Saturday, November 24, 2012

Walmart Strike Hits 100 Cities, But Fails To Distract Black Friday Shoppers

DALLAS and LOS ANGELES -- As she neared the entrance of a Dallas-area Walmart shortly before midnight on the eve of the shopping frenzy known as Black Friday, Tammy was both shocked and thrilled to encounter a group of more than 40 protesters.

Having worked for a dozen years as a cashier at another national retail chain, Walgreens, Tammy said she felt an immediate sense of solidarity with the Walmart employees.

"Walmart cuts hours and benefits to push people out," said Tammy, using her phone to capture video of the protest. "It's the same thing at Walgreens. The workers are suffering while billionaires make all the money."

But despite her professed anger at corporate greed, Tammy -- who declined to provide her last name lest she jeopardize her job -- was not deterred from entering Walmart to purchase a TV on a layaway plan. Her own low wages made her feel a sense of community with the striking Walmart workers, but those same wages also generated pressure to find and buy goods at low prices -- precisely the demand that Walmart has fed to turn itself into the world's largest retailer.

"You gotta go where the sales are," Tammy said. "Today at Walgreens every toy was half off. I had to work a 12-hour shift, and they didn't pay me enough. But I can't tell shoppers, 'Don't come in.' I'd lose my job."

Tammy wasn't the only passerby who felt sympathy for the Walmart strikers. In 100 cities across 46 states Thursday and Friday, the protesters were likely to be met by honks and fist pumps from cars as they waved signs and chanted outside Walmart stores. At the Walmart in Paramount, Calif., near Los Angeles, about 600 protesters, including an estimated 100 Walmart workers, turned out Friday morning. In Hanover, Md., 400 store employees, union workers, activists and other supporters showed up at a Walmart Supercenter Friday.

Click here or scroll down for photos from Walmart strikes across the country.

Given their goal of raising awareness among shoppers about low pay, lack of benefits and what they call Walmart's pattern of punishing workers who try to organize, strikers said their events were a success.

But whether deal-hungry shoppers will support the strikers' cause with more than just kind words is another question, and one that will be crucial in determining whether the actions have a real impact on America's labor conditions. While most shoppers interviewed in the Dallas area said they supported the strikers, many were not willing to acknowledge the crucial link between the discounted products they themselves were buying and Walmart's low-wage jobs.

"The strikers need to pick a day when people aren't counting on the sales," said Liz Brookings, who was pushing a cart overflowing with socks and underwear for her four grandchildren on Thursday evening. "A lot of people need this day. They save up for Black Friday all year, and this is all there is."

Brian Johnson, who was sorting through a bin of discounted CDs at a Paramount Walmart on Friday morning, said the strikers should speak out for what they believe in. "But I'm a teacher, so I also barely make anything, too," he said. "I have to shop here."

Walmart has long responded to critics by touting the insatiable consumer demand for its low-priced goods. In a release on Friday morning, the company noted that it had sold 1.3 million televisions, 1.8 million towels and 250,000 bicycles so far during its Black Friday sales. The first wave of protests Thursday evening were negligible both in size and influence, it said.

"Only 26 protests occurred at stores last night and many of them did not include any Walmart associates,? wrote Bill Simon, president and CEO of Walmart U.S., using the company's term for its employees. "We estimate that less than 50 associates participated in the protest nationwide. In fact, this year, roughly the same number of associates missed their scheduled shift as last year."

In another statement released Friday at noon, David Tovar, Walmart's vice president of communications, added that the "number of protests being reported by the United Food and Commercial Workers Union are grossly exaggerated."

OUR Walmart, the worker organization that is coordinating the protests backed by the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, contests Walmart's estimates. Nationwide, there have been more than 1,000 individual actions and strikes so far, which is in line with what OUR Walmart projected, according to Dan Schlademan, director of the union's Making Change at Walmart campaign.

On a conference call Friday, Schlademan said his organization does not yet have a precise count of the number of workers who walked off, as the strikes are ongoing. There have been "hundreds" of workers and "thousands" of supporters so far, he said.

In the Dallas area, the protests were smaller than expected. While OUR Walmart had estimated there would be about 200 people in attendance, roughly 42 people (half of whom were Walmart workers) turned out for Thursday's event outside the Wheatland, Texas, store. Seventy-five people turned out for a demonstration Friday morning at the nearby Lancaster, Texas, store.

Other cities around the country, however, had higher-than-expected turnouts. At the Walmart in Paramount, where The Huffington Post counted 600 people at one point, organizers later said that a total of 1,500 people had shown up. Nine people were arrested for sitting in the street, which had been blocked off for the protesters. Those arrested included three Walmart employees, a father of a worker, a former worker, two clergy members and two other supporters, according to organizers.

According to strikers, one reason that so few of their colleagues among Walmart's 1 million hourly store workers came out with them is that the company intimidates anyone who considers joining a labor group. At the Paramount store, three workers who were not on the job and not participating in the strike told The Huffington Post that they share the strikers' concerns about low wages, lost benefits and retaliation for speaking up, but they did not strike for fear of losing their jobs. Walmart, for its part, says it never retaliates against workers.

One worker on the job, Alma, told HuffPost that there was a sign about the strike in a back area of the store. "It says something like, 'Don't throw your money away [on unions]. We open doors for you and take care of you,'" she said. "But the thing is that's not true."

Workers striking in Paramount who had been scheduled to work Friday said they may face retaliation but that the chance to take action was worth it. "People say I could just get a job elsewhere. But why?" said Victoria Martinez, who was scheduled to work Friday at the Pico Rivera, Calif., store. "It will just be the same, and Walmart will get away with this. We can't run away."

At Dallas-area demonstrations, protesters had a difficult time approaching the stores' entrances to talk to customers and ended up staging most of their action near the entrance to the stores' parking lots. Thursday evening in Wheatland, when the strikers attempted to approach the store, a dozen police officers and Walmart managers met them halfway and told them to "step back" to their original spot.

"In Texas, we own our parking lots," explained Jaime Durand, a Walmart human relations manager who was waiting for protesters to arrive outside the Lancaster store Friday morning. "We won't ask them to stop what they're doing, but we will be asking them to leave private property so we can maintain a safe area for our customers."

While the tactic did prevent strikers from disrupting the flow of money into Walmart's cash registers, many shoppers took the initiative to walk over to where the strikers were demonstrating. At one point, a group of supporters started an impromptu dance party at the parking-lot entrance, waving their arms and legs at cars as a striker beat a drum. Most of the drivers who stopped to watch had cars stuffed with bags of Walmart goods.

"We're not going to attempt to go inside the store," said Colby Harris, a Walmart produce department worker from Lancaster who has become something of the public face of the workers' movement. "We know it would get nasty, and we don't think it would be smart."

The protesters will have many more opportunities to reach shoppers over the long holiday season, Harris noted over breakfast Thursday morning. "Walmart knows we're not going to stop."

Check out Walmart strike photos from cities across the U.S.:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/23/walmart-strike-black-friday_n_2177784.html

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Home affordability improves in Canada | Mortgages ... - Financial Post

TORONTO ? Royal Bank says the cost of home ownership became more affordable in the most recent quarter due to a modest decline in home prices and gains in Canadian household incomes.

RBC?s affordability index for a detached bungalow stood at 42% of income nationally in the second quarter.

That means an owner would need to spend 42% of pre-tax annual income to pay for mortgage payments, utilities and property taxes ? one percentage point lower than in the third quarter of 2011.

The index fell even more for two-storey homes, by 1.2 percentage points to 47.8% and eased 0.6 percentage points to 28% for condos.

The bank, which publishes the index on a quarterly basis, says ultra low interest rates have been the key factor in keeping affordability levels from reaching dangerous levels in recent years.

Despite the recent improvement in affordability, RBC said the amount of income to service home ownership costs continues to be higher than long-term averages.

RBC notes that Canada?s housing market cooled further in the third quarter, partially because of the effects of a fourth round of rule changes to government-backed mortgage insurance.

The bank expects the negative effect of the changes on home sales will ease by the end of the year and that resale activity will stabilize next year.

The July-September quarter fully reversed the mild erosion in affordability that occurred during the first half of 2012, said RBC chief economist Craig Wright.

?The broad affordability picture has been somewhat stationary over the last two years, alternating between periods of improvement and deterioration, resulting in an affordability trend that is, on net, essentially flat,? Wright said.

Wright expects the Bank of Canada to begin raising its overnight lending rate for banks ? which affects bank?s prime lending rates ? from the current 1% in the second half of next year, assuming the euro crisis remains in check and U.S fiscal issues are addressed.

?This, along with the expected continued growth in household income, will lessen the risk of marked erosion in affordability,? he said.

Despite the recent improvement in affordability, RBC said the amount of income to service home ownership costs continues to be higher than long-term averages,

As is often the case, Vancouver?s extremely expensive real-estate skewed the national figures.

?The cost of owning a home took a smaller bite out of household pocketbooks in the third quarter as home prices fell ? most notably in the Vancouver area, though it remains the least affordable market in Canada by a wide margin,? explained Wright.

The index in Vancouver stood at 83.2% of income, followed by Toronto at 52.4%, Montreal 40.2%, Ottawa at 38.7%, Calgary at 38.3% and Edmonton at 31.1%.

Source: http://business.financialpost.com/2012/11/22/canadian-homes-are-getting-more-affordable/

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Friday, November 23, 2012

Miss E slowly conquering the music industry | The Confidente

Esmeralda

WITH a number of creative and a human resource diplo?mas and certificates from re?nowned Namibian arts institutions, she now feels more than enough equipped and mentally prepared to take on, with a bang, the very competitive and diverse lo?cal music industry, where so many others have failed.
This determined gospel and soulful singer in her mid-twenties, Esmeralda Katjikuru, was born and bred in the rural town of Maltahohe in the south-west of the country.
?I grew up in a God fearing family and started singing as a primary school learn?er at the age of eight years, singing gospel and Christmas songs at Sunday school in Maltahohe. At that age my mother pur?chased me a keyboard with which I musi?cally accompanied myself during presen?tations. That was the start of me learning to play the piano, a musical instrument I love to play,? said the girl, whose musical stage name is Esme Miss E.
The young budding singer along with four of her friends formed a teenage girl group called the ?Top Girls.?
?Top Girls were very popular and much in demand at weddings, parties and church events in Maltahohe,? asserted Esmeralda, who has joined on stage bands such as the Ugly Creatures and had been backed by Heritage Band.
She completed matric in 2005 at Mariental Secondary School where she was elected as a school choir leader, after that time she moved to the capital to further her studies in humanities at Lingua College.
?In fact, I wanted to study to become a doctor, but finances prevented me to achieve that life-long ambition. Instead, I studied human resources at college. I have also joined musical forces with gospel groups such as Trinity Gos?pel Band and the Adorations Worshippers. My music studies at Semitone Music College came in very handy, learning all about voice care, voice techniques and voice control,? the friendly, articulated and soft spoken singer said.
Esmeralda is determined to steadily calve her professional music way to the top of the Namibian singing and music ladder nationally and hopes in future to break into the international market.
?To achieve this I need to keep intact the complete package of my character as a caring, not to disappoint my mother and my two sisters, respectful and consider?ing religious person, as a role model to the youth and not to indulge in the use of alcohol and/ or drugs. In fact, I do not do clubbing, but prefer to do the motiva?tional speech cycle. I?d also like to become a super star like my idol, the late Whitney Houston, who started her singing career singing in church,?? the born again Chris?tian, who also adores and admires the music of American singers Juanita By?num and Alicia Keys, said.
Esmeralda, who recently performed at the Windhoek Jazz Festival with the Ugly Creatures, considers herself to be a role model to many Namibian youths who look up to her.
?Conquering the music world in my view is not about the fame, fortune and glamour, but to artistically express me in the best sort of way and be appreciated by many youths as well as adults locally and around the world. As a diva with self-confidence and a solidly grounded person I belief I can achieve all my goals, hopes, dreams and aspirations running my own music and business affairs,? she said con?fidently.
The articulated musician pride herself having organized her personal appearanc?es at music festivals around the country.
?I am very selective in my choices for one has to be very careful what one lets oneself into. The music world can be very competitive and dangerous for new up?coming singers and performers. Luckily my church is very much involved in my singing career. My career is tightly inter?twined with my church and I give prefer?ence to my church,? said Miss E, who is also inspired by opera music.
Esmeralda is proud to say she writes and composes her own music and has al?ready produced her first CD, Perfect Plan in 2009.
?All 1,000 copies of Perfect Plan had been sold out. Since then I have been invited as a guest singer by the National Theatre of Namibia (NTN) at the popular Last Band Standing and the Sister Namib?ia?s Sister Thang. Currently, I am very busy writing and composing a second CD of an inspirational nature,? Esmeralda, whose Face book name is Esme Esmeralda Katji?kuru, concluded.

By Frederick B. Philander

Source: http://www.confidente.com.na/2012/11/22/miss-e-slowly-conquering-the-music-industry/

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Thursday, November 22, 2012

My Top Ten Online Marketing Podcasts To Listen To | Tresnic Media

As noted in the earlier blog post,?5 Links Social Media Marketers Can Be Thankful For, there is an overabundance of information out there. Especially in the online marketing world of social media, SEO, web design, user experience, and the list goes on. Because it?s part of our philosophy, publishing content that we are passionate about comes natural and is encouraged.

Due to this passion in the industry, it creates enough information being published that you could spend all day, every day reading new articles online about these different industries and never catch up. I spend about an hour a day (at least) reading new articles about different aspects of online marketing.

The Easiest Way To Consume New Information Without Taking Time Away From Your Day

online marketing podcasts 300x273 The Top 10 Online Marketing Podcasts That Im Most Thankful ForIt?s extremely difficult to be reading new articles AND doing actual work at the same time, if not impossible. So how can you keep up with all of the industry news that you need to be aware of but not steal time away from your day?

The answer is podcasts. I love listening to stuff while I?m working just to keep me from being in a silent office all day. I capitalize on that by listening to expert podcasts discussing news, strategies, success stories, different platforms, etc. while still being able to focus on working on client projects.

Being that today is Thanksgiving, I?d like to give thanks to these podcasters for putting out quality audio content on a regular basis to keep me informed, inspired and motivated without the need to block off time to consume their published knowledge. The list is in no particular order of importance or preference, I love them all the same. Without further ado?

My Top Ten Online Marketing Podcasts

1.?Tropical Talk Radio/Lifestyle Business Podcast

http://www.tropicalmba.com/category/podcast-episodes/
http://www.lifestylebusinesspodcast.com/

These two podcasts are put out by Dan and Ian, a couple of awesome dudes who have taken on the lifestyle of true entrepreneurs and share their stories and advice for how to run a real business online and live a kickass lifestyle (without losing the point that you still have to bust your ass and work hard).?The Tropical Talk Radio podcast is much more informal but sometimes provides even higher quality information than it?s counterpart.

Every episode comes with very practical and actionable items for entrepreneurs and business owners. There is rarely any fluff to their podcasts and when there is it?s actually pretty entertaining. While not really an online marketing show, these guys are a great listen for any business owner or entrepreneur.

2.?The Foolish Adventure Show

http://foolishadventure.com/category/audio/

This is another very practical podcast to listen to. Host Tim Conley often has guests on that have real experience and success under their belt to speak about. These aren?t just Internet marketers yapping about Internet marketing, they have used online marketing to succeed in all different industries and have solid business models to learn from.

3.?Mad Marketing ? The Sales Lion Podcast with Marcus Sheridan

http://www.thesaleslion.com/

what online marketing podcasts to listen to 300x225 The Top 10 Online Marketing Podcasts That Im Most Thankful For

Marcus Sheridan is a pool salesman turned content marketing expert. He earned his stripes with his own pool company when he saw online marketing and content as the key to growing a successful business. Now Marcus consults as a content marketer (I?m sure among other things) in addition to having his pool business. His content is very informative on his website as well as his podcast and a lot can be learned from his experience.

4.?Marketing Over Coffee

http://www.marketingovercoffee.com/category/podcast/

John Wall and Christopher Penn host this weekly podcast where they discuss what?s new in the marketing world. They touch on different industry news and talk about marketing from a very professional level. This is a great listen for real marketers.

5.?Six Pixels Of Separation

http://www.twistimage.com/podcast/

This podcast is brought to us by Mitch Joel, the president of Twist Image and an expert in digital marketing, he brings a weekly perspective on the marketing world from the viewpoint of a digital marketing agency.

6.?Social Media Marketing Podcast with Michael Stelzner

http://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/category/podcast-episodes/

Michael Stelzner of Social Media Examiner is a serious source of social media information. His book, Launch, is one that I consider a must-read for anyone working in the website, marketing or small business world. Obviously that makes his weekly social media podcast a must-listen.

7.?Social Pros Podcast: Real People Doing Real Work in Social Media

?http://www.convinceandconvert.com/social-pros-podcast/

Jay Baer (of Convince And Convert fame) is a social media consultant that teams up with Eric Boggs of Argyle Social to put out this weekly podcast. They talk about some social media industry news as well as have on professionals who work at real companies outside of the online marketing world and earn real results with social media.

Their guests include social media managers from Fifth Third Bank, McDonalds, Caterpillar among many others. But as you can see, they don?t speak to social media managers of social media companies, they talk about real social media work for real businesses.

8.?Inbound Now ? Inbound Marketing & Social Media Podcast

http://www.inboundnow.com/all-episodes/

David Wells is an inbound marketing professional who puts out this biweekly inbound marketing podcast. He actually publishes a video and audio version so that you can watch him interview his guests as well as see examples of what he?s talking about. But if you are on the go and just listen to the audio (which is what I do most of the time) then the audio still delivers high quality, practical information.

David goes over all different topics of online marketing including content marketing, how to use different social media tools to get customers, email marketing, etc. His guests are also often very high figures in the online marketing world like Lee Odden (Top Rank), Rand Fishkin (SEOmoz) and Brian Clark (Copyblogger).

9.?The Content Warfare Podcast

?http://www.ryanhanley.com/contentwarfarepodcast/

Ryan Hanley is another guy like Marcus Sheridan who got his chops in the real world marketing his insurance company. Now Ryan doubles as a content marketing evangelist and puts out great, practical information that you can use to be successful with your own business.

10.?Marketing Smarts Podcast from MarketingProfs

?http://www.marketingprofs.com/topic/all/marketing-smarts

Last but definitely not least, is the Marketing Smarts Podcast from the great folks over at MarketingProfs. Their blog is an excellent source of online marketing information and their weekly podcast delivers that same level of quality audio content. They have great interviews with professional marketers who have experienced real success. A great source of information and inspiration.

What Podcasts Do You Listen To And Recommend?

I?d love to hear your suggestions on what great podcasts are out there that I didn?t mention and am probably not yet aware of. Please leave your recommendations in the comments below!

About Todd Giannattasio

Todd Giannattasio is a master of digital communications. He graduated from Seton Hall University where he earned his Bachelor's Degree in Communications as well as Specializing in Computer Graphics with a Certificate in Web Design. Professionally, Todd has spent time working for a small multimedia agency, one of the top four global record labels and a multi-billion dollar, international corporation. As the founder of Tresnic Media, Todd looks to bring businesses to the forefront of their markets through customer-oriented design, quality content strategies and engaging, online customer relationships. His knowledge and expertise are in all things digital. A master of web design and development, Todd also specializes in social media management and search engine optimization.

Source: http://tresnicmedia.com/the-top-10-online-marketing-podcasts-that-im-most-thankful-for/

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Call that a ball? Dogs learn to associate words with objects differently than humans do

ScienceDaily (Nov. 21, 2012) ? Dogs learning to associate words with objects form these associations in different ways than humans do, according to research published Nov. 21 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Emile van der Zee and colleagues from the University of Lincoln, UK.

Previous studies have shown that humans between the ages of two to three typically learn to associate words with the shapes of objects, rather than their size or texture. For example, toddlers who learn what a 'ball' is and are then presented other objects with similar shapes, sizes or textures will identify a similarly-shaped object as 'ball', rather than one of the same size or texture.

Earlier research with dogs has shown that they can learn to associate words with categories of objects (such as 'toy'), but whether their learning process was the same as that of humans was unknown.

In this new study, the scientists presented Gable, a five year old Border Collie, with similar choices to see if this 'shape bias' exists in dogs. They found that after a brief training period, Gable learned to associate the name of an object with its size, identifying other objects of similar size by the same name. After a longer period of exposure to both a name and an object, the dog learned to associate a word to other objects of similar textures, but not to objects of similar shape.

According to the authors, these results suggest that dogs (or at least Gable) process and associate words with objects in qualitatively different ways than humans do. They add that this may be due to differences in how evolutionary history has shaped human and dog senses of perceiving shape, texture or size.

The bottom line: Though your dog understands the command "Fetch the ball," but he may think of the object in a very different way than you do when he hears it. As the authors explain, "Where shape matters for us, size or texture matters more for your dog. This study shows for the first time that there is a qualitative difference in word comprehension in the dog compared to word comprehension in humans."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Public Library of Science.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. van der Zee E, Zulch H, Mills D. Word Generalization by a Dog (Canis familiaris): Is Shape Important? PLoS ONE, 7(11): e49382 DOI: 10.1371/ journal.pone.0049382

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/living_well/~3/HMuJ1Bls-qQ/121121210253.htm

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Asian shares rise on firm China, U.S. factory data

TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian shares rose on Thursday as a survey showed China's manufacturing sector expanded for the first time in 13 months in November, adding to optimism after firm U.S. factory data that the global growth slowdown may have turned a corner.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.miapj0000pus> extended early gains to rise 0.8 percent to a one-week high.

Regional equities markets had already been buoyed by recovering risk appetite on easing tension in the Middle East and hopes that a Greece bailout will be agreed next week.

Resources-sensitive Australian shares <.axjo> surged 1.3 percent to a one-week high as miners climbed. London copper rose 0.5 percent to $7,732.75 a tonne while spot gold inched up 0.2 percent to $1,731.34 an ounce.

The China HSBC Flash Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index rose to a 13-month high of 50.4 in November, indicating factory activity was picking up and pointing to a reviving economic growth after seven consecutive quarters of slowing. A sub-index measuring output rose to 51.3, also the highest since October 2011.

"The data suggests the China's growth had hit a bottom in the third quarter and prospects are brightening for small and medium-sized firms in China," said Naohiro Niimura, a partner at research and consulting firm Market Risk Advisory.

While the report is positive, the rise in prices of base metals, for which China is the world's top consumer, will be contained given the high level of Chinese inventories, he said.

"But shares get a boost because they are driven by sentiment and because contained base metal prices under an improving economy will help companies boost their earnings," Niimura said.

Japan's Nikkei stock average <.n225> jumped 1.2 percent to a 6-1/2-month high as exporters were lifted by hopes the weakening yen would boost their earnings. <.t/>

The yen has come under pressure since the Japanese government announced a December 16 election last week.

The opposition Liberal Democratic Party, which is tipped to win, on Wednesday promised a big extra budget and a policy accord with the central bank on aggressive monetary stimulus to prevent the economy from sliding into recession.

The yen fell to a 7-1/2-month low versus the dollar of 82.59 on Thursday, while the yen also hit a 6-1/2-month low of 106.26 yen against the euro.

"Yen, I think, is being driven by anticipation of LDP led government forcing aggressive monetary easing," said Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York.

Traders said the markets may be capped as activity slows ahead of the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday weekend.

Niimura said as hedge funds close their books this month and next, any swing in prices should be seen as more related to their position adjustments than a change in real risk appetite.

GREECE DEAL AWAITED

European shares <.fteu3> rose for a third straight session on Wednesday as investors bet on a positive outcome to negotiations over aid to Greece after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said a deal to release emergency aid to Greece was still possible next Monday when euro ministers meet.

The expectations of a Greek deal helped the euro rebound to a two-week high against the dollar of $1.28685, after being initially sold off after international lenders to Greece failed to reach a deal to release the aid on Wednesday.

"Efforts to avert a Greek default may provide short-term relief for the euro, but the measures will only help to buy more time as Greece persistently seeks further external assistance," said David Song, currency analyst at DailyFX, who is maintaining a bearish view on the single currency.

Overnight, U.S. stocks ended modestly higher but volume was one of the year's lowest on the day ahead of the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday.

U.S. manufacturing grew in November at its quickest pace in five months, with a rise in domestic demand hinting that factories could provide a boost to economic growth in the fourth quarter, while those from Europe are due out later on Thursday.

A ceasefire between Israel and Gaza's Hamas rulers took hold on Thursday after eight days of conflict, easing concerns about supply from oil-producing Middle East.

U.S. crude rose 0.3 percent to $87.66 a barrel while Brent inched up 0.2 percent to $111.06.

A rallying stock market boosted sentiment in Asian credit markets, tightening the spreads on the iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment-grade index by 3 basis points.

(Additional reporting by Ian Chua in Sydney and Dominic Lau and Lisa Twaronite in Tokyo; Editing by Kim Coghill)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/falling-yen-lifts-japan-stocks-eyes-china-data-021952655--finance.html

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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Woman gets 80 years for deadly Texas day care fire

FILE - In this Nov. 13, 2012 file photo, home day care operator Jessica Tata is seen in Houston's Harris County Criminal Justice Center. Tata was sentenced to 80 years Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2012 for her felony murder conviction in the death of one of four children killed in a fire at her home day care in Houston. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Johnny Hanson, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 13, 2012 file photo, home day care operator Jessica Tata is seen in Houston's Harris County Criminal Justice Center. Tata was sentenced to 80 years Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2012 for her felony murder conviction in the death of one of four children killed in a fire at her home day care in Houston. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Johnny Hanson, File)

(AP) ? A Texas woman was sentenced to 80 years Tuesday for her felony murder conviction in the death of one of four children killed in a fire at her home day care in Houston.

Jessica Tata, 24, was convicted last week in connection with the death of 16-month-old Elias Castillo. Authorities say Elias was one of seven children whom Tata left unsupervised at her home while she went to a nearby Target store. Prosecutors say she left a pan of oil cooking atop a stovetop burner and that this ignited the February 2011 blaze. Three other children were seriously injured.

Along with the prison sentence, Tata was ordered to pay a $10,000 fine. She will have to serve 30 years of her sentence before she is eligible for parole, prosecutor Steve Baldassano said.

"Nobody wins in this situation," said Patty Sparks, Elias' great-grandmother, after the sentence was announced. "My heart goes out to the Tata family and those precious mothers and fathers who lost their babies."

Tata could have received up to life in prison.

She still faces three more counts of felony murder in relation to the other children who died, and three counts of abandoning a child and two counts of reckless injury to a child in relation to three who were hurt. Baldassano said prosecutors planned to pursue trials on the remaining felony murder charges.

During the punishment phase of the trial, prosecutors argued Tata was an irresponsible day care owner who left the children she was caring for alone on multiple occasions and who ran an unclean facility. Tata's family and friends told jurors she was a good person who loved kids. They asked the jury for mercy.

Tata's attorneys argued she never intended to hurt the children, who ranged in age from 16 months to 3 years old, and that she tried to save them. But prosecutors did not need to show she intended to harm the children, only that the deaths occurred because she put them in danger by leaving them alone. Under Texas law, a person can be convicted of felony murder if he or she committed an underlying felony and that action led to the death.

"It's tough because the verdict doesn't undo things, but I think (the families of the victims) feel as if the jury listened to them and justice was done for their children," Baldassano said afterward.

One of the surviving children, Makayla Dickerson, stood next to Baldassano as he spoke. She showed reporters scars the fire left on her right forearm.

Baldassano also offered sympathy for Tata's relatives, some of whom attended the trial.

"But on the other hand, she brought this on herself," Baldassano said. "She was being paid to watch these children. She knew better. She really can't blame anybody or anything."

Defense attorney Mike DeGeurin said he still believes Tata should not have been tried for murder because the deaths were an accident.

"The sentence is not going to fix things. It's not going to make anybody feel better later on. But the jury has spoken. That's their sentence," DeGeurin said.

When asked how Tata was doing after she heard her sentence, DeGeurin said: "She's not doing well."

Tata fled to Nigeria in the wake of the fire but was captured after about a month, returned to the U.S. in March 2011 and has remained jailed since. She was born in the U.S. but has Nigerian citizenship.

During Tata's trial, which began Oct. 24, surveillance video was presented that showed her shopping at Target just before the fire occurred. A former Target manager told jurors that Tata did not seem to be in a hurry after realizing she had left the stove top burner on while the kids were at the day care.

Neighbors testified that they heard the children crying during their unsuccessful attempts to rescue them from the blaze. Parents of the children who died or were injured told jurors they had trusted Tata, believing she was qualified.

Defense attorneys presented expert testimony to argue that faulty kitchen equipment may have sparked the fire.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-11-20-Day%20Care%20Fire/id-ed29d811d63345f38a41a4eb46ee9821

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Telomere lengths predict life expectancy in the wild, research shows

ScienceDaily (Nov. 20, 2012) ? Researchers at the University of East Anglia have found that biological age and life expectancy can be predicted by measuring an individual's DNA.

They studied the length of chromosome caps -- known as telomeres -- in a 320-strong wild population of Seychelles Warblers on a small isolated island.

Published Nov. 20 in Molecular Ecology, their research shows that individuals differ radically in how quickly their telomeres shorten with age, and that having shorter telomeres at any age is associated with an increased risk of death. Telomere length is a better indicator of future life-expectancy than actual age and may, therefore, be an indicator of biological age.

The 20-year research project is the first of its kind to measure telomeres across the entire lifespan of individuals in a wild population.

Telomeres are found at the end of chromosomes. They act as protective caps to stop genes close to the end of the chromosome degenerating -- like the hard plastic ends of a boot lace.

Lead researcher Dr David S Richardson said: "Over time these telomeres get broken down and become shorter. When they reach a critical short length they cause the cells they are in to stop functioning. This mechanism has evolved to prevent cells replicating out of control -- becoming cancerous. However the flip side is that as these zombie cells build up in our organs it leads to their degeneration -- aging -- and consequently to health issues and eventually death.

"Telomeres help safeguard us from cancer but result in our aging."

Researchers studied the warbler population on Cousin Island. Blood samples were collected twice a year and telomere length analysed.

"We wanted to understand what happens over an entire lifetime, so the Seychelles Warbler is an ideal research subject. They are naturally confined to an isolated tropical island, without any predators, so we can follow individuals throughout their lives, right through to old age.

"We investigated whether, at any given age, their telomere lengths could predict imminent death. We found that short and rapidly shortening telomeres were a good indication that the bird would die within a year.

"We also found that individuals with longer telomeres had longer life spans overall.

"It used to be thought that telomere shortening occurred at a constant rate in individuals, and that telomere length could act as an internal clock to measure the chronological age of organisms in the wild.

"However while telomeres do shorten with chronological age, the rate at which this happens differs between individuals of the same age. This is because individuals experience different amounts of biological stress due to the challenges and exertions they face in life. Telomere length can be used as a measure of the amount of damage an individual has accumulated over its life.

"We saw that telomere length is a better indicator of life expectancy than chronological age -- so by measuring telomere length we have a way of estimating the biological age of an individual -- how much of its life it has used up."

The research is important because while these ideas have been researched in the lab, they have never been tested in a wild environment.

"It would be virtually impossible to do such a study in humans," said Dr Richardson. "For one thing it would take a very long time to study a human lifespan. Also in humans we would normally, quite rightly, intervene in cases of disease, so it wouldn't be a natural study.

"We found that telomeres are linked to body condition and reflect the history of oxidative stress that has occurred within an individual's lifetime. The healthier you are, or have been, the better telomeres you have. But it's hard to know whether this is a consequence of being healthy, or a cause.

"Oxidants attack telomeres. So things like smoking, eating foods that are bad for you, and putting your body through extreme physical or mental stress all have a shortening affect on telomeres.

"All these stresses do damage to our bodies. You hear people saying 'oh they look like they've had a hard life'. This is why. A shortened telomere shows an accumulation of damage life has done to you."

'Telomere length and dynamics predict mortality in a wild longitudinal study' is authored by Dr David S Richardson and Emma Barrett from the University of East Anglia (UK), Terry Burke from the University of Sheffield (UK), and Jan Komdeur and Martijn Hammers from the University of Gronigen (Netherlands).

The study was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and carried out in collaboration with conservation group Nature Seychelles.

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Story Source:

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

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


Journal Reference:

  1. David S Richardson et al. Telomere length and dynamics predict mortality in a wild longitudinal study. Molecular Ecology, November 20 2012

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/P0zA5-pV-PA/121119213144.htm

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Keeping pets safe during the holidays - Salt Lake City, Utah News

Posted on: 10:54 pm, November 20, 2012, by David Wells and Kelly Chapman, updated on: 11:50pm, November 20, 2012

Many of the things we enjoy during the holiday season can be dangerous, even deadly, for our pets.

One of the biggest culprits is turkey. Both dogs and cats are sensitive to the meat, which can cause serious gastrointestinal problems and even pancreatitis, an inflammation of the pancreas.

Other foods that are toxic for pets include grapes, raisins, onions, chocolate and artificial sweeteners such as Xylitol. Poinsettias and mistletoe can also be fatal if ingested.

Pet owners are reminded to seek veterinary care if they suspect their pets have ingested something that might be toxic for them.

?They need to get to a veterinarian as soon as they can,? said Sasha Reaid, University Veterinary Hospital. ?Usually the veterinarian makes them vomit or gives them some special medications that can kind of help them get over it.

Early detection and care can help prevent long-term health problems.

Source: http://fox13now.com/2012/11/20/keeping-pets-safe-during-the-holidays/

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

3-D light switch for the brain: Device may help treat Parkinson's, epilepsy; aid understanding of consciousness

ScienceDaily (Nov. 19, 2012) ? A new tool for neuroscientists delivers a thousand pinpricks of light to a chunk of gray matter smaller than a sugar cube. The new fiber-optic device, created by biologists and engineers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, is the first tool that can deliver precise points of light to a 3-D section of living brain tissue. The work is a step forward for a relatively new but promising technique that uses gene therapy to turn individual brain cells on and off with light.

Scientists can use the new 3-D "light switch" to better understand how the brain works. It might also be used one day to create neural prostheses that could treat conditions such as Parkinson's disease and epilepsy. The researchers describe their device in a paper published November 19 in the Optical Society's (OSA) journal Optics Letters.

The technique of manipulating neurons with light is only a few years old, but the authors estimate that thousands of scientists are already using this technology, called optogenetics, to study the brain. In optogenetics, researchers first sensitize select cells in the brain to a particular color of light. Then, by illuminating precise areas of the brain, they are able to selectively activate or deactivate the individual neurons that have been sensitized.

Ed Boyden, a synthetic biologist at MIT and co-lead researcher on the paper, is a pioneer of this emerging field, which he says offers the ability to probe connections in the brain.

"You can see neural activity in the brain that is associated with specific behaviors," Boyden says, "but is it important? Or is it a passive copy of important activity located elsewhere in the brain? There's no way to know for sure if you just watch." Optogenetics allows scientists to play a more active role in probing the brain's connections, to fire up one type of cell or deactivate another and then observe the effect on a behavior, such as quieting a seizure.

Unlike the previous, 1-D versions of this light-emitting device, the new tool delivers light to the brain in three dimensions, opening the potential to explore entire circuits within the brain. So far, the 3-D version has been tested in mice, although Boyden and colleagues have used earlier optogenetic technologies with non-human primates as well.

Targeting neurons with light

One of the advantages of optogenetics is that this technology allows scientists to focus on one particular type of neuron without affecting other types of neurons in the same area of cortex. Probes that deliver electricity to the brain can manipulate neurons, but they cannot target individual kinds of cell, Boyden says. Drugs can turn neurons on or off as well, he continues, but not on such a quick time scale or with such a high degree of control. In contrast, the new 3-D array is precise enough to activate a single kind of neuron, at a precise location, with a single beam of light.

In an earlier incarnation, Boyden's device looked like a needle-thin probe with light-emitting ports along its length; this setup allowed scientists to manipulate neurons along a single line. The new tool contains up to a hundred of these probes in a square grid, which makes the device look like a series of fine-toothed combs laid next to each other with their teeth pointing in the same direction.

Each probe is just 150 microns across -- a little thicker than a human hair, and thin enough so that the device can be implanted at any depth in the cortex without damaging it. The brain lacks pain receptors, so the implants do not cause any discomfort to the brain itself. As in the earlier model, several light-emitting ports are located along the length of each probe. Scientists can illuminate and change the color of each light port independently from the others.

Adding a third dimension to the probe's light-delivery capabilities has allowed researchers to make any pattern of light they want within the volume of a cubic centimeter of brain tissue, using a few hundred independently controllable illumination points.

"It's turning out to be a very powerful and convenient tool," says MIT professor of electrical engineering Clifton Fonstad, co-lead author of the paper.

Blue for on, yellow for off

Neurons in the brain are not naturally responsive to light, so scientists sensitize these cells with molecules called opsins, light-detecting proteins naturally found in algae and bacteria. Genes for an opsin are transferred to the neurons in a mouse's brain using gene therapy, a process in which DNA is ferried into a cell via a carrier such as a harmless virus. The carrier can be instructed to deliver the DNA package only to certain types of cells.

Different colors of light turn different flavors of opsin on -- blue might cause one opsin to activate a cell, while yellow might cause another opsin to silence it. Neurons that are sensitized with opsins gain these abilities to respond to light.

The response of an individual neuron -- whether to turn on or turn off -- depends on the type of opsin it was sensitized with, and the color of light used to illuminate it. In this way, the tool gives neuroscientists an unprecedented level of control over individual neurons in the brain.

Teams from around the world are currently using the technology developed by Boyden's group to study some of the most profound questions neuroscience tries to answer, such as how memory works, the connections between memory and emotion, and the difference between being awake and being asleep.

"I'm really excited about how the brain computes -- the ebb and flow of consciousness," Boyden says. "We know so little about the brain."

A better understanding of the brain may lead to another benefit of this technology: therapy. If a particular type of cell malfunctions in a particular disease, scientists may be able to use a modified 3-D array as a neural prosthesis that could help to treat neurological conditions. Using light to stop overactive cells from firing might alleviate the uncontrollable muscle action of Parkinson's disease. Cells that cause seizures in the brain could be quieted optically without the side effects of anti-seizure medications. Implants that correct hearing deficiencies are also being explored with this technology.

Although the new device is effective in bringing light to the brain, other challenges remain before optogenetics can be used for medical therapy, Boyden says. Scientists do not yet know for certain whether the body will detect the opsin proteins as foreign molecules and reject them. Gene therapy will also have to prove itself if neurons are to be sensitized with opsin effectively.

"It's a long road," Boyden admits.

Meanwhile, he continues, the demand for the tool is currently higher than his team can supply. Boyden says his group is excited about the possibility of commercializing the new 3-D array, as one potential route that would make the devices available as quickly as possible to the neuroscience community.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Optical Society of America, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Anthony N. Zorzos, Jorg Scholvin, Edward S. Boyden, and Clifton G. Fonstad. Three-dimensional multiwaveguide probe array for light delivery to distributed brain circuits. Opt. Lett., 37, 4841-4843 (2012) [link]

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/h0wOiEImIHU/121119114249.htm

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Disney Pulls Plug On Online Movie Service - Deadline.com

Disney Movies Online will cease to exist at the end of the year, Disney announced today. The little-known Internet movie service will close as of December 31, said the company in an email to users and on the site. ?The digital environment is rapidly evolving and Disney Movies Online does not have the flexibility that many users today demand?, a Disney spokesperson said in a separate statement Monday. ?We made a business decision to close the service until we are able to provide the greatest value and experience?to our customers?. Another?reason for the closure was that Disney Movies Online didn?t generate the number of users that was expected and the service was costly to run, says a source.?Movies were not available for rent or purchase on the service as of Monday morning. Launched in 2009, Disney Movies Online let users buy and rent films from the vast Disney library, including Pixar offerings. It also allowed users who bought Disney DVDs or Blu-ray discs to stream movies online; it did not allow movies to be downloaded for offline use or be watched in a non-browser format. No launch date has been set for the more flexible Disney Movie Anywhere system, which the company has been developing in the past year. Here?s Disney?s statement on its shuttered site:

Disney Movies Online is closing on December 31st. As part of this change, purchases, upgrades, and Magic Code entries can no longer be made on the Disney Movies Online website. You can continue to stream your existing movies until December 31st.

You can still enter Magic Codes on DisneyMovieRewards.com, and Disney Movies Rewards services will not be interrupted. You can also continue to use your Disney member name and password to access and enjoy other Disney websites. In addition, if you purchased a Disney Combo pack with Digital Copy, your Digital Copy can still be transferred and watched from either iTunes or Windows Media Player.

Deadline's Dominic Patten - tip him here.

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Source: http://www.deadline.com/2012/11/disney-pulls-the-plug-on-disney-movies-online/

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The Only Life You Can Bring to Thanksgiving Dinner is the Messy ...

We bring the messes we?ve made of our lives to the dinner table on Thanksgiving. That can make this once-a-year family meal into a battlefield or, as more often happens, a sullen duty.

Families marred and disfigured by drugs, violence and too many divorces are incubators for fractured people without ?inner peace and contentment. This kind of family robs them of their spiritual and emotional freedom, leaving them trapped in a spider?s web of resentments and anger.?They can?t feel joy.?They cannot share joyous times with anyone, but especially not each other. That is what the loss of family does to people.

I know people who spend all day Thanksgiving driving from the husband?s mother?s house to the husband?s father?s house, to the wife?s mother?s house, and on to the wife?s father?s house, sitting down to a full-bore Thanksgiving feast at each stop.

They are dutiful and long-suffering in their efforts to make up to their parents what their parents have done to themselves with their divorces and remarriages. Thanksgiving for them is a joyless and exhausting round of overeating and trying to make right what wasn?t their fault in the first place.

Oftentimes, these same frazzled and over-stuffed people are fresh from arguments with their former spouses over when and how to shuffle their children back and forth between them. In some families, the two spouses each have children from prior marriages and maybe one or two they?ve had together to transport around.

It all becomes an endurance march instead of a delight, a dreaded day rather than an anticipated one.

Then there are the unhappy Thanksgiving feasts where relatives who actively hate one another sit through a meal in an atmosphere that buzzes with sullen resentments and long-time grudges. All this is mixed in with the dread of the cousin or stepfather showing up loaded on drugs or stumbling from booze.

The interesting part of all this is how often the people who are leading these miserable lives full of self-inflicted misery blame society, each other and God for the messes they?ve made of the time they?ve been given in this life. The same parents who shuffle their kids on the parent to parent express and live their lives in a bath of resentment and anger will wail and whine ?I didn?t raise them this way? when those children hit their teens and turn into mixed-up monsters of sexual promiscuity, rebellion, narcissism and drugs.

Thanksgiving can be a rough day for families full of people with messy lives. The reason is that the enforced family togetherness brings all their disparate chickens flapping home to roost. Everything they numb and blind themselves to all the rest of the year flies up and lands in front of them on Thanksgiving.

For one day, they are faced with the mess they?ve made of their families, the utter lack of a stable home they have provided for either themselves or their children.

We?ve made Thanksgiving tough by the expectations and endless requirements we heap on ourselves.

Let me repeat that:?We?ve made Thanksgiving tough by the expectations and endless requirements we heap on ourselves.?

There is no requirement that we spend Thanksgiving shuffling our children and ourselves from broken home to broken home. We do not have to allow the family drunk/drug addict to show up and destroy things. If our relatives beat us when we were kids, we don?t have to see them now.

We can?t undo divorces. We can?t control other people. But, if we?ll stop blaming and whining, we will realize that we have absolute control over ourselves.

We can sit down with our children and our spouses and determine what matters to us on this day. The most important thing, of course, is the children. For some reason, these families who?ve made a mess of things are the first ones to forget that, so let me repeat it: The most important thing is the children.

If you?ve made a mess of your life and theirs with multiple marriages, remember that you owe them as much stability and emotional security as you can salvage from the complications you have inflicted on their young lives.

What is best for them?

Here are a few thoughts, based on my years of raising kids, seeing my friends raise kids and going with those same friends to the police station or the mental ward of the hospital to visit their kids when they were teens.

Why not, instead of dragging your kids from one of your divorced relative?s homes to another, have dinner at your house and tell your relatives they can come if they want, but they have to play nice and behave if they do? If they throw a fit, let them. Your children are more important than their fits.

If your parents haven?t spoken in 30 years and will not be in the same room together, that?s their choice. You first responsibility is to your own children. You can have a nice dinner with each of your parents in turn on some other day. But do not let them indulge their ancient hatreds and ruin Thanksgiving for your own family and your children.

Why not, instead of shuffling children back and forth between your former spouses and you, arrange that one spouse will have them on Christmas day and another will have them on Thanksgiving? Then, when it?s your turn to share the kids, have Thanksgiving or Christmas early for your kids at your house before sending them off.

Never say a word of resentment or spite while you are doing this. Do not whine and complain about how awful it all is for you. Invite the extended family. Do it right. Provide your children with an actual, family Thanksgiving, even if it isn?t on exactly the right day.

Why not, instead of nursing grievances from when you were six or sixteen, grow up and accept that none of this narcissistic self-indulgent picking at old scabs matters anymore? It?s over. Be done with it.

If you come from a background where you were abused (and I mean abuse, not that your big brother had a larger room than you and your folks bought your sister a prettier prom dress than yours) if you come from a background with beatings, sexual abuse or some such, then, stay away from those people. Dump them. Be done with them.

Don?t go near the people who treated you like this. Get therapy and figure out that they are poison and live your life without them. Definitely protect your children from these folks by not letting them near them.

As for the endless list of gotta dos that we inflict on ourselves at the holidays, my advice is to get real. Your house and your meal are not going on a magazine cover. So stop worrying about it.

Thanksgiving is about Thanks Giving. It?s about bringing the bizarreness of our lives to a pause for one day and eating a delicious meal, watching some football, playing a few board games with the people we love.

Some families are able to ease the work by everyone pitching in and bringing a dish. That way no one is overloaded with cooking. If that doesn?t work for your family (it doesn?t for mine) then the person who does the meal calls the shots. Do not wear yourself to a frazzle preparing a meal for the memory book. Prepare a good/great meal and enjoy.

A few other do nots are do not plan on putting up your Christmas decorations after you eat dinner. (Unless, of course, everyone has fun doing this.) Do not use china or table settings that are more precious to you than the people eating from them. Do not expect your relatives to be anybody else than who they are on this day. If your brother-in-law always shows up late, he?ll be late on Thanksgiving. Family is home, and home is a place of the heart where this sort of thing doesn?t matter. I wouldn?t wait dinner for him. But there?s no point getting upset about it, either.

I know I?m going to make some people mad with this post. It almost certainly cuts close to the bone for a lot of people and I?m not being overly sympathetic.

That?s because I?m writing it for the children. I want every parent to make this wonderful holiday of Thanksgiving a gift of real family for them. No matter how complicated your life has become, stop, think and work out ways to provide your children with a nurturing, calm and love-filled day.

It will be a gift to you as well as them, both now and for years to come.

?

?

?

Source: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/publiccatholic/2012/11/the-only-life-you-can-bring-to-thanksgiving-dinner-is-the-messy-one-youve-got/

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Monday, November 19, 2012

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Book Addicts' Pam Brewer: Dangerous escape in Mexico leads to thrilling action

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/IdahostatesmancomLife/~3/VHt40MBIVgY/dangerous-escape-in-mexico-leads.html

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Republicans say Rice must testify on Benghazi statements

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican U.S. lawmakers turned up the heat on Sunday on Susan Rice, saying the U.N. ambassador - seen as a possible nominee to replace Hillary Clinton as secretary of state - must testify before Congress on her remarks after the September attack that killed the American envoy to Libya.

Two influential Senate Republicans, John McCain and Lindsey Graham, did not back down on Sunday from their vow made last week to oppose any attempt by President Barack Obama to put Rice into a Cabinet position that would require Senate confirmation.

"She has a lot of explaining to do. I am curious why she has not repudiated these remarks," McCain, the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services committee, said on CBS's "Face the Nation" program.

Obama last Thursday warned Republicans that if they had a problem with the U.S. handling of the Benghazi attack in Libya to "go after me" rather than picking on Rice.

McCain said he wished the president would not waste time getting mad at him but instead spend the time finding out what happened in Libya and how could it be prevented in the future.

"She's going to have to come in and testify at some point, whether it's in a closed hearing or an open hearing," Republican Saxby Chambliss, vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, told the "Fox News Sunday" program, referring to Rice.

"We're going to have an open hearing, too. But at some point, she needs to come in and say what the president or the White House directed her to say," Chambliss added.

Republicans have criticized Rice for appearing on Sunday morning news shows five days after the September 11 attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi and saying that preliminary information suggested the assault was the result of protests over an anti-Muslim film rather than a premeditated strike.

The U.S. ambassador to Libya, Christopher Stevens, and three other Americans were killed in an attack that has raised questions about the security of the diplomatic mission, U.S. intelligence about the threat, and the adequacy of the immediate U.S. response.

The White House has said Rice's comments were based on the best information Rice had at the time. Republicans have used her early assessment as a cudgel for criticizing the administration as not being forthcoming about Benghazi. The senators' remarks last week suggested they would pursue the issue even though the U.S. presidential election is over.

'DESTROYS THE NARRATIVE'

Graham said Rice's initial explanation helped reinforce the Obama administration's "narrative" that al Qaeda has been weakened.

"Had the truth come out a few weeks before the election that our consulate in Benghazi had been overrun by an al Qaeda-sponsored, affiliated militia, that destroys the narrative we have been hearing for months that al Qaeda's been dismantled," Graham said on NBC's "Meet the Press" show.

"The truth of the matter is nothing could be further from the truth, and the story she told helped reinforce the political narrative helpful to the president," Graham said. "I don't know what she knew, but I know the story she told was misleading. I don't know why it was misleading."

Asked if Rice has a chance of being confirmed by the Senate to another post, Graham said he would listen to what she had to say but he was "very disappointed in Susan Rice."

When McCain was asked if he would support Rice if she were nominated as secretary of state, McCain said: "Under the present circumstances, until we find out all the information as to what happened, I don't think you could want to support any nominee right now."

"This is very, very serious, and it has even larger implications than the deaths of four Americans," McCain added. "It goes right to the heart of the 'light footprint' policy that this administration has been pursuing and all of the failures throughout the Middle East."

Lawmakers appearing on the Sunday shows expressed no appetite for the proposal by McCain and Graham for the creation of a special congressional committee to investigate the Benghazi attack, rather than have the existing committees with jurisdiction hold hearings.

"The committees within the United States Senate are very capable of investigating this in the right way," Chambliss said.

Senator Joseph Lieberman, an independent who has worked closely with McCain and Graham, added that he disagreed with "my two amigos" on the matter and that "our committees can handle this and come up with the answers."

Senator Carl Levin, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, called the criticism of Rice "one of the most unfair attacks I've ever seen in Washington in 34 years. Susan Rice was using the unclassified talking points which were provided by the intelligence community."

"The issue is whether or not Susan Rice should be pilloried for using a intelligence report which (former CIA chief) David Petraeus signed off on, which the DNI, the director of national intelligence, Mr. (James) Clapper, signed off on," Levin said.

(Reporting by Deborah Charles, Jackie Frank and Will Dunham; Editing by Will Dunham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/republicans-rice-must-testify-benghazi-statements-183752476.html

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Sunday, November 18, 2012

Dover rallies for local woman injured in London

Saturday November 17, 2012

WEST DOVER -- An auction benefit for a young woman hit in a pedestrian accident is going to bring together 500 to 600 people on Sunday at the 1846 Tavern at the West Dover Inn.

"It's a benefit to help a dear friend and her family," said First Trax Ski Shop owner and an organizer for this event, Mark Wallace. "To one: Lift the spirits of the community up because it happened so far away. And two: Help the family raise money for short-term and long-term rehabilitation."

Community members are eager to help Amy Werner and her family. She is 23 years old and had lived in Dover with parents Rich and Regina. Her father is a town police investigator and the fire chief in West Dover. She has a brother named Jeremy.

Amy went to London, England, to follow her dreams and get her master's degree in marketing and event planning.

She was involved in the accident on Saturday night and her parents are currently at her side in a hospital in London.

Right now, Amy is doing better, according to Wallace. She is still heavily sedated in an induced coma, and has had to go through multiple operations to repair her arm and leg. Contrary to some reports that people had been hearing, she suffered only one broken leg.

Amy had some facial fractures. Her pelvis was broken, too, and there is a concern with the swelling of her brain.

Wallace expects a big turn-out for the event, which goes from 1 to 5 p.m. It costs $20, which includes

food, drink and access to multiple auctions.

"I'm looking forward to putting my arms around everyone, thinking about Amy, praying for her well-being and raising money, so that her parents can concentrate on nursing Amy back to health, so they don't have to worry about the hardship and financial burdens put on them."

There will be live auction items, a silent auction with plenty of merchandise and a raffle with tickets in a cup that will be pulled at some point during the afternoon.

An Amy Werner Benefit Fund has been created at Merchant's Bank, that is statewide and "quite possibly throughout New England," Wallace said. People can donate at any bank. Donations have been made throughout Vermont, including Manchester. Funds can be dropped off at any of the Merchant's Bank locations.

Items that involve traveling, which will be auctioned off, include one week at Myrtle Beach, a one-week stay at Longboat Key, which is off the west coast of Florida and a one-week stay at the Orlando Sheraton Vistana resort.

Tickets to sporting events that will be auctioned include five tickets to the Red Sox-Orioles game, four tickets to the Jets-Patriots game this Thursday and tickets to the Jets-Chargers on Dec. 3.

Locally, events being auctioned off are a Snowcat ride for eight at Mount Snow with dinner at Harriman's, as well as a Cadillac Snowcat ride for four, up to the top of the Haystack with a champagne toast as the CAT goes up the mountain. Upon reaching the top, a dinner will be provided.

First Trax donated a ski of choice, which will allow the winner to come into the store and choose whatever skis they want. POC Helmets donated a helmet and goggle package of choice. A boot heater is another product that will be available for attendees to bid on.

"Amy and her family are so well-respected and loved in the community. It's time to pay it forward."

People who cannot make it to the event but would like to participate are allowed to enter their maximum bid by e-mailing Kristen Wallace at kristen@firsttraxsportsshop.com.

Donations can be made to Deerfield Valley Rotary Club, P.O. Box 1150, West Dover, VT 05356. To donate an item to the auction, call Kristen Wallace at 802-464-3464.

Chris Mays can be reached at 802-254-2311, ext. 273, or cmays@reformer.com

Source: http://www.reformer.com/ci_22015665/dover-rallies-amy?source=rss_viewed

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McCain on Benghazi (talking-points-memo)

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Energy companies and environmental groups are watching to see what decisions Pre...

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Saturday, November 17, 2012

The Google Maps iPhone app is real

The mythical Google Maps iPhone app possibly coming to an iOS device near you by 2013 exists,?a source tells?The Wall Street Journal's Amir Efrati and Jessica Lessin. At least a test version of it does and some "individuals outside of the company" are getting to play with it, says "person with direct knowledge of the matter." This is all very exciting for iPhone users who are unhappy "upgrading" to the lesser-than-Google maps app from Apple. But before they get too hopeful, the existence of said app does not guarantee it will arrive on your phone. Google has not yet submitted it to Apple for App Store approval, and Apple could still reject the app leaving its users Google Maps-app-deprived for good?an actual, but maybe unsubstantiated, concern of people within the company.?The Journal's source said it was unclear when Google would even bother submitting it.

Apple does not comment on apps that have not yet been submitted, so no word from them on if they will allow it. The company got rid of Google's maps for its own because it wants to compete. So, it might not accept the app on that basis. Or, maybe it will, in which case: yay. It's all very uncertain. But, at least we're one step closer. And, if it doesn't work out, we'll always have?Nokia's more-than-competent? maps.

Source: http://www.nextgov.com/mobile/2012/11/google-maps-iphone-app-real/59586/

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