Sunday, September 30, 2012

Peoria Carp Hunters featured in Animal Planet show

PEORIA, Ill. --?

An Animal Planet TV show featuring the acrobatic exploits of Asian carp along the Illinois River will air Sunday.

TV crews spent four days filming in and around Peoria last summer for an episode of "Off the Hook: Extreme Catches" called "Carpocalypse Now."

The invasive species is feared because it could have a disastrous impact on aquatic life, boating and fishing if the carp migrate from the Mississippi and its tributaries to Lake Michigan. They fish are also known for leaping from the water.

In the show, host Eric Young meets the Peoria Carp Hunters, a local group that hunts the fish with bows and arrows.

Carp Hunter's Nate Wallick tells the (Peoria) Journal Star ( http://bit.ly/P1csgz) that they "had a blast" filming the show.

It airs at 8 p.m.

Source: http://www.fortmilltimes.com/2012/09/30/2234387/peoria-carp-hunters-featured-in.html

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Jerusalem ? PM?s Camp Says NYC Trip Cleared Air with Washington

Jerusalem - Netanyahu returns satisfied after ?red line? speech to UN General Assembly; Canada?s Harper: Those who target Israel are a threat to free societies everywhere.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu left New York for Israel Saturday night with aides expressing satisfaction that the key objectives of his trip ? clearly defining red lines on Iran and clearing the air with Washington ? were achieved.

?The first thing that he succeeded in doing was sharpening the message on Iran,? one source in Netanyahu?s entourage said of the prime minister?s speech Thursday to the UN. ?We were more specific about what we think should be the red lines, and that is important in framing the parameters of the debate.?

The official said that the visit, which included a phone conversation Friday with US President Barack Obama and a meeting Thursday with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, ?strengthened and enhanced our dialogue with the US administration over these issues.?

In addition, the official noted, Netanyahu?s UN speech and his red line on a rudimentary sketch of a bomb received ?almost unprecedented coverage internationally? and succeeded in putting the Iranian nuclear program ?at the very center of the international political agenda.?

It is more clear than in the past what Israel means when it talks about red lines, the official said.

Netanyahu, in an interview with Channel 1, said he believed that placing a red line in front of Iran reduced the chances Tehran would cross it. He defined that line in his speech as the point before Iran had stockpiled enough low-grade and medium-grade uranium to begin working on high-grade uranium and a nuclear detonator.

Defining where the red line is, he said, gave ?a great deal of legitimization? to those who might want to act if Iran crossed it.

The prime minister, in a Channel 2 interview, said he did not discuss an Israeli attack in his speech ? only that the red line had to be at a point before Iran completed the second stage of enrichment needed for a bomb. Regarding his comment that the Iranians could reach that stage by springtime, Netanyahu said this would happen only if they continued enriching at their current pace.

?But lets see if they continue,? he said. ?I think that placing a red line is the best guarantor to prevent the need for military action.?

Netanyahu clarified that in saying Iran would not cross the line until at least spring, he ?never gave up for even a minute Israel?s right to defend itself at any time. I think that right is clear and understood by everyone.?

He added that it was important to make clear to the international community that Iran was continuing to move forward on its nuclear program, and that if it wanted to stop the program it had to do so ?before the finishing of the enrichment process.?

Washington?s refusal to articulate its red line has been a source of public tension in recent weeks between Israel and the US. Netanyahu, however, said that teams from both countries were working at the highest levels to try to translate into practical terms the joint objective of preventing Iran from attaining a nuclear weapon.

The White House stressed on Friday, following the Obama-Netanyahu phone conversation, that the US and Israel were ?in full agreement? on preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon.

The two men discussed the coordination of their efforts and cooperation in dealing with Iran, according to a statement by White House press secretary Jay Carney.

While the statement did not say how long the conversation lasted, Netanyahu said it was a ?prolonged? discussion.

?The two leaders underscored that they are in full agreement on the shared goal of preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon,? the statement said.

The conversation was their second in three weeks, an unusually short stretch of time for two publicly announced calls. It comes after criticism of Obama for declining a meeting with Netanyahu while the premier was in the US for the UN General Assembly, and amidst discord between the two countries on how best to thwart the threat from Tehran.

Netanyahu?s comments to the UN Thursday and his comments that Iran would not cross his red line until at least spring suggested the timeline for any Israel action would not come until well into next year, after the US elections in November, reducing some of the immediate tension between the two countries.

?The temperature is lower than it had been,? an Obama aide said after the call.

The White House readout also noted that Netanyahu ?welcomed President Obama?s commitment at the UN to do what we must to achieve that goal.?

Netanyahu also spoke by phone Friday with Obama challenger Mitt Romney.

Romney, speaking to reporters on his campaign plane, said he and Netanyahu agreed that Iran must be denied nuclear capabilities but did not agree on specific red lines to confront Tehran.

?I do not believe in the final analysis we will have to use military action,? Romney said. ?I certainly hope we don?t have to. I can?t take that action off the table.?

Friday?s White House phone call followed a meeting between Netanyahu and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in New York Thursday night. The meeting lasted one hour and 15 minutes and was entirely one-on-one, according to the State Department.

The pair held a lengthy discussion on Iran, and also discussed developments in the broader region and the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.

?It was an open, wide-ranging constructive conversation,? the State Department statement said. The Prime Minister?s Office released no information about that meeting.

Netanyahu also met Friday with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and praised Harper again for Canada?s recent decision to cut ties with Iran.

?I think that what you did, severing ties with Iran, was not only an act of statesmanship, but an act of moral clarity,? he said to the Canadian leader before the meeting.

Harper said Canada wanted to see a peaceful resolution to the Iranian crisis, ?and we work closely with our allies to try and alert the world to the danger this presents and the necessity of dealing with it.?

Later in the day, at the Appeal of Conscience Foundation?s annual dinner in New York, Harper said ?the appeal of our conscience requires us to speak out against what the Iranian regime stands for. Likewise, it requires us to speak in support of the country that its hatred most immediately threatens, the State of Israel.?

Harper said that while Ottawa does not sanction every policy Israel pursues, ?neither its existence nor its policies are responsible for the pathologies present in that part of the world.?

He was also mindful, Harper said, ?of a lesson of history, that those who single out the Jewish people as a target of racial and religious bigotry will inevitably be a threat to all of us. Indeed, those who so target Israel today are, by their own words and deeds, also a threat to all free and democratic societies.?


Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post


?New York - Just five days after the most solemn Jewish Holiday of Yom Kippur, Tonight begins the Jewish holiday of Sukkos. Sukkos is the most joyous of the three...? Happy Sukkos: Wishing You All Chag Sameach ?Washington - A selection of issues at stake in the presidential election and their impact on Americans, in brief: Afghanistan: The stakes now are similar to what...? Washington - WHY IT MATTERS: Issues at Stake in Election

?

Source: http://feeds.vosizneias.com/~r/vin/~3/tH9eIu0H048/

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How to get real income through Google Online Jobs?

I just want to know about Google?s Online Jobs which is having more potential online jobs from Google Adsense. I need to get lot of information about it because I already created a blog about Social Bookmarking Sites which is having nice ? http://socialbookmarkee.blogspot.com ? opportunity to make outbound links to your websites. Now I need to get information about work from home to get handsome income from home. I hope web master can help me out. I really need to work hard to get real online income from home.

How to get real Google online income thorugh online home jobs?

How to get offline part time job income from home?

Is their any real online income from home?

This entry was posted in Google Jobs. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://jobswithoutinvestment.com/how-to-get-real-income-through-google-online-jobs

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Ex-NY Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger dies

NEW YORK (AP) ? Former New York Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, who led the newspaper to new levels of influence and profit while standing up for press freedom during some of the most significant moments in 20th-century journalism, died Saturday. He was 86.

Sulzberger, who went by the nickname "Punch" and served with the Marine Corps before joining the Times staff, first as a reporter, and then following his father and grandfather as publisher, died at his home in Southampton, N.Y., after a long illness, his family announced.

During his three-decade tenure, the newspaper won 31 Pulitzer prizes, published the Pentagon Papers and won a libel case victory in New York Times vs. Sullivan that established important First Amendment protections for the press.

"Punch, the old Marine captain who never backed down from a fight, was an absolutely fierce defender of the freedom of the press," his son, and current Times publisher, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., said in a statement. He said his father's refusal to back down in the paper's free-speech battles "helped to expand access to critical information and to prevent government censorship and intimidation."

In an era of declining newspaper readership, the Times' weekday circulation climbed from 714,000 when Sulzberger became publisher in 1963 to 1.1 million upon his retirement as publisher in 1992. Over the same period, the annual revenues of the Times' corporate parent rose from $100 million to $1.7 billion.

"Above all, he took the quality of the product up to an entirely new level," the late Katharine Graham, chairwoman of The Washington Post Co., said at the time Sulzberger relinquished the publisher's title.

Sulzberger was the only grandson of Adolph S. Ochs (pronounced ox), the son of Bavarian immigrants who took over the Times in 1896 and built it into the nation's most influential newspaper.

The family retains control to this day, holding a special class of shares that give them more powerful voting rights than other stockholders.

Power was thrust on Sulzberger at the age of 37 after the sudden death of his brother-in-law in 1963. He had been in the Times executive suite for eight years in a role he later described as "vice president in charge of nothing."

But Sulzberger directed the Times' evolution from an encyclopedic paper of record to a more reader-friendly product that reached into the suburbs and across the nation.

During his tenure, the Times started a national edition, bought its first color presses, and introduced ? to the chagrin of some hard-news purists ? popular and lucrative new sections covering topics such as food and entertainment.

"If you weren't around then, you forget the unbelievable outrage that greeted those sections. But in retrospect it was the right decision both editorially and economically," said Nicholas Lemann, dean of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.

Sulzberger also improved the paper's bottom line, pulling it and its parent company out of a tailspin in the mid-1970s and lifting both to unprecedented profitability a decade later.

In 1992, Sulzberger relinquished the publisher's job to his 40-year-old son, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., but remained chairman of The New York Times Co. Sulzberger retired as chairman and chief executive of the company in 1997. His son then was named chairman. Sulzberger stayed on the Times Co. board of directors until 2002.

Reacting to news of Sulzberger's death Saturday, former Times executive editor Joseph Lelyveld said that his business success was matched by integrity in the newsroom.

"As an editor, you knew that if you went to the publisher and sought his support on an issue that you deemed to be of high importance, you could pretty much count on getting it. He knew how to back his people," Lelyveld said. "The last years have been extremely difficult with his health problems. He bore them with great courage. I admired him hugely."

President Barack Obama said Sulzberger was "a firm believer in the importance of a free and independent press ? one that isn't afraid to seek the truth, hold those in power accountable, and tell the stories that need to be told."

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he "changed the course of American history with his journalistic decisions."

Significant free-press and free-speech precedents were established during Sulzberger's years as publisher, most notably the Times vs. Sullivan case. It resulted in a landmark 1964 Supreme Court ruling that shielded the press from libel lawsuits by public officials unless they could prove actual malice.

In 1971 the Times led the First Amendment fight to keep the government from suppressing the Pentagon Papers, a series of classified reports on the Vietnam War. Asked by a reporter who at the Times made the decision to publish the papers, Sulzberger gestured toward his chest and silently mouthed, "me."

Sulzberger read the more than 7,000 pages of the Pentagon Papers before deciding to publish them. After Sulzberger read the papers, he was asked what he thought. "Oh, I would think about 20 years to life," he responded.

But in a landmark decision, the U.S. Supreme Court eventually sided with the Times and The Washington Post, which had begun publishing the papers a few days after the Times.

"Punch Sulzberger was a giant in the industry, a leader who fought to preserve the vital role of a free press in society and championed journalism executed at the highest level," said Associated Press President and CEO Gary Pruitt. "The Associated Press benefited from his wisdom, both during his years on the board of directors and his thoughtful engagement in the years that followed."

Gay Talese, who worked at the Times as a reporter when Sulzberger took over and chronicled the paper's history in his book "The Kingdom and the Power," called him "a brilliant publisher. He far exceeded the achievements of his father in both making the paper better and more profitable at a time when papers are not as good as they used to be."

In their book "The Trust," a history of the Ochs-Sulzberger family and its stewardship of the paper, Susan E. Tifft and Alex S. Jones cited Sulzberger's "common sense and unerring instincts."

In an interview in 1990 with New York magazine, Sulzberger was typically candid about the paper's readership.

"We're not New York's hometown newspaper," he said. "We're read on Park Avenue, but we don't do well in Chinatown or the east Bronx. We have to approach journalism differently than, say, the Sarasota Herald Tribune, where you try to blanket the community."

New York City's mayor from 1978 to 1989, Ed Koch, said Sulzberger also had great humility, despite his extraordinary influence.

"With enormous power and authority he was a humble a person as you could ever meet," Koch said Saturday. "People with enormous power often dominate a room. He did not. And yet the power and authority was there."

In the mid-1980s Sulzberger authorized the building of a $450 million color printing and distribution plant across the Hudson River in Edison, N.J., part of a plan to get all printing out of cramped facilities in the Times building in Manhattan.

Sulzberger was born in New York City on Feb. 5, 1926, the only son of Arthur Hays Sulzberger and his wife, Iphigene Ochs Sulzberger, Adolph's only child. One of his three sisters was named Judy, and from early on he was known as "Punch," from the puppet characters Punch and Judy.

Sulzberger's grandfather led the paper until his death in 1935, when he was followed by Sulzberger's father, who remained at the helm until he retired in 1961.

Meanwhile, Arthur served in the Marines during World War II and, briefly, in Korea. He later observed, in a typically self-deprecating remark, that "My family didn't worry about me for a minute. They knew that if I got shot in the head it wouldn't do any harm."

Except for a year at The Milwaukee Journal, 1953-54, the younger Sulzberger spent his entire career at the family paper. He joined after graduating from Columbia College in 1951. He worked in European bureaus for a time and was back in New York by 1955, but found he had little to do.

Sulzberger had not been expected to assume power at the paper for years. His father passed control to Orvil E. Dryfoos, his oldest daughter's husband, in 1961. But two years later Dryfoos died suddenly of heart disease at 50. Punch Sulzberger's parents named him publisher, the fourth family member to hold the title.

"We had all hoped that Punch would have many years more training before having to take over," said his mother, Iphigene. Sulzberger relied on senior editors and managers for advice, and quickly developed a reputation as a solid leader.

At various times, Sulzberger was a director or chairman of the Newspaper Advertising Bureau, American Newspaper Publishers Association and American Press Institute. He was a director of The Associated Press from 1975 to 1984.

Sulzberger married Barbara Grant in 1948, and the couple had two children, Arthur Jr. and Karen. After a divorce in 1956, Sulzberger married Carol Fox. The couple had a daughter, Cynthia, and Sulzberger adopted Fox's daughter from a previous marriage, Cathy.

Carol Sulzberger died in 1995. The following year, Sulzberger married Allison Cowles, the widow of William H. Cowles 3rd, who was the president and publisher of The Spokesman-Review and Spokane Chronicle of Spokane, Wash. She died in 2010.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ex-ny-times-publisher-arthur-ochs-sulzberger-dies-142532804--finance.html

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South Africa looking to end their losing streak

The Irish Times - Saturday, September 29, 2012

SOUTH AFRICA will look to end a record five-match losing streak against an Australia team who in turn will be seeking a first win at Loftus Versfeld in six attempts in their Rugby Championship Test in Pretoria today.

?We?ve only won one out of our last eight matches against Australia which is simply not good enough. That can never be acceptable and this team has now inherited that record so it?s our job to rectify that,? South Africa captain Jean De Villiers told a news conference in Johannesburg yesterday.

The Wallabies have won their last two matches in South Africa, including a 41-39 triumph in Bloemfontein on the high veld in 2010, and they have set their sights firmly on winning again at altitude at Loftus Versfeld.

?Every Rugby Championship match is a big weekend but the context of this game is that it?s a great opportunity to change history. We?ve waited a long time to win in Pretoria and that?s something we look forward to,? Australia captain Nathan Sharpe said.

Both teams have endured a troubled year, with new Springbok coach Heyneke Meyer gaining two wins over England but just a solitary Rugby Championship victory, against debutants Argentina in Cape Town.

Wallaby coach Robbie Deans, at the helm of the team for a fifth year, has two Rugby Championship wins over Argentina and South Africa at home to his credit, but his continued failure to engineer victory over his home nation New Zealand has put him under increasing fire in Australia.

De Villiers said the Springboks were desperate to go out and win the test for Meyer.

?We really believe we?ve improved over the last two matches, we just haven?t been able to get the result we wanted. We really believe we?re on the right track and we want to win more than anything for the coach, to take pressure off him and the rest of the management,? the centre said.

Both under-performing teams have chosen outhalves who will start for the first time in the number 10 jersey at Test level.

Deans is hoping former fullback Kurtley Beale will spark the Wallabies on attack in the absence of the injured Quade Cooper, whose social media attacks on the coach have provided an unnecessary distraction.

?Kurtley is one of the better kickers in our side and I have no concerns over his capacity to do what we want him to do.

?He?s played a lot of flyhalf alongside scrumhalf Nick Phipps at the Melbourne Rebels, so it?s an established combination.

?If you look at both backlines, the match should clearly be a good spectacle, I expect both sides to be positive and because of the conditions, it?s likely to be pretty expansive,? Deans said.

Meyer has chosen 20-year-old Johan Goosen, who has shown a willingness to attack with the ball in hand during his two appearances off the bench, in place of the experienced Morne Steyn, who has suffered a dramatic loss of form with the boot.

Francois Steyn has been withdrawn from the Springbok team after rolling his ankle earlier in the week and De Villiers will replace him at inside centre, with debutant Jaco Taute wearing the number 13 jersey.

SOUTH AFRICA: Zane Kirchner; Bryan Habana, Jaco Taute, Jean de Villiers, Francois Hougaard; Johan Goosen, Ruan Pienaar; Tendai Mtawarira, Adriaan Strauss, Jannie du Plessis, Eben Etzebeth, Andries Bekker, Francois Louw, Willem Alberts, Duane Vermeulen. Replacements: Tiaan Liebenberg, Pat Cilliers, Flip van der Merwe, Marcell Coetzee, Elton Jantjies, Juan de Jongh, Pat Lambie.?

AUSTRALIA: Berrick Barnes; Dominic Shipperley, Adam Ashley-Cooper, Pat McCabe, Digby Ioane; Kurtley Beale, Nick Phipps; Benn Robinson, Tatafu Polota-Nau, Ben Alexander, Kane Douglas, Nathan Sharpe, Dave Dennis, Michael Hooper, Radike Samo. Replacements: Saia Faingaa, James Slipper, Rob Simmons, Scott Higginbotham/Mike Harris, Liam Gill, Brett Sheehan, Anthony Faingaa.?

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/851/f/10849/s/23efcd2a/l/0L0Sirishtimes0N0Cnewspaper0Csport0C20A120C0A9290C1224324610A2590Bhtml/story01.htm

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Friday Q&A: Kevin Delaney on making Quartz an essential ...

Before Quartz became a device-morphing business site and the buzz of online journalism circles, it was a blank canvas. That?s an enviable position these days, particularly if you?ve got the backing of Atlantic Media and a staff pulled together from places like The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, The Economist, and The New York Times. Looking out at the media landscape today, Quartz editor-in-chief Kevin Delaney and his team decided the path to success and a broad readership involved two things: Being free, and being readable on just about anything with a screen.

In his letter to readers on launch day, Delaney wrote, ?What is the best way to build a global news organization in 2012? With your help, we?ll figure it out.? Delaney told me one of the ways to do that is through the power of the open web, not restricting access to content behind a paywall or being in an app store. This is something he has a little experience with, having previously worked as managing editor of the mostly paywalled WSJ.com.

But if Quartz isn?t going to charge for its work and isn?t available in newsstands or app stores, how will they find their audience? I spoke with Delaney about the virtue of being mobile-friendly for business readers, how Quartz plans to use comments to engage readers, and how the site wants to innovate in advertising as well as editorial. Here?s a lightly edited transcript of the conversation.

Justin Ellis: One of the things you guys have talked about is wanting to be essential, something your readers will want to check in on every day. How do you do that?

Kevin Delaney: We?re really focused on making Quartz an essential read. Our target is global business professionals ? so readers who are on the move, but also know they need to know what?s going on in the global economy.

For many of these people, there?s effectively one economy that stretches around the world and affects their businesses and their lives. So what we?re doing is providing them with the essential information they need to know at a digital rhythm and on any digital device they happen to have on hand.

The way we become an essential read is through smart analysis of the key macro questions affecting the global business professional, using a digital platform that is available to them, whether they?re on their mobile phone, their iPad, their desktop.

Ellis: What if this global business professional speaks Chinese or Japanese? Are you guys going to be looking into translation?

Delaney: Our goal was to get out in English first, but we would love to expand to other languages. I would be surprised if we didn?t do that sometime in the future. We?re looking to reach a real international readership, and at the beginning it will be readers who are international but speak English. But our ambitions extend beyond that.

Ellis: What you think the voice of Quartz should be, in terms of the writing?

?Our content is made to share. That, I believe is the most effective distribution you have possible.?

Delaney: It?s a really interesting question, and I think the answer to that will evolve over time. One of my colleagues here told me this morning her mother told her that what she liked about Quartz was that we respected our readers. I think that partly gets at the answer to your question. Which is to say we want to be as creative and smart as possible.We want to respect our readers, be analytical, and funny where possible. But we don?t need to be gratuitously snarky or flip.

I think the voice that we?re going for is one that is smart, journalistic, and internationally-minded, but at the same time accessible and creative.

Ellis: You aren?t on a print newsstand and you?re not in an app store. How are people going to find Quartz?

Delaney: We very consciously constructed Quartz so that it will thrive on the free and open web. I think it?s as great a time as ever to build a new journalistic product, a new media organization. And the reason is that you make yourself open to the web.

We?re a free product; we don?t have a paywall; we do not have registration walls; we don?t actually have the wall of someone having to go into an app store to download us. Our content is made to share. That, I believe is the most effective distribution you have possible. So the imperative that creates for us is one that I?m excited about, which is to create good and interesting content.

And we?ve structured it so that, if we succeed with that, this will be shared, and if someones shares it and their friends like it, they?ll share it as well. The other thing is that the site is architected to work on different devices, so you don?t have to install an app on different devices ? you can go and use the site on whatever you have at hand.

Ellis: It?s been just a couple of days, but some folks have had trouble with the UI of Quartz, and some are wondering if there are bugs that need to be fixed. Are there things you guys are still working out, or is this a new type of experience that readers will have to get used to?

Delaney: We built Quartz and view the launch as a start of what we?re going to do. We optimized it for tablet, for iPhone, and then for desktop. When you?re building an HTML5 app, you can run into compatibility issues in supporting every single browser and device in the world. We?ve put it out so that it works well on our primary platforms, and we?ve released updates to the site that make it work better on additional browsers and platforms. Our technology approach is ambitious, but we?re also working very hard now that it?s out to make sure that everyone possible can experience our site in the fullest way possible.

Ellis: Any initial observations from your stats that you guys are seeing that are surprising? Are people looking at it primarily on their phones or on their tablets? What can you tell me?

Delaney: One thing I?ve been really encouraged by, just in the early days, is the geographic spread of our readership. I don?t know off-hand the numbers for our total traffic breakdown by country, but there was a moment [Tuesday] in our first full morning where I looked at Chartbeat, which we?re using for real-time analytics, and 40 percent of our traffic was coming from the US and the rest was spread other places in the world. A big chunk of it was from Europe, but there also was some traffic from Asia as well. I was really encouraged by that because I thought it demonstrated some success in being really open to the web from day one and having a global readership, which was really our goal with the project.

Ellis: One of the things folks have noticed is that at this point there?s no comments on stories. That?s something that?s a debate about in journalism circles. But we did notice Zach mentioned on Twitter that you guys are cooking something up for comments. Could you give me an idea what that is? Delaney: We felt that the current commenting systems on most websites weren?t especially satisfying. I know Nick Denton at Gawker and others share this view and are trying to get their heads around a solution to it. So we have designed a way for readers to effectively comment, but it?s a different interface. And we will be rolling that out sometime in the future.

We?re committed to commenting but believe that there?s an opportunity to change the form ? the user interface may be the best way to put it ? for commenting. And I think we have something innovative to do there that we?re continuing to build and we?ll roll out over time.

Ellis: Quartz already has an API. I?m wondering what opportunities you think that presents.

Delaney: There are two primary advantages of having an open API. The first is it actually makes your own development easier. So if you have an open API, your own developers can use it, play with it, and you can build things on it. The second advantage is you have your content out in the broader world and allow other people to do things with it you might not have time or have thought of.

A good example of how this has been done is with The New York Times API. One of my favorite applications of it is the mashup of the New York Times starred critics film reviews and the Netflix on-demand catalog. We don?t know what the specific applications could be for Quartz content that are similar to that, but our strong preference is to make that available from day one and see what happens.

Ellis: Something we?ve been talking about here is how fluid your obsessions will be. They sound like something that is meant to change from time to time. Will they change every month, two months, five minutes? How do you determine that?

I think that there?s an imperative to rethink how advertising is handled, and I think sponsored content is an interesting approach to it.

Delaney: The idea for obsessions stemmed from our observation that really good blogs and magazines have what we think of as defining obsessions, and these obsessions change over time.

We?ve gone out with a number of things our news staff is focused on and obsessed with. Our expectation is that they change with some frequency. We haven?t explicitly noted this to the reader, but we talk about having some major obsessions and some that are more minor. So I think there are some major obsessions that will probably be more consistent over time, although they could change as well.

In terms of the time frame we might obsess about something, we haven?t quite gotten there yet. But we?re active in our news meetings talking about obsessions and what candidates for obsessions are. We have a list of obsessions we haven?t developed enough to go out with them from day one. But we have a high degree of confidence that we will essentially promote these to obsessions in our navigation and in terms of reporting focus pretty quickly. We see them as important macro-judgments about what is important to our readers.

Ellis: Your sponsored content didn?t seem very prominent in some places at launch, and in some places it looked like there was a banner ad on top, ?Sponsored by Chevron? or something like that. How does the placement of these play into whether they are clicked on or noticed? And are display ads going to be a big part of what you?re doing?

Delaney: We definitely wanted to innovate in terms of what we offer advertisers in the same way we wanted to innovate with our journalism and our product. So we have two forms of advertising. One is what the ad sales people call ?engage,? and that?s a display ad that fills the bulk of the content well when you encounter it. It?s similar to a full-page ad in a newspaper, or magazine, in terms of being big and in the reading space, but it looks like a glossy advertisement. In our case its been adapted so that you can play videos and can swipe and look at photos, so that it?s touchable when you?re on your phone or iPad, and responsive to the device you are using.

The other form of ads is sponsored content, and you encounter them in the list of headlines, and if you click on them you go into an article that is written and provided by a sponsor. No editorial staff ever has anything to do with that. We wanted to make it pretty clear that this was different from our editorial content. You mention that it looks like there is a banner ad. One of our decisions was there should be a sponsor logo there, and by having the sponsor logo on the content it would help make clear that this was coming from the sponsor. Our expectation is that the sponsors create quality content and they are incentivized to engage with the reader, and there are share tools and other things on the content that allow them to do that with the articles they write and the videos that they post. But no one is looking in any way to mislead the reader about what the difference is between sponsor content and Quartz? own editorial content.

Ellis: What are your thoughts about native advertising or content advertising? We?re seeing a lot more organizations that are doing it now and they try to be transparent in it. But I wonder, will people click on it?

Delaney: I think the older forms of advertising are relatively broken and the right rail ads on traditional websites are not great, for the most part, for readers or for advertisers. I think that there?s an imperative to rethink how advertising is handled, and I think sponsored content is an interesting approach to it.

It puts some onus on the advertiser to write things, or post videos, or do data visualizations, or whatever they do, that are compelling for readers to actually spend time with them and share them. In some ways, it makes the advertisers? challenge similar to the challenge that an editor has ? that the content be compelling. I think over time that?s probably good, that advertisers are thinking actively about the best ways to do stuff that interests readers. I think it?s still pretty early, in terms of how that?s done today. But that?s probably a positive development.

Source: http://www.niemanlab.org/2012/09/friday-qa-kevin-delaney-on-making-quartz-an-essential-international-brand/

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Angels' Weaver downs Rangers, wins 20th

Associated Press Sports

updated 12:14 a.m. ET Sept. 29, 2012

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) - With the Los Angeles Angels needing every win they can get to stay in the playoff hunt, their ace pitcher came up with another clutch start.

Jered Weaver became the American League's first 20-game winner, Mike Trout hit a leadoff homer and the Angels beat Texas 7-4 Friday night to prevent the Rangers from clinching a playoff berth.

Los Angeles remained two games behind Oakland for the last wild-card spot. The Athletics beat Seattle 8-2 to pull to three games behind the Rangers in the AL West.

The Angels are a league-best 25-10 since Aug. 21 to keep their postseason hopes alive, and Weaver has been a big part of that run.

Weaver (20-4) has won his last four starts overall with a 1.98 ERA in 27 1-3 innings since Sept. 13.

The lanky right-hander allowed two runs and five hits in seven innings to beat Texas for the fourth straight time this season. He is the Angels' first 20-game winner since Bartolo Colon had 21 in 2005.

"We're not in a pennant race without him," Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. "You look at just what he's done virtually every start. I don't think there's a more consistent pitcher in our league."

Texas' magic number remains at three to clinch its third straight division crown. The Rangers need one more victory to lock up a postseason spot.

The Rangers close out the season with three on the road against Oakland, but Texas would obviously prefer to have its postseason spot locked up before heading to the Bay Area.

"If you win games, everything will take care of itself," Texas manager Ron Washington said.

Trout homered on the sixth pitch of the game out to the grassy area beyond the wall in center, his fifth starting off a game since Aug. 18.

The dynamic rookie also set a club record by scoring his 125th run this season on that blast. It breaks the mark of 124 runs scored by Vladimir Guerrero in 2004.

Trout said he's not fazed being a part of the postseason chase for the first time.

"You've got to be relaxed," Trout said. "There's always going to be pressure when you play."

Dempster (12-8) dropped to 7-3 since he was acquired from the Chicago Cubs on July 31. Two of those losses have come this month to the Angels, who have won six of seven overall.

Chris Iannetta hit a solo shot in the third for Los Angeles, and slumping outfielder Mark Trumbo had three RBIs and saved at least one run with a nice catch in left.

Nelson Cruz hit a solo shot in the seventh and Adrian Beltre added a two-run homer in the eighth that brought the Rangers within 7-4.

With two outs in the bottom of the eighth, right fielder Torii Hunter played Cruz's drive off the wall and threw him out at second trying to stretch it to a double.

Ernesto Frieri pitched a perfect ninth to pick up his 22nd save in 25 chances.

Weaver had struggled on the road against the Rangers in his career. He came into the game with a 3-7 record and a 5.05 ERA lifetime in Arlington, including a loss where he gave up eight runs on May 13.

Weaver, who struck out five and walked two, was pretty much in control from the start Friday. Weaver also got some help from two nice defensive plays.

With two men on base, Trumbo made a twisting catch on the warning track of Mike Napoli's drive to end the second.

Third baseman Alberto Callaspo leaned onto a short wall and lunged into the stands to snag Ian Kinsler's pop in the third.

"Never did I think I'd win 20 games in the big leagues," Weaver said. "So a lot of things have to go your way in a season to get to that milestone. Guys have picked me up and done great things."

Dempster yielded seven hits and four runs in 5 2-3 innings, his third start against the Angels this season. Trout and Iannetta's homers off Dempster gave the Angels a 2-0 lead.

Trumbo, who had been hitting .175 since Aug. 1 had an RBI double in the fourth and then added another run-scoring double with two outs in the sixth to make it 4-1.

"Solo home runs don't beat you," Dempster said. "It's the pitches you don't make with two outs."

Los Angeles extended its lead to 7-1 with three runs in the seventh, which was capped by Trumbo's RBI single.

NOTES: Texas RHP Mike Adams had an MRI and was diagnosed with a mild cervical strain. Adams, who has been battling soreness near his right shoulder, said he will be sidelined indefinitely. He allowed three home runs in the eighth inning of Texas' 9-7 victory over Oakland on Thursday. . Los Angeles DH Kendrys Morales left in the eighth with right rib soreness. Scioscia said he will be evaluated further on Saturday. . Trout also set the Angels rookie record for hits in a season with 173. Wally Joyner had the record with 172 hits in 1986. . Los Angeles righty Ervin Santana (9-12) will oppose Texas left-hander Derek Holland (11-6) on Saturday.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Reds' Bailey no-hits Pirates

Homer Bailey of the Cincinnati Reds threw the season's seventh no-hitter, beating the Pittsburgh Pirates 1-0 on Friday night.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/49220747/ns/sports-baseball/

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Los Angeles drivers see minimal traffic in 'Carmageddon 2'

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Drivers in Los Angeles saw limited congestion on Saturday near a key freeway corridor shut down this weekend in what has been dubbed "Carmageddon 2," due to fears of gridlock from a 53-hour construction project, officials said.

A 10-mile (16-km) stretch of the 405 Freeway at the Sepulveda Pass, normally the nation's busiest thoroughfare, was closed at midnight on Friday for a $1 billion freeway widening project.

But so far, despite the slowing near the project itself, traffic seemed to be zipping along in the city as a whole, said California Highway Patrol spokeswoman Officer Charmaine Fajardo.

"So far so good, it looks like people are heeding the information we've put out there and staying out of the area," Fajardo said.

Construction crews with giant cranes on Saturday chipped away at a bridge spanning the 405 Freeway in the city, with pieces of concrete dropping dozens of feet (meters) to the ground below. A four-foot (1.2-metre) pad of dirt laid down in advance protected the pavement from the falling debris.

The work is to widen the bridge itself to expand the freeway below.

The project comes just over a year after a similar weekend construction shut down the same area in what was dubbed "Carmageddon," in anticipation of massive congestion that never came to pass as many drivers stayed home.

This year, the project has caused some anxiety nonetheless among officials and motorists in the city where car travel is king but only very limited congestion had materialized by noon.

More significant delays could develop on Saturday afternoon as people pile into cars heading for the beach, highway patrol officials said.

The shutdown of the 405 Freeway along the Sepulveda Pass is scheduled to end at 5 a.m. on Monday, said Marc Littman, a spokesman for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

The construction crew on the project stands to be fined $6,000 per closed lane for every 10 minutes that the project extends past its scheduled ending on Monday morning, officials said. (Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Sandra Maler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/los-angeles-drivers-see-minimal-traffic-carmageddon-2-192613668--sector.html

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Indiana Jones plot comes to life as Nazi Buddha revealed to be carved from meteorite

The Nazi-backed venture which discovered the statue set out for Tibet in 1938 in part to trace the origins of the Aryan race ? a cornerstone of the Nazis' racist ideology.

By Frank Jordans,?Associated Press / September 28, 2012

A Buddha statue dating back to the 8th to 10th centuries is carved from a rare iron meteorite.

Elmar Buchner

Enlarge

An ancient Buddhist statue that a Nazi expedition brought back from Tibet shortly before World War II was carved from a meteorite that crashed on Earth thousands of years ago.

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What sounds like an Indiana Jones movie plot appears to have actually taken place, according to European researchers publishing in the journal Meteoritics and Planetary Science this month.

Elmar Buchner of the University of Stuttgart said Thursday the statue was brought to Germany by the Schaefer expedition. The Nazi-backed venture set out for Tibet in 1938 in part to trace the origins of the Aryan race ? a cornerstone of the Nazis' racist ideology.

The existence of the 10.6-kilogram (23.4-pound) statue, known as "iron man," was only revealed in 2007 when its owner died and it came up for auction, Buchner told The Associated Press.

German and Austrian scientists were able to get permission from its new owner, who wasn't disclosed, to conduct a chemical analysis that shows the statue came from the Chinga meteorite, which crashed in the area of what is now the Russian and Mongolian border around 15,000 years ago.

The meteorite was officially discovered in 1913, but Buchner said the statue could be 1,000 years old and represent a Buddhist god called Vaisravana.

The Nazis were probably attracted to it by a left-facing swastika symbol on its front. The swastika has been used by various cultures throughout the ages, but the Nazis tried to appropriate it as the symbol of their ideology, going so far as to put a right-facing version of it on their red and white flag.

Scientists not involved in the study told the AP that the research linking the statue to the meteorite was credible.

"Looks like a solid piece of geochemical 'forensic' work," said Qing-Zhu Yin, a researcher in geology at the University of California, Davis. "No terrestrial artifact would generally contain that much nickel content. Chemical elements don't lie."

Rhian Jones, an associate professor at the University of New Mexico who specializes in meteorites, said the claim appeared conclusive.

"There is a clear and convincing argument that the meteorite the statue is made from is the Chinga iron meteorite," she said.

But Yin cast doubt on the claim that the statue represented a Buddhist deity.

"I am not a historian. But the 'iron man' does not look like a?Buddha?to me from my cultural background," he said. "It looks more like a warrior with a sword ... (a) resemblance of Genghis Khan. ... I have never seen aBuddha?with a sword or knife."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/aXKDprjLaWA/Indiana-Jones-plot-comes-to-life-as-Nazi-Buddha-revealed-to-be-carved-from-meteorite

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Music Reviews: Deep Purple Tribute, Dare, Pride of Lions, Kix ...

Welcome back to the land that never stops rocking.

Yet another tribute album lands, this time called Re-Machined, which is a tribute to Deep Purple's album Machine Head. For the most part the covers on here are not that bad. You do get two songs twice to pad out the album. And one of those doubles is the worst cover version of anything I have ever heard. The Flaming Lips' putrid version of "Smoke on the Water" should have been left to the last track and not stuck in the middle to ruin the flow of this album. The other double is "Space Truckin'." To be honest, this one is for completists only.

Dare have released Calm before the Storm 2 and it is as good as its name-sake. In fact, according to Darren Warren, Dare's mainman, and sometime/current Thin Lizzy keyboardist, it is better than original because it was recorded as he wanted. Possibly only the true fan will notice the difference, but it does include tracks in the form of "Precious" and "Cold Wind Will Blow". Call it a slight tweak on a classic AOR release.

Pride of Lions are back with an album called Immortal that just oozes class and quality. Like House of Lords, this bunch churn out melodic AOR with ease. The songs are catchy and a tiny bit cheesy, but no less enjoyable. If you want something that is damn good, but not too in your face, then check this album out. I defy you not to be singing along on the second listen through.

Kix's Live in Baltimore is the latest release from this vastly overrated band. They were rubbish live back in the day and this shows it in its glory. "Blow My Fuse" is just as dumb as it always was, but no less catchy and crude. And their "hit" ballad "Don't Close Your Eyes" doesn't stand the test of time as well as similar songs of the day. Krokus always did similar stuff so much better than these guys. A release for fans only.

Dokken's new release Broken Bones is a surprising return to form. Don Dokken's voice sounds as good if not better than it has ever been. The album hints at the band's heyday without merely cloning their hits as an excuse to tour. The songwriting on here is first rate and there are tracks that clearly stack up to their best. Those thinking the lack of George Lynch in the band would hurt the quality of the tracks are proven wrong. A must for fans of the band and anyone who ever liked Dokken. A welcome and pleasant return for this LA band.

Downspirit come at us with Bulletproof? and it ain't a bad affair. While it drifts into Nickelback territory on some tracks, overall it is just a decent hard rock album. The songwriting is probably not where it should be yet and the tracks can sound a bit samey. There is something there that is hard to ignore. Certainly a band to watch as they evolve into something really good.

Well that is your melodic lot for this week. Rockgards to you all and stay safe.

View the original article on blogcritics.org

Source: http://www.seattlepi.com/lifestyle/blogcritics/article/Music-Reviews-Deep-Purple-Tribute-Dare-Pride-3899956.php

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Man Jailed for Accidentally Sexting His Whole Address Book (Including Some Tweens) [WTFriday]

You know that episode of The Newsroom where the sassy British lady accidentally emails the whole staff from her BackBerry instead of her boss? A 24-year-old swimming coach did that, but with a fairly graphic sex message. And for extra credit, he had some underaged girls in his phone. That meant trouble. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/QbsHS3zOCJI/man-jailed-for-accidentally-sexting-his-whole-address-book-including-some-tweens

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Schwarzenegger: Maid affair was 'stupidest thing'

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) ? Arnold Schwarzenegger says the affair he had with his family's longtime housekeeper was "the stupidest thing" he ever did to then-wife Maria Shriver and caused great pain to her and their four children.

"I think it was the stupidest thing I've done in the whole relationship. It was terrible. I inflicted tremendous pain on Maria and unbelievable pain on the kids," Schwarzenegger said of the affair that led to a son who is now 14.

The former Republican governor of California made the comments in an interview with "60 Minutes" that is scheduled to air Sunday, as the one-time "Mr. Universe" and Hollywood action star tries to rebrand himself and promote his new autobiography, "Total Recall: My Unbelievably True Life Story." CBS aired excerpts of the interview Friday.

After leaving the governor's office in January 2011 following a turbulent seven years, Schwarzenegger, 65, has launched a wholesale effort to redeem his reputation in the wake of the embarrassing public revelations about the affair he had with Mildred Baena, a housekeeper who reportedly worked for the family for 20 years. Their son, Joseph, was born just days after Schwarzenegger's youngest child with Shriver.

Baena listed her former husband as the father on the birth certificate and has said she did not know for certain who the father was until the boy began looking more and more like Schwarzenegger.

Revelations about the affair came shortly after Schwarzenegger's political reputation had taken a blow because of a decision made in his final hours in office.

Schwarzenegger commuted the voluntary manslaughter sentence of the son of a political ally. Schwarzenegger said he thought the 16-year sentence for Esteban Nunez was excessive and cut it to seven, but later acknowledged he was helping a friend, former state Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez.

Esteban Nunez pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter in a 2008 attack on an unarmed group of young men after he and some friends were turned away from a fraternity party in San Diego. Three others pleaded guilty to various charges in the stabbing attack that killed 22-year-old college student Luis Santos.

Earlier this month, a Sacramento County Superior Court judge said the commutation was within the powers granted the governor but also criticized Schwarzenegger's action, calling it "an abuse of discretion" and "repugnant to the bulk of the citizenry of this state." The California Republican Party also officially condemned the commutation, saying it was done "without concern for the victims and their suffering."

Schwarzenegger came into office during California's historic 2003 recall election, promising to restore fiscal responsibility to the state. But he faced repeated multibillion-dollar budget deficits that he acknowledged he and lawmakers could not fully address.

The "60 Minutes" interview comes a week after Schwarzenegger launched a think tank at the University of Southern California, the Schwarzenegger Institute for State and Global Policy. He started it in part, he said, because he accomplished only about half of what he set out to do as governor.

Schwarzenegger has also returned to his acting career, appearing most recently in "The Expendables 2" and the forthcoming "The Tomb," co-starring Sylvester Stallone, and "The Last Stand," which opens in January.

Shriver, a member of the politically powerful Kennedy clan, filed for divorce in July. In a separate excerpt of the "60 Minutes" interview released by CBS earlier this week, Schwarzenegger said Shriver has not read his tell-all book.

"I think that Maria is, you know, wishing me well in everything I do," Schwarzenegger told interviewer Lesley Stahl.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/schwarzenegger-maid-affair-stupidest-thing-110322258.html

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'Bad Piggies' snort their way to the top ?but can they stay there ...

After playing second fiddle to the Angry Birds for the last three years, the green pigs have snorted their way to the top of the gaming charts ?at least on Day One of its release.

?

?

"What Rovio has proven with Amazing Alex ? and now with Bad Piggies ? is that it has the network power to get a game to No. 1 on the first day, a skill any mobile game developer would covet. But whether that alone is worth as much as $9 billion, it?s hard to know," it said, referring to the games the Finnish game maker released after Angry Birds in December 2009.

?

Rovio's Angry Birds game was so massively popular it spawned several versions of Angry Birds, including Angry Birds Space. Rovio recently released a new game, Amazing Alex.

?

In the case of "Bad Piggies," AllThingsD said the new 99-cent Angry Birds spinoff game zoomed to the top of the iPhone and iPad paid charts in the United States.

?

Staying on top?

?

But AllThingsD noted that in the case of Amazing Alex, Rovio's first game outside the Angry Birds universe, it initially topped of the charts in 54 countries but failed to stay in top position.

?

"After less than two months, Amazing Alex ranked as the 73rd most-popular paid app worldwide," it noted.

?

If Rovio scores a hit on app stores, AllThingsD said this would mean a boost for its possible stock market flotation in 2013.

?

Some analysts put its market value at between $6 billion and $9 billion, nearly on par with phone maker Nokia, it added.

?

Bad Piggies

?

The game starts with the Bad Piggies having found a map to the eggs, but the map is in pieces all over Piggy Island.

?

King Pig orders his minions to recover the map wherever it is, even from the top of a mountain or the bottom of a cave!

?

Pigs will have to turn objects like umbrellas, wings, bottle rockets, balloons, and engines into the "ultimate flying machine."

?

Rovio said the game has more than 60 levels and free updates.?? TJD, GMA News

?

Source: http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/276058/scitech/gaming/bad-piggies-snort-their-way-to-the-top-mdash-but-can-they-stay-there

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Friday, September 28, 2012

HTC One X+ spied in O2 (UK) sales flyer

HTC One X+

The rumored HTC One X+ just got a step closer to reality, as it's has made its way into a brochure for the UK carrier O2. What we're seeing looks delightful, fir an updated 1.7GHz CPU (likely Tegra3 based), 64GB of on-device storage, HTC stellar camera, and Android 4.1 Jelly Bean out-of-the-box.

Here in the states we've see a version come through the FCC toting AT&T's LTE radio bands, but the rumored specs don't quite match up as we've been hearing that it is a 32GB model. There's a good chance AT&T has decided to cut the storage in half like they did with the original HTC One X, but we can still hope it's a case of bad info and we'll be seeing a 64GB version on this side of the pond. 

With enough evidence to call this one legit, it's about time for HTC to come forward and tell us what we want to hear and announce this one. New Windows phones are cool and all, but we want some Android!

Source: GSM Arena



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/YLZY2E-bnsU/story01.htm

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NYC's Bartender's Fight Against Breast Cancer - New York ...


In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, bartender Michelle Milton for Neely's Barbecue Parlor will be donating 100 percent of her tips for the month of October to Chemo Comfort, which provides cancer patients with kits that help with the side effects of chemotherapy.

And at the end of the month, Milton will shave her head as an act of solidarity to everyone with the disease.

Michelle is a former media account executive who made bartending her new career four years ago. She became a dedicated breast cancer awareness advocate after losing close friends, including the woman whom she considers her mentor, to the disease.

In the past three years, she has raised thousands of dollars for breast cancer foundations by dedicating all of her tips - the bulk of her salary for the month.

Contact me here or follow me @dearclarissa & on Facebook. To keep up with all of our food coverage go to Fork in The Road or follow us on Twitter @ForkintheRoadVV.

Source: http://blogs.villagevoice.com/forkintheroad/2012/09/nycs_bartenders_breast_cancer.php

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China volcano shows signs of unrest

A very hazardous volcano at the border of China and North Korea is growing more active, and might erupt in the next few decades, researchers studying the area say.

About 1,100 years ago, the Changbaishan volcano in northeastern China erupted, shooting superheated flows of ash and gas up to 30 miles (50 kilometers) away and blasting a 3-mile-wide (5 km) chunk off the tip of the volcano. The explosion, known as the Millennium eruption because it occurred close to the turn of the first millennium, was one of the largest volcanic events in the last 2,000 years.

Since the Millennium eruption, Changbaishan has seen three smaller eruptions, the most recent of which took place in 1903. Starting in 1999, driven by signs of resumed activity, scientists established the Changbaishan Volcano Observatory.

Now, data collected over the past 12 years suggest that changes in seismic activity, ground deformation and gas emissions all spiked during a brief period of heightened activity from 2002 to 2006. This suggests the magma chamber beneath Changbaishan has awakened, researchers studying the volcano say.

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    4. China volcano shows signs of unrest

The researchers saw the number of earthquakes increase dramatically during this burst of activity. From 1999 to 2002, and from 2006 to 2011, researchers detected seven earthquakes per month. However, from 2002 to 2006, this rate increased to 72 earthquakes per month, peaking in November 2003, which saw 243 events. Most of these quakes are tied to a region 3 miles beneath the volcanic crater that has risen slowly over the years, which suggests magma is creeping upward.

Gas emissions from hot springs near the volcano show rises in carbon dioxide, hydrogen, helium and nitrogen gases. The researchers say this could be related to outgassing from magma. The ground also expanded briefly and rapidly during the 2002-2006 period. [ Album: Volcanoes from Space ]

Although Changbaishan does not seem in danger of imminent eruption, the researchers say this unrest suggests an explosion could be expected in the next couple of decades. Changbaishan is at the most risk of eruption of the dozen or so volcanoes in mainland China, and potentially could have the most catastrophic effects of all of them, said researcher Jiandong Xu, a volcanologist at the China Earthquake Administration in Beijing.

The researchers will focus on analyzing what hazardous effects an explosive outburst on the scale of the Millennium eruption might have in the future.

"We need to upgrade our current monitoring system in order to be able to meet the need for the early warning system for Changbaishan," Xu told OurAmazingPlanet.

The scientists detailed their findings online Aug. 22 in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @OAPlanet. We're also on Facebook and? Google+.

? 2012 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49198003/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Playing and Enjoying the Outdoor Sport of Badminton

There are different kinds of outdoor sports that you can do especially when you are tired of sitting in front of your computer and television at home or when you get bored from always doing the same routine inside the house and playing different board games. It is time for you to extend your muscles and sweat out. You need to move and try out doing any form of recreation outside your house. It would be a great time to enjoy the beautiful day.Playing badminton is truly a fun thing to do. But before you learn at what instances you will be able to enjoy the sport, you must have a short overview of its history. Its name is derived from the house of the Duke of Beaufort. Its rich history can be dated back to about two thousand years past where there were games developed first before this game was discovered and became part of world tournaments.This sport and at the same time recreational activity is good for the whole body. It is a kind of play that lets you move all the muscles of your body which is a good reason for it to be considered one of the best exercises. It is both enjoyed by men and women at varying ages. You just need to prepare your racquet, shuttlecock and of course water or energy drinks to replenish your body with the sweat that it excretes.It is a best partner and a great idea for a form of entertainment when you go out for a picnic in the park. You can play badminton with your kids before you decide to chat and eat some of the food that you prepare. You can run freely run on the grass. Since there would be other people who will be staying in the park, it is best to place in your pocket your pepper spray gun for more safety.When you plan to go to the beach, you can also bring your badminton gear along especially if you want to do other things on the location aside from swimming or playing with the sand. Even a small area would be just fine because in this game you can have an informal play where you can be in control with the distance that you will have between you and your opponent. It is a fun sport during the summer.Lastly, after work, you can make it a routine to visit the nearest badminton court available in your community. You can join a certain club or group so that you will be able to make new friends and play with them. This will develop your skills when it comes to this sport. Just remember to bring your streetwise stun gun for added protection especially if you will be going there alone and you will finish late in the evening.Indeed, badminton can be enjoyed by different individuals and at different places. It is a good idea for a fun outdoor sport.

Source: http://semarangbisnis.info/playing-and-enjoying-the-outdoor-sport-of-badminton/

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Creative Car Audio Opens In Columbia

Photo courtesy of Merchantcircle.com

Calling all car fanatics: New mobile electronics dealer Creative Car Audio might help you add some swag to your beloved four-wheels.?To kick off the grand opening of Creative Car Audio, a brand new mobile electronics and auto styling center will be open to the public during the month of September. Creative Car Audio T-shirts, promotional items and giveaways from JL Audio, Alpine and Kicker are up for grabs all month long.

About the event: It will feature demonstrations, prize giveaways, live radio broadcasts, special discounts on mobile electronics, remote start systems and the popular Creative Car Audio computer-cut automotive window tinting. In addition, a?100 foot Kicker Tractor Trailer Demonstration Rig will be at the store on Sept. 28, 29 and 30. As for the finale ? the Creative Nights Car show ? will be held on the weekend of Sept. 29 and 30 where dozens of cars will be competing for prizes and trophies.

During the event, Creative Car Audio will also be offering discounts on window tinting, car audio upgrades, remote start/security systems and many other services for attendees.

About Creative Car Audio: Established in 1991, Creative Car Audio is one of the leading providers of automotive, commercial and marine mobile electronics and?window tinting services in Joplin, Sedalia, Springfield (now Columbia), Mo. and Pittsburg, Kan., which focuses on customer retail sales and service. Services provided include automotive upgrades such as cruise control, navigation, mobile video, heated seats and leather interior conversions. Creative Car Audio also offers auto security, remote start, mobile electronics, performance and styling accessories.

Source: http://www.voxmagazine.com/blog/2012/09/creative-car-audio-opens-in-columbia/

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Chrome for Android now fully compatible with x86 devices

Android Central

Google's Chrome for Android browser, much loved by those with an Android 4.0 and above device, has finally been updated to be fully compatible with x86 devices. This is a big deal, as one of the snags when it came to Android devices running Intel chips (OK, there aren't that many yet) was incompatibility of apps -- even popular ones like Chrome. What this shows us is that Google is devoted to updating its own apps to work on the Intel platform, and hopefully now other app developers will follow suit with their own updates.

We've had a look at a few Intel devices at this point, most recently the Motorola RAZR i, and hopefully with application support like this we'll see more in the future.

Source: Google Chrome Releases



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/m7Zt72MWlJE/story01.htm

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Elusive element 113 created at last

Scientists in Japan think they've finally created the elusive element 113, one of the missing items on the periodic table of elements.

Element 113 is an atom with 113 protons in its nucleus ? a type of matter that must be created inside a laboratory because it is not found naturally on Earth. Heavier and heavier synthetic elements have been created over the years, with the most massive one being element 118, temporarily named ununoctium.

But element 113 has been stubbornly hard to create. After years of trying, researchers at the RIKEN Nishina Center for Accelerator-Based Science in Japan said Wednesday they finally did so. On Aug. 12, the unstable element was formed and quickly decayed, leaving the team with data to cite as proof of the accomplishment.

"For over nine years, we have been searching for data conclusively identifying element 113, and now that at last we have it, it feels like a great weight has been lifted from our shoulders," Kosuke Morita, leader of the research group, said in a statement. [ Graphic: Nature's Tiniest Particles Explained ]

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If confirmed, the achievement will mark the first time Japan has discovered a new element, and should make Japan the first Asian country with naming rights to a member of the periodic table. Until now, only scientists in the United States, Russia and Germany have had that chance.

"I would like to thank all the researchers and staff involved in this momentous result, who persevered with the belief that one day 113 would be ours," Morita said. "For our next challenge, we look to the uncharted territory of element 119 and beyond."

Scientists are continually trying to create bigger and bigger atoms, both for the joy of discovery and for the knowledge these new elements can offer about how atoms work.

Most things in the universe are made of very simple elements, such as hydrogen (which has one proton), carbon (six) and oxygen (eight). For each proton, atoms generally have roughly the same number of neutrons and electrons. Yet the more protons and neutrons that are packed into an atom's nucleus, the more unstable the atom can become. Scientists wonder if there is a limit to how large atoms can be.

The first synthetic element was created in 1940, and so far 20 different elements have been made. All of these are unstable and last only seconds, at most, before breaking apart into smaller elements.

To synthesize element 113, Morita and his team collided zinc nuclei (with 30 protons each) into a thin layer of bismuth (which contains 83 protons). When 113 was created, it quickly decayed by shedding alpha particles, which consist of two protons and two neutrons each. This process happened six times, turning element 113 into element 111, then 109, 107, 105, 103 and finally, element 101, Mendelevium (also a synthetic element).

Morita's group seemed to create element 113 in experiments conducted in 2004 and 2005, but the complete decay chain was not observed, so the discovery couldn't be confirmed. Now that this specific pattern resulting in Mendelevium has been seen, the scientists say it "provides unambiguous proof that element 113 is the origin of the chain."

Follow Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz? or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook? and Google+.

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49180454/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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