Thursday, December 27, 2012

White House: Obama likely to curtail holiday trip

KAILUA, Hawaii (AP) ? President Barack Obama is likely to cut short his traditional Christmas holiday in Hawaii to return to Washington as lawmakers consider how to prevent the economy from going over the so-called fiscal cliff.

White House officials say Obama could fly back to the nation's capital as early as Wednesday, just five days after arriving in Hawaii. Congress is expected to return on Thursday.

Automatic budget cuts and tax increases are set to begin in January. So far, the president and congressional Republicans have been unable to reach agreement on any alternatives.

Obama and his family are spending the Christmas holiday at a rented home near Honolulu. On Christmas Day, the president and first lady Michelle Obama visited a nearby Marine Corps base to thank the Marines for their service.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/white-house-obama-likely-curtail-holiday-trip-022234286.html

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Sunday, December 23, 2012

North Korea missiles could reach US, says South

South Korean navy ships have found what appeared to be debris from the rocket launched by North Korea this week. NBCNews.com's Alex Witt reports.

By Reuters

SEOUL - This month's rocket launch by reclusive North Korea shows it has likely developed the technology to fire a warhead more than 6,200 miles, South Korean officials said on Sunday - putting the U.S. West Coast in range.

North Korea said the December 12 launch put a weather satellite in orbit but critics say it was aimed at nurturing the kind of technology needed to mount a nuclear warhead on a long-range missile.

North Korea is banned from testing missile or nuclear technology under U.N. sanctions imposed after its 2006 and 2009 nuclear weapons tests and the U.N. Security Council condemned the launch.

North Korea: Detained American tourist has 'admitted his crime'

South Korea retrieved and analyzed parts of the first-stage rocket that dropped in the waters off its west coast

"As a result of analyzing the material of Unha-3 (North Korea's rocket), we judged North Korea had secured a range of more than 10,000 km in case the warhead is 500-600 kg," a South Korean Defense Ministry official told a news briefing.

North Korea's previous missile tests ended in failure.

North Korea, which denounces the United States as the mother of all warmongers on an almost daily basis, has spent decades and scarce resources to try to develop technology capable of striking targets as far away as the United States and it is also working to build a nuclear arsenal.

David Guttenfelder / AP

In this 2011 file photo, a girl plays the piano inside the Changgwang Elementary School in Pyongyang, North Korea.

But experts believe the North is still years away from mastering the technology needed to miniaturize a nuclear bomb to mount on a missile.

South Korean defense officials also said there was no confirmation whether the North had the re-entry technology needed for a payload to survive the heat and vibration without disintegrating.

Despite international condemnation, the launch this month was seen as a major boost domestically to the credibility of the North's young leader, Kim Jong-un, who took over power from his father who died last year.

Apparently encouraged by the euphoria, the fledgling supreme leader called for the development and launching of "a variety of more working satellites" and "carrier rockets of bigger capacity" at a banquet in Pyongyang on Friday which he hosted for those who contributed to the lift-off, according to North Korean state media.?

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Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/23/16105519-north-korea-missiles-could-reach-us-says-south?lite

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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Customer Service 'Magic Moments' - Business Insider

In 1912 L.L. Bean launched his newly formed Maine Hunting Boot company with what he called his single Golden Rule which in part said,?treat your customers like human beings,?and they will always come back for more.

Sounds simple, ?treat your customers like human beings?, but in today?s world of PC to person interaction it's not always as easy as it looks and unless a company has a relentless drive for service, satisfaction and experience it is sure to suffer.

Exceptional customer focus is something to behold and should be a central tenet of any company, young or old.

All of us remember great moments in customer service; those little things that allow a company to stand out from the pack and keep you coming back year after year, or when we turn an interaction into a lifelong memory.?

I call them Magic Moments. I have one from a couple of years ago. I purchased a pair of mountain boots as a Christmas gift for my son from Zappos. The shoes came promptly but when I got around to wrapping them, just 3 days before the holiday, I opened the box and saw the size 12 I ordered had a size 9 in the box. I quickly called Zappos and was ready for a fight? until they turned a bad situation into a Magic Moment.

The call center rep was empowered to make decisions.? First, she overnighted, at no cost to me, a new pair of the proper size.? Next she discounted the shoes as a ?small token of their appreciation for my business and an apology for my inconvenience.?? Finally, she enrolled me in their VIP website. One small problem was transformed into a story that I love to tell and a site I will buy from forever.

The best companies understand that a customer comes in many flavors and sizes. I have yet to run across a business that can deliver on a mission of growth with a narrowly defined customer. It starts with the people that buy our goods or use our websites but from there it extends into a maze of possibilities that all need to be considered and cared for.

A smart business recognizes that customers include not only those that provide revenue, but also extends to fellow employees, suppliers, partners and anyone else that can, might or should play a role in the value chain of a great customer experience. Who for instance is the customer at Google?? Is it a paying advertiser?? Is it a user who conducts a search? Is it the website that allows for easy indexing and hence a more relevant result? Is it the UI designer that creates a masterful experience that allows an engineer?s brilliant creation to be appreciated?? The possibilities are endless.

The point is that none of us can get the job done on an island. In an ever increasingly automated world, we rely on each other to deliver results.

It's important, it's actually critical, that an organization, from top to bottom is thinking about the customer.? When I was running Lycos, I challenged employees to find something every day that would improve or deliver on a great customer experience.? It has to be ingrained in the culture of a company and it has to be something we think about all the time.

So here are 10 quick things to think about. Get them all right and you will be unstoppable.

  1. Build a culture committed to the customer ? instill a company wide commitment to making your customers feel valued.
  2. When your customer tells you something, listen ? whether surveys, focus groups, social posts or email, the market speaks the truth.? Don?t ignore it.
  3. Customers remember failures? your execution needs to be flawless all the time.? Adopt a zero tolerance policy in that it is never OK to disappoint.
  4. When it comes to customer service, one size does not fit all ? be flexible, fluid and adaptive.
  5. Empower ALL of your employees to make the experience perfect ? you can't predict every situation but you can enable your organization to be responsive to every situation.
  6. Treat employees like customers ? happy and respected employees deliver happy customers.
  7. Be obsessed with quality ? you don?t get a second chance to make a good first impression.
  8. Copy best practices ? learn from the best.
  9. Keep the customer central to every decision the company makes.
  10. Create Magic Moments at every opportunity.?

Exceptional customer satisfaction isn?t hard but like all else in a top notch organization it take focus, attention to detail and commitment. Magic Moments are there every day for the taking. Look for them and you will be amazed at the impact you can have.

In the words of the late great Same Walton, co-founder of Wal-Mart, ?The goal as a company is to have customer service that is not just the best but legendary.?

Follow Bob Davis on Twitter.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/customer-service-magic-moments-2012-12

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Air Canada's new discount carrier will fly in July

Published: Dec 18, 2012 at 8:58 AM PST
TORONTO (AP) - Air Canada says its new low-cost carrier, called Rouge, will begin flying on July 1.

Air Canada said Tuesday that Rouge will fly to Venice, Italy, and Edinburgh, Scotland, two destinations that currently aren't served by Air Canada.

The new airline will also serve Athens and other European destinations and the Caribbean from Montreal and Toronto.

The discount carrier will begin operations with two Boeing 767-300ER and two Airbus A319 aircraft that will be released from Air Canada's mainline fleet.

Additional planes will be added as Air Canada starts to take delivery of new Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft in 2014, ramping up to 50 planes.

Air Canada is Canada's largest domestic and international airline and the 15th largest airline in the world, serving more than 33 million passengers last year.

Source: http://www.kval.com/news/business/Air-Canadas-new-discount-carrier-will-fly-in-July-183959501.html

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The Sad Legacy of Robert Bork (Atlantic Politics Channel)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/271847807?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Assistant Professor - Psychology - HigherEdJobs

Oregon Institute of Technology is conducting a search for a full-time, tenure track, 9-month Assistant Professor. Primary responsibilities will be teaching undergraduate courses in our BS in Applied Psychology Program. Start date will be September 16, 2013. Salary is commensurate with education and experience. Oregon Tech's faculty salaries are competitive with our comparator institutions. Summer and on-line teaching opportunities may also be available.

Oregon Tech's primary mission is teaching and our Applied Psychology program has a strong practical component. Candidates must be student oriented and able to teach smaller seminar and lab classes with a hands-on emphasis as well as large lecture classes. The teaching load is normally 12 credits per quarter and will include courses in Basic Counseling and Abnormal Psychology, as well as courses in the candidate's area of expertise. Successful candidates will be expected to provide service to the university and community, contribute to program development at the undergraduate and graduate level, and maintain professional development activities. The Applied Psychology program is housed within the Humanities and Social Sciences department and encourages interdisciplinary collaboration.

Minimum Qualifications
Doctorate degree in Counselor Education, Counseling, Psychology or a related field from an accredited college or university.

Oregon Tech is the only accredited public polytechnic university in the Pacific Northwest. Located in southern Oregon, the 300-acre Klamath Falls campus is nestled on the eastern slope of the Cascade Mountains, with easy access to the outdoors, cultural opportunities and a distinctive quality of life. While maintaining a primary focus on teaching, Oregon Tech also offers opportunities for applied research through local and statewide centers of excellence, including the Oregon Center for Health Professions, the Oregon Renewable Energy Center and the Oregon Built Environment & Sustainable Technologies Center.

Review of applications will begin January 31, 2013 and continue until the position is filled. Therefore, at the discretion of Oregon Tech, materials received after January 31, 2013 may not receive consideration. To apply, submit a letter of application, current curriculum vitae, and a statement of your teaching philosophy, student evaluations (if available), a sample syllabus, transcripts and three letters of reference electronically to oithr@oit.edu job # 13-66011. Application material may also be mailed to the Oregon Tech Office of Human Resources, 3201 Campus Drive, Klamath Falls, OR 97601 or faxed to (541) 851-5200. For further information contact Dr. Maria Lynn Kessler, Search Chair, at (541) 885-1674, marialynn.kessler@oit.edu, or visit Oregon Tech's website at www.oit.edu.

Oregon Tech is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity/ADA employer.

Source: http://www.higheredjobs.com/details.cfm?JobCode=175703237

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Three ways to detonate a job interview

A job interview is an artificial process.

The questions are esoteric; the setting is forced; the rules and conventions are convoluted.

Attending an interview is rarely synonymous with how you can be expected to perform on the job or the regular way that the business operates.

But even the best candidate can destroy their employment chances in a job interview.

Often when we interview people who have been in one role for most of their career, it?s apparent they lack so much experience in interviewing that they ruin their chances with potential employers, even if they could be fantastic in a role.

Interviews can easily turn nasty. Here are three of the most common interview etiquette faux pas that I have observed:

1. Being obviously motivated by money

Asking about salary is an appropriate question, if handled properly. When you are asked about motivations to leave your employer, however, crying foul over your pay is not. No employer ever wants to think that a candidate is solely motivated by money. Responsibility, career advancement, opportunity, a better work culture or life balance: they?re all good reasons. They?ll sit well with the interviewer. But relying solely on money as a motivator? What guarantee would the employer have that the candidate wouldn?t quickly up-stumps for a bigger carrot?

2. Failing to engage all interviewers

I?ve been guilty of this, so I?m not preaching from an ivory tower on this one. It?s actually really tricky to engage all interviewers when you are facing a panel. Still, it?s a surprisingly common bug-bear from prospective employers. Focussing your attention on just one person (the person asking the questions, the most senior person in the room, or even the interviewer who just seems to be smiling at you a lot) can cause all sorts of odd perceptions.

3. Acting like you?ve already got the job.

The single greatest mistake I?ve seen people make going into second or subsequent interviews is to assume that they have the position sewn up. If you use assumptive phrases like ?I will? instead of ?If I?m successful, I would?? you might as well be saying to the interviewer ?I?ve already got this job, so let?s cut to the chase.?

The truth is that until there?s a signed letter of offer returned to the organisation, the job can still disappear. There?s a mantra I use whenever I?m in that situation, especially when I feel that an interview is going well. ?I don?t have the job yet, I don?t have the job yet, I don?t...? ? you get the picture.

Interviewing is a learned skill. The only real way to avoid making these kinds of mistakes is to put in the necessary preparation and practice beforehand. Just being the right person isn?t enough.?

Source: http://www.leadingcompany.com.au/managing-me/three-ways-to-detonate-a-job-interview/201212173320

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Asbury Automotive Group, Inc. Enters Oversold Territory - Zacks.com

December 17, 2012 | Comments : Recommended this article: (0)

This page is temporarily not available.? Please check later as it should be available shortly. If you have any questions, please email customer support at support@zacks.com or call 800-767-3771 ext. ?9339.

Asbury Automotive Group, Inc.?s (ABG - Snapshot Report) share price has entered into oversold territory with a stochastic value of 14.765. The Zacks Consensus Estimate on the company?s earnings for year ending December 2012 increased by 13 cents over the past two months to $2.62 per share. Asbury Automotive Group, Inc. is a Zacks #1 Rank (?Strong Buy?) company.

Source: http://www.zacks.com/stock/news/88693/asbury-automotive-group-inc-enters-oversold-territory

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Monday, December 17, 2012

Mad Max: Fury Road Wraps Principal Photography

It weathered massive delays due - ironically - to good weather, survived a move to a different continent, and finished out the end of the shoot under the watchful eye of studio bean counters. But the key word in that statement is 'end'. Because that's what production of Mad Max: Fury Road has reached: The end of principal photography.

After a six month shoot, largely in the deserts of Namibia, George Miller's long talked about Mad Max: Fury Road has wrapped production and the Tom hardy / Charlize Theron starring revival of the post-apocalyptic franchise that made Mel Gibson a star will now undergo a lengthy post production process in Australia. It's a happy note in what has been one of the more snake bitten productions of recent memory.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1926500/news/1926500/

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Sandy Hook shooting: Parenting common sense and solace

In the Sandy Hook shooting aftermath, parents can make their own logical solace: focus on the good and that happened that day, like the bravery and strength of the teachers; stop rehearsing the horror by watching the endless media loop; and don't forget? ... think of Sandy Hook two months from now.

By Madora Kibbe,?Guest Blogger / December 17, 2012

Sandy Hook put us all in uncharted territory. And in our fast paced, Wikipedia world we want to make sense of the senseless now. Well, we can?t. But there are some things we can do. Beginning with ourselves.

Illustration by Barrie Maguire

Enlarge

Most parents are very good at comforting their children. They look under beds and in closets to prove no monsters are lurking. They dry tears, hug and hold on, because they know instinctively that the words they say are never as important as the acts of kindness parents perform on a daily hourly, moment-by-moment basis. That's why they became parents, because parenting equals love. And most of the time our children's fears aren't our own. So we can handle them calmly and rationally.? We say, "See you in the morning light," and mean it.?

Skip to next paragraph Madora Kibbe

Guest Blogger

Madora Kibbe has been a contributing writer for?The Christian Science Monitor for more than 35 years. A full-time Christian Science practitioner, she blogs in both a serious and humorous vein about all things mundane, sublime, and spiritual. She writes the "Thinking Makes It So" blog for Psychology Today.? She and her husband Jon moved back to Manhattan after raising their family in the suburbs.

Recent posts

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But the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. last Friday are unprecedented and unimaginable. Although there have been acts of violence before at schools, the magnitude of the shootings at Sandy Hook put us all in uncharted territory. And in our fast paced, Wikipedia world we want to make sense of the senseless now.? Well, we can?t.? But there are some things we can do. Beginning with ourselves.
?
1.? We can act like the brave teacher at Sandy Hook, who hid all her students in a closet, telling them everything was going to be alright, even though she didn?t think it would be. She kept them calm by maintaining order, by telling them to smile, by telling them she loved them. What she did was powerful, and those children not only survived because of her, they also walked out of that closet with at least a small amount of equilibrium. And comfort.
?
2.? We can listen to the news reports in small amounts. It?s normal and necessary to know what?s going on in our world, but not to get hooked on every sound bite, some of which are often wrong. Now more than ever we need to monitor our children?s screen time.? We may even want to unplug for a few days.

3.? We can talk to our children about the other acts of courage and kindness that transpired at Sandy Hook. The custodian who warned the teachers and children, the first responders who got the other children out and told them to hold on to each other and keep their eyes closed. We can help them to focus on the good that transpired that day, not the horrible.
?
4.? We can realize that the quick fix fixes nothing. That we need to hit re-send, over and over again, in our prayers for ourselves and others. Yes prayers, even atheists can pray, because by prayer I mean thinking thoughts of love and kindness about the people of Newtown. And that?s exactly what I mean.

5.? Finally, a practical suggestion: The tragedy occurred on Dec. 14.? Two months later will be Valentine's Day.? What if your family sent a Valentine card, to Sandy Hook Elementary School, or the town of Newtown?? Just a card signed by you and your kids that says, "We love you and we?re still grieving your loss. We?re thinking of you, we?re keeping you in our prayers." The words won?t really matter. It?s the thought, the act, the love, that counts.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/zRz6tnBhWy8/Sandy-Hook-shooting-Parenting-common-sense-and-solace

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Militants attack airport in NW Pakistan; 9 killed

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) ? Suicide bombers armed with rockets attacked the military side of a Pakistani airport in the northwestern city of Peshawar Saturday, killing four civilians and wounding more than 30, officials said. Five militants also were killed.

Peshawar is on the edge of Pakistan's tribal region, the main sanctuary for al-Qaida and Taliban militants in the country. The city has frequently been attacked in the past few years, but Saturday was the first strike against the airport, which is jointly used by the air force and civilian authorities.

The militants fired three rockets at the airport, two of which hit a wall ringing the premises, said Mian Iftikhar Hussain, the information minister in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, where Peshawar is the capital. The third landed near a government building outside the wall, Hussain said.

The militants also set off a car bomb outside the wall around the airport, causing civilian casualties, said the military.

The dead and wounded civilians from the attack came from neighborhoods located near the airport, said Umar Ayub, a local hospital official. The 36 wounded included six women and three children, and several people were in critical condition, said Ayub.

Five militants were killed in a gunbattle with security forces during the attack, said the military.

However, Zahid Khan, a police explosives expert, said it appeared that three of the militants were accidentally killed when the car bomb they used to try to break through the airport wall exploded.

Four of the attackers who were killed were wearing suicide vests that have been defused, said the air force.

The air force side of the airport was the target of the attack and authorities were searching the area for any remaining attackers, said Defense Minister Naveed Qamar.

No air force personnel were wounded in the attack and none of the service's equipment was damaged, the air force said.

Local TV footage showed people in the neighborhoods near the airport rushing for safety as the attack occurred. One car was damaged in the attack and another was set on fire. A house was also damaged.

The airport was closed, and flights were diverted to other cities, said Pervez George, a spokesman for the Civil Aviation Authority.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but suspicion will likely fall on the Pakistani Taliban. The militant group has been waging a bloody insurgency against the government for the past several years and has attacked Peshawar many times in the past.

Also Saturday, police said a judge freed a couple on bail who confessed to killing their 15-year-old daughter in October by pouring acid on her after their other children pardoned them.

The girl's parents, Mohammad Zafar and his wife Zaheen, said in a televised interview that they killed her because she sullied the family's honor by looking at a boy.

They were freed from a jail in Pakistan-administered Kashmir on Friday after their other children, who are minors, said they forgave their parents, said police officer Tahir Ayub. The children spoke through their guardian, who is also a relative, said Ayub.

The police officer said authorities had evidence to prove the murder charge against the parents, but by law, their children had the right to forgive them. The murder charge will likely be dropped, said Ayub.

The girl's death underlined the problem of so-called "honor killings" in Pakistan, where women are often killed for marrying or having relationships not approved by their families or because they are perceived to have somehow dishonored their family.

According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, at least 943 women were killed in the name of honor last year. The real toll is believed to be higher because many of the crimes go unreported.

___

Associated Press writer Zarar Khan in Islamabad and Roshan Mughal in Muzaffarabad, Pakistan, contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/militants-attack-airport-nw-pakistan-9-killed-191106206.html

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Rocket still centerpiece as NKoreans mourn Kim

PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) ? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un solemnly reopened the sprawling, granite mausoleum where his father's body lies in state as the nation marked the first anniversary of Kim Jong Il's death Monday with sadness as well as celebration over last week's successful satellite launch.

Kim Jong Un joined top Workers' Party, military and government officials in a brief ceremony at the renovated Kumsusan mausoleum in Pyongyang's outskirts after being closed to the public since Kim Jong Il's death. The hall bearing Kim Jong Il's body was expected to open to guests on Monday afternoon.

At noon, North Koreans across the country stopped in their tracks to pay tribute to Kim, who died of a heart attack last year after 17 years in power. On one street in Pyongyang, construction workers took off their yellow hard hats and bowed at the waist as sirens wailed across the city for three minutes.

Unlike the dramatic shows of tears and mourning last year, the mood in Pyongyang was decidedly upbeat Monday, less than a week after North Korea successfully sent a satellite named after Kim Jong Il into space.

The controversial launch, widely condemned by the U.S. and other nations that consider it a violation of U.N. bans against missile activity, underlined Kim Jong Un's determination to continue carrying out his father's hardline policies even if they draw sanctions and international condemnation.

The West sees the rocket as a thinly disguised way of carrying out U.N-banned tests of long-range missile technology, which it says not only threatens regional stability but is also a waste of resources when the country is struggling with a chronic food shortage.

Outsiders worry that in upcoming weeks Pyongyang will press ahead with a nuclear test, necessary in the march toward building a warhead small enough to be carried by a long-range missile.

At the mausoleum, renamed the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, Choe Ryong Hae, the military's top political officer, said North Korea should be proud of the satellite. He called it a show of strength to the world.

Following tradition, North Korea reopened the mausoleum on the first anniversary of the leader's death and was expected to present Kim's body lying in state later Monday. Kumsusan, the palace where his father, Kim Il Sung, served as president, was reopened as a mausoleum on the first anniversary of his death in 1994.

Lined with snow-tinged firs, the plaza has been turned into a park at Kim Jong Un's orders and his father's portrait installed on the fa?ade alongside that of Kim Il Sung.

At a memorial service on Sunday, North Korea's top leadership eulogized Kim Jong Il and praised his son, who gained national prestige and clout by going ahead with the rocket launch.

Kim Yong Nam, president of the Presidium of North Korea's parliament, credited Kim Jong Il with building Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program, and called the satellite launch a "shining victory" and an emblem of the promise that lies ahead with his son in power.

Choe warned that the army was prepared to defend the country's sovereignty.

Wednesday's launch was North Korea's second attempt in eight months to fulfill Kim Jong Il's 14-year quest to put a satellite into space. International experts confirmed that a satellite succeeded in reaching space.

Criticism of the launch was swift. The United States called it a covert test of missile technology, and U.N. Security Council condemned the launch as a violation of resolutions barring Pyongyang from developing its nuclear and missile programs.

However, the launch fit neatly into the preparations to mark the first anniversary of Kim's death and the rise of his young son.

Even before his death, Kim Jong Il had laid the ground for his son to inherit a government with national policies focused on science, technology and improving the economy. The son has been characterized as forward-thinking and tech-savvy ? and the kind of man bold enough to take a gamble on a tricky rocket launch.

A launch in April, sent amid festivities to mark the centenary of the birth of North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, ended in failure shortly after liftoff.

Kim Jong Un made clear his intention to treat Wednesday's successful launch as a gift to his father, inviting scientists in charge of the launch from a west coast launch pad to Pyongyang for the mourning rites, according to state media.

The mood in North Korea has been subdued this month in the run-up to the anniversary. However, news of the launch cheered people and the regime held a mass rally on Friday at the main plaza in Pyongyang.

Starting Saturday, North Koreans began streaming to a bronze statue of Kim on Mansu Hill and to Kim Il Sung Square to pay their respects, many laying white mourning flowers and bowing before his image.

On Sunday, a solemn Kim Jong Un joined the memorial service at the Pyongyang Indoor Stadium on the eve of the anniversary of Kim Jong Il's death.

Kim, whose entrances and exits usually are accompanied by a triumphant welcome song and a swell of cheers, entered the stage in silence, followed by top Workers' Party, government and Korean People's Army officials, as well as his aunt and uncle.

Tight security surrounded the gymnasium near Pyongyang's Pothong Gate. Armed soldiers in helmets posted along the street outside diverted traffic and pedestrians while more guarded every entrance to the building. The handful of foreign journalists allowed to cover the event, including The Associated Press, were searched by armed soldiers.

In his speech, Kim Yong Nam called Kim Jong Il a "peerless patriot" who strengthened the military and stood up to the United States.

The U.S. and North Korea signed a truce, not a peace treaty, at the close of the 1950-53 Korean War, and Pyongyang cites American troops in South Korea as a key reason for building its atomic weapons program.

As the hourlong ceremony came to a close, the band briefly played the mournful refrain to "The General Will Always be With Us." After the musicians put down their instruments, Kim Jong Un stood up and led a silent procession out.

___

Associated Press writer Hyung-jin Kim contributed to this report from Seoul, South Korea. Follow AP's bureau chief for Pyongyang and Seoul at www.twitter.com/newsjean.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rocket-still-centerpiece-nkoreans-mourn-kim-054503270.html

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Saturday, December 15, 2012

Spike in crime for Benton County | Local & Regional | KEPR CBS 19 ...

BENTON COUNTY - The KEPR Crime Tracker is learning of an outbreak of car prowls -- mailbox thefts -- and home burglaries. Thieves are hot on the trail of your Christmas presents.

Corky is just like any grandma. Carefully crafting presents -- ready to ship in the mail.
Her only worry? Thieves.

"Yeah, I worry about that immensely," said Finley Resident Corky.

Corky's trailer park in Finley was recently hit by a series of mailbox thefts.

"It's extremely frustrating," exclaimed Corky.

Her situation is not isolated -- Benton County is reporting a handful of problem spots for theft -- car prowls and burglaries.

They include Paul's Trailer Court and Kelly Estates in Finley. Also the west end of Benton County -- along King Tull Road and West Hanks. And a pock of Benton County in unincorporated Kennewick -- near Arrowhead and Jefferson. Car prowlers have targeted that area near Canal Drive in recent weeks.

"Whatever present you just bought for your mom is going to someone else's mom," said Benton County Sheriff's Deputy Joe Lusignan.

It reflects a bigger trend. Crime in Benton County is down compared to the five year average. However, theft from vehicles, thefts and residential burglaries are all close to matching last year's numbers.

"This time of the year, these things start to trend upwards," explained Lusignan.

The Sheriff's department says it's increasing patrols and trying to boost awareness. But community action goes a long ways. It's all about simply locking-up.

"They'll take advantage of those of us in our society who are a little bit too trusting," said Lusignan.

So far no arrests have been made in connection to these. To avoid becoming a victim -- always park in a well-lit area -- and don't put the red flag up on your mailbox if you put cards or checks inside.

Source: http://www.keprtv.com/news/local/HOLIDAY-CRIMETRACKER-Benton-County-183589761.html

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Will Brody Die? Is Carrie the Mole? Is It All a Dream?

Damian Lewis as Nicholas "Nick" Brody in Homeland's season finale.

Damian Lewis as Nicholas "Nick" Brody in Homeland's season finale.

Photo by Kent Smith/Showtime.

One critic likened Season 2 of Homeland to an extended game of Mad Libs, so implausible were some of its plot twists. As the final episode approaches, we asked Slate writers and the folks who took part in the Homeland TV Club to offer their predictions for what will go down Sunday night. We also plucked a couple of smart suggestions from the Internet.

Quinn kills Brody, and he and Estes exchange Brody?s body for Abu Nazir?s body. Then they dump it out at sea. That?s the body we saw in the ?next week on Homeland? trailer. Saul tips off Carrie, but too late to save Brody, and now they have no hard evidence. She is horrified and heartbroken and vows to prove what happened so she can bring down Quinn and Estes. But Saul is discredited and exiled and Carrie is in some sort of box, too. The problem with this theory is that it means no more Damian Lewis playing Nicholas Brody in Season 3, which would be a crying shame.? Emily Bazelon

I predict that all the emphasis on the romance between Carrie and Brody (which has been driving some of us nuts) is a masterful sleight of hand by the writers. Carrie is the only person alive who knows that Brody killed the vice president. And Brody could barely play off his feelings about the death of Abu Nazir in front of his own family. Brody is using his alleged feelings for Carrie to lull her into a false sense of security, but actually he?s unhinged and she?s in great danger. Will Quinn save her? I might be wrong, but I have to believe it. Because otherwise, the show is a second-rate soap opera based on a completely unbelievable affair. ?Rachael Larimore

Brody needs to die, but Carrie Mathison needs, as Roya Hammad put it to her, "someone who takes over your life, pulls you in, gets you to do things you would normally never do." So my bet: Peter Quinn manages to take out Brody in the finale. Next season, Saul and Carrie work together to prove that Quinn, David Estes, and?Dar Adul are in it together, if only so I can get my prescription dose of F. Murray Abraham. And Quinn and Carrie do some??Stage 5?delusional getting laid? of their own. ?Alyssa Rosenberg

Quinn will follow orders and kill Brody, only to be burned by Estes and Dar Adul. Carrie will realize that Saul has an agenda of his own?suspects with valuable information die when he?s around. Quinn and Carrie?when they?re not screaming at each other or screwing?will spend Season 3 trying to figure out who Saul is really working for. ?June Thomas

I continue to think the season is going to wind its way around to Carrie having to kill Brody, then discovering she?s having his child. ?The AV Club?s Todd VanDerWerff (in his take on Episode 211)

I have a sinking feeling that Season 2's finale will wrap up with Brody dead?though not at the hands of gorgeous Peter Quinn, who I envision standing down out of compassion for Carrie. Maybe Estes himself will pull the trigger, as Saul and Carrie burst into the room. When word gets out, Estes will retire in disgrace, and Saul will reconcile with his wife and open a waffle restaurant. The last we see of Claire Danes will be a shot of her bent over Brody's body, making the Cry Face To End All Cry Faces. ?Katy Waldman

Honestly, I have not the foggiest idea. It has gone so far off into the realm of preposterousness that they could do anything. It will probably end with Brody?a trained sniper, remember??killing Dar Adul, as Dar Adul prepares to murder Carrie and Saul. ?David Plotz

Brody becomes the new No. 1, replacing Abu Nazir. He never had divided loyalties and has been working for the terrorists all along. He has been carefully setting up Carrie and is going to make it look like she is the mole. ?Emily Yoffe

Could the big bad be a character you never thought of?

If Nazir had been really smart, he would have spent years cultivating those close to Brody and Walker, knowing they would need a minder when they got back to the States, someone to keep Brody from connecting with his family ... aka Mike. ?Chad Briggs

Carrie is the mole. That?s what Estes says, anyway, creating a convincing narrative: Carrie and Brody became terrorist sympathizers. Carrie and Brody are framed for Walden?s death. Carrie?s history of mental illness?manifested in erratic behavior, insubordination, and suspension?plays in. Her obsession with Nazir evolved into admiration. Estes says she was a complicit prisoner.

Estes leaks Brody?s video and other evidence that golden boy Brody is a conspirator. Brody?s family doesn?t know any better. The only person who knows otherwise is Saul, but Estes saw to it that he was discredited.

Like Emily Yoffe's Dear Prudence Column on Facebook:

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=fba35172dd26a48f5270d93821960d70

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Friday, December 14, 2012

Steam opens up Community Market for the sale of virtual goods ...

If ever there was such a thing as a win-win-win situation in the world of digital video game distribution, the new ?Community Market? within Valve?s Steam platform would pretty much nail the definition right on the head. Although it?s still very much just a beta idea right now, it opens up the floodgates to grant extra money to game developers, to Valve, and even directly to gamers themselves.

The basic concept behind the Community Market is that players will be able to sell their in-game items directly to other players. Valve will get a cut of the transaction, as will the publisher of the game, and then the player who?s selling the item gets to pocket the rest.

Of course, the money is only available to the player?s Steam Wallet which makes it an even bigger revenue booster to Valve and, by extension, all other publishers on Steam.

Right now, the Community Market is only available in the game Team Fortress 2, one of the most popular titles on Steam. Even within TF2, only certain eligible items are available to be sold from player to player. Of course, Valve says that once the kinks are ironed out and it has a chance to evaluate the program, if everything is successful it will roll it out to more items within TF2 and then eventually to more Steam games.

Steam market

Other limitations of the beta include the fact that players can have no more than $200 in their Steam Wallet at any time. As such, the maximum amount they can charge for any item is $200.

As for the nitty gritty details, all Community Market transactions will be subjected to a 5% transaction fee, which the buyer will pay, as well as a 10% Team Fortress 2 Fee. So a total of 15% goes to Valve and the publisher ? not a bad deal for the kind of transaction that usually takes place outside of the game servers. Instead of Ebay getting a cut of the sale, why not let the people who made the game get in on the action?

There is no timeline for when Valve expects to expand the Community Market, but the limited accessibility within TF2 is now available for all users.

Steam Support and Market, via Gamasutra

Source: http://www.geek.com/articles/games/steam-opens-up-community-market-20121213/

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Spaniard jailed in Cuba to finish sentence at home

FILE - In this Oct. 5, 2012 file photo, Cuban security forces escort Spanish citizen Angel Carromero, center, to the courthouse in Bayamo, Cuba. Carromero. The Spaniard who was sentenced in Cuba to prison in the death of a prominent dissident will fly back to Spain to serve the rest of his four-year term. Carromero, a Spanish regional political youth leader, was driving a car July 22 that lost control and crashed, killing Oswaldo Paya, a passenger. Paya was a well-known opponent of the Cuban government. (AP Photo/Ismael Francisco, Cubadebate, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 5, 2012 file photo, Cuban security forces escort Spanish citizen Angel Carromero, center, to the courthouse in Bayamo, Cuba. Carromero. The Spaniard who was sentenced in Cuba to prison in the death of a prominent dissident will fly back to Spain to serve the rest of his four-year term. Carromero, a Spanish regional political youth leader, was driving a car July 22 that lost control and crashed, killing Oswaldo Paya, a passenger. Paya was a well-known opponent of the Cuban government. (AP Photo/Ismael Francisco, Cubadebate, File)

(AP) ? A Spaniard sentenced in Cuba to prison for the death of a prominent dissident will fly back to Spain to serve the rest of his four-year term, authorities in both countries said Friday.

Angel Carromero Barrios, a Spanish regional political youth leader, was driving a car July 22 that lost control and crashed, killing Oswaldo Paya, a passenger. Paya was a well-known opponent of the Cuban government.

Paya's widow had asked that the Spaniard not be prosecuted, but a court eventually sentenced him to jail in October for the equivalent of vehicular manslaughter. Carromero later asked to be able to serve his sentence in Spain.

On Friday, Spanish Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria said Carromero would return to Spain. Cuba also confirmed the decision after negotiations concluded Thursday between the two countries' justice ministries. Neither specified a date for the transfer.

"Both delegations agreed that upon conclusion of the formal legal procedures, the aforementioned offender will be transferred to Spanish territory," the Cuban Foreign Ministry's legal director Manuel de Jesus Pirez Perez said in a statement sent to The Associated Press.

Ofelia Acevedo, Paya's widow, has repeatedly said she does not believe government investigators' account of the accident.

"For me, Carromero never should have been in prison," Acevedo said. "I don't accept the official version of this tragic story."

Acevedo said she was happy to see the 27-year-old Carromero leave Cuba's penal system, adding that she hoped he would be able to tell the truth once he arrived on Spanish soil.

Aron Modig, a Swedish national who was also in the car at the time of the crash, said via Twitter that he had heard of Cuba's decision and that he is "very happy and relieved about it."

___

Associated Press correspondents Peter Orsi in Havana, Cuba, and Karl Ritter in Stockholm, Sweden, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-12-14-Spain-Cuba-Prisoner/id-e6c4545d79c74f20bc7072a7615d713c

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18 and Under: Understanding How Children Develop Empathy

The mother was trying to hold the baby still, and I was pulling gently on the ear, angling for a better look at the infant?s eardrum. The wriggling baby didn?t like any of it, and her whimpering quickly turned to full-fledged wails.

Suddenly the baby?s 3-year-old brother, an innocent bystander in no danger of having his own ears examined, began to wail as well, creating the kind of harmonic cacophony that makes passers-by wince in recognition. And the poor mother, her hands full, could only look over and reassure him: Your sister is O.K., don?t worry, don?t feel bad.

But really, was that why the 3-year-old was crying? Was he tired and frustrated, scared by the noise, jealous of his mother?s attention? Or was he, in fact, upset because his sister was upset ? an early step toward empathy, sympathy, kindness and charity?

The capacity to notice the distress of others, and to be moved by it, can be a critical component of what is called prosocial behavior, actions that benefit others: individuals, groups or society as a whole. Psychologists, neurobiologists and even economists are increasingly interested in the overarching question of how and why we become our better selves.

How do children develop prosocial behavior, and is there in fact any way to encourage it? If you do, will you eventually get altruistic adults, the sort who buy shoes for a homeless man on a freezing night, or rush to lift a commuter pushed onto the subway tracks as the train nears?

Nancy Eisenberg, a professor of psychology at Arizona State University, is an expert on the development in children of prosocial behavior, ?voluntary behavior intended to benefit another.? Such behavior is often examined through the child?s ability to perceive and react to someone else?s distress. Attempts at concern and reassurance can be seen in children as young as 1.

Dr. Eisenberg draws a distinction between empathy and sympathy: ?Empathy, at least the way I break it out, is experiencing the same emotion or highly similar emotion to what the other person is feeling,? she said. ?Sympathy is feeling concern or sorrow for the other person.? While that may be based in part on empathy, she said, or on memory, ?it?s not feeling the same emotion.?

By itself, intense empathy ? really feeling someone else?s pain ? can backfire, causing so much personal distress that the end result is a desire to avoid the source of the pain, researchers have found. The ingredients of prosocial behavior, from kindness to philanthropy, are more complex and varied.

They include the ability to perceive others? distress, the sense of self that helps sort out your own identity and feelings, the regulatory skills that prevent distress so severe it turns to aversion, and the cognitive and emotional understanding of the value of helping.

Twin studies have suggested that there is some genetic component to prosocial tendencies. When reacting to an adult who is pretending to be distressed, for example, identical twins behave more like each other than do fraternal twins. And as children grow up, these early manifestations of sympathy and empathy become part of complex decision-making and personal morality.

?There is some degree of heritability,? said Carolyn Zahn-Waxler, a senior research scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who has done some of these twin studies. But she notes that the effect is small: ?There is no gene for empathy, there is no gene for altruism. What?s heritable may be some personality characteristics.?

Scott Huettel, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke, described two broad theories to explain prosocial behavior. One, he said, was essentially motivational: It feels good to help other people. Economists have also looked at the question of altruism, and have hypothesized about a ?warm glow effect? to account for charitable giving.

Experimental studies have shown that the same brain region that is activated when people win money for themselves is active when they give to charity ? that is, that there is a kind of neurologic ?reward? built into the motivational system of the brain.

?Charitable giving can activate the same pleasure-reward centers, the dopaminergic centers, in the brain that are very closely tied to habit formation,? said Bill Harbaugh, an economist at the University of Oregon who studies altruism. ?This suggests it might be possible to foster the same sorts of habits for charitable giving you see with other sorts of habits.?

The other theory of prosocial behavior, Dr. Huettel said, is based on social cognition ? the recognition that other people have needs and goals. The two theories aren?t mutually exclusive: Cognitive understanding accompanied by a motivational reward reinforces prosocial behavior.

But shaping prosocial behavior is a tricky business. For instance, certain financial incentives seem to deter prosocial impulses, a phenomenon called reward undermining, Dr. Huettel said.

Consider that in the United States, historically, blood donors could be paid, but not in Britain. And the British donated more blood. ?When you give extrinsic motivations, they can supplant the intrinsic ones,? he said.

What would the experts say about fostering prosocial behavior in children, from kindness on to charity?

Parental modeling is important, of course; sympathy and compassion should be part of children?s experience long before they know the words.

?Explain how other people feel,? Dr. Eisenberg said. ?Reflect the child?s feelings, but also point out, look, you hurt Johnny?s feelings.?

Don?t offer material rewards for prosocial behavior, but do offer opportunities to do good ? opportunities that the child will see as voluntary. And help children see themselves and frame their own behavior as generous, kind, helpful, as the mother in my exam room did.

Working with a child?s temperament, taking advantage of an emerging sense of self and increasing cognitive understanding of the world and helped by the reward centers of the brain, parents can try to foster that warm glow and the worldview that goes with it. Empathy, sympathy, compassion, kindness and charity begin at home, and very early.

Source: http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/10/understanding-how-children-develop-empathy/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Thursday, December 13, 2012

Independent theaters feel pressure - South Sound - The Olympian ...

SEAN ROBINSON | Staff writer ? Published December 12, 2012 Modified December 12, 2012

You can?t kill the flicker. The flicker will live on.

The flicker is the visual signature of a 35mm film projector, the industry standard for decades and the drug of choice for film fanatics. It?s slowly disappearing, pushed into irrelevance by digital projection systems favored by major film studios.

Zero hour will arrive next year, when studios cease to provide old-standard film prints to movie houses around the country.

Independent theaters from Tacoma to Olympia are racing that clock, adopting a common motto: Go digital or go dark. The Grand Cinema and the Blue Mouse in Tacoma, the Olympia Film Society and the Roxy in downtown Eatonville ? all face the same choice.

?It?s all of us little guys,? said Susan Evans, manager of the Blue Mouse. ?I?m sad for everybody.?

The conversion presents no problem for suburban multiplexes and theater chains; virtually all of them have switched already, replacing film projectors with their digital counterparts.

It?s not so easy for the independent operators. Digital projectors cost big money ? $75,000 or more. Around the country, some theaters are shutting down, unable to bear the cost.

Others, such as the Grand and the Blue Mouse, are raising money to fund the conversion. The Grand, which runs four screens, is aiming for $344,000, relying largely on contributions from its members, said executive director Philip Cowan, who said the effort is on track.

?We?re writing for grants and then going to our membership for donations, and then every time somebody sees a movie at the Grand, they?re seeing a trailer that we have on our website,? Cowan said. ?Our goal is to install by next fall.?

In Olympia, the Film Society runs a single screen at the Capitol Theater downtown, often inviting prominent directors for discussions. Last month, director Philip Kaufman presented his 1983 epic, ?The Right Stuff,? which chronicles the early days of the U.S. space program.

The society aims to raise $80,000 for the digital conversion, wrapped into a longer-term fund-raising effort to spruce up the 90-year-old building, said executive director Thom Mayes.

?We not only need to convert but we need to make some serious capital upgrades to the building,? he said.

That effort ? with a target of $400,000 ? will pay for new theater seats, better rest rooms and safety improvements.

The Blue Mouse started raising money online last month, aiming at a $75,000 target. As of Tuesday, donations stood at $43,655 ? 58 percent of the money needed, with slightly more than a month to go.

?We have had a wonderful outpouring,? said Evans, the manager and lone projectionist for the 89-year-old theater in Tacoma?s Proctor neighborhood. ?For me it?s been very emotional to watch, because I?ve worked for months to put this campaign together.?

In Eatonville, Michael Wood, co-owner of the Roxy, built in 1942, hopes to raise money through online and private sources, but progress has been slow ? about $5,500 so far.

The independent houses are stuck with raising money on their own, chiefly because they pick their own films rather than following the dictates of major studios. The multiplexes don?t face that challenge; the studios underwrite the cost of conversion.

?Their assistance is kind of assistance with strings,? Cowan said. ?More or less it comes back to them giving you kickbacks for you carrying their films.?

The Grand and the Film Society don?t work that way: both houses tend to feature art-house films and vintage classics that don?t find their way to the suburbs. Sometimes it?s first-run stuff (the Grand is currently showing Steven Spielberg?s ?Lincoln,? along with ?Anna Karenina?), but filmgoers are just as likely to see the unexpected, such as a series of classic martial arts movies or a screening of ?The Maltese Falcon.?

The Grand and the Film Society won?t give up on 35mm ? both houses will preserve their ability to show vintage prints on film in special cases. But for the most part, films no longer will arrive in 90-pound canisters; instead, they?ll come in five-pound cartridges, about the size of a bulky paperback book.

?I do worry that 10 years from now, that we might have to go through something like this again,? Cowan said.

Source: http://www.theolympian.com/2012/12/12/2350524/independent-theaters-feel-pressure.html

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Wednesday, December 12, 2012

?Dangerous for Military? Isn't Synonymous with ?Dangerous for Society?

Here?s a letter to?US News & World Report:

Worried that sequestration will reduce the Pentagon?s budget, Mackenzie Eaglen quotes Pentagon Comptroller Robert Hale?s allegation that sequestration would result in a ?less-capable, less-modern, less-ready force and [risk] creating a hollow military? (?Obama?s fiscal cliff stubbornness dangerous for military,? Dec. 7).

Please.

According to the International Institute for Strategic Studies, Uncle Sam?s annual military budget today is more than seven times (!) larger than that of the nation (China) with the globe?s second-largest military budget.? And if China and all other nations, apart from the U.S., ranked today in the top ten according to absolute size of military budgets were to merge into one gigantic country, America?s current military budget would still be much larger than that of our new mega-rival ? larger than the combined budgets of these other nine countries by 52 percent (or $252 billion)!? Put differently, if sequestration does kick in to cut, as projected, $50 billion annually from the Pentagon?s budget, five years of such cuts would be necessary to shrink the U.S. military budget to the size at which it would equal the sum?of the world?s next nine largest military budgets.

When champions of fiscal prudence and market economies ? such as Ms. Eaglen?s employer, the American Enterprise Institute ? frantically insist that modest belt-tightening by the colossus that is the Pentagon will bring calamity, ?Progressives? and others who endorse active government involvement in the economy can be forgiven for likewise issuing over-the-top, hysterical predictions about the calamities that will doom us from modest belt-tightening by the likes of the Department of Education and the F.D.A.

Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
and
Martha and Nelson Getchell Chair for the Study of Free Market Capitalism at the Mercatus Center
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA? 22030

Source: http://cafehayek.com/2012/12/and-dangerous-for-military-isnt-synonymous-for-dangerous-for-society.html

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Source: http://www.gamezone.nfo.ph/ways-to-beat-your-internet-internet-hosting-woes/

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Ancient red dye powers new 'green' battery: Chemists use plant extract in eco-friendly, sustainable lithium-ion battery

Dec. 11, 2012 ? Rose madder -- a natural plant dye once prized throughout the Old World to make fiery red textiles -- has found a second life as the basis for a new "green" battery.

Chemists from The City College of New York teamed with researchers from Rice University and the U.S. Army Research Laboratory to develop a non-toxic and sustainable lithium-ion battery powered by purpurin, a dye extracted from the roots of the madder plant (Rubia species).

More than 3,500 years ago, civilizations in Asia and the Middle East first boiled madder roots to color fabrics in vivid oranges, reds and pinks. In its latest technological incarnation, the climbing herb could lay the foundation for an eco-friendly alternative to traditional lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries. These batteries charge everything from your mobile phone to electric vehicles, but carry with them risks to the environment during production, recycling and disposal.

"Purpurin," on the other hand, said team member and City College Professor of Chemistry George John, "comes from nature and it will go back to nature." The team reports their results in the journal Nature's online and open access publication, Scientific Reports, on December 11, 2012.

Most Li-ion batteries today rely on finite supplies of mined metal ores, such as cobalt. "Thirty percent of globally produced cobalt is fed into battery technology," noted Dr. Leela Reddy, lead author and a research scientist in Professor Pulickel Ajayan's lab in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science at Rice University. The cobalt salt and lithium are combined at high temperatures to make a battery's cathode, the electrode through which the electric current flows.

Mining cobalt metal and transforming it, however, is expensive, Dr. Reddy explained. Fabricating and recycling standard Li-ion batteries demands high temperatures, guzzling costly energy, especially during recycling. "In 2010, almost 10 billion lithium-ion batteries had to be recycled," he said .

Production and recycling also pumps an estimated 72 kilograms of carbon dioxide -- a greenhouse gas -- into the atmosphere for every kilowatt-hour of energy in a Li-ion battery, he noted. These grim facts have fed a surging demand to develop green batteries, said Dr. Reddy.

Fortunately, biologically based color molecules, like purpurin and its relatives, seem pre-adapted to act as a battery's electrode. In the case of purpurin, the molecule's six-membered (aromatic) rings are festooned with carbonyl and hydroxyl groups adept at passing electrons back and forth, just as traditional electrodes do. "These aromatic systems are electron-rich molecules that easily coordinate with lithium," explained Professor John.

Moreover, growing madder or other biomass crops to make batteries would soak up carbon dioxide and eliminate the disposal problem -- without its toxic components, a lithium-ion battery could be thrown away.

Best of all, purpurin also turns out to be a no-fuss ingredient. "In the literature there are one or two other natural organic molecules in development for batteries, but the process to make them is much more tedious and complicated," noted Professor John.

Made and stored at room temperature, the purpurin electrode is made in just a few easy steps: dissolve the purpurin in an alcohol solvent and add lithium salt. When the salt's lithium ion binds with purpurin the solution turns from reddish yellow to pink. "The chemistry is quite simple," coauthor and City College postdoctoral researcher Dr. Subbiah Nagarajan explained.

The team estimates that a commercial green Li-ion battery may be only a few years away, counting the time needed to ramp up purpurin's efficiency or hunt down and synthesize similar molecules. "We can say it is definitely going to happen, and sometime soon, because in this case we are fully aware of the mechanism," said Professor John.

"When you can generate something new or unheard of, you think of chemistry in a different way," he added. "That a natural material or dye can be used for a battery, that is exciting, even for me."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by City College of New York.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Arava Leela Mohana Reddy, Subbiah Nagarajan, Porramate Chumyim, Sanketh R. Gowda, Padmanava Pradhan, Swapnil R. Jadhav, Madan Dubey, George John, Pulickel M. Ajayan. Lithium storage mechanisms in purpurin based organic lithium ion battery electrodes. Scientific Reports, 2012; 2 DOI: 10.1038/srep00960

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_technology/~3/F8OVKIXWx7Q/121211145240.htm

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Tuesday, December 11, 2012

?Cougar Town? Star Busy Phillips Has A Bun In The Oven!

“Cougar Town” Star Busy Phillips Has A Bun In The Oven!

Busy Philipps had a little surprise to share with her fans. The “Cougar Town” actress took to Twitter on Monday to tell her followers that she is expecting her second child. Phillips, who had taken a home pregnancy test, tweeted a picture of the positive results that simply read, “Pregnant”. The actress seemed pretty surprised, ...

“Cougar Town” Star Busy Phillips Has A Bun In The Oven! Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2012/12/cougar-town-star-busy-phillips-has-a-bun-in-the-oven/

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Growing Frustration Inside the GOP ? Center for Christian Business ...


The Article: Jim DeMint?s Move and the Growing Frustration Inside the GOP
The Source: The Washington Examiner
The Author: Bryon York
The Date: 12/10/12

If Republicans had won big on November 6, it?s likely Jim DeMint would not be leaving the Senate to head the Heritage Foundation. In a conversation not long after the announcement, DeMint expressed frustration with being a ?Doctor No? in the Senate, that is, a minority lawmaker who spends his time usefully but unhappily stopping misguided legislation. He also expressed a strong desire to become the kind of powerful force in the political world that is not possible for a Republican senator right now. In a move that stunned many Washington insiders, DeMint decided the path to more influence was to leave elected office.

?Yes, I?m frustrated,? he told me. ?If Romney was in the White House and Republicans had control of the Senate, I would have had a chance to advance positive ideas, so there would have been a very different scenario.? But that?s just not the case. DeMint explained that he believes ?it?s an important role in the Senate to be here and try to stop bad legislation when you?re in the minority,? but the election results made clear that conservatives face more urgent problems.


JimDemint

DeMint said many people were shocked that a U.S. senator would give up his seat. But given today?s political situation, he believes he will have greater influence ? not just on the public debate generally but specifically on the Senate ? from the outside. ?I won?t be taking votes, but I guarantee you I will affect more votes at the Heritage Foundation than I do in the Senate.?

DeMint?s move is an enormous break with tradition in his native South Carolina. Predecessors Strom Thurmond and Ernest Hollings served a total of 85 years in the Senate and retired at ages 100 and 83, respectively. DeMint is 61 and has served in the Senate just since January 2005. He is leaving two years into a six-year term; certainly some South Carolinians who voted for him are unhappy about that. ?People in South Carolina knew I wasn?t going to make this a career,? DeMint told me. ?A lot of them didn?t like it when I said I was going to leave the House after six years, and I announced after the last election that I wasn?t going to run again. I would not leave the Senate unless I thought I could serve South Carolina better at the Heritage Foundation.?

That?s the frustration again. Facing defeat after defeat in a situation in which the most he could do was stop some bad things from happening, DeMint didn?t see much conservative vigor among his colleagues. ?I just believed that Republicans have not been reliable partners of the conservative cause,? he said. ?I think there is a lack of vision and boldness that we need at the national level. I?m not pointing to anyone in particular, but it?s been a long time since I?ve been in a conservative conference where someone stood up and just inspired people with a message of what we really stand for and what America needs at this point.?

Source: http://www.cfcbe.com/2012/12/11/growing-frustration-inside-the-gop/

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Jada Pinkett Smith On The Problems Facing Women And Men In ...

Jada Pinkett Smith Addresses The Problems Facing Today?s Women And Men In Relationships
Will-Jada-Pinkett-Smith

Jada Pinkett Smith has obvious concerns about the state of relationships between men and women nowadays and has posted a long blog to her?Facebook page?to address them.? In her latest post, Jada talks about how the true inner beauty of a woman over time has taken a backseat to superficiality of ?weaves and?red bottom shoes,? while men use?money?as a status symbol and as a way of buying love. Jada also believes that?women today have no voice and have been reduced to being just pleasure toys. She states that our culture promotes women looking good without saying anything meaningful, and men have become so frustrated with insecurity that it often leads to domestic violence in?the home.? Jada also says if one person in the relationship is lost, then the entire union is doomed because the couple are supposed to balance each other out..

Step into her blog below:

The war on men through the degradation of woman.

How is man to recognize his full self, his full power through the eye?s of an incomplete woman? The woman who has been stripped of Goddess recognition and diminished to a big ass and full breast for physical comfort only. The woman who has been silenced so she may forget her spiritual essence because her words stir too much?thought outside of the pleasure space. The woman who has been diminished to covering all that rots inside of her with weaves and?red bottom shoes.

I am sure the men, who restructured our societies from cultures that honored woman, had no idea of the outcome. They had no idea that eventually, even men would render themselves empty and longing for meaning, depth and connection. There is a deep sadness when I witness a man that can?t recognize the emptiness he feels when he objectifies himself as a bank and truly believes he can buy love with things and status. It is painful to witness the betrayal when a woman takes him up on that offer. He doesn?t recognize that the create of a half woman has contributed to his repressed anger and frustration of feeling he is not enough. He then may love no woman or keep many half women as his prize. He doesn?t recognize that it?s his submersion in the imbalanced warrior culture, where violence is the means of getting respect and power, as the reason he can break the face of the woman who bore him four children.

When woman is lost, so is man. The truth is, woman is the window to a man?s heart and a man?s heart is the gateway to his soul.

Power and control will NEVER out weigh love.

May we all find our way.
J

Deep.

Read more:?Necole Bitchie.com

Source: http://wzakcleveland.com/3516366/jada-pinkett-smith-addresses-the-problems-facing-todays-women-and-men-in-relationships/

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