have a display screen.

You can program the setup to alert you via email or text if something is awry, regardless of where you are, and you'll be able to monitor everything directly from your smartphone; in the future, Observos hopes to expand into a control network that would give you the ability to make changes to environmental conditions remotely. In other words, if your plants get low on moisture, you'd be able to program a flow valve to open automatically.

While the company's Expand booth featured only six sensors, up to 40 could be used simultaneously. The Observos team plans to launch its Kickstarter campaign this coming Monday, and backers can grab one indoor sensor and base station together for $175, with the price going up as more sensors are added; outdoor sensors will be a bit more spendy as well. A hacker's board will also be available at $75 for anyone who just wants to tinker around with the goods. Check out our video and full image gallery below for another look.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/PafIzy2pkzU/

no child left behind neurofibromatosis steve jobs fbi file suge knight obama birth control mortgage settlement macauly culkin

Friday, March 15, 2013

From every direction, arms for Syria

The United Nations said today that more than 5 million Syrians ? about 20 percent of its population ? have been left reliant on aid handouts by the ferocious civil war that has raged there for two years now.

A glance at today's headlines gives good reason to expect the number of Syrians driven from their homes to bulge ? they highlight the prospect of more arms flowing into a conflict that has already claimed 70,000 lives and driven more than 1 million refugees into neighboring countries.

Saudi Arabia and Qatar are already arming the rebellion, and Iran and its partner Hezbollah in Lebanon have been sending arms and men to fight alongside President Bashar al-Assad's troops. Now Britain and France want to open the door to direct arming of the rebels themselves. Yesterday, the two countries said they want to lift immediately a European Union embargo on arming the rebels, set to expire on May 31.

"We have to go very fast," French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said, indicating France may act even if it doesn't get an EU green light. "We are a sovereign nation," he emphasized.

The UK doesn't appear to be quite as gung-ho as France, but still seems to be inching close to much stronger intervention in Syria's war. "We have no plans at the moment to do anything different," Foreign Secretary William Hague said in London today.

But he also didn't fully distance himself from the French position, adding, "I have said of course that that policy may need to change again in the future if the situation continues to get worse, more people dying, more people fleeing, but we have no plans at the moment, the British government has no plans to send lethal arms, lethal equipment to Syria."

The one constant of this war has been more people dying and more people fleeing, so Mr. Hague appears to be laying the public ground for a shift. The UN refugee agency said registered Syrians who had fled their country surged to 121,000 last week, 10 percent of the running total of 1 million refugees generated in the past two years. UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres called the increases a "staggering escalation." He said the daily flow of refugees more than doubled from December to February ? from 3,000 a day to 8,000.

This is tragic, but hardly surprising. December is when it first became clear that the rebels had tapped into a new arms supply, since confirmed to be supplied by Saudi Arabia and Qatar, mostly via Jordan. As a result, rebels have made gains in a number areas, but has also intensified fighting that has reduced whole blocks of cities like Homs and Aleppo to rubble. The Syrian government has responded with an even greater willingness to target civilian residential neighborhoods with stand off weapons like mortars, rockets and cluster bombs.

Amnesty International wrote yesterday:

Research carried out inside Syria in the last fortnight confirms that government forces continue to bomb civilians indiscriminately, often with internationally banned weapons, flattening entire neighborhoods. Detainees held by these forces are routinely subjected to torture, enforced disappearances or extra-judicial executions

?While the vast majority of war crimes and other gross violations continue to be committed by government forces, our research also points to an escalation in abuses by armed opposition groups,? said Ann Harrison, Deputy Director of Amnesty International?s Middle East and North Africa Programme. ?If left unaddressed such practices risk becoming more and more entrenched - it is imperative that all those concerned know they will be held accountable for their actions.?

So, will even more arms for the rebels make a difference? While US Secretary of State John Kerry said on a visit to Saudi Arabia earlier this month that the US hopes arms flows to the rebels will force Assad to the negotiating table, so far they have only bolstered the resolve of the rebellion while doing nothing to take away from the commitment of Assad's troops, many of whom belong to his minority Alawite sect and view victory in this war as a question of survival.

The sectarian dimension, both locally and internationally, looms ever larger. Syria is already in many ways a hot proxy war in Shiite Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia's long tussle for regional power and influence. Iraq, which has a Shiite-led government but an angry Sunni minority, is providing aid to both Assad via official channels and to the rebels via Sunni militants who see victory for Syria's rebellion as a potential gamechanger for their own prospects inside Iraq.

With all this activity comes the possibility of blowback for international actors. Secretary Kerry has said the US is convinced that current arms flows are going only to nationalist groups, rather than to the jihadi-inspired organizations like Jabhat al-Nusra, which have been at the forefront of some of Syria's bloodiest recent rebels, but the historic track record of making sure only the "good guys" end up with the weapons is not very promising.

Consider the US and Saudi effort to arm the mujahideen who fought the Soviet Union in Afghanistan in the 1980s. While the US tried to avoid arming what it viewed as the most extreme and anti-American groups fighting the Soviets, the Saudis had far fewer qualms about this. In any event, following the Soviet withdrawal, the weapons that ended up in the hands of what became the Taliban enabled them to win their own civil war, at an enormous cost that country is still counting today.

Syria is not Afghanistan. A different place, a different culture, a different time. But there are at least superficial similarities. The Global Post reported on Wednesday that "hundreds of young Saudis are secretly making their way into Syria to join extremist groups fighting against the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad... over a dozen sources have confirmed that wealthy Saudis, as well as the government, are arming some Syrian rebel groups. Saudi and Syrian sources confirm that hundreds of Saudis are joining the rebels, but the government denies any sponsoring role."

Sound familiar? It should. Saudi fighters flowed to the Afghan jihad too, and were the vanguard of what became Al Qaeda. Back then, the House of Saud didn't consider the dangers of blowback. They may be making the same mistake again.

Meanwhile, US involvement continues apace, and is making for strange bedfellows. The Wall Street Journal had an interesting story this week about the CIA stepping up training and equipping efforts for Iraqi anti-terrorism units that answer directly to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

"The stepped-up mission expands a covert US presence on the edges of the two-year-old Syrian conflict, at a time of American concerns about the growing power of extremists in the Syrian rebellion," WSJ wrote. "Al Qaeda in Iraq, the terrorist network's affiliate in the country, has close ties to Syria-based Jabhat al Nusra, also known as the Nusra Front, an opposition militant group that has attacked government installations and controls territory in northern Syria. The State Department placed Al Nusra on its list of foreign terror organizations in December, calling the group an alias for Al Qaeda in Iraq."

The concerns are obvious. But units that answer directly to Mr. Maliki have frequently been accused of torture and execution, with their efforts largely targeted at Iraq's Sunni Arabs. And Iraq's goal in this is to stem the flow of support and fighters to Syria's rebellion ? a rebellion the US says it would like to see succeed, even as Iraq helps Iran arm Bashar al-Assad.

This all seems likely to grow more, not less, complex. While the outcome remains difficult to predict, the near-term future seems to promise more suffering for Syria's people.

Read this story at csmonitor.com

Become a part of the Monitor community

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/every-direction-arms-syria-173144716.html

dixville notch Remember Remember The 5th Of November African painted dogs What Time Do Polls Open Krysten Ritter v for vendetta Voting Locations

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Life in the universe: Foundations of carbon-based life leave little room for error

Mar. 13, 2013 ? Life as we know it is based upon the elements of carbon and oxygen. Now a team of physicists, including one from North Carolina State University, is looking at the conditions necessary to the formation of those two elements in the universe. They've found that when it comes to supporting life, the universe leaves very little margin for error.

Both carbon and oxygen are produced when helium burns inside of giant red stars. Carbon-12, an essential element we're all made of, can only form when three alpha particles, or helium-4 nuclei, combine in a very specific way. The key to formation is an excited state of carbon-12 known as the Hoyle state, and it has a very specific energy -- measured at 379 keV (or 379,000 electron volts) above the energy of three alpha particles. Oxygen is produced by the combination of another alpha particle and carbon.

NC State physicist Dean Lee and German colleagues Evgeny Epelbaum, Hermann Krebs, Timo Laehde and Ulf-G. Meissner had previously confirmed the existence and structure of the Hoyle state with a numerical lattice that allowed the researchers to simulate how protons and neutrons interact. These protons and neutrons are made up of elementary particles called quarks. The light quark mass is one of the fundamental parameters of nature, and this mass affects particles' energies.

In new lattice calculations done at the Juelich Supercomputer Centre the physicists found that just a slight variation in the light quark mass will change the energy of the Hoyle state, and this in turn would affect the production of carbon and oxygen in such a way that life as we know it wouldn't exist.

"The Hoyle state of carbon is key," Lee says. "If the Hoyle state energy was at 479 keV or more above the three alpha particles, then the amount of carbon produced would be too low for carbon-based life.

"The same holds true for oxygen," he adds. "If the Hoyle state energy were instead within 279 keV of the three alphas, then there would be plenty of carbon. But the stars would burn their helium into carbon much earlier in their life cycle. As a consequence, the stars would not be hot enough to produce sufficient oxygen for life. In our lattice simulations, we find that more than a 2 or 3 percent change in the light quark mass would lead to problems with the abundance of either carbon or oxygen in the universe."

The researchers' findings appear in Physical Review Letters.

The work was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy; the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft Deutscher Forschungszentren and Bundesministerium fuer Bildung und Forschung in Germany; European Union HadronPhysics3 Project and the European Research Council.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by North Carolina State University.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. evgeny Epelbaum, Hermann Krebs, Timo A. L?hde, Dean Lee, and Ulf-G. Mei?ner. Viability of Carbon-Based Life as a Function of the Light Quark Mass. Physical Review Letters, 2013 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.112502

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/EihF0KTZbaA/130313182310.htm

Melissa Nelson sound of music foot locker champs champs calvin johnson calvin johnson

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

GOP sends mixed signals on Obama's outreach effort

President Barack Obama leaves the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, March 12, 2013, after visiting with Senate Democrats in in the first of four meetings with lawmakers this week to discuss the budget. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

President Barack Obama leaves the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, March 12, 2013, after visiting with Senate Democrats in in the first of four meetings with lawmakers this week to discuss the budget. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? House Republicans are sending mixed signals in agreeing to meet with President Barack Obama for talks over the budget impasse, while Obama is conceding that a political accommodation may be impossible.

On the one hand, many Republicans who long have chided Obama for failing to engage their party on the nation's biggest problems are applauding his newfound outreach ? part of a concerted effort by the president to mend ties with Congress in hopes of reaching a grand compromise on fiscal issues.

On the other hand, neither side is backing down from entrenched positions that have prevented deals in the past ? a status quo scenario that Obama acknowledged could preclude any agreement.

"Ultimately, it may be that the differences are just too wide," he said in an interview broadcast Wednesday on ABC's "Good Morning America."

"It may be that, ideologically, if their position is, 'We can't do any revenue,' or 'We can only do revenue if we gut Medicare or gut Social Security or gut Medicaid, if that's the position, then we're probably not going to be able to get a deal," he said.

"That won't create a crisis," Obama said. "It just means that we will have missed an opportunity."

The issues separating the two parties are the same as they have been all along ? fundamental disagreements over whether to pair tax increases with budget cuts in an effort to rein in the nation's deficit.

Exhibit A: the House GOP's new budget proposal, crafted by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., who ran against Obama as the 2012 Republican vice presidential nominee but broke bread with him last week as the president initiated his congressional "charm offensive."

Ryan and House Republicans, who were to meet with Obama at the Capitol on Wednesday, put forward their 2014 budget fully mindful that it would be dead on arrival at the White House and in the Democratic-controlled Senate. The plan, which the White House immediately panned, doubles down on longstanding Republican proposals to slash funding for programs Obama and Democrats sorely want to protect. It includes a repeal of Obama's health care law ? a major component of his legacy ? and Medicare changes that would shift more of the cost to future patients.

At the same time, Obama hasn't budged from his insistence that any budget include new tax revenues ? the key sticking point in February's failed attempt to avert $85 billion in automatic spending cuts that both parties agreed made for bad policy. And Senate Democrats were to unveil a counterproposal Wednesday that aides said would raise taxes by almost $1 trillion and would use savings to repeal the automatic spending cuts ? a nonstarter for House Republicans.

The resolve from both sides to dig in their heels on the most contentious issues raises an important question about Obama's efforts to make nice with Republicans: What's the point?

The president, who was returning to Capitol Hill Wednesday for more discussions, said in the network interview that he was searching for the "common-sense caucus."

Earlier, White House press secretary Jay Carney told reporters, "We're not naive. There are disagreements and obstacles. But the president is at the head of this effort because he believes deeply in it."

In reaching out to lawmakers, Obama hopes to attract more moderate elements from both parties in Congress to deal comprehensively with the nation's long-term fiscal imbalance. The fence-mending campaign started with a dinner Obama hosted last week at a hotel near the White House for a dozen Senate Republicans and continues this week with the House GOP meeting Wednesday and a pair of closed-door sessions with House Democrats and Senate Republicans on Thursday.

In interviews and on Sunday talk shows, many Republicans on the receiving end of Obama's overtures have praised the president for making an effort ? even if they feel it's too little, too late.

"We welcome it," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Tuesday. "I told the president on Friday I hope he'll invite all of our members down for these dinners."

But other Republicans are refusing to give Obama the benefit of the doubt.

Fueling their reluctance is the not-so-distant memory of being hammered by the president on a near-daily basis amid last month's fight over the automatic spending cuts; Obama claimed Republicans alone were responsible for blocking a deal.

"All of a sudden there's a pivot literally overnight, where he wants to come to the caucus and everyone should get out the drums and pound them and sing songs," Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., who chairs the House GOP's campaign committee, said in an interview. "It doesn't work like that in any relationship I've been in."

White House aides say Obama is also sensitive to the fact that for Republicans looking ahead to the 2014 elections, appearing too chummy with a Democratic president could inflict more harm than good ? especially for Republicans from conservative states who fear a primary challenge from their right.

A House leadership aide said that Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, believes Obama's outreach is genuine but that GOP leaders perceive it to be geared mostly toward boosting Obama's own standing. The aide was not authorized to discuss publicly internal GOP deliberations and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The White House argues it's the opposite. Freed from the need to run for re-election, aides said, Obama feels more flexibility to strike deals with Republicans that include provisions that liberals in his own party might not want, such as an adjustment for Social Security cost-of-living increases. Obama proposed the idea Tuesday in a meeting with Senate Democrats, but it's not included in the plan Senate Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray, D-Wash., was to unveil Wednesday.

Murray's proposal would raise taxes by almost $1 trillion over a decade and cut spending by almost $1 trillion over the same period. But more than half of the combined deficit savings would be used to repeal the spending cuts that began to hit the economy on March 1 and are set to continue through the decade.

The president will release his own budget proposal in early April, although aides are playing down its significance because prospects that Congress will take up his plan are negligible.

___

Follow Josh Lederman on Twitter: http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-13-Budget%20Battle/id-1221c6cc956241cf9e0dda309b983156

dallas mavericks washington capitals amare stoudemire tallest building in the world the pitch brandon inge freedom tower

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Zambia's Agriculture Sector Still Significant to Economic Growth ...

By admin - Tue Mar 12, 9:14 am

Zambia?s agriculture sector still remains significant to the country?s economic growth through exports.

The production in agriculture sector has been increasing poverty levels which are still to be scaled down.

Apart from the mining sector, agriculture industry is seen to be an export alternative for the Zambian economy.

Some of Zambia?s major agriculture exports include cash crops like tobacco, cotton and rose flowers.

Francis Lungu gives us an analysis of the agriculture sector and its exports.

Source: http://www.muvitv.com/?p=7453

nc state erika van pelt pat robertson hunger games trailer hunger games trailer in plain sight hunger games movie review

Monday, March 11, 2013

Palo Alto CA Residential Lots and Land For Sale 3/11/2013

Palo Alto residential lots are scarce as general inventory of homes in the area are leading Silicon Valley?s housing market recovery. Very few single family lots have come on the market, driving many who would like to build a custom home in Palo Alto to resort to buying tear-downs and rebuilding. If you?re looking for a home site to build on in Palo Alto ? tear-down or an empty lot ? we can help.

Here are Palo Alto residential lots and land for sale as of March 11, 2013. Click on the property?s Address to view detailed information and photos.

Lot sizes are approximate and use of the land is subject to local government regulation and approval.

?

Contact Us for help buying and selling Silicon Valley real estate

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

John A. Souerbry & Associates Tel (650) 815-6182 (DRE 01370983)

Source: http://www.trulia.com/blog/johnsouerbry/2013/03/palo_alto_ca_residential_lots_and_land_for_sale_3_11_2013

battle royale key largo arnold palmer invitational ryan madson louisiana primary syracuse basketball chipper jones

Sunday, March 10, 2013

ECG screening for competitive athletes would not prevent sudden death, experts say

Mar. 10, 2013 ? The risk of cardiovascular sudden death was very small and only about 30% of the incidence were due to diseases that could be reliably detected by pre-participation screening, even with 12-lead ECGs, according to research in a U.S. high school athlete population presented March 10 at the American College of Cardiology (ACC) Scientific Sessions.

Sudden death in young competitive athletes due to cardiovascular disease is an important community issue, which could impact the design of population-based screening initiatives. The frequency with which these tragic events occur impacts considerations for selecting the most appropriate screening strategy. Currently, athletes are assessed through a healthcare professional performing a physical exam and reviewing the individual's clinical history.

"Screening initiatives for high school-aged athletes has the potential to impact 10-15 million young adults in the U.S.," says the study's lead author, Barry J. Maron, MD, director of the Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Center at the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation in Minneapolis. "This is a controversial issue because some are suggesting that all young competitive athletes should be screened with a 12-lead ECG screening, which would be a massive and costly undertaking. Also, we do not have any evidence to show whether this is clinically necessary."

To assess this need, Maron and his colleagues interrogated the forensic case records of the U.S. National Registry of Sudden Death in Athletes over a 26-year period (1986-2011) to identify those events judged to be cardiovascular in origin occurring in organized competitive interscholastic sports participants in Minnesota. There were more than 4.44 million sports participations, including 1,930,504 individual participants among 24 sports.

There were 13 incidence of sudden deaths in high school student-athletes related to physical exertion during competition (7) or at practice (6). The ages were 12 to18 and each was a white male. Most common sports involved were basketball, wrestling or cross-country running. Sudden deaths occurred in 1 out of 150,000 participants.

Autopsy examination documented cardiac causes in 7 of the 13 deaths. In only 4 athletes (31%) could the responsible cardiovascular diseases be reliably detected by history, physical exam or 12-lead ECG, which is equivalent to 1 in 1 million participants.

"This very low event rate does not warrant changing the current national screening strategy, especially because only one-third of the deaths would have been detectable through additional screening," says Maron. "These findings demonstrate that these tragic events are rare. In addition to these data, no evidence in the medical literature has shown that ECGs reduce mortality in a broad-based screening effort."

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


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/aiayKRGmAb8/130310164221.htm

Chicago Marathon 2012 texas rangers steve jobs meningitis bobby valentine bobby valentine Karrueche Tran

No. 13 Oklahoma St. edges No. 9 Kansas St. 76-70

STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) ? Le'Bryan Nash scored 24 points, Marcus Smart added 21 and No. 13 Oklahoma State hurt No. 9 Kansas State's chances to win the Big 12 championship by beating the Wildcats 76-70 on Saturday.

The Wildcats (25-6, 14-4 Big 12) came into the day tied with rival Kansas for the conference lead, but were left needing the Jayhawks to lose on the road at Baylor later Saturday to come away with their first conference title since 1977 in the Big Eight.

K-State led by as much as nine in the second half and was up 61-57 following Rodney McGruder's three-point play with 4:45 remaining. The Cowboys (23-7, 13-5) didn't allow another field goal for more than 4 minutes and hit 13 straight free throws during crunch time to come away with the win.

McGruder led the Wildcats with 22 points. He had a big game when the teams met in the Big 12 opener, scoring 26 of his 28 points and making all five of his 3-point attempts to lead K-State to a victory. He couldn't match that this time, connecting on only six of his 15 shots.

Thomas Gipson chipped in 15 points and Angel Rodriguez scored 10, but also struggled to a 3-for-16 outing. Kansas State allowed Oklahoma State to shoot 57 percent while making just 39 percent of its own shots, but still managed to hang in until the final minutes.

The Wildcats had a six-game winning streak snapped and lost for just the second time in 12 games.

After McGruder's three-point play, Smart tied it with a jumper and a pair of free throws before Nash's driving layup gave the Cowboys the lead for good at 63-61 with 2:47 remaining. The Wildcats missed eight straight attempts during a 14-1 Oklahoma State that flipped the game in the Cowboys' favor.

Markel Brown finished with 16 points, hitting seven free throws in the final 2 minutes for OSU.

Shane Southwell and Martavious Irving hit 3-pointers to get the Wildcats going after halftime, and soon they put together a 14-1 blitz to charge into the lead. Rodriguez had two baskets and two free throws during the run, and Nino Williams made a jumper along the left baseline to put K-State up 50-41 with 13:12 left.

The Cowboys responded by pushing the pace in transition, and Nash had a two-handed slam and a pair of layups during an 11-0 comeback. Smart's three-point play off a driving runner along the right side of the lane put OSU back up 56-53 with 6:21 remaining ? and fans chanted "One more year!" to the NBA prospect as he hit the free throw.

Oklahoma State led by as much as seven in the first half, going up 22-15 with 6:34 left when Smart finished an 8-0 run with a three-point play. Will Spradling fouled him as he went up for a dunk, and the ball still bounced in after Smart slammed it into the rim. K-State rallied back to get within two before the Cowboys scored the final four points of the first half to go up 36-30 at the break.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-13-oklahoma-st-edges-no-9-kansas-213710979--spt.html

neil degrasse tyson

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Vatican: conclave likely to start early next week; cardinals to vote soon on start date

MANCHESTER, England, March 8 (Reuters) - Manchester United's Champions League exit has made it harder for Manchester City to retain their Premier League title, the champions' manager Roberto Mancini said on Friday. Alex Ferguson's side, whose elimination by Real Madrid on Tuesday has left them with only domestic matters to focus on, had some unlikely supporters of their European campaign in Manchester City. "It's worse for us because I think now they put all their strength into the championship," Mancini, whose side trail United by 12 points, told a news conference. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/vatican-conclave-likely-start-early-next-week-cardinals-123141395.html

kathy griffin jadeveon clowney orange bowl Rose Parade 2013 rex ryan PNC Bank Louisville football