Saturday, December 31, 2011

Katy Perry and Russell Brand: It's Over!!


The Internet may be a "wicked little liar," to use Russell Brand's words, a great deal of the time. But apparently not in this sad case. He's divorcing Katy Perry.

Just 24 hours after Russell was spotted sans wedding ring in London, with Katy 7,000 miles away with friends in Hawaii, the actor filed the papers this afternoon.

Brand personally confirmed the news, saying in a statement: "Sadly, Katy and I are ending our marriage I'll always adore her and I know we'll remain friends."

Katy Perry, Russell Brand Picture

Brand cited "irreconcilable differences" as the reason for the split in the official divorce documents, filed in Los Angeles Friday. The couple married October 23, 2010.

The documents list "community property assets," which may indicate a lack of prenup, or one that does not account for all their earnings and other assets.

The news is surprising and yet not, given recent reports that the couple had been having problems and spending time apart, possibly following a massive fight.

He does not list a date the couple separated, but TMZ reports that Russell Brand may have blindsided Katy Perry by filing the divorce petition. Stay tuned.

[Photo: WENN.com]

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/katy-perry-and-russell-brand-its-over/

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Netgear Powerline AV 500 Adapter Kit (XAVB5001)

  • Netgear Powerline AV 500 Adapter Kit (XAVB5001)
  • Performance

It?s hard to beat the convenience of a home Wi-Fi network but it can?t touch wired connectivity when it comes to throughput speed. Unfortunately, wiring your home with CAT-5 cabling can get expensive and messy if you don?t know what you?re doing. Enter Netgear?s Powerline AV 500 Powerline Adapter Kit ($159.99 list), an incredibly easy to use solution that turns every power outlet in your home into a Gigabit wired Ethernet port. In my testing, the AV 500 delivered almost ten times the transfer speed of my Wi-Fi router. While that's less than a wired connection, it's just fine for streaming movies and transferring large data files and folders.?

Features and Design
The AV 500 kit consists of two XAV5001 Powerline adapters, two 6.5 foot Ethernet cables, and a Resource CD containing a Powerline Utility and an Installation Guide. Unfortunately, the disc does not include a user manual; instead, it provides a link to an online manual, which may be inconvenient if you?re having trouble getting the adapters to work for some reason. However, the odds of that happening are slim to none as Powerline technology is the epitome of plug and play.

Each adapter measures 3.3 by 2.5 by 1.5 inches (HWD) and weighs a little less than half a pound (0.4 pounds). The front of the housing has a glossy white finish and has the Netgear logo etched into the center and a blue Powerline AV 500 label at the bottom. At the top are three LED indicators; the power indicator glows a solid green when electrical power is on and blinks green when the adapter is starting up and running through the security setup process. An amber light indicates that the adapter has gone into power saving mode, which happens when the port is not linked for more than ten minutes. The Powerline indicator is solid green when a connection is made to the network, and it blinks when the adapter is receiving and sending data. It remains unlit if a compatible adapter with the same encryption key cannot be found, or if the adapter has been disabled via the Powerline Utility. This indicator also tells you how strong the link rate is for each electrical outlet. A green light means the link rate is better than 80 Mbps, amber means less than 80 Mbps but greater than 50 Mbps, and a red light means less than 50 Mbps.

On the right side of the adapter are a security button and a recessed factory reset button. The security button makes it easy to set a private encryption key that can be used across your entire Powerline network, and the reset button returns the adapter to its original factory defaults. On the bottom of the adapter is a single Ethernet port. Despite the vented casing designed to prevent the adapter from overheating while plugged in and running, the adapter was still quite warm to the touch after 15 minutes of use.

Installation
Powerline AV 500 installation is as easy as it gets as long as you follow a few simple rules of thumb. Always plug the adapter directly into the electrical socket; do not use extension cords, power strips, or surge protectors. Try to use an outlet that does not have power hungry appliances plugged into it, such as a washer, dryer, or refrigerator, and make sure that the outlets to be used are on the same circuit and use the same breaker box, otherwise they will not be able to communicate with each other.? For this reason Powerline adapters may not work in large apartment complexes or office buildings. You?ll also need an existing network and a router.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/1h4m5KY74z8/0,2817,2398207,00.asp

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Friday, December 30, 2011

London tennis body honours local lad


Ambala, December 27
The overall crime rate in Ambala district during 2011 has gone down owing to efficient policing, according to a spokesman for the police. According to police records, 552 road accident cases had so far been registered at various police stations in the district. At least 252 persons lost their lives, while 324 were seriously injured in the accidents.

While the figures indicated a dip in the crime rate in the district this year, certain prominent citizens contended that the figures were not accurate as the police did not register FIRs in many cases.

While the district police claimed there had been a dip in the crime graph in the district this year, residents refused to buy the theory. They felt the police and the district administration were responsible for various lapses, as a result of which there had been an upswing in the rate of crime.

Deputy Commissioner of Police, Ambala, Shashank Anand claimed that the district police had been able to control crime to a large extent this year and there had been a decline in the crime graph. He said efforts were being made to arrest persons involved in criminal activities.

According to the police records, till December 20, the district had witnessed a sharp fall in several crimes. For instance, 17 cases each of murder and murder attempts were registered in the district this year, as against 18 and 25 cases, respectively, last year.

Similarly, three cases of dowry deaths were registered this year, as against five cases registered last year. Also, 119 cases of dowry demand were registered this year, as against 139 cases last year.

No case of dacoity had been registered so far this year, while four cases were registered last year. And, the number of cases of clashes, which was 105 last year, had gone down to just 67 this year.

Sources, however, said cases like rape, robbery, chain snatching, drug smuggling, and those under the Arms and NDPS Acts had witnessed a drastic increase during 2011, as compared to the previous year.

The district has recorded 20 cases of kidnapping (16 last year), 22 cases of rape (21 last year), 17 cases of robbery (10 last year), 682 cases of theft (579 last year), 100 cases of chain snatching (79 last year), 43 cases of drug smuggling (31 last year), 29 cases of Arms Act (23 last year), 260 cases of NDPS Act (223 last year) and 297 cases of gambling (220 last year).

Shashank Anand said to ensure effective patrolling and safety of people, police posts had been established in the district, while police stations were provided with vehicles, commando vehicles, etc. to focus on detection of crime and prompt action.

Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5670393967

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Children don't give words special power to categorize their world

ScienceDaily (Dec. 27, 2011) ? New research challenges the conventional thinking that young children use language just as adults do to help classify and understand objects in the world around them.

In a new study involving 4- to 5-year-old children, researchers found that the labels adults use to classify items -- words like "dog" or "pencil" -- don't have the same ability to influence the thinking of children.

"As adults, we know that words are very predictive. If you use words to guide you, they won't often let you down," said Vladimir Sloutsky, co-author of the new study and professor of psychology at Ohio State University and director of the university's Center for Cognitive Science.

"But for children, words are just another feature among many to consider when they're trying to classify an object."

For example, suppose that someone you trust shows you an object that looks like a pen and says that it is a tape recorder, Sloutsky said.

Your first reaction might be to look at the pen to see where the microphone would be hidden, and how you could turn it on or off.

"You might think it was some kind of spy tool, but you would not have a hard time understanding it as a tape recorder even though it looks like a pen," Sloutsky said. "Adults believe words do have a unique power to classify things, but young children don't think the same way."

The results suggest that even after children learn language, it doesn't govern their thinking as much as scientists believed.

"It is only over the course of development that children begin to understand that words can reliably be used to label items," he said.

Sloutsky conducted the study with Wei (Sophia) Deng, a graduate student in psychology at Ohio State. Their research appears online in the journal Psychological Science and will appear in a future print edition.

The study involved two related experiments. One experiment involved 13 preschool children aged 4 to 5 and 30 college-aged adults.

In this first experiment, participants were shown colorful drawings of two fictional creatures that the researchers identified as a "flurp" or a "jalet." Each was distinct in the color and shape of five of their features: body, hands, feet antennae and head. For example, flurps generally had tan-colored square antennae while jalets generally had gray-colored triangle antennae.

The researchers made the heads of the animals particularly salient, or conspicuous: the flurp had a pink head that moved up and down and jalet had a blue head that moved sideways. The head was the only part of the body that moved.

After they learned the relevant characteristics of the flurp and jalet, participants were tested in two conditions. In one condition, they were shown a picture of a creature that had some, but not all of the characteristics of one of the creatures, and asked if it was a flurp or a jalet. In another condition, they were shown a creature where one of the six features was covered and they were asked to predict the missing part.

The critical test came when the participants were shown a creature with a label that matched most of the body parts -- except for the very noticeable moving head, which belonged to the other animal. They were then asked which animal was pictured.

"About 90 percent of the children went with what the head told them -- even if the label and every other feature suggested the other animal," Sloutsky said.

"The label was just another feature, and it was not as important to them as the most salient feature -- the moving head."

Adults put much more stock in the label compared to children- about 37 percent used the label to guide their choice, versus 31 percent who used the moving head. The remaining 31 percent had mixed responses.

However, to eliminate the possibility that participants were confused because they had never heard of flurps and jalets before, the researchers conducted another experiment. The second experiment was similar to the first, except that the animals were given more familiar names: "meat-eaters" and "carrot-eaters" instead of flurps and jalets.

In this case, the difference between the adults and children was even clearer. Nearly two-thirds of adults relied on the label to guide their choices, compared to 18 percent who relied on the moving head and 18 percent who were mixed responders. Only 7 percent of the children relied on the labels, compared to 67 percent who relied on the moving head and 26 percent who were mixed responders.

Sloutsky said these findings add to our understanding of how language affects cognition and may help parents communicate and teach their children.

"In the past, we thought that if we name the things for children, the labels will do the rest: children would infer that the two things that have the same name are alike in some way or that they go together," he said.

"We can't assume that anymore. We really need to do more than just label things."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ohio State University. The original article was written by Jeff Grabmeier.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Vladimir M. Sloutsky and Wei Deng. Carrot-Eaters and Moving Heads: Salient Features Provide Greater Support for Inductive Inference than Category Labels. Psychological Science, 2012

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

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

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111227142537.htm

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Nelson Expected to Retire (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/179746886?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Frogs use calls to find mates with matching chromosomes

ScienceDaily (Dec. 27, 2011) ? When it comes to love songs, female tree frogs are pretty picky. According to a new study from the University of Missouri, certain female tree frogs may be remarkably attuned to the songs of mates who share the same number of chromosomes as they do. The discovery offers insight into how new frog species may have evolved.

Carl Gerhardt, Curators Professor of Biological Sciences in the MU College of Arts and Science and doctoral student Mitch Tucker studied two closely related species of grey tree frogs that live in Missouri, the eastern grey tree frog (Hyla versicolor) and the Cope's grey tree frog (H. chrysoscelis).

"To the naked eye -- human and frog -- the two frogs look exactly alike," Gerhardt said. "The frogs differ only in the number of chromosomes. The eastern grey tree frog has double the number of chromosomes."

To the ears of potential mates, the two species differ in their vocal performances.

"The males are both singing the same love song -- just one frog is singing it slower. It's kind of like the difference between Eric Clapton's original and unplugged versions of Layla," Tucker said.

In previous studies, the scientists found that tree frogs with more sets of chromosome have larger cell sizes, which slows down the trill rate. What was not known was whether the calling preferences of females are similarly linked to chromosome number.

To answer this question, Tucker simulated the chromosome duplication event by replicating spring temperatures early in the frog development. Females were grown to maturity and then exposed to computer-generated, synthetic male calls that differed by trill rate. They found that the females hopped toward the calls with the trill rate of the males with matching chromosome numbers, which indicates female preference.

"This shows that chromosome number alone can control the behavior that keeps the species separate," Gerhardt said. "In turn, as chromosome number increases, so does the size of cells, which is probably the immediate cause of the changes in calls and preferences."

In animals, the origin of species is often associated with geographic barriers. A large body of water or range of mountains, for example, splits a large population and prevents mating. The eastern grey tree frog, according to Gerhardt, may represent a rare case of rapid evolution occurring by chromosome duplication, changes in behavior and reproductive isolation.

The report, titled "Parallel changes in mate-attracting calls and female preferences in autotriploid tree frogs," was published by the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences. The study was supported by funding from the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, and the University of Missouri Research Board.

Frog call sound clips are available at http://www.biosci.missouri.edu/gerhardt/sounds.htm

Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:

Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

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

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


Journal Reference:

  1. M. A. Tucker, H. C. Gerhardt. Parallel changes in mate-attracting calls and female preferences in autotriploid tree frogs. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2011; DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2011.1968

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

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

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111227153754.htm

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Emile Faurie Lecture Demonstration at Bishop Burton College

Wednesday 21 December 2011

Top International Dressage Rider and Trainer Emile Faurie will be holding a lecture demonstration evening at Bishop Burton College on Friday 3rd February 2012.?

Tickets cost ?25 in advance or ?30 on the door (subject to availability).

Doors open at 6.30pm and performance starts at 7.00pm.

Refreshments available.

comments:


Source: http://www.horsemart.co.uk/news.php?id=2872

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Subscribe to the Lifehacker Newsletter for Our Top-Stories in Your Inbox At the End of Every Day [Announcements]

Subscribe to the Lifehacker Newsletter for Our Top-Stories in Your Inbox At the End of Every Day If your goals for the new year involve being more productive and organized, and streamlining the amount of information you consume, let us help you. Subscribe to the Lifehacker newsletter for a daily digest of our top stories emailed to you every evening, perfect for a few tips and tricks to try out at work or around the house the next day.

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Lakers are not even fit for Kings in falling to 0-2 for first time since 2002-03 NBA season

Lakers forward Josh McRoberts, right, goes to the basket against Sacramento center DeMarcus Cousins during the first quarter of Monday's game. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

SACRAMENTO - One game into the shortest season of many of their professional lives, and the Lakers were already hurting when they took the court Monday night at the Power Balance Pavilion to face the Sacramento Kings.

By now you probably know all about the torn ligament in Kobe Bryant's right wrist. Then came word an hour or so before the game that Pau Gasol suffered a sprained right shoulder and Josh McRoberts had a sprained left thumb.

It was double trouble since the Lakers were already without Andrew Bynum, who served the second game of his four-game suspension Monday.

It was just the sort of thing the Kings could exploit en route to a 100-91 victory, dropping the Lakers to 0-2 for the first time since the 2002-03 season.

Gasol and McRoberts were injured during the Lakers' come-from-ahead loss Sunday afternoon to the Chicago Bulls at Staples Center, the first of three games in as many days to start the lockout-shortened 2011-12 season.

The Lakers complete their only stretch of back-to-back-to- back games when they play host to the Utah Jazz tonight at Staples Center. It's only part of a grueling period in which they play six times in eight days, however.

Gasol, who shifted to center from power forward to replace Bynum, was ineffective early but found a better rhythm to start the third quarter. He wore a black neoprene sleeve to protect his shoulder.

McRoberts, who moved from a backup role to the starting

power forward job, couldn't remember how he hurt his thumb. He didn't believe it would trouble him and he contributed some energetic play from the opening tip.

The Lakers looked like a tired and injured team against the Kings, falling behind in the first half and staying behind in the second. Some inspired bench play kept them close in the first half, before Bryant and Gasol fueled a fourth-quarter comeback.

Sacramento led by as many as 15 points in the fourth, then put the game away in the closing minutes.

Bryant scored 29 points on 10-for-24 shooting, including two on a thunderous dunk off a lob pass from Devin Ebanks on a third-quarter fastbreak. Gasol scored all but two of his 15 points in the second half. He also grabbed nine rebounds.

McRoberts had two points, five rebounds and three assists.

Marcus Thornton scored 27 points for the Kings, who were playing their season opener. Rookie Jimmer Fredette had six points in his NBA debut, leaving little doubt that he can be an effective player in the pros after a stellar college career at BYU.

Meanwhile, Devin Ebanks made his second consecutive start at small forward for the Lakers, keeping veterans Matt Barnes, Luke Walton and Metta World Peace on the bench. World Peace (the former Ron Artest) will remain with the second unit.

"It's a job interview," coach Mike Brown said of starting Ebanks, a second-year player. "I have the right to terminate that interview at any time, especially when I have some pretty good veterans sitting and waiting and pushing the guys in front of them."

World Peace then went out and scored 10 points on 5-for-7 shooting in 12 minutes, 25 seconds in the first half, helping to keep the Lakers close to Sacramento before a late collapse enabled the Kings to take a 49-40 lead by halftime.

World Peace finished with 19 points on 8-for-14 shooting.

By game's end, Barnes and Walton also would play.

The Lakers went into the game with five consecutive victories over the Kings in Sacramento, including what many assumed would be their final visit to the place Phil Jackson rather famously called a cow town.

The Kings were close to swapping the state capital for the suburbs of Orange County, but a last-gasp effort by mayor Kevin Johnson and other city officials kept the team from leaving the outdated and renamed Power Balance Pavilion for Anaheim.

"You have to give credit to Kevin Johnson and the city of the Sacramento for doing what they needed to know to give this thing another go," Brown said when asked about the possibility the Lakers might have played Monday at the Honda Center.

Source: http://www.presstelegram.com/sports/ci_19623753?source=rss

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Moldovan separatist region elects new president (AP)

CHISINAU, Moldova ? Yevgheny Shevchuk, a 43-year-old businessman and politician, has been elected the new president of the breakaway Moldovan region of Trans-Dniester, the separatists' official news agency reported Monday.

Olvia-Pres quotes election officials Monday as announcing that Shevchuk won 73.9 percent of votes to defeat Anatoly Kaminski, the candidate preferred by Russia, in Sunday's runoff.

Trans-Dniester broke away from Moldova in 1990 and fought a war with Moldovan forces in 1992 that left 1,500 people dead. The region, which is populated mainly by Ukrainians and Russians, is not recognized internationally, but has its own legal and administrative system.

Moscow has traditionally wielded significant influence there, and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin sent Kaminski a letter of support prior to the runoff. Analysts have said it is too early to predict whether Russia would lose influence in the region.

However, Shevchuk is thought to have a more conciliatory stance toward Moldova and the government in Chisinau than his predecessor Igor Smirnov, who led Trans-Dniester for 20 years. Smirnov came in third in the first round vote Dec. 11.

Shevchuk has shares in Sheriff, a company which has interests in the food, medicine, construction and petrol sectors.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects spelling of leader's name, adds background, byline.)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_re_eu/eu_moldova_separatist_elections

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Monday, December 26, 2011

China central bank chief: cut reliance on rating agencies (Reuters)

BEIJING (Reuters) ? China's Central Bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said financial companies must cut their reliance on ratings agencies, and that China is considering setting up a system where investors pay for ratings, rather than bond issuers.

Zhou was speaking at a forum in Beijing.

(Reporting by Aileen Wang and Koh Gui Qing)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111225/bs_nm/us_china_cbank_ratings

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Cal chooses Google Apps over Microsoft Office 365

By John Cook,?GeekWire

Organizations everywhere are debating the best way to migrate systems to the cloud. And one of the biggest decisions they face is the best cloud provider for their needs.

Google

The University of California-Berkeley just went through an exhaustive process to choose a new cloud-based email and calendar provider, weighing options from both Google Apps and Microsoft?s Office 365. (The University of Washington just went through a similar process as it?ditched its old Alpine email system?earlier this year).

Now, here?s what Berkeley concluded after looking at both Google Apps and Office 365 to replace its CalMail system.

?While both products are feature rich and offer advantages over our current environment, the analysis concluded that the Google offering was the better overall fit for the campus at this time,? university officials?wrote in a message?earlier this week.

But now here?s the really interesting part. The university went beyond the traditional press release by laying out a detailed analysis of how Google Apps and Office 365 perform in critical areas.

As you?ll see in the?Berkeley matrix?assessment, it wasn?t a slam dunk for Google. Microsoft got higher marks in security, contract terms and ease-of-use with its calendar functionality.

(Msnbc.com is a joint venture between Microsoft and NBC Universal.)

But Berkeley decided to go with Google in part because it was easier to roll out and many of its students and faculty were already familiar with Gmail. Berkeley officials noted that Office 365 is still very much a new service.?And they pointed out that one of the early adopters of the technology, The University of Nebraska, still had not migrated its email system to the new platform.

The report also notes that?Microsoft?s previous online service offerings ? BPOS and Live@EDU ? did not have ?exceptional track records for performance.?

?Google?s solution is optimized for web-based interaction,? the report says. ?It is designed to be quickly provisioned and a migration to Google could begin more quickly than one to Office 365.? The university estimated that it would take six to 10 weeks to migrate systems to Google.

?Via Wired?

Previously on GeekWire:?

?

?

Source: http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/24/9682281-major-university-chooses-google-apps-over-microsoft-office-365

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Note Well (talking-points-memo)

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Occupy: What Now, What Next? Commonwealth Club forum with Oakland Mayor Quan: audio & photos

[Pictured above: moderator Melissa Griffin and panelists Diana Macasa, Jean Quan, Nadim Haida, Iris Brown, and George Lakoff]

After Caroline Moriarity Sacks of the Commonwealth Club introduces the forum and moderator Melissa Griffin, the first question goes to Iris Brown, who became involved with Occupy Oakland during the November 2nd General Strike. Iris describes the movement's appeal.

Diana Macasa of Occupy SF says that she had been to occupation of the capital building in Madison, Wisconsin during labor struggles for the right to collectively bargain in the state and that she became involved with Occupy SF when the encampment at 101 Market was raided.

Jean Quan starts by mentioning her history of activism as a student at UC Berkeley and says she was initially enthusiastic about the Occupy movement, but she quickly turns to criticizing Occupy Oakland with a litany of mostly specious and factually incorrect arguments. While no one interrupted Quan, Ali from Occupy Oakland did stand with his back to her the entire time she spoke and a number of people in attendance began to grumble as she continued on for over three minutes with her self-justifying diatribe against Occupy Oakland.

George Lakoff discusses the framing of the Occupy movement, being in agreement with the sense of democracy as a form of mutual caring and responsibility rather than as means to merely satisfy one's own self-interest with no obligations toward other citizens.

Nadim Haida reports that he has been to Occupy Boulder, Denver, Santa Fe, Las Vegas, and Oakland. He says that every camp is unique with the exception of a common denominator being the consensus process used to organize the occupations and their anti-authoritarian nature. He describes some of the challenges facing the various occupations.

Diana is asked to talk about the horizontal organizing at Occupy SF. First, though, she confronts Quan's earlier statement which largely blamed Occupy Oakland for societal ills that long pre-date the Occupy movement and can be more strongly correlated with the avarices of American capitalism. Diana adds that Occupy SF has fed close to 1000 people a day.

Quan responds by saying that she supports economic equality in ways such as Governor Jerry Brown looking to increase taxes on the wealthy in California and claims that Oakland's homeless population has recently decreased. Quan says Occupy Oakland's work with the homeless and mentally ill cannot substitute for the long-term work that Quan and her allies are doing, then goes on to say that defending the work of the Occupy movement doesn't mean that the work of politicians has to be put down.

Nadim confronts Quan's earlier statement about political leaders tolerating peaceful protests . He makes clear that the Occupy movement is not asking for permission. He says it is not a protest,. It is a reclamation that does not depend on the authority of the state but rather innate human decency.

Quan retorts that Oakland was already occupied by Oaklanders. She says that she wanted to discuss the economic impact of Occupy Oakland and that she tried to open a dialogue between occupiers and local businesses. Quan claims that Chinatown restaurants reported a 40% loss in business when the camp was present, without offering any substantiation of the claim. (Chinatown is several blocks away from Oscar Grant Plaza and, other than perhaps a few marches that passed the edge of Chinatown via Broadway, it's hard to imagine how occupiers could have made such a strong negative impact. The claim also fails to acknowledge that hundreds of police in riot gear repeatedly releasing massive amounts of teargas downtown may not be much of an appetizer.) A woman outside of the main room shouted, "Liar!" right after Quan made that claim.

Sara from the Local Business Liaison committee of Occupy Oakland stands in front of the audience to correct Quan's misinformation. She reports that the LBL committee conducted a comprehensive survey of local businesses which showed no such negative impact, and that overall business went up after the Occupy Oakland encampment established itself.

Melissa Griffin then asks George Lakoff about the importance of non-violence and horizontal organizing in the Occupy movement. George Lakoff first thanks occupiers for having brought the moral issue of the hoarding of wealth by the 1% to the forefront of national discussion. He urges occupiers to not only stop negative things, but to encourage positive actions and to connect a moral value with each action.

Iris and Nadim are asked about criticisms around the lack of demands and leaders in the Occupy movement. Iris says that getting caught up in the semantics of demands can lead to losing sight of the common goal, caring for one another, and that not having leaders is a strength of the movement. Nadim says that there is not one demand, but 10,000 demands and grievances, which requires a fundamental transformation of the system. George Lakoff had commented just before about some small businesses being good, and Nadim adds to that that in a capitalist profit-driven system there are tensions between workers and owners even in small businesses.

Quan jumps in and insists on talking about the issue of violence. Quan says that the Occupy Oakland General Assembly proposal on non-violence was critical but didn't pass by the required 90% consensus. Sara from Occupy Oakland asks why Quan thinks the police are non-violent. The woman outside of the main room called out, "OPD is violent! Police are violent! Your ordered police violence! You almost killed Scott Olsen!" Quan goes on to talk about a "small group of anarchists" being violent on November 2nd.

It is at that point that Sara from Occupy Oakland, who began to ask about police violence, initiates a "human mic" by calling out, "Mic check!" She apologizes to Quan for the interruption, but tells Quan that her statement is "a misrepresentation of anarchism in all of its forms. The only reason that non-violence proposal didn't pass is because it generated a beautiful community discussion. That discussion is ongoing. We have fortunately, unfortunately for the city of Oakland, do not have the apparatus of state violence that you call the OPD to brutalize our citizens like Oscar Grant, like Scott Olsen, like myself, and like many other peaceful protesters that have been occupying Oakland." The woman and the man standing next to her are then escorted out of the room by Commonwealth Club people acting as security.

The audience was perhaps two thirds supporters of the Occupy movement. As Melissa Griffin tries to settle the crowd down, several people shout out about Quan's continued lying. When Caroline Moriarity Sacks announces that anyone who speaks out during the panel will be removed, about a third of those in attendance applaud.

Melissa Griffin reads a quote from Kalle Lasn of Adbusters, who is credited with having conceived Occupy Wall Street. Kalle said in a recent interview that occupations should hibernate for the winter, brainstorm, and "come out swinging" in the spring. Griffin asks the panel for their thoughts.

Diana returns to the violence issue first. She says that the occupations have been brutalized. She says she is tired of seeing the police attack occupiers. Diana then moves on to confront memes that has been promoted in the corporate media about the port shutdowns, one originating from Quan that the actions were a form of "economic violence." Diana says that the true economic violence is being perpetrated by the 1%. She says that sometimes a lock might have to be broken in order to defend a family from being evicted from a foreclosed house. Diana disagrees with Lasn about hibernating and says that actions will continue throughout the winter.

Nadim, too, addresses the issue of "economic violence" by reading a series of facts reported by the U.N. Fifty percent of the population of the world makes less than $2.50 a day. The top 2% of the world's population controls over 40% of the wealth. He calls that economic violence. Nadim agrees with Lasn that hibernation might be the way to go for now due to the cold of winter.

Iris points out that there are many people who do not have the option of going indoors. She says that foreclosed homes and banks are still ripe for actions. She insists that there needs to be a continued presence and support for those who maintain it. Iris says that if cold is an issue, then donate supplies to help keep people warm. Iris then reports having overheard Quan in the back room before the forum began complaining about spending $5 million clearing out the Occupy Oakland encampment. Iris says one irony of that is that the occupation could have used that money, for instance, to help the homeless stay a lot warmer. Iris mentions the overwatering of the Jack London oak being done by the city of Oakland in order to make Oscar Grant Plaza uninhabitable for occupiers, adding that some are now calling the plaza "Quan Lake." In regard to the phrase "economic violence", Iris mentions the violence committed against Scott Olsen and Kayvan Sabehgi.

Quan responds that she has seen Scott Olsen and asked for an independent investigation into the incident. She says "nobody in Oakland is happy with what happened around the tear gas, around the mutual aid." She says she has been working with Judge Thelton Henderson regarding civil rights violations. Quan said it is a tough thing for her to deal with, to see to public safety and that civil rights are respected. She moves on to say that the Port of Oakland belongs to the people of Oakland. She says that kids in East and West Oakland really depend on jobs at the port and that she has been working on environmental issues with diesel trucks idling at the port. From there, she says all of the $5 million the city has spent around Occupy Oakland was not spent on police, that $1.5 million went towards vandalism around the plaza.

Melissa Griffin asks George Lakoff about a recent piece he wrote about the occupation of elections. He points to the Tea Party having elected a large number of representatives to the U.S. Congress in 2010, as well as lower level elected positions. Lakoff, citing polls that show 46% percent of Californians support the Occupy movement and over 50% support the ideals, suggests that the "bought and sold" Democratic party be occupied, not necessarily by those in the streets, but by the larger group of supporters. He says that committed volunteers can overcome the advantages of money. He says that if a group can run an encampment, it can run a campaign. George Lakoff calls this a "dangerous time" and calls for occupiers to seize electoral power.

The forum then moves to audience questions. Caroline Moriarity Sacks lays out how the Q&A is to go, warning audience members that if they speak out then they will be asked to leave. The first questioner addresses Quan, saying that her statements about economic violence encourage real physical police violence against protesters. He asks if she thinks that her daughter and husband were guilty of economic violence when they shut down the port on November 2nd. Quan says that her daughter was not there, and that her husband, Floyd Huen, was one of 200 "community monitors" out to thwart the "black bloc" on that day, so he was not a part of the economic violence.

George Lakoff is asked about the Occupy movement including more of the 99%, people that are currently afraid of it. Lakoff says that differences should be recognized between "greed capitalism" and smaller businesses that are honest and trying to serve the community.

Diana talks about Occupy SF outreach looking to do community forums in neighborhoods throughout the city. She says that she helped plan an immigrant rights march with the Day Labor program and Women's Collective of La Raza Centro Legal. She says Occupy SF has had human rights marches, anti-war marches, and tries to include as many of the 99% as possible.

Iris goes back to George Lakoff's point about elections. Iris says that many in the movement do not support reform of capitalism. Lakoff responds that the issue is not capitalism per se but whether people can make a living without exploiting anybody and how can things get moved in that direction.

The next questioner quotes from the Nuremberg Trials and asks occupiers on the panel about ways to incorporate language about universal human rights into the Occupy movement and its dialogue with the broader U.S. Nadim refers to Noam Chomsky, who he notes always defends anarchists, and suggests educating people, decolonizing their minds, is the way to go, that you don't have to appeal to public opinion on its own terms if that opinion is racist.

The next questioner asks what occupiers can do to assure that the next thirty years do not look like the last thirty as far as growing economic inequality. Lakoff goes back to his thoughts on elections, noting that right-wingers do think about elections. Quan recommends state initiatives that would shift wealth from the wealthy to school districts. Someone shouts out, "and the recall," referring to efforts to recall Mayor Jean Quan.

Melissa Griffin closes the forum by asking panelists for their 60-second idea to change the world. Diana says to get involved with the Occupy movement. Quan says she is working to break the cycle of violence with her 100-block program to put more resources into the most troubled neighborhoods in Oakland, including jobs, centers, toy drives, having police officers walking children to school, and giving residents more say in how resources are distributed in their neighborhoods. Nadim recommends dismantling illegitimate forms of authority, those based on violence and unjustified premises, and to do it out of love, not out of revenge. Iris suggests people go to Oscar Grant plaza and bring supplies and warm food for those holding vigil there. Lakoff talks about the language barriers to discussing systemic causation and the need to understand how systems work with our economy, our planet, and our politics.

A final mic check is called by Elle of Occupy Oakland once the panel portion of the forum comes to a close, asking if Quan will talk about economic terrorism when she is spending $5 million to shut down Occupy Oakland instead of spending $500,000 to keep open Lakeview Elementary school and the devastation to small local businesses when she is teargassing them. The mic check ends in a chant to recall Quan.

Event Announcement
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/12/07/18701967.php

Source: http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/12/22/18703262.php

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Internet Changes How We Remember

Head Lines | Mind & Brain Cover Image: January 2012 Scientific American MagazineSee Inside

Knowing we can retrieve facts online later alters memory

Image: Mike Kemp/Corbis

Four years ago Columbia University psychologist Betsy Sparrow turned to her husband after looking up some movie trivia online and asked, ?What did we do before the Internet?? Thus, Sparrow set out to investigate how Google, and all the information it proffers, has changed how people think. Four psychology experiments later Sparrow has her answer, which was published in Science this past August. ?[The Web] is an external memory storage space, and we make it responsible for remembering things,? she says.

In one of Sparrow?s experiments she presented two groups of undergraduates with trivia statements. Individuals in one group, who were told they could retrieve the information later on their computer, had worse recall than subjects in the other group, who knew in advance they could not do so. Together with the rest of her results, this finding suggests that Internet users have learned to remember how to find a fact rather than the fact itself.

Does this mean the Web is dumbing us down? Certainly not, she says: ?Memory is much greater than memorizing.? Our brain may simply be adapting to present circum?stances, Sparrow points out. ?We?re in an Internet world.?


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=bf33f20af2554caa96dcf49fff5deca3

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Dawn spacecraft beams back new images of asteroid

This combination of three separate photos provided by NASA and released Wednesday Dec. 21, 2 011 shows a region of the asteroid Vesta taken from different altitudes. The images were snapped by the Dawn spacecraft, which entered orbit around Vesta in July 2011 on a mission to?better understand the origins of the solar system. (AP Photo/NASA/ JPL)

This combination of three separate photos provided by NASA and released Wednesday Dec. 21, 2 011 shows a region of the asteroid Vesta taken from different altitudes. The images were snapped by the Dawn spacecraft, which entered orbit around Vesta in July 2011 on a mission to?better understand the origins of the solar system. (AP Photo/NASA/ JPL)

This photo released by NASA on Wednesday Dec. 21, 2011 shows the asteroid Vesta, photographed by NASA's Dawn spacecraft in its low altitude mapping orbit, showing buried craters located within the equatorial region of the giant asteroid. The Dawn spacecraft entered orbit around Vesta in July 2011 on a mission to?better understand the origins of the solar system. (AP Photo/NASA/ JPL)

(AP) ? NASA's Dawn spacecraft has been a fervent photographer, snapping more than 10,000 pictures of the asteroid Vesta since it slipped into orbit around the giant space rock last summer.

The views were taken from a distance away ? until now. On Wednesday, the space agency released new images of the hummocky surface as Dawn circled from an average altitude of 130 miles (209 kilometers) above the surface ? the closest it'll get.

From this low orbit, scientists can count numerous small impact craters and see textured grooves and outcrops in sharp detail.

"We're totally thrilled with the data we're getting. It seems to get better," said mission deputy principal investigator Carol Raymond of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which manages the $466 million mission.

By inching this close to Vesta, Dawn will use other instruments to measure the gravity field and determine its chemical makeup to better understand its origins.

Dawn will spend the next 2 1/2 months at the current altitude before moving higher to take another round of pictures. By that time, the sun will hit Vesta at a different angle and illuminate sections of the northern hemisphere that had been shrouded earlier.

About the length of Arizona with a huge crater at its south pole, Vesta is the second largest body residing in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Asteroids are leftovers from the solar system's birth some 4.5 billion years ago and studying these bodies could offer clues about how rocky planets like Earth formed.

Previous spacecraft have visited smaller asteroids before, but this is the first trip to Vesta.

Powered by ion propulsion, Dawn began orbiting Vesta in July after a 1.7 billion mile (2.74 billion kilometer) cruise. It will depart Vesta next summer and will fly to an even bigger asteroid, Ceres, where it will arrive in 2015.

___

Online:

Dawn mission: http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2011-12-21-Asteroid%20Mission/id-9ffaddd6fbc346d8a31e7ca99cc54304

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Obama welcomes payroll tax deal (AP)

WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama is welcoming a deal on extending a payroll tax cut and congratulating Congress for ending its "partisan stalemate."

The president issued a statement Thursday evening moments after House Speaker John Boehner announced that House Republicans were reversing course and accepting a two-month extension agreed to by the Senate and supported by the president.

Obama says the deal, which also extends unemployment benefits, is good news just in time for the holidays and the right thing to do for American families and the economy.

And he is thanking Americans who pressured Congress to get it done.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

President Barack Obama on Thursday chided House Republicans he said are holding up an extension of expiring payroll tax cuts, saying the debate is "about the American people."

To make his point, Obama was flanked at the White House by people who said they would be stretched thin financially if Congress failed to extend the cuts before the end of the year. If no deal is reached, the White House says a person making $50,000 a year would see a loss of about $40 per paycheck.

"Now there may be some folks in the House who refuse to vote for this compromise because they don't think 40 bucks is a lot of money," Obama said. "But anyone who knows how to stretch a budget knows that at the end of the week or the end of the month, $40 can make all the difference in the world."

In seeking to ratchet up pressure on Republicans for a deal, Obama reiterated his call for a two-month extension of the payroll tax cuts, a measure already agreed to by an overwhelming majority of Senators from both parties. He said the House GOP's refusal to sign on to the bipartisan deal was exactly why the American people have grown so frustrated with Washington.

"This is an issue where an overwhelming number of people in both parties agree," Obama said. "How can we not get that done? Has this place become so dysfunctional that even when people agree to things we can't do it? It doesn't make any sense. Enough is enough."

House Republicans say they oppose the two-month deal because it doesn't provide the public and businesses enough certainty. They've called on Obama and Senate Democrats to instead negotiate a full-year extension now.

Earlier Thursday, House Speaker John Boehner called Obama, their second conversation in as many days. The White House said Obama committed to immediately starting talks on a full-year deal if the House first passes the two-month extension. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has also urged the House to pass a short-term extension while starting work on the full-year deal.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama_payroll_tax

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700 Union County Vo-Tech Students Honored by American Cancer Society


UNION COUNTY ? Students from the Union County Vo-Tech Schools received a resolution of ?Outstanding Accomplishment? from the American Cancer Society this week, for their 2011 Relay for Life event that raised more than $180,000 for cancer research. More than 700 students participated along with adult volunteers and cancer survivors. In the nationwide Relay for Life competition, Vo-Tech came in 2nd place for per capita fundraising and 3rd place in the Top Youth Event category. Pictured with the awards (from left-to-right): Vo-Tech advisors/teachers Ginny Oels and Adam Moskowitz, Academy of Performing Arts sophomore Amber Chabus, Magnet High School senior Meghan Emmons, Academy for Allied Health Sciences sophomore Caroline Culp, Academy for Information Technology senior Chris Sprague, UCVTS Board of Education Member Jane Lorber, and Deirdre McGuinness of the American Cancer Society. (Photo courtesy of Union County)

Call Now: 888-652-5737

Source: http://njtoday.net/2011/12/21/700-union-county-vo-tech-students-honored-by-american-cancer-society/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011