Saturday, December 22, 2012

Interview: Director Rich Moore on Wreck-It Ralph


How much do you love Rich Moore? As one of the key directing circle on the early seasons of The Simpsons, the Californian animator was behind such classic episodes as "Flaming Moe's" and "Marge vs. the Monorail," and would later go on to helm some of the best of Futurama, too (you can thank him for "Roswell That Ends Well," one of that show's absolute highlights.)

This year he's made his feature directing debut with Disney's video-game adventure riff Wreck-It Ralph, which arrives in Australian cinemas this week on the back of a hit run with both audiences and critics in the US.

John C. Reilly voices Ralph, an 8-bit oaf who -- yearning to break from the drudgery of being the bad guy and become a hero -- escapes his vintage arcade game and sets out on a cross-platform quest through a first-person sci-fi shooter and the unlikely world of a Mario Kart-style candyland. Bursting with dynamic visual humour, a cavalcade of famous gaming character cameos, and a serving of old-fashioned Disney heart, Ralph marks an impressive big-screen debut for Moore. But you'd expect nothing less from the man, of course.

We had a chance to sit down and chat with Moore in Los Angeles recently, where he talked about developing the movie with Disney, his love of gaming and layered humour, and why he thought Reilly was perfect for the role.


How did Wreck-It Ralph develop at Disney? When did you become involved?

Rich Moore: I started [at Disney] in 2008 and was invited to develop three different presentations for [animation head] John Lasseter. He likes to hear three ideas at a time. As I was putting those ideas together, I became aware that at the studio they had this notion -- for many, many years -- of a story about video game characters floating around. It had existed as two different incarnations: one was called High Score, back in the '90s, and that didn't get any traction and ended up on the shelf; then another director dusted it off and it became Joe Jump -- that was the name of the project, and that also kind of hit a dead end. So without looking at the material the other directors had come up with, I just kinda took the notion of "Well, what is it like for the life of video game characters behind the scenes when the games aren't being played?" Because I thought, "Well I like video games [laughs], I've played 'em for a long time and I think that world, of the different genres, could be an amazing backdrop to set a story within." The opportunity for visuals and spectacle, and just the scope of a big movie, would be great.


What would the story be like? After about a week I kind of hit a dead end because I thought, "This is a horrible idea [laughs], because, you know, video game characters have their programs and you know they do the same job day-in and day-out; they have no free will, they have no choice over what they do. Their lot is kinda cast. Who would wanna watch a movie about that?" And then I kind of had a breakthrough and thought, "Well that's a fantastic problem for a main character to have if he did not like his place in this world." It's a great conflict. So I presented that idea to John Lasseter.

At one stage in the concept art Ralph looked like a giant bear. How did the character's design evolve to his final look in the film?

RM: Well, I think a huge part of our process is leaving no stone unturned as we design or characters and our worlds. We wanted to make sure we had the right design for Ralph, and in the beginning he was almost kind of like a big Sasquatch kind of thing, like a bear or an animal, and [Ralph's 8-bit hero nemesis] Felix was this little human being. As we started to develop the relationship he has with [Sugar Rush racer] Vanellope, he becomes kind of like an older, big brother to her. So they felt like siblings. As that story relationship began to develop, you look at the design as a bear and you think, "Can you really tell that story where Ralph is a bear? He feels more like a toy." So slowly he started to become more human. It's a long process and a lot of exploration. If it happens overnight then we're doing something wrong. [Laughs] The best stuff comes from honing and honing.

How influential was something like Donkey Kong in evoking Ralph's pathos?

RM: Definitely that crossed my mind a lot, because I always felt sorry for Donkey Kong, you know. I always thought that Mario was kind of the bad guy -- because if you knew about the game there was supposed to be a back story where Mario was teasing the ape and the ape stole his girlfriend and this was kind of karma for Mario, you know? [Laughs] "Well, you shouldn't have teased the ape!" [Laughs] So it was important to me that some of that pathos, that sympathy for the bad guy, came across in Ralph and Felix. And that's why we have it that Ralph is kind of pushed off his land by a bulldozer, you know, because I think that gives you an immediate sympathy for him, and connection to him. He's a victim of circumstance; he's kind of big and loud and aggressive, so the people in his world go, "He's bad." He's labeled immediately as a bad person.


What drew you to cast John C. Reilly as the voice of Ralph?

RM: Oh, well once we realised who the main character was going to be -- and we knew it was going to be this big kind of oafish, loud, you know, simple guy -- the writer, Phil Johnston, and I were like, "Well who can play that? And play it with some humanity, you know, where you care about him, and it's not just a kind of a joke." We immediately thought of John. I'm a huge fan of John's, because I think he's hysterically funny, but he can also perform drama very well -- while all the while reminding you that there's a human being underneath the skin. There's just something about his performances; there's deep, deep humanity to what he does, and I just think he does it naturally.

Did Ralph's look change at all, once you'd cast John?

RM: I think that once he was cast that it would be impossible for our artists to not look at the source and implement that, because our people here are sponges. I would say that, yeah, once we knew it was John, his influences started to come through. And I liked that about the character; that you can kind of feel him under there. It's kind of the way Dory in Finding Nemo had some characteristics of Ellen DeGeneres, even though it's a fish, you know -- there's something about the look of it and the voice. It transcends. I don't think it's a caricature of John; it's a transcended character that has elements of what makes him great and a visual look that's kind of it's own thing.

How did you decide what gaming genres were going to be in the film's world?

RM: We wanted to represent the prominent genres of games that people would immediately recognise. So we went with old school, which was Fix-It Felix, Jr. -- that's where Ralph is from. We wanted him to be from the simplest type of game. And then we chose Hero's Duty, because that's one of the first places he goes in his quest. I look at the history of video games and it's Fix-It in the '80s, and we wanted him to go into a game that was contemporary. Then I'm always looking to change up the dynamic of what you see on screen, so I felt like going to something sweeter [Sugar Rush], or kid friendly, would be fun after this intense, military sci-fi world -- and I feel like people kind of have a deep connection to that Mario Kart world, those racing-type games for kids. But they still have a lot of treachery to them, I think. I wanted to present something that looks sweet on the outside, but when you get in, it's like, this is a real race. We wanted to get the camera down there. If you were to be in the middle of Mario Kart, it would be very dangerous. [Laughs]


So you're a gamer from way back?

RM: I grew up with them. I spent a good bulk of my teenage years in arcades with video games back home, in Oxnard, California. It seemed like when I was a teenager there was a video game everywhere: they were in 7-Elevens, movie theatres, pizza shops; they were everywhere. And this was just before home gaming was about to take off. So to me they were culturally a big part of my youth growing up. I have a nostalgic feeling, especially for that era of gaming.

There are several levels of in-jokes in the film. Is that something you carried over from your days on Futurama and The Simpsons?

RM: Very much. I love that multi-layered kind of humour. I like giving the audience a lot of stuff to look at, and rewards for repeated viewings and paying attention. I've loved that all my life, you know -- in Warner Bros' cartoons, when you would catch these little sight gags in the background. And I loved Star Wars growing up. There was just so much on the screen and you could sit and watch it again and look at the people in the background and go, "Oh look, there's a cool alien in the background that I didn't notice before in the cantina." To me, before I ever worked on Simpsons and Futurama, that's always been something I loved. Like, I loved the movie Airplane! [aka Flying High!] when I was a kid, 'cause there were so many absurd things you could just pick out in the background. To me that's just another great layer of comedy to give the audience. It wouldn't be complete without a lot of that stuff. [Laughs]


Wreck-It Ralph opens in cinemas everywhere on December 26.


Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1926447/news/1926447/

st. bonaventure ira glass march madness swain match day nene dark shadows trailer

Friday, December 21, 2012

Edwin Jackson, Cubs near $52M deal

UPDATE: Patrick Mooney of CSNChicago.com reports that it?s a done deal at four years and $52 million, with an official announcement coming once Jackson passes a physical exam.

==========

Late last night the Cubs were said to be the ?frontrunner? for Edwin Jackson and now Buster Olney of ESPN.com reports that the two sides are closing in on a four-year, $52 million deal.

After failing to land a huge contract as a free agent last offseason Jackson opted for a one-year, $11 million deal from the Nationals, who oddly did not make him a one-year, $13.3 million qualifying offer that would have guaranteed them a first-round draft pick when he signed elsewhere. Instead the Nationals replaced him with Dan Haren for one year, $13 million and will now let Jackson walk for nothing.

Jackson?s numbers were similar to 2011, but for whatever reason he drew significantly more interest this time around. His overall production and strikeout rates have never quite matched his raw stuff, but Jackson?s started at least 30 games in six straight seasons despite being just 29 years old.

During the past three seasons he made 94 starts and threw 599 innings with a 4.10 ERA. Over that same period Anibal Sanchez?who the Cubs reportedly thought they had signed for five years and $75 million?made 95 starts and threw 587 innings with a 3.70 ERA. Given those numbers and the fact that Sanchez was helped by more pitcher-friendly environments $52 million for Jackson seems reasonable after Sanchez got $80 million from the Tigers.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/12/20/edwin-jackson-moving-closer-to-four-year-52-million-deal-with-cubs/related/

mike jones just friends chronicle george lopez bedtime stories micron susan g komen

Brain imaging insight into cannabis as a pain killer

Dec. 20, 2012 ? The pain relief offered by cannabis varies greatly between individuals, a brain imaging study carried out at the University of Oxford suggests.

The researchers found that an oral tablet of THC, the psychoactive ingredient in cannabis, tended to make the experience of pain more bearable, rather than actually reduce the intensity of the pain.

MRI brain imaging showed reduced activity in key areas of the brain that substantiated the pain relief the study participants experienced.

'We have revealed new information about the neural basis of cannabis-induced pain relief,' says Dr Michael Lee of Oxford University's Centre for Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain (FMRIB).

He adds: 'Our small-scale study, in a controlled setting, involved 12 healthy men and only one of many compounds that can be derived from cannabis. That's quite different from doing a study with patients. My view is the findings are of interest scientifically but it remains to see how they impact the debate about use of cannabis-based medicines. Understanding cannabis' effects on clinical outcomes, or the quality of life of those suffering chronic pain, would need research in patients over long time periods.'

The researchers report their findings in the journal Pain. The study was funded by the UK Medical Research Council and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Oxford Biomedical Research Centre.

Long-term pain, often without clear cause, is a complex healthcare problem. Different approaches are often needed to help patient manage pain, and can include medications, physiotherapy and other forms of physical therapy, and psychological support. For a few patients, cannabis or cannabis-based medications remain effective when other drugs have failed to control pain, while others report very little effect of the drug on their pain but experience side-effects.

'We know little about cannabis and what aspects of pain it affects, or which people might see benefits over the side-effects or potential harms in the long term. We carried out this study to try and get at what is happening when someone experiences pain relief using cannabis,' says Dr Lee.

The Oxford research team carried out a series of MRI scans with each of the 12 volunteers at the FMRIB centre in Oxford.

Before a scan, participants were given either a 15mg tablet of THC or a placebo. THC, or delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, is the active psychotropic compound in cannabis -- the ingredient that's responsible for the high that drives recreational use of the drug.

To induce a certain level of pain, the volunteers also had a cream rubbed into the skin of one leg. This was either a dummy cream or a cream that contained 1% capsaicin, the ingredient of chillis that causes a hot, burning and painful sensation.

Each participant had four MRI tests to cover each combination of THC or placebo, and chilli pain-inducing cream or dummy cream.

'The participants were asked to report the intensity and unpleasantness of the pain: how much it burned and how much it bothered them,' says Dr Lee. 'We found that with THC, on average people didn't report any change in the burn, but the pain bothered them less.'

While this average effect was statistically significant, there was great variability among the participants in THC's effect on the pain they experienced. Only six out of the 12 reported a clear change in how much the pain bothered them, for example.

The brain imaging results substantiate the reports of the participants. The change in unpleasantness of pain was matched with a suppression of activity in the part of the brain called the anterior mid-cingulate cortex. This structure sits in a deep part of the brain and is involved in many functions, and has previously been implicated in the emotional aspects of pain.

There were also changes in activity of the right amygdala that correlated with the lessening in the unpleasantness of the pain with THC. It is already known that the right side of the amygdala can be 'primed' by pain.

Of most interest to the researchers, however, was the strength of the connection in individuals between their right amydala and a part of the cortex called the primary sensorimotor area. The strength of this connection in individual participants correlated well with THC's different effects on the pain that that volunteer experienced.

This is suggestive that there might be a way of predicting who would see benefits from taking cannabis for pain relief.

'We may in future be able to predict who will respond to cannabis, but we would need to do studies in patients with chronic pain over longer time periods,' says Dr Lee.

He adds: 'Cannabis does not seem to act like a conventional pain medicine. Some people respond really well, others not at all, or even poorly. Brain imaging shows little reduction in the brain regions that code for the sensation of pain, which is what we tend to see with drugs like opiates. Instead cannabis appears to mainly affect the emotional reaction to pain in a highly variable way.'

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

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

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Michael C. Lee, Markus Ploner, Katja Wiech, Ulrike Bingel, Vishvarani Wanigasekera, Jonathan Brooks, David K. Menon, Irene Tracey. Amygdala activity contributes to the dissociative effect of cannabis on pain perception. PAIN, January 2013 DOI: 10.1016/j.pain.2012.09.017

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_health/~3/k2BRtSmyKx8/121220195744.htm

breaking dawn part 2 trailer mississippi state chris carpenter chris carpenter dick cheney hcg drops reason rally

House GOP puts off vote on 'Plan B'

House Speaker Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, speaks to the media about the fiscal cliff at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

House Speaker Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, speaks to the media about the fiscal cliff at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

President Barack Obama waves to the media as he walks from Marine One to the Oval Office of the White House, Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012, in Washington, as he returns from Walter Reed National Military Medial Center in Bethesda, Md., where he visited injured military members. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Chart shows estimated deficit reduction under various plans

Senate Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., speaks to the media about the fiscal cliff at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

House Majority Leader Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va., speaks to the media about the fiscal cliff and "Plan B," at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

(AP) ? Confronted with a revolt among the rank and file, House Republicans abruptly scrapped a vote Thursday night on legislation allowing tax rates to rise for households earning $1 million and up, complicating attempts to avoid a year-end "fiscal cliff" that threatens to send the economy into recession.

The legislation "did not have sufficient support from our members to pass," Speaker John Boehner conceded in a brief statement. At the same time he challenged President Barack Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., to work on legislation to avoid across-the-board tax increases and deep spending cuts due to take effect in less than two weeks.

"The Senate must now act," said the Ohio Republican, who has noted recently that he has taken risks in supporting higher tax revenues during several weeks of fruitless negotiations on the fiscal cliff.

In a statement released a short while later, the White House said the president's "main priority is to ensure that taxes don't go up on 98 percent of Americans and 97 percent of small businesses in just a few short days. The president will work with Congress to get this done and we are hopeful that we will be able to find a bipartisan solution quickly that protects the middle class and our economy."

Reid's office sounded a more combative note. "The only way to avoid the cliff altogether is for Speaker Boehner to return to negotiations and work with President Obama and the Senate to forge a bipartisan deal," spokesman Adam Jentleson said.

Earlier, emerging from a hurriedly-called evening meeting of House Republicans, Ohio Rep. Steve LaTourette said Boehner had told lawmakers he's "going to call the president and he's going to go down and talk to him and maybe they can hammer something out."

The turn of events marked a major personal defeat for Boehner and yet another indication of the power of tea party-backed lawmakers who helped Republicans gain a majority in the 2010 elections.

One first-termer, Rep. Tim Huelskamp, said the developments were "a victory for Republican principles." The Kansas Republican is one of three lawmakers recently stripped of favored committee assignments for bucking the leadership.

The legislation was crafted to prevent tax increases set to kick in on Jan. 1, 2013, on tens of millions of Americans. But another provision that would have let rates rise for those at the upper income range ? a violation of long-standing Republican orthodoxy ? triggered the opposition of anti-tax lawmakers inside the party.

The abrupt turn of events left precious little time for divided government to prevent across-the-board tax increases and deep spending cuts from taking effect with the new year. Economists say the combination threatened a return to recession for an economy that has been recovering slowly from the last one.

The House will not meet again until after Christmas, if then, and the Senate is expected to meet briefly on Friday, then not reconvene until next Thursday.

In his written statement, Boehner said the House has previously passed legislation to prevent all the tax increases from taking effect, and noted that earlier in the evening it had approved a measure to replace across-the-board spending cuts with "responsible" reductions.

Hours earlier, Boehner said Thursday night's legislation ? he'd dubbed it Plan B ? marked a move to "protect as many American families and small businesses as possible from the tax hikes that are already scheduled to occur" with the new year.

Referring to one of the core themes of Obama's re-election campaign, he said the president has called for legislation to protect 98 percent of the American people from a tax hike. "Well, today we're going to do better than that," he said of the measure that raises total taxes by slightly more than $300 billion over a decade. "Our bill would protect 99.81 percent of the American people from an increase in taxes."

Democrats said that by keeping tax rates unchanged below $1 million ? Obama wants the level to be $400,000 ? Republicans had turned the bill into a tax break for the wealthy. They also accused Republicans of crafting their measure to impose a tax increase on 11 million middle class families.

"This is a ploy, not a plan," said Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich. He accused Republicans of being "deeply cynical," saying the legislation would scale back some education and child tax credits.

A companion bill on the evening's House agenda, meant to build GOP support for the tax bill, called for elimination of an estimated $97 billion in cuts to the Pentagon and certain domestic programs over a decade. It cleared the House on a partisan vote of 215-209 and is an updated version of legislation that passed a little more than six months ago.

Those cuts would be replaced with savings totaling $314 billion, achieved through increases in the amount federal employees contribute toward their pensions and through cuts in social programs such as food stamps and the health care law that Obama signed earlier in his term.

Ironically, the votes were set in motion earlier in the week, after Boehner and Obama had significantly narrowed their differences on a compromise to avoid the fiscal cliff.

Republican officials said that members of the GOP leadership had balked at the terms that were emerging. Democrats said Boehner's abrupt decision to shift to his Plan B ? legislation drafted unilaterally by Republicans ? reflected a calculation that he lacked support from his own rank and file to win the votes needed for the type of agreement he was negotiating with the president.

Asked at a news conference a few hours before the scheduled vote if that were so, Boehner avoided a direct answer. "Listen, the president knows that I've been able to keep my word on every agreement we've ever made," he said.

At the same time, Boehner hinted broadly that however Democrats end up responding to the legislation he placed before the House, it will not be the end of the attempt to keep the economy from reaching the fiscal cliff.

"Our country faces serious challenges. The president and I in our respective roles have a responsibility to work together to get them resolved. I expect that we'll continue to work together."

Obama made it clear on Wednesday that he, too, is prepared for further negotiations, and numerous officials in both parties in the Senate predicted that might happen quickly after the votes in the House.

The tax bill would prevent scheduled increases from taking effect on Jan. 1 on all income under $1 million. Above that, the current rate of 35 percent would rise to 39.6 percent, the level in effect more than a decade ago when then-President George W. Bush signed tax cuts into law that now are expiring.

The top rates also would rise on capital gains and dividends from 15 percent to 20 percent.

By any measure, the two bills in the House were far removed from the latest offers that officials said Obama and Boehner had tendered.

Obama is now seeking $1.2 trillion in higher tax revenue, down from the $1.6 trillion he initially sought. He also has softened his demand for higher tax rates on household incomes so they would apply to incomes over $400,000 instead of the $250,000 he cited during his successful campaign for a new term.

He also has offered more than $800 billion in spending cuts over a decade, half of it from Medicare and Medicaid, $200 billion from farm and other benefit programs, $100 billion from defense and $100 billion from a broad swath of government accounts ranging from parks to transportation to education.

In a key concession to Republicans, the president also has agreed to slow the rise in cost-of-living increases in Social Security and other benefit programs, at a savings estimated at about $130 billion over a decade.

By contrast, Boehner's most recent offer allowed for about $940 billion in higher taxes over a decade, with higher rates for annual incomes over $1 million.

His latest offer seeks about $1.2 trillion in spending cuts, not counting the change in the cost-of-living adjustment that Obama has said he can accept. He is seeking $600 billion in savings from Medicare and Medicaid, $200 billion from other benefit programs and $300 billion from a range of government accounts.

___

Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor, Alan Fram and Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-12-20-Fiscal%20Cliff/id-55c006ba3d2144579bc30184f1bde9a7

mary j blige dionne warwick patricia heaton arsenic and old lace leslie varez ward solar storms

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Potentially habitable planet detected

A sun-like star in our solar system's backyard may host five planets, including one perhaps capable of supporting life as we know it, a new study reports.

  1. Space news from NBCNews.com

    1. Holiday treats from Saturn and beyond

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: The holiday season is bringing beautiful baubles from outer space, including an unconventional view of Saturn from the Cassini orbiter, a gaudy nebula from the Hubble Space Telescope and a loopy picture of a supernova's leftovers.

    2. Gaze into the Great Blue Hole from space
    3. Astronaut study holds promise for elderly
    4. An expert's views on buying a telescope

Astronomers have detected five possible alien planets circling the star Tau Ceti, which is less than 12 light-years from Earth ? a mere stone's throw in the cosmic scheme of things. One of the newfound worlds appears to orbit in Tau Ceti's habitable zone, a range of distances from a star where liquid water can exist on a planet's surface.

With a minimum mass just 4.3 times that of Earth, this potential planet would be the smallest yet found in the habitable zone of a sun-like star if it's confirmed, researchers said.

"This discovery is in keeping with our emerging view that virtually every star has planets, and that the galaxy must have many such potentially habitable Earth-sized planets," study co-author Steve Vogt, of the University of California, Santa Cruz, said in a statement. "They are everywhere, even right next door."

[ Gallery: 7 Potentially Habitable Exoplanets ]

The five planet candidates are all relatively small, with minimum masses ranging from 2 to 6.6 times that of Earth. The possibly habitable world, which completes one lap around Tau Ceti every 168 days, is unlikely to be a rocky planet like Earth, researchers said.

"It is impossible to tell the composition, but I do not consider this particular planet to be very likely to have a rocky surface," lead author Mikko Tuomi, of the University of Hertfordshire in England, told SPACE.com via email. "It might be a 'water world,' but at the moment it's anybody's guess."

Spotting signals in the noise
Tau Ceti is slightly smaller and less luminous than our sun. It lies 11.9 light-years away in the constellation Cetus (the Whale) and is visible with the naked eye in the night sky. Because of its proximity and sun-like nature, Tau Ceti has featured prominently in science fiction over the years.

Astronomers have searched for exoplanets around Tau Ceti before and turned up nothing. But in the new study, researchers were able to pull five possible planetary signals out from under a mountain of noise.

Tuomi and his team re-analyzed 6,000 observations of Tau Ceti made by three different spectrographs, instruments that allow researchers to detect the tiny gravitational wobbles orbiting planets induce in their parent stars.

The three instruments are the High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS), on the European Southern Observatory's 3.6-meter telescope in La Silla, Chile; the University College London Echelle Spectrograph (UCLES) on the Anglo-Australian Telescope in Siding Spring, Australia; and the High Resolution Echelle Spectrometer, or HIRES, on the 10-meter Keck telescope atop Mauna Kea in Hawaii.

Using new analysis and modeling techniques, the team spotted the five faint signals, successfully separating them from noise caused by stellar activity and other factors.

"We pioneered new data modeling techniques by adding artificial signals to the data and testing our recovery of the signals with a variety of different approaches," Tuomi said in statement. "This significantly improved our noise modeling techniques and increased our ability to find low-mass planets."

The new analysis methods should aid the search for small planets, allowing more and more of them to be spotted throughout the galaxy, researchers said.

[ A Galaxy Full of Alien Planets (Infographic) ]

A nearby planetary system?
The five planets remain candidates at this point and will not become official discoveries until they're confirmed by further analysis or observations. And that's not a sure thing, researchers said.

"I am very confident that the three shortest periodicities are really there, but I cannot be that sure whether they are of planetary origin or some artifacts of insufficient noise modelling or stellar activity and/or magnetic cycles at this stage," Tuomi said, referring to the potential planets with orbital periods of 14, 35 and 94 days (compared to 168 days for the habitable zone candidate and 640 days for the most distantly orbiting world).

"The situation is even worse for the possible habitable zone candidate, because the very existence of that signal is uncertain, yet according to our detection criteria the signal is there and we cannot rule out the possibility that it indeed is of planetary origin," he added. "But we don't know what else it could be, either."

If the Tau Ceti planets do indeed exist, their proximity would make them prime targets for future instruments to study, researchers said.

"Tau Ceti is one of our nearest cosmic neighbors and so bright that we may be able to study the atmospheres of these planets in the not-too-distant future," James Jenkins, of the Universidad de Chile and the University of Hertfordshire, said in a statement. "Planetary systems found around nearby stars close to our sun indicate that these systems are common in our Milky Way galaxy."

If confirmed, the Tau Ceti planets would not be the closest exoplanets to Earth. That title still goes to Alpha Centauri Bb, a roasting-hot, rocky world recently spotted just 4.3 light-years away, in the closest star system to our own.

The new study has been accepted for publication in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

Follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter@michaeldwallor SPACE.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebookand Google+.

? 2012 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50245884/ns/technology_and_science-space/

kyle williams florida debate rand paul mark kirk florida gop debate freddie mac kristin cavallari

For power and status, dominance and skill trump likability

Dec. 19, 2012 ? Finding the next Barack Obama or Warren Buffett might be as simple as looking at who attracts the most eyes in a crowd, a new University of British Columbia study finds.

For the study, which used eye-tracking technology, participants who observed groups of strangers were able to accurately predict who would emerge as leader of the group in 120 seconds or less.

According to the study -- to appear in the forthcoming Journal of Personality and Social Psychology -- two sets of behaviours will accurately predict future leadership and catch people's attention. The first is prestige -- the appearance of skill and competency. The second is dominance, which includes the ability to impose ideas on others through bullying and intimidation.

"Our findings suggest there are really two ways to top the social ladder and gain leadership -- impressing people with your skills or powering your way through old-fashioned dominance," says lead author Joey Cheng, a PhD candidate in UBC's Dept. of Psychology. "By measuring levels of influence and visual attention, we find that people defer to and readily spot the prestigious and dominant leaders."

Surprisingly, the study finds that one's likeability -- long considered essential for modern leaders -- does not consistently predict the attainment of greater status. While participants preferred leaders with prestige, they were surprisingly likely to choose dominant leaders. They were also more forgiving of dominant behaviour than outside observers, the researchers say.

The findings might explain the ongoing prevalence of aggressive leaders in business and politics, such as Donald Trump or Toronto mayor Rob Ford. According to the researchers, today's dominant behaviour has evolved from resource and power battles from our evolutionary past. Prestige's viability as means of attaining status, has increased with the rise of meritocracy in society.

Backgrounder

The study had two parts. First, 200 participants completed a problem-solving task in small groups while being videotaped. Group members rated participants' dominance, prestige and influence during the task, including their own. Participants who were more dominant or prestigious had a greater influence on the task and were perceived as more influential by group members.

In the second part of the study, 60 additional participants watched a total of 120 seconds of short videos of the initial group interactions while wearing an eye-tracking device. These participants paid significantly greater attention to individuals in the clips who appeared more dominant or prestigious, indicating their higher levels of influence.

Study co-authors include Jessica Tracy, Alan Kingstone, Joseph Henrich (UBC psychology) and Tom Foulsham (formerly UBC, now University of Essex).

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

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

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Joey T. Cheng, Jessica L. Tracy, Tom Foulsham, Alan Kingstone, Joseph Henrich. Two Ways to the Top: Evidence That Dominance and Prestige Are Distinct Yet Viable Avenues to Social Rank and Influence.. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2012; DOI: 10.1037/a0030398

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/strange_science/~3/qD5y0w2caUY/121219084219.htm

oklahoma city thunder rajon rondo sunoco titanic ii babe ruth new jersey nets nba playoff schedule

Miss Santa Cruz, Jessica Vo, competing in Miss California pageant

There have been a lot of tall, blonde Miss California USA winners in the pageant's 50-year history, but never a Vietnamese-American winner. Jessica Vo wants to change that.

Miss Santa Cruz is competing in the?Miss California USA 2013?pageant on Jan. 12 in Pasadena, Calif.

Click to read more.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50242835/ns/local_news-monterey_ca/

temptations work hard play hard tim ferriss wmt human nature arkansas football blackhawks

Return of the downtown cafes - Litchfield Independent Review ...

Print
Font Size:
Default font size
Larger font size
Main Street Cafe

Main Street Cafe

After closing its doors Dec. 1, Litchfield?s Main Street Cafe is reopening. Parkview Cafe, another downtown restaurant, is slated to reopen in April.

Posted: Wednesday, December 19, 2012 8:00 am | Updated: 11:42 am, Wed Dec 19, 2012.

Walking into a cafe in downtown Litchfield, patrons used to hear the constant gurgle of coffee being brewed throughout the day. The mingling scents of crisp hash browns and fried hamburgers seemed to spill out into the streets. And then the restaurants disappeared ? storefronts were dark and tables were empty ? and patrons wondered where their beloved cafes went.

?I miss both of them,? Litchfield resident Don Brock said last week about Parkview Cafe and Main Street Cafe, two mainstays of downtown Litchfield. Parkview Cafe closed in July and Main Street Cafe closed in December.

An online service is needed to view this article in its entirety. You need an online service to view this article in its entirety.

Login

Or, use your linked account:

Choose an online service.

  • 1 Independent Review Digital Daily Only$36.00 for 365 days

    Independent Review Digital Daily edition ONLY - 1 year $36.

  • 2 Independent Review Print + Digital Daily Local$39.00 for 365 days

    Independent Review Print + Digital Daily edition - 1 year $39,?for readers who live within Meeker, McLeod, Kandiyohi, Renville, Stearns and Wright counties.

  • 3 Independent Review Print + Digital Daily Outstate$54.00 for 365 days

    Independent Review Print + Digital Daily edition - 1 year $54,?for readers who live outside Meeker, McLeod, Kandiyohi, Renville, Stearns and Wright counties.

  • 4 Independent Review Print Edition Only$36.00 for 365 days

    Independent Review Print edition ONLY - 1 year $36.

Current print subscribers

Need an account? Create one now.

Or, use your linked account:

kAmqFE qC@4< 2?5 4C6H >:89E ;FDE 36 :? =F4< ? |2:? $EC66E r276 @H?6C #@? |2C<@G:49 D2:5 96 9@A6D E96 4276 H:== C6@A6? D@>6E:>6 E9:D H66<[ 2?5 !2C<G:6H r276 :D D=2E65 E@ C6@A6? :? pAC:=]k^Am

kAm|2C<@G:49 7:CDE AFC492D65 |2:? $EC66E r276 :? `hgh 2?5 C2? :E F?E:= a__h[ H96? 96 D@=5 E96 C6DE2FC2?E 2D 4@?EC24E\7@C\5665 E@ 2 $E] r=@F5 C6D:56?E] |2C<@G:49 D2:5 E96 @E96C A2CEJ H2D F?23=6 E@ ?4@>A=6E6 E96 4@?EC24EF2= 28C66>6?E[Q 2?5 |2C<@G:49 4=@D65 E96 C6DE2FC2?E s64] `] }@H |2C<@G:49 :D H@C<:?8 E@ C6@A6? E96 C6DE2FC2?E]k^Am

kAm|2C<@G:49 D2:5 96 9@A65 E@ C6@A6? |2:? $EC66E r276 @? s64] `f[ 3FE 5@6D ?@E 92G6 2== E96 6BF:A>6?E :? A=246]k^Am

kAm?x?> ECJ:?8 E@ 86E @A6? 2D BF:4<=J 2D H6 42?[? |2C<@G:49 D2:5] ?$E277 :D C625J 2?5 E96 3F:=5:?8 :D C625J[ 3FE E96 6BF:A>6?E :D??E]?k^Am

kAm(9:=6 |2C<@G:49 :D 7CFDEC2E65 E96 C6DE2FC2?E 4=@D65[ 96 D2:5 96 :D 8=25 E@ 36 324<]k^Am

kAm?x >:DD65 E96 A6@A=6[? |2C<@G:49 D2:5 @7 9:D @=5 4FDE@>6CD] ?x?> 8=25 E@ 36 324< 2?5 D66 E96 A6@A=6]?k^Am

kAmqC@4<[ g_[ :D @?6 @7 E9@D6 A6@A=6 ? 2 C68F=2C 2E 3@E9 5@H?E@H? 4276D] qC@4< D2:5 2 8C@FA @7 C6E:C66D H@F=5 >66E 7:G6 52JD 2 H66<[ 2C@F?5 h 2]>] 2E |2:? $EC66E r276 2?5 2C@F?5 b A]>] 2E !2C<G:6H r276] (96? 3@E9 4276D 4=@D65[ E96 8C@FA DE:== >6E[ ;FDE 2E 5:776C6?E C6DE2FC2?ED 2C@F?5 E@H?]k^Am

kAm?x?> DFC6 H6?== DH:E49 324< 2?5 8@ 5@H?E@H?[? D2:5 qC@4<[ ?@E:?8 96 7C6BF6?E65 y2?@FD6<?D r276 ?62C=J D6G6? 52JD 2 H66< 7@C b_ E@ c_ J62CD H96? 96 @H?65 qC@4< w@>6 uFC?:D9:?8D] x? E96 `hg_D[ y2?@FD6<?D r276 H2D D@=5 2?5 3642>6 !2C<G:6H r276]k^Am

kAmrFCC6?E !2C<G:6H r276 @H?6C[ s2G:5 $E@C6G:< @7 $2?5DE@?6[ |:??][ 3@F89E E96 C6DE2FC2?E :? a__e] (96? 96 C6E:C65 :? yF=J a_``[ 96 EC:65 E@ D6== E96 DE@C6 E@ 2 =@42= >2? H9@ D2:5 96 H2D 8@:?8 E@ FD6 7F?5D 7C@> 2 72C> :? p=6I2?5C:2[ |:??][ E@ 3FJ E96 C6DE2FC2?E] p44@C5:?8 E@ $E@C6G:<[ E96 >2? E@=5 $E@C6G:< 96 4@F=5??E 4=@D6 @? E96 3F:=5:?8 3642FD6 @7 E96 DE2E6 D9FE 5@H? 2?5 56=2J65 7:?2=:K:?8 E96 D2=6]k^Am

kAm$E@C6G:< D2:5 E96 >2? 4=@D65 E96 3FD:?6DD :? yF=J H:E9@FE E6==:?8 9:>] }@H[ $E@C6G:< :D A=2??:?8 E@ D6== E96 3F:=5:?8 E@ 2 =@42= 4@FA=6 H9@ H:D965 ?@E E@ 36 :56?E:7:65 F?E:= E96 D2=6 :D 7:?2=] %96 4=@D:?8 52E6 :D D6E 7@C uC:52J[ s64] a`]k^Am

kAm%96 6IA64E65 3FJ6C D2:5 96 :D A=2??:?8 E@ @A6? 2 ?6H C6DE2FC2?E 3J pAC:= `[ 2?5 :?E6?5D E@ EFC? E96 C6DE2FC2?E :?E@ 2 D>2== 32C 2?5 8C:== E92E @776CD ?3=F6 A=2E6 4@>7@CE 7@@5 2E =F?49 2?5 <:?5 @7 2? 64=64E:4 5:??6C >6?F E92E H:== 492?86 D62D@?2==J]?k^Am

kAm$E@C6G:< D2:5 E96 :?E6?565 3FJ6C 925 E96 36DE A=2? E@ C6>@56= E96 3F:=5:?8 2?5 @A6? 2 ?6H C6DE2FC2?E]k^Am

kAm?x?> 6I4:E65 H:E9 H92E 96?D 8@:?8 E@ 5@ H:E9 E96 3FD:?6DD[? $E@C6G:< D2:5]k^Am

Thank you for reading 8 free articles on our site. You can come back at the end of your 30-day period for another 8 free articles, or you can purchase a subscription and continue to enjoy valuable local news and information. If you need help, please contact our office at 320-693-3266. You need an online service to view this article in its entirety.

Login

Or, use your linked account:

Choose an online service.

  • 1 Independent Review Digital Daily Only$36.00 for 365 days

    Independent Review Digital Daily edition ONLY - 1 year $36.

  • 2 Independent Review Print + Digital Daily Local$39.00 for 365 days

    Independent Review Print + Digital Daily edition - 1 year $39,?for readers who live within Meeker, McLeod, Kandiyohi, Renville, Stearns and Wright counties.

  • 3 Independent Review Print + Digital Daily Outstate$54.00 for 365 days

    Independent Review Print + Digital Daily edition - 1 year $54,?for readers who live outside Meeker, McLeod, Kandiyohi, Renville, Stearns and Wright counties.

  • 4 Independent Review Print Edition Only$36.00 for 365 days

    Independent Review Print edition ONLY - 1 year $36.

Current print subscribers

Need an account? Create one now.

(%remaining%) Remaining Thanks for visiting Litchfield Independent Review. You're entitled to view 8 free articles every 30 days. Then, if you enjoy our site and want full access, we'll ask you to purchase an affordable subscription.

(%remaining%) Remaining Thanks for visiting Litchfield Independent Review. You're entitled to view 8 free articles every 30 days, and you currently have (%remaining%) remaining. Then, if you enjoy our site and want full access, we'll ask you to purchase an affordable subscription.

(%remaining%) Remaining We hope you will enjoy this free article on Litchfield Independent Review. You're entitled to view 8 free articles every 30 days, and you currently have (%remaining%) remaining. Then, if you enjoy our site and want full access, we'll ask you to purchase an affordable subscription.

(%remaining%) Remaining We hope you will enjoy this free article on Litchfield Independent Review. You're entitled to view 8 free articles every 30 days, and you currently have (%remaining%) remaining. Then, if you enjoy our site and want full access, we'll ask you to purchase an affordable subscription.

(%remaining%) Remaining Thank you for reading Litchfield Independent Review. You have viewed (%remaining%) of your 8 free pages in 30 days. Please login or register at this time and enjoy the next (%remaining%) articles free of charge. After your 8 free articles, we'll ask you to purchase an affordable subscription.

(%remaining%) Remaining Thank you for reading Litchfield Independent Review. Because you have already viewed this article, you may view it again as many times as you would like without subtracting from your remaining free article views.

(%remaining%) Remaining Thank you for registering on Litchfield Independent Review. You're entitled to view 8 articles for free every 30 days, and you currently have (%remaining%) remaining. Then, if you enjoy our site and want full access, we'll ask you to purchase an affordable subscription.

(%remaining%) Remaining Thank you for reading Litchfield Independent Review. You're entitled to view 8 articles for free every 30 days, and you currently have (%remaining%) remaining. Then, if you enjoy our site and want full access, we'll ask you to purchase an affordable subscription.

(%remaining%) Remaining Thank you for reading Litchfield Independent Review. You're entitled to view 8 articles for free every 30 days, and you currently have (%remaining%) remaining. Then, if you enjoy our site and want full access, we'll ask you to purchase an affordable subscription.

(%remaining%) Remaining Thank you for reading Litchfield Independent Review. You're entitled to view 8 articles for free every 30 days. This is your last free article this period. On your next article we'll ask you to purchase an affordable subscription.

(%remaining%) Remaining Thank you for reading 8 free articles on our site. You can come back at the end of your 30-day period for another 8 free articles, or you can purchase a subscription and continue to enjoy valuable local news and information. If you need help, please contact our office at 320-693-3266.

Source: http://www.independentreview.net/news/business_and_agriculture/return-of-the-downtown-cafes/article_8ae59536-bbd4-51f7-8502-6e94cf274ac3.html

gla republican candidates mike martz hokies quadrantid norv turner jerry angelo

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Health: New Tool To Detect Breast Cancer Arrives In Our Area ...

By Stephanie Stahl

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) ? New technology is making it easier for doctors to detect breast cancer. And a facility in South Jersey is among the first of ten in the country to make it available to patients. 3 On Your Side Health Reporter Stephanie Stahl has more on the new screening tool.

This may look like your typical mammogram, but the pictures it can provide are not the same.

?You always wonder ya know statistically are you going to be that one person that?s going to have cancer,? said Mary Campellone, of Mt. Laurel. She has dense breasts which makes it harder for doctors to spot cancer on standard mammography. She had a suspicious mammogram, so they recommended she get a new FDA approved SenoBright Mammogram at Cooper University?s Breast Imaging Center.

?It offered me peace of mind. The test was actually read while I was here,? said Mary.

This machine holds special contrast dye that?s injected into patients through an IV. Then patients get a standard mammogram.

?This is a technology that can identify abnormalities based on blood flow,? said Dr. Kristin Brill, Director of Breast Surgery with Cooper University Health Care.

The contrast dye lights up areas with increased blood flow that may be cancerous. Doctors say this can almost immediately eliminate patients who don?t need further testing, including biopsies.

?It may add to our ability to identify cancers particularly women who are difficult to image, that would be the younger, with dense breast tissue. Um it may give us some alternative to MRI,? said Dr. Brill.

For Mary, the new imaging told doctors she needed more testing, including a biopsy.

?Everything was benign, and I?m very, very happy about that. Big, big relief,? said Mary.

Doctors say the test is quick, about 15 minutes, and results are given to the patients at that visit, cutting the patient wait time from detection to diagnosis.

For more information on Cooper University?s Breast Imaging Center SenoBright, visit http://www.cooperhealth.org

Source: http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2012/12/19/health-new-tool-to-detect-breast-cancer-arrives-in-our-area/

paul pierce strawberry festival knicks strikeforce tate vs rousey ciaa the monkees strikeforce

McALPINE LIBEL DEMANDS: Legal watchdog rules show Peer and ...

mcalpgrrrcropMcAlpine?.bark, bite etc etc

The lawyers? watchdog the Solicitors? Regulation Authority (SRA) takes a very dim view of certain practices when it comes to suing for libel. The Slog believes that anyone surveying the precedents and agreed practices involved would fairly swiftly reach the conclusion that Lord McAlpine and his legal creature RMPI are already in breach of some of them.

With the help of legal-eagle Sloggers, over the last week I have been poring over some cases of multiple-defendant libel actions, and observing major case precedents that are relevant to the list of ?culprits? being drawn up by Alistair McAlpine and Andrew Reid of RMPI.

One seminal case involves that of Smith v ADVFN, a City website which, as it happens, I use myself. The comment threads are usually, shall we say pretty lively, and a Mr Smith decided to sue on the basis that various threaders had defamed him. The methods used were challenged?.and these extracts from judgement might give everyone interested in the McAlpine suits some serious pause for thought: (my emphases)

?The strategy adopted by Mr Smith , aided by his solicitors, has been to try to pick off the ?offenders? one by one by threatening proceedings for libel and by suggesting payments by way of damages and/or costs?.and there is clearly the hope that they will collapse and comply with these demands at an early stage?.At the very least it is possible to conclude, even at this stage, that the strategy of ?divide and rule? is inappropriate?..This is especially so in libel proceedings?.In particular, any distress and hurt feelings suffered would have to be compensated by reference to the totality of the publications and not on the artificial basis of the sum total of the impact upon his feelings by one individual publication; otherwise there would obviously be a significant risk of overcompensation.?

In turn, these extracts from a later Queen?s Bench judgement on the case are instructive:

??Meanwhile, the Defendants who appeared in person and those who made submissions to me in writing seek to maintain in some cases, there has been a suggestion that the individual claim should be struck out as having no realistic prospect of success?..It is obviously a relevant question to ask whether someone would have thought it proportionate to any legitimate gain to issue 37 sets of proceedings (with apparently more to come). If there is a genuine desire for vindication over any significant defamatory allegation, it is reasonable to suppose that this objective could generally be achieved by a more targeted strategy?.?

??.a significant number of actions were started, with more flesh to be put on the bones later, but that does not explain why nothing was done before that date?. I am asked to scrutinise these cases with particular care and to ask whether they actually represent, in each case, a genuine attempt to vindicate reputation.?

Much of this opinion is in effect referring back to SRA rules which state that:

?Taking ?unfair advantage? refers to behaviour that any reasonable solicitor would regard as wrong and improper. That might include:

  • bullying and unjustifiable threats;
  • misleading or deceitful behaviour;
  • claiming what cannot be properly claimed;
  • demanding what cannot properly be demanded.

There can be no doubt that Andrew Reid?s initial remarks to the press contained thinly veiled threats along the lines of ?it?ll be cheaper for you to settle now?. The Slog would argue that Lord McAlpine may have been deceitful about his family name, and how he was mistakenly accused, during a Radio 4 interview in November. There is further the matter of McAlpine?s book on the basis of how to manipulate the media, which does (to say the least) raise doubts about the sincerity of his statements at the time. The demands made against both the BBC and ITV were vague in the extreme ? ?caused people to look at the internet? and so forth. The remarks made by Philip Schofield in that regard also represent the truth, and action to both silence and or discipline him on that basis arguably represent a serious attempt to curtail freedom of speech.

The following actions are also deemed ?offside? by the SRA:

taking unfair advantage of an opposing party?s lack of legal knowledge where they have not instructed a lawyer;

using your professional status or qualification to take unfair advantage of another person in order to advance your personal interests;

taking unfair advantage of a public office held by you, or a member of your family, or a member of your firm or their family.

Point 1 would apply to almost every Tweeter targeted by McAlpine and Reid. Points 2 & 3 apply in relation to McAlpine?s unprecedented access to the media as a public figure and former holder of high office, and also Reid?s use of the RMPI website.

On this matter, I am in receipt of one opinion as follows:

?In my view RMPI have taken unfair advantage of unrepresented parties in the conduct of their initial media campaign. It has made demands of money which would never be recoverable in a court of law and therefore are demanding sums unfairly and without quantifying them or even setting out what has been said to cause the complaint. The website demanding money is unfair pressure and taking advantage of the lack of legal knowledge of Twitter users. For example the RMPI website does not even advise people to seek legal representation which I think is the very least they should do.?

It is worth adding in addition, by the way, that the SRA strongly disapproves of solicitors collecting money for clients before Court action in libel cases ? especially when the method involves what it calls ?speculative invoicing?. This is, in the view of many observers, what Reid is already doing on his website. The legal site Solicitors from Hell for example notes:

?Everyone will have heard about Mr Reid ? the solicitor who is representing Lord McAlpine. He spends half his time on TV and radio discussing the litigation. Now he has taken the Twitter ?libel? tweets to a whole new level and is accepting apologies and money on his website: http://www.rmpi.co.uk . This is against the principle of treating those who have been alleged to libel his client fairly ? and arguably is a breach of the SRA code of practice. The likelihood is that Mr Reid has set up this facility because he is trying to steam roller people into making settlements when he knows any cases are likely to be dismissed in court as an abuse of process. His client has already received ?310,000 from broadcasters and in this context it is difficult to see how the costs in pursuing individuals will further vindicate him and achieve meaningful damages.?

It would be hard to get a more definitively negative judgement than that?.and reflects in its entirety the advice I was given several weeks ago ? viz: the case will fall apart as soon as McScalpine & Greid are forced into a Court wherein sits a judge in possession of the majority of his marbles.

The SRA has in fact already received a number of complaints. No wonder Andrew Reid is ?still hopeful? that a Court appearance can be avoided. In the case of the Sally Bercow action, the lady should be encouraged to go forward with the case, or force the dynamic duo to accept a simple apology without damages. This is a game of poker, but the Speaker?s wife technically looks on better ground than her accusers. I mustn?t encourage her, of course: it?s none of my business, and I?m not the one facing ?50,000 worth of potential damages.

But I continue to believe that the two litigators would rather do anything? than face a judge. And although Alistair McAlpine currently has the media eating from his hand, the way he is conducting this matter could result in them biting that extremity before too long.

There are times, are there not, when you can see why bankers, globalists and ambulance chasers are so in favour of deregulation. Meanwhile, as this distraction from the main point continues, several MSM titles are now uncovering all kinds of dirt on the Estbalishment fiddlers still at large. Jimmies McAlpine and Savile may be dead, but this scandal is still very much alive.

Stay tuned.

Like this:

Be the first to like this.

Source: http://hat4uk.wordpress.com/2012/12/18/mcalpine-libel-demands-legal-watchdog-rules-show-peer-and-lawyer-on-dodgy-ground/

goog Sylvia Kristel st louis cardinals Steelers Schedule tory burch Al Smith Dinner Herman Melville Books

Travel costly but worth it for small businesses | TribLIVE


By Rhonda Abrams

Published: Tuesday, December 18, 2012, 12:01?a.m.
Updated 10 hours ago

Business travel is an often-neglected aspect of small-business life, and most entrepreneurs don?t travel enough.

Nothing beats the power of a face-to-face meeting for closing a deal or maintaining an ongoing client relationship. Business travel can be expensive, especially on a small-business budget, but I?ve got tips to save you money.

1. Travel early in the year. January and February are often a less expensive time to travel with a couple of exceptions.

2. Use alternate airports. Going to Miami, Washington or San Francisco? Check prices to Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Baltimore; or San Jose and Oakland, Calif., instead. Lower-cost airlines often run flights from secondary airports, driving prices down on all airlines.

3. Shop prices on the Internet,but also call hotels directly. Often, the lowest rate ? especially at the last minute ? can be obtained by checking with the hotel.

4. Get a credit card that gives you miles, and pay business expenses with that card.

5. Try moderately priced, business-oriented motels. Many hotel chains are specifically aimed at road warriors ? entrepreneurs, salespeople, consultants. These hotels provide a lot of stuff free: Wi-Fi, breakfast, parking, sometimes even free appetizers and drinks in the early evening.

6. Use your own cellphone in the United States. Hotel phones can be costly, even for local calls.

7. Use smartphone apps to connect when you?re outside the United States. You can call or text back home free.

It?s tough to build, maintain and deepen professional relationships from a distance. Travel is the way to build those bridges.

Rhonda Abrams is president of The Planning Shop and publisher of books for entrepreneurs.

You must be signed in to add comments

To comment, click the Sign in or sign up at the very top of this page.

There are currently no comments for this story.
Subscribe today! Click here for our subscription offers.

Source: http://triblive.com/business/headlines/3131943-74/travel-business-entrepreneurs

Karrueche Tran dodd frank Lark Voorhies Jennifer Livingston Orlando Cruz MLB Playoff Schedule arizona cardinals

Plumes across the Pacific deliver thousands of microbial species to West Coast

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

A surprising number of microorganisms ? 99 percent more kinds than had been reported in findings published just four months ago ? are leaping the biggest gap on the planet. Hitching rides in the upper troposphere, they're making their way from Asia across the Pacific Ocean and landing in North America. For the first time researchers have been able to gather enough biomass in the form of DNA to apply molecular methods to samples from two large dust plumes originating in Asia in the spring of 2011. The scientists detected more than 2,100 unique species compared to only 18 found in the very same plumes using traditional methods of culturing, results they published in July.

"The long-range transport and surprising level of species richness in the upper atmosphere overturns traditional paradigms in aerobiology," says David J. Smith, who recently earned his doctorate at the University of Washington in biology and astrobiology. He's lead author of a paper in the current issue of the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology.

"It's a small world. Global wind circulation can move Earth's smallest types of life to just about anywhere," Smith said. It's been estimated that about 7.1 million tons (64 teragrams) of aerosols ? dust, pollutants and other atmospheric particles, including microorganisms ? cross the Pacific each year. The aerosols are carried by wind storms into the upper reaches of the troposphere. The troposphere, the layer of air closest to earth up to about 11 miles (18 kilometers), is where almost all our weather occurs.

Co-author Daniel Jaffe, professor at UW Bothell, has previously documented especially large plumes of aerosols in the troposphere making the trans-Pacific trip in seven to 10 days. The recent findings are based on two such plumes, one in April and the other in May of 2011, detected at Mount Bachelor in the Cascade Mountains of central Oregon.

Most of the microorganisms ? about half were bacterial and the other half fungal ? originated from soils and were either dead on arrival or harmless to humans. A few fungal species have been associated previously with crop wilt but scientists had no way of determining if any crops were affected during either plume event. Most of the species in the plumes can be found in low, background levels on the West Coast. The plumes, however, brought elevated levels of such organisms leading the scientists to say that it may be useful to think about microorganisms as air pollution: microorganisms that are unnoticed in background levels might be more relevant in concentrated doses.

"I was very surprised at the concentrations. One might expect the concentrations of cells to decrease with altitude based on fallout and dilution," Smith said. "But during these plume events, the atmosphere was pooling these cells just as it does with other kinds of air pollution."

Interestingly, Smith says, two of the three most common families of bacteria in the plumes are known for their ability to form spores in ways that they can hibernate safely during harsh conditions, making them especially well adapted to high altitude transport.

"I think we're getting close to calling the atmosphere an ecosystem," Smith said. "Until recently, most people would refer to it as a conveyor belt, or a transient place where life moves through. But the discovery of so many cells potentially able to adapt to traveling long distances at high altitudes challenges the old classification."

Cells also can interact with their high-altitude environment, for example, becoming the nucleus for rain drops and snow flakes and influencing the amount of precipitation that falls. Other scientists estimate that 30 percent of global precipitation stems from microbes.

On the other hand, scientists have yet to see evidence of metabolism or growth of microorganisms while aloft and there's a limited amount of time that any organism might reside there.

Sampling the upper troposphere for microorganisms in the past has been a spotty effort using aircraft and balloons, Smith said

"Because it is so difficult to get samples, I argue it's probably the last biological environment on the planet to be explored," he said.

Mount Bachelor, like many other mountains in the Cascades, has a peak tall enough to pierce the upper troposphere. Unlike other mountains in the Cascades, however, the top of Mount Bachelor is a far more accessible place for an observatory because a ski area exists there. There's power and bringing equipment and personnel to the observatory is not a major undertaking, you just take the ski lift.

###

University of Washington: http://www.uwnews.org

Thanks to University of Washington for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 17 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/125983/Plumes_across_the_Pacific_deliver_thousands_of_microbial_species_to_West_Coast

Michelle Obama Speech eva longoria Rihanna wiz khalifa Michael Clarke Duncan Nazanin Boniadi Deval Patrick

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

BB10 Dev Alpa B has a Wider Aperture than the Dev Alpha A and iPhone 5

{content}';

var google_adnum = 0;
function google_ad_request_done(google_ads) {
for(i = 0; i Ads by Google";
var content = "";

if (ad.type == "flash") {
content += '';
} else if (ad.type == "image") {
content += ''; } else if (ad.type == "html") { content += ad.snippet; } else { content += '' + ad.line1 + '
' + '' + ad.line2 + '?' + ad.line3 + '
' + '' + ad.visible_url + ''; } content = ad_template.replace("{title}",title).replace("{content}",content); var pos = i*3 + (i+2); $('#posts .postcontainer:eq(' + pos + ')').after(content); } if (google_ads.length > 0 && google_ads[0].bidtype == "CPC") google_adnum = google_adnum + google_ads.length; } var google_ad_client = "ca-pub-8460099860738313"; var google_ad_channel = '1590343211'; var google_ad_output = 'js'; var google_max_num_ads = '10'; var google_ad_type = 'text'; var google_image_size = '728x90'; var google_feedback = 'on'; var google_skip = google_adnum;

Source: http://forums.crackberry.com/blackberry-l-series-f254/bb10-dev-alpa-b-has-wider-aperture-than-dev-alpha-iphone-5-a-758417/

chardon high school christopher plummer viola davis school shooting in ohio shooting at chardon high school sasha baron cohen stacy keibler

Monday, December 17, 2012

ComScore: Smartphone Penetration In Europe?s Big-5 Markets Now At 55%, Samsung Is The One To Beat

apple-samsungEurope's mobile market has reached a tipping point: the top-five markets in the region collectively now have a majority of consumers using smartphones, according to the latest numbers from comScore.?France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK are now collectively reporting a 55% smartphone penetration, according to comScore's MobiLens research -- an online survey of "nationally representative" sample of mobile subscribers aged 13 and up.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Z9w4_1liPSU/

mark davis marine urination video cadillac ats bain capital marines urinating haley barbour peoples choice awards 2012

School shooter was 'very nervous around people'

Investigators and former classmates of Connecticut school shooter Adam Lanza say he was bright, but extremely shy and remote. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

By NBC News staff and wire services

Updated at 8 p.m. ET: A picture of Adam Lanza slowly emerged Saturday, as acquaintances said his behavior included pressing up against walls to avoid others and clutching his briefcase. Investigators, meanwhile, said they hoped that "very good evidence" found at his home would shed light on what pushed him to kill 26 children and teachers as well as his mother.

Connecticut State Police Lt. Paul Vance said Saturday that investigators had found "very good evidence ... that our investigators will be able to use in painting the complete picture, the 'how' and, more importantly, the 'why this occurred.'"

But he would not elaborate and the mystery deepened as education officials in Newtown, Conn., said they had found no link between Lanza's mother and the school, contrary to news reports that said she was a teacher there.


Investigators said they believe Lanza, 20, attended Sandy Hook Elementary many years ago, but they had no explanation for why he went there on Friday.

Lanza shot and killed his mother, Nancy Lanza, at the home they shared, then drove to the school in her car, forced his way inside and opened fire in two classrooms, authorities said. Within minutes, he killed 20 children, six adults and himself.

Authorities said Lanza had no criminal history; it was not clear whether he had a job.?

His father, who learned about the shooting from a reporter at the Stamford Advocate, said in a statement that he was in a "state of disbelief and trying to find whatever answers we can." Lanza said he has cooperated with law enforcement and will continue to do so.

Meanwhile, acquaintances described the former honor student as smart but odd and remote.

"We would hang out, and he was a good kid," Joshua Milas told The Associated Press. He said he had not seen Lanza in a few years. "He was probably one of the smartest kids I know. He was probably a genius."

"(His mother) pushed him really hard to be smarter and work harder in school," Tim Arnone told Reuters. He first met Lanza at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

"He was very different and very shy and didn't make an effort to interact with anybody" in his 10th-grade English class at Newtown High School, Olivia DeVivo told the AP. DeVivo, now a student at the University of Connecticut, said Lanza always came to school toting a briefcase and wearing his shirt buttoned all the way up.

"Now looking back, it's kind of like 'OK, he had all these signs,' but you can't say every shy person would do something like this," she said.

Richard Novia ? who until 2008 was the school district's head of security and adviser to the school's technology club, of which Lanza was a member ? described Lanza to the AP as "a loner."

"You had yourself a very scared young boy, who was very nervous around people," he added.

Novia said Lanza had extreme difficulties relating to fellow students and teachers, as well as a strange bodily condition: "If that boy would've burned himself, he would not have known it or felt it physically."

Lanza would also go through crises that would require his mother to come to school to deal with them. Such episodes might involve "total withdrawal from whatever he was supposed to be doing, be it a class, be it sitting and reading a book," Novia told the AP.

When people approached Lanza in the hallways, he would press himself against the wall or walk in a different direction, clutching his black briefcase "like an 8-year-old who refuses to give up his teddy bear," said Novia, who now lives in Tennessee.

Even so, Novia said his primary concern about Lanza was that he might become a target for teasing or abuse by his fellow students, not that he might become a threat himself.

"Somewhere along in the last four years there were significant changes that led to what has happened Friday morning," Novia said. "I could never have foreseen him doing that."

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

Authorities say the man behind one of the worst mass shootings in US history was a 20-year-old whose mother worked at the school and whose brother has told them he had a history of mental problems. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

Related content from NBCNews.com:

Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

?

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/15/15933406-connecticut-school-shooter-was-very-nervous-around-people?lite

paul babeu kevin costner budweiser shootout animal house invincible jesse jackson whitney houston funeral video