Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Salesforce.com Plugs Its Ad Tools Into CRM And Social Listening With Social.com

salesforce marketing cloudSalesforce.com is expanding its social ad offerings today with a new product called Salesforce Social.com. Thanks to its acquisition last year of Buddy Media, Salesforce already runs social ad campaigns for a number of major ad companies like GroupM and Omnicom. But today it's breaking out its ad product into a separate entity that's distinct from Buddy Media's social publishing capabilities.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/E8XnOi0RW5k/

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Monday, April 22, 2013

Grains of sand from ancient supernova found in meteorites: Supernova may have been the one that triggered the formation of the solar system

Apr. 19, 2013 ? It's a bit like learning the secrets of the family that lived in your house in the 1800s by examining dust particles they left behind in cracks in the floorboards.

By looking at specks of dust carried to earth in meteorites, scientists are able to study stars that winked out of existence long before our solar system formed.

This technique for studying the stars -- sometimes called astronomy in the lab -- gives scientists information that cannot be obtained by the traditional techniques of astronomy, such as telescope observations or computer modeling.

Now scientists working at Washington University in St. Louis with support from the McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences, have discovered two tiny grains of silica (SiO2; the most common constituent of sand) in primitive meteorites. This discovery is surprising because silica is not one of the minerals expected to condense in stellar atmospheres -- in fact, it has been called 'a mythical condensate.'

Five silica grains were found earlier, but, because of their isotopic compositions, they are thought to originate from AGB stars, red giants that puff up to enormous sizes at the end of their lives and are stripped of most of their mass by powerful stellar winds.

These two grains are thought to have come instead from a core-collapse supernova, a massive star that exploded at the end of its life.

Because the grains, which were found in meteorites from two different bodies of origin, have spookily similar isotopic compositions, the scientists speculate in the May 1 issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters, that they may have come from a single supernova, perhaps even the one whose explosion is thought to have triggered the formation of the solar system.

A summary of the paper will also appear in the Editors' Choice compilation in the May 3 issue of Science magazine.

The first presolar grains are discovered

Until the 1960s most scientists believed the early solar system got so hot that presolar material could not have survived.

But in 1987 scientists at the University of Chicago discovered miniscule diamonds in a primitive meteorite (ones that had not been heated and reworked). Since then they've found grains of more than ten other minerals in primitive meteorites.

Many of these discoveries were made at Washington University, home to Ernst Zinner, PhD, research professor in Physics at Washington University in St. Louis, who helped develop the instruments and techniques needed to study presolar grains (and the last author on the paper).

The scientists can tell these grains came from ancient stars because they have highly unusual isotopic signatures. (Isotopes are different atoms of the same chemical element that have a slightly different mass.)

Different stars produce different proportions of isotopes. But the material from which our solar system was fashioned was mixed and homogenized before the solar system formed. So all of the planets and the Sun have the pretty much the same isotopic composition, known simply as "solar."

Meteorites, most of which are pieces of asteroids, have the solar composition as well, but trapped deep within the primitive ones are pure samples of stars. The isotopic compositions of these presolar grains provide clues to the complex nuclear and convective processes operating within stars, which are poorly understood.

Even our nearby Sun is still a mystery to us; much less more exotic stars that are incomprehensibly far away.

Some models of stellar evolution predict that silica could condense in the cooler outer atmospheres of stars but others predict silicon would be completely consumed by the formation of magnesium- or iron-rich silicates, leaving none to form silica.

But in the absence of any evidence, few modelers even bothered to discuss the condensation of silica in stellar atmospheres. "We didn't know which model was right and which was not, because the models had so many parameters," said Pierre Haenecour, a graduate student in Earth and Planetary Sciences, who is the first author on the paper.

The first silica grains are discovered In 2009 Christine Floss, PhD, research professor of physics at Washington University in St. Louis, and Frank Stadermann, PhD, since deceased, found the first silica grain in a meteorite. Their find was followed within the next few years by the discovery of four more grains.

All of these grains were enriched in oxygen-17 relative to solar. "This meant they had probably come from red giant or AGB stars" Floss said.

When Haenecour began his graduate study with Floss, she had him look at a primitive meteorite that had been picked up in Antarctica by a U.S. team. Antarctica is prime meteorite-hunting-territory because the dark rocks show up clearly against the white snow and ice.

Haenecour with the NanoSIMS 50 ion microprobe he used to look for presolar grains in a primitive meteorite. The silica grain he found is too small to be seen with the unaided eye, but the microprobe can magnify it 20,000 times, to about the size of a chocolate chip.

Haenecour found 138 presolar grains in the meteorite slice he examined and to his delight one of them was a silica grain, But this one was enriched in oxygen-18, which meant it came from a core-collapse supernova, not a red giant.

He knew that another graduate student in the lab had found a silica grain rich in oxygen-18. Xuchao Zhao, now a scientist at the Institute of Geology and Geophysics in Beijing, China, found his grain in a meteorite picked up in Antarctica by the Chinese Antarctic Research Expedition.

With two specks to go on, Haenecour tackled the difficult problem of calculating how a supernova might have produced silica grains. Before it explodes, a supernova is a giant onion, made up of concentric layers dominated by different elements.

A massive star that will explode at the end of its life, a core-collapse supernova has a layered structure rather like that of an onion.

Some theoretical models predicted that silica might be produced in massive oxygen-rich layers near the core of the supernova. But if silica grains could condense there, Haenecour and his colleagues thought, they should be enriched in oxygen-16, not oxygen-18.

They found they could reproduce the oxygen-18 enrichment of the two grains by mixing small amounts of material from the oxygen-rich inner zones and the oxygen-18-rich helium/carbon zone with large amounts of material from the hydrogen envelope of the supernova.

In fact, Haenecour said, the mixing needed to produce the composition of the two grains was so similar that the grains might well come from the same supernova. Could it have been the supernova whose explosion is thought to have kick-started the collapse of the molecular cloud out of which the planets of the solar system formed?

How strange to think that two tiny grains of sand could be the humble bearers of such momentous tidings from so long ago and so far away.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Washington University in St. Louis.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Pierre Haenecour, Xuchao Zhao, Christine Floss, Yangting Lin, Ernst Zinner. FIRST LABORATORY OBSERVATION OF SILICA GRAINS FROM CORE COLLAPSE SUPERNOVAE. The Astrophysical Journal, 2013; 768 (1): L17 DOI: 10.1088/2041-8205/768/1/L17

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/JDhPlmpFrZo/130422111246.htm

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Buck's seventh blast powers Mets past Nationals

By MIKE FITZPATRICK

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 5:13 p.m. ET April 21, 2013

NEW YORK (AP) - Everyone knows the Mets need more than just Matt Harvey on the mound. So when Dillon Gee finally pitched in Sunday, he wasn't the only one smiling in the clubhouse.

Gee earned his first victory of the season, John Buck hit his seventh home run and New York beat the Washington Nationals 2-0 to take two of three games from the NL East champions.

"It's been really eating away at me for the last few weeks. I haven't really been doing my job," Gee said. "I'm just happy to finally contribute to a win."

Following a pair of poor starts, Gee (1-3) used an effective changeup to toss three-hit ball over 5 2-3 innings. It was his first win since his 2012 season was cut short in July by surgery to replace a damaged artery in his right shoulder.

"I think he needed it bad. I think it's a great confidence builder for him," Mets manager Terry Collins said. "He needed this just psychologically that he's going to be OK. ... I think it's huge for him."

New York also got a strong effort from its struggling bullpen, which entered with the highest ERA in the majors at 5.47. Buck hit a drive into the second deck at Citi Field and Mike Baxter added a sacrifice fly as the Mets ran up Jordan Zimmermann's pitch count enough to deal the right-hander his first loss of the year.

The Mets, 4-14 against the Nationals last year, have won their first three series at home for the first time since 2006.

"They're a great team and to come out and take two of three from them is big," Gee said.

Slick defensive plays by Buck behind the plate and Ruben Tejada at shortstop gave the Mets a boost. Meanwhile, Washington committed three errors - though none proved costly.

The Nationals tried to rally in the eighth when pinch-hitter Steve Lombardozzi led off with a single and Denard Span walked against 31-year-old rookie Scott Rice. But with the meat of the order coming up, Jayson Werth grounded into a double play on a 3-0 sinker.

"I was looking to pull something. I even moved up on the plate. He threw like seven straight balls in a row, felt like he was going to groove one there," Werth said. "I felt like I let the guys down, that's the bottom line.

"I got caught up in the moment. Looking back, I was trying to do too much. I was trying to win the game right there. The situation got the best of me," he added. "It's probably one of the dumber things I've done on the field for a while. I feel like I pretty much blew it."

Collins and Buck acknowledged they were surprised to see Werth swing. David Wright even said the Mets "got lucky on that one."

Rice, however, had an inkling that Werth might be hacking.

"Jayson Werth gets paid a lot of money to drive in runs," Rice said. "I was able to make a pitch when it mattered and get out of it."

The left-hander then struck out Bryce Harper, who homered twice and doubled Saturday in Washington's 7-6 victory.

With the Mets almost desperate for a solid start from someone other than Harvey (4-0, 0.93 ERA) or Jonathon Niese, Gee came through.

"If we want to be competitive in our division, we can't just have two starters throwing well. We need to have three or four," Buck said. "So it's huge for (Gee) to get back on track like that."

The right-hander struck out six and did not walk a batter until issuing three free passes in the sixth. But he got some help when Buck made a tough, backhand pickup of a breaking ball in the dirt and threw out Span trying to scamper to second.

"Eyes were shut," Buck said with a grin.

LaTroy Hawkins threw a called third strike past Ian Desmond with two on to end the inning.

Brandon Lyon worked a 1-2-3 seventh, and Bobby Parnell fanned two in a perfect ninth for his second save.

"We just passed the baton today. Everybody went out there and did their job," Hawkins said.

Coming off a complete game at Miami, Zimmermann (3-1) threw 96 pitches in five innings. He allowed two hits and three walks.

"I fell behind guys, didn't throw a lot of first-pitch strikes," Zimmermann said. "Without first-pitch strikes, you have to work a little harder."

Anthony Rendon went hitless with two strikeouts for Washington and committed an error in his major league debut. Selected sixth overall in the 2011 amateur draft out of Rice, he was called up from Double-A Harrisburg to fill in for injured third baseman Ryan Zimmerman.

Before the game, Rendon said his parents tried to fly in from Houston for his debut - but airline trouble left them without seats even though they thought they had booked their reservation. He said his parents plan to be in Washington to see him play when the Nationals return home Monday to face St. Louis.

Buck launched a drive to left-center leading off the second, giving him 22 RBIs in his first three weeks with the Mets after arriving in the trade that sent NL Cy Young Award winner R.A. Dickey to Toronto.

"I don't know where we'd be without John Buck," Collins said.

A leadoff walk to Wright in the fourth and Ike Davis' hit-and-run single set up Baxter's sacrifice fly.

NOTES: Zimmerman was placed on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 18, with a strained left hamstring. ... Nationals reliever Zach Duke struck out four in two scoreless innings. ... The Mets recalled LHP Rob Carson from Triple-A Las Vegas and designated LHP Aaron Laffey for assignment. ... New York's first shutout of the season was the third blanking of Washington this year. ... The Mets had not won a series against the Nationals was in September 2011 at Washington.

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


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Buck's seventh blast powers Mets past Nationals

NEW YORK (AP) - John Buck hit his seventh home run of the season, Dillon Gee earned his first win and the New York Mets beat the Washington Nationals 2-0 on Sunday to take two of three games from the NL East champions.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/51614492/ns/sports-baseball/

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Base Articles - Sports Apparel- Look Fit and Athletic by Article Master

How To Save On Cheap Sports Apparel

In this chaotic globe that we reside in, the most preferred type of recreation is observing one's favourite sport. It is a thing to glimpse ahead to passionate followers of any unique game will constantly find time in their occupied schedules to view their favourite team playing a important game. These sports can involve cricket, baseball, tennis, golf, all kinds of athletics and so on. Considering that these are worldwide video games, most often than not, they are watched around television, nonetheless, there are numerous ardent followers who always travel to destinations where their favorite team is playing.

By: Erin McDonivan | Sports | Mar 17, 2011

Source: http://www.basearticles.com/Art/1189727/52/Sports-Apparel--Look-Fit-and-Athletic.html

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Sunday, April 21, 2013

96% War Witch

All Critics (46) | Top Critics (16) | Fresh (44) | Rotten (2)

Canadian writer-director Kim Nguyen spent nearly a decade researching this docudrama about child soldiers in Africa, and the film feels as authoritative as a first-hand account.

A haunting take on unspeakably grim subject matter, shot on location in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

A powerful and upsetting portrait of a young girl compelled into unimaginably horrific circumstances.

Nguyen, astonishingly, manages to wring something vaguely like a happy ending from this tragic story.

War Witch is most effective not when we are looking in on Komona but when we are inside her head.

The powerful things we expect from "War Witch" are as advertised, but what we don't expect is even better.

You're likely to ponder its images, its insights into a very foreign (for most of us) location and the tragic situation of Komona (and others like her) for a long time to come.

Is it accurate depiction of Africa's child soldiers? I don't know, thank God. But it feels authentic to its very core, and that makes it as hard to forget as it is to ignore.

Brutal without turning exploitative, the result is harrowing and heartbreaking.

Nguyen creates a mesmerizing tone through his camerawork, editing, sound and the infusion of African folk imagery and ritual, but it's Mwanza's performance as Komona that makes "War Witch" feel so miraculous.

Nguyen reportedly worked on "War Witch" for a decade, and it shows in both the immediacy and authenticity of his tale, and the meticulous craft with which it's told.

Made with extremely clear-eyed restraint from harangues, sentiment, message-mongering, or anything else that would cheapen its central character's suffering and fight.

War Witch features a standout performance by Rachel Mwanza, but the supernatural visions don't really suit the film's tone and mood.

Nguyen's compassion and commitment to the issue is admirable, and at its best, War Witch is devastating.

War Witch is remarkable for the fact that it never strays into sentimentality or sensationalism.

...a love story between youngsters who are forced to become adults all too early in their lives.

This is a straight ahead essay on warfare at its worst and the survival of the human spirit at its best.

An astonishing drama set in Africa that vividly depicts the courage and resiliency of a 12-year-old girl whose spiritual gifts enable her to survive.

It is astonishing that film that contains such violence can have such a serene tone. The source of the serenity is the measured, calm narration by Komona (voice of Diane Umawahoro) that is the telling of her story to her unborn child

An exquisitely made film in direct contrast to the ugliness of its subject matter

The portrait of a girl who retains her dignity and strength, her faith in the future, in the face of unimaginable horrors. It's inspirational in a very real way.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/war_witch/

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Insight: China's 2020 consumer is in a town you've never heard of

By Melanie Lee

ZHENGZHOU/CHONGQING, China (Reuters) - Wearing a floral brocade cardigan and toting a Huawei smartphone, Guo Qian, 22, gushes over her latest purchases on Taobao, China's largest e-commerce platform. As an administrative worker, Guo makes only 3,000 yuan a month and spends most of it.

Not only does she spend nearly all of her own money, Guo also fritters away most of her father's 1,000 yuan monthly pension on trinkets and clothes on Taobao. "Sometimes I feel guilty using his money, so I buy him some clothes."

Guo, a Zhengzhou native, already owns an apartment - her parents helped finance the purchase last year - and is on the upward climb to join China's burgeoning middle class.

As Beijing tries to engineer a crucial macroeconomic shift-- toward more consumption and less investment, the crucial "rebalancing" China's new leadership is committed to, and the rest of the world is counting on -- it is young consumers like Guo Qian who may hold the key to the transition.

Raised in an era of unprecedented prosperity, Guo, like many other members of what is known as the `post-80s' generation (anyone born after 1980) has a very different answer than her parents when it comes to a central economic question: whether to spend the money she has, or save it?

"I don't save at all," she told Reuters. " Why should I?"

Her "spend it if you've got it" attitude, some economists argue, may help unlock the surge in consumption that China urgently needs to rebalance its economy over the next decade, ending an era of lopsided, investment driven growth.

"This 18-35 group, for a variety of reasons, are much more optimistic and more open to risk, because they haven't yet experienced bad times at all," says Benjamin Cavender associate principal analyst with China Market Research. "They tend to have high disposable income relative to their earning power, and they tend not to be saving heavily."

This generational change in mindset, harnessed to the sheer number of people growing more prosperous in once poor provinces throughout the country - such as Guo's native Henan - is recasting China's economic landscape: both the composition of growth, and its geography, are about to change significantly.

GO WEST YOUNG PEOPLE

Today, cities along China's eastern seaboard account for about 35 per cent of China's annual 18 trillion yuan retail spending. This reflects the extent to which cities such as Shanghai and Guangdong have prospered compared to the rest of the country since China's economic opening 30 years ago.

Surging income growth in China's interior - as companies shift manufacturing capacity away from the east, in search of less expensive labor and new markets - is shifting the economic balance of power in China.

"(There) will still be growth along the (east) coast. But it's in the first band of inland provinces - Jiangxi, Henan, Anhui-- where you will see more significant growth in the consuming class," said Jeff Walters, Beijing-based managing director at the Boston Consulting Group.

"If you look at the coming years, you have a lot of consumers whose incomes are rising, and they are just about to cross the threshold into those levels of income where households are going to become more comfortable spending more."

The emerging comfort zone has important macroeconomic implications. Today, China's household savings rate is around 28 percent, among the highest in the world. Most economists blame a patchy, still-under-construction social safety net for keeping savings rates high and consumption low.

But continued strong wage growth is prompting Chinese households to loosen the reins on spending. In urban areas, average total income per capita has grown nearly 30 percent since the end of 2010 while disposable income per capita has also risen about 30 percent. Heleen Mees, an economics professor at New York University, forecasts the household savings rate will fall from to 24 percent by 2020.

WHERE THE GROWTH IS

The newly emerging economic landscape is most visible in Henan, the country's third-most populous province, where bucolic pastures have long since given way to crowded cities and construction cranes.

The province grew by 11.6 per cent in 2011, in part due to a huge inflow of foreign direct investment. According to a report by the Economist Intelligence Unit, the province is now home to three of the fastest growing cities in China - Zhengzhou, Jiaozuo and Xinxiang.

Across China, the labor market has been steadily tightening, in part because China's aging population is reducing the number of working age employees. In 2012, the number actually fell for the first time since China opened its economy more than 30 years ago.

In response, companies, both foreign and domestic, have been moving a massive amount of manufacturing capacity from the east to western and interior cities like Zhengzhou, taking advantage of lower labor costs and government tax incentives.

In Zhengzhou, the resulting jobs boom has lured nearly three million new residents to the city over the last decade - the overall population is now nine million - the vast majority coming from the countryside for the first time.

Partly as a result, by 2020 there will be nearly twice as many urban middle class and affluent households - defined as those making 75,000 yuan ($12,000) or more annually - in Henan than there are today in Shanghai, according to a Reuters calculation based on figures provided by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG).

"Provinces like Henan have a big population base, and on top of that, the people are becoming richer and richer at a faster pace," said Louise Liu, deputy director of EIU's Access China and co-author of a 2010 report on China's fastest-growing cities.

Chongqing, Hunan, Hebei, Anhui will also experience a boom in urban middle class and affluent households, with their numbers growing to about the size of Shanghai's currently, according to a recent study by Boston Consulting Group.

Not only are those regions now growing more briskly than cities in the east, the behavior of consumers, market researchers say, is changing across provinces in China's heartland for concrete economic reasons.

Disposable incomes tend to be higher in places such as Zhengzhou and Chongqing, even if wages are slightly lower than they are in Beijing and Shanghai. A big part of the reason: for all the talk about a real estate bubble in China, apartments are much more affordable in smaller cities throughout China's interior.

Guo already has her apartment, and she plans to buy another one with her boyfriend in two years.

"Lower housing and other costs in smaller cities mean households have more left over after basic living expenses to spend on discretionary items," said BCG's Walters. "This is a key reason why the lower-tier consumer who just crossed the middle class threshold tends to be more secure and willing to spend than their higher tier city counterparts."

NO LONGER A SAVINGS MINDSET

Economists who believe China's rebalancing is underway say population trends and income growth are only part of what will trigger a sustained increase in consumption's share of the overall economy. Rising disposable incomes coincide with a change in psychology among younger consumers - a shift that means when it comes to money and spending they are decidedly not their parents.

"We don't have that mindset to save all our money and worry about what will happen in the future," said Han Lingxiao, a law student in Jiaozuo city, 90 kms (54 miles) from Zhengzhou. "We are more focused on how to improve our lives now."

Han moved from a poor farming county near Jiaozuo to study law at a city university. She says her younger brother who is only 12 will also follow in her footsteps and move to the city.

For younger consumers like Han, three decades of steady economic growth means that "perpetual optimism is the driver," said Ling Hai, China general manager for Mastercard. "They will not save as their parents have, and they will start to use tomorrow's money."

To be sure, a major economic shock of the sort that derailed the U.S. consumer in 2008-2009, could similarly undercut China's. But absent that, many economists and market researchers now believe the shift in attitudes toward consumption will prove to be durable, even if the economy slows.

"China is fueled by a belief that tomorrow is going to be better than today," said Tom Doctoroff, Asia Pacific head of advertising firm JWT and author of "Billions: Selling to the New Chinese Consumer."

That psychology is evident in the evolving tastes of consumers. Like so many of their counterparts in the developed world, young Chinese, whether in Shanghai or Zhengzhou, now regard brands as investments reflecting their status in society, Doctoroff said.

BRANDS BETTING ON MIDDLE CLASS

Not surprisingly, with so many of those younger consumers located in smaller, more far flung cities, domestic and foreign consumer goods companies are making substantial bets on the anticipated surge in consumption.

L'Oreal, the world's largest cosmetics company, forecasts that China's middle class will expand by 260 million people by 2020, with smaller interior cities leading the growth.

"Tier three cities are really important for us. They're growing really fast and are a way for us to reach this soaring middle class," said Stephane Rinderknech, Vice President of L'Oreal's luxury division in China at a press conference recently.

Sportswear maker Adidas has already doubled its lower-tier city presence over the past two years as part of a plan to expand into 1,400 cities by 2015. And Starbucks will increase the number of its stores outside wealthy cities like Beijing and Shanghai by 20 to 30 per cent over the next few years.

Ou Ye, 23, is precisely the type of consumer all three of those companies want to attract. The former model turned schoolteacher lives in Chongqing, a massive city in southwestern China and one of the places where the emerging consumer class is expanding most rapidly.

Wearing a fuchsia coat and black suede boots, Ou says she spends upwards of 70 percent of her 4,000 yuan per month ($640) teacher's salary on clothes. Her favorite brands, she says, are Hennes & Mauritz and Shanghai-based Lulualways. She picks up new fashion trends off the Internet.

"I used to make my decisions purely based on designs, now I think about quality. If something is more expensive but has better quality, I will buy it," Ou said.

Back in Jiaozou city, Jiang Xiao, a fellow law student and friend of Han Lingxiao's, expresses another sentiment that consumer goods makers - not to mention economists worried about China's rebalancing - love to hear. "My parents and grandparents," she said, "believe whatever you earned is whatever you saved. But not our generation. We are more Western in our consumption style." ($1 = 6.2143 Chinese yuan)

(Reporting by Melanie Lee; Editing by Bill Powell and Bill Tarrant)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-chinas-2020-consumer-town-youve-never-heard-065454540--business.html

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The Globe reports: ?Islam might have had secondary role in Boston attacks? (Powerlineblog)

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

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Austrians say end bank secrecy for foreigners: polls

VIENNA (Reuters) - Most Austrians are in favor of relaxing the strict banking secrecy rules that have isolated the Alpine republic from its European peers, according to two polls published on Saturday.

Only 18 percent want to keep banking secrecy in its current form, a Gallup poll for daily tabloid Oesterreich found, while a second poll for news weekly profil found only 14 percent would be opposed to Austria's sharing details of foreigners' accounts.

Austria is under pressure to share information with its European Union partners on accounts held by foreigners after Luxembourg decided this month to do so, leaving it as the EU's last holdout.

Currently Austria deducts interest income tax at source from foreign accounts and sends most of proceeds back to the depositors' home countries without revealing names of the account holders.

Chancellor Werner Faymann has indicated he is ready to exchange some details on foreigners' accounts but will protect confidentiality for law-abiding Austrian savers.

But Finance Minister Maria Fekter has said she will fight "like a lioness" for banking secrecy, which has been traditionally cherished in Austria.

The new polls suggested that attachment to confidentiality may be waning, especially for foreigners.

The Oesterreich poll found 44 percent in favor of Faymann's compromise, while 31 percent were ready to give up banking secrecy altogether. Half thought Fekter's stance unsustainable.

The profil poll, carried out by the Karmasin market research institute, found as many as 71 percent of Austrians in favor of Austria's sharing details of foreigners' accounts.

(Reporting by Georgina Prodhan; Editing by Stephen Powell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/austrians-end-bank-secrecy-foreigners-polls-143913693--finance.html

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Do cigarette companies use tax hikes in strategy?

By Andrew M. Seaman

New York (Reuters Health) - Large cigarette companies can keep their products affordable for young people and the poor by shifting the burden of rising excise taxes from cheaper brands to more expensive cigarettes, according to a new study from the UK.

The analysis of cigarette makers' behavior over a decade in that country found the companies may also often hide price hikes on expensive brands by timing them to coincide with the tax increases.

"They're playing a clever game with prices. They're making large profits with their expensive brands, and they're keeping their cheap brands very cheap to keep young people in the market," said Anna Gilmore, the study's lead author from the University of Bath and the UK Center for Tobacco Control Studies.

Typically countries impose taxes on tobacco products as a way to curb their use - especially by making them too expensive for young people and the poor. But Gilmore and her fellow researchers write in the journal Addiction that no one had studied how the UK tobacco industry responded to these taxes.

For example, did the companies absorb the taxes without passing the additional cost to customers? Did they pass the costs along to some customers but not others? Or did they raise prices on top of the new taxes to increase revenue?

The answer was all three, depending on which sector of the cigarette market one examines.

Using consumer and market research from 1999 through 2009, Gilmore and her colleagues found that the UK cigarette industry put its products into four categories: premium, mid-priced, economy and ultra-low priced.

UK tobacco firms started selling ultra-low priced cigarettes in 2006, when the companies bought the brands from supermarkets. The category's price to consumers has remained virtually unchanged since then, but their share of the market has doubled, according to the researchers.

Overall, Gilmore and her colleagues found the tobacco companies tend to pass on the cigarette taxes to consumers on the most expensive cigarettes, but taxes on ultra-low priced cigarettes are not always passed to consumers.

For example, the pre-tax price of a pack of ultra-low priced cigarettes dropped by 3 pence in the year after the companies took over the brands, while the price of a pack of premium, economy or mid-priced cigarettes increased between 2 pence and 4 pence from 2006 to 2007. One pence is equivalent to about 2 U.S. cents.

The tobacco companies then made up for the initial price cut on ultra-low priced cigarettes during the next year by increasing their pre-tax price more than 4 pence, compared to increases for premium, mid-priced and economy cigarettes of about 1 pence to 3 pence.

After that, the prices of ultra-low priced cigarettes remain virtually static while the other categories continued to rise.

Gilmore told Reuters Health that the tobacco companies win by volume among ultra-low priced cigarette smokers, and by keeping the young and poor in the market - instead of letting the taxes price them out.

"The idea is to keep those people in the market and one day they'll trade up to one of the more expensive brands," she said.

The researchers also note a distinct difference between categories in the timing of cigarette price changes - for the more expensive brands, pre-tax price increases happened between November and May, which is when new tax rates would take effect. For the ultra-low priced brands, the prices dropped during that period and rose again between May and December.

The researchers conclude that governments should monitor cigarette prices by type - premium, mid-priced, economy and ultra-low priced - and consider the industry's pricing strategies when setting taxes.

Gilmore told Reuters Health that she suspects these findings are also applicable to other countries.

But the UK's Tobacco Manufacturers' Association said tobacco pricing is a matter of competition, and that the new study's findings are based on a time of change in the industry.

"This report is based on 2001-2009, when tobacco duties rose by inflation and combined with greater enforcement action led to a gradual, but very much welcome decline in smuggled products, stabilizing Government tax receipts," the Association said in a statement to Reuters Health.

Moreover, the Association noted, tobacco taxes have increased significantly since 2010. That increase, the statement said, is leading smokers to get their products from other sources and ultimately costing the government money.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/10l1gBp Addiction, online April 16, 2013.

(This story has been corrected to fix the dollar conversion in paragraph 10)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cigarette-companies-tax-hikes-strategy-140530201.html

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Saturday, April 20, 2013

Is Teavana and Celestial Seasoning tea safe to consume? | MNN ...

Recent lab testing of both Teavana and Celestial Seasonings teas had alarming results. I didn't realize it before, but tea can be a highly sprayed crop, leading to cups full of pesticides instead of just healthy antioxidants.

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I will link to the full research release below, but here is a quick overview.?

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Celestial Seasonings has bad quality control

91 percent of the Celestial Seasonings tea tested had pesticide residues exceeding the U.S. limits. One of the company's teas, Sleepytime Kids Goodnight Grape Herbal, was tested to contain 0.26 ppm of propachlor, which has no safe harbor limit under California's Proposition 65 as it is a known carcinogen.

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Not what I want my child to be drinking every night before bed!

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Other teas, including the "Wellness" tea line, were found to contain traces of propargite, also a known carcinogen, a developmental toxin, and which also has no safe harbor limit under California's Proposition 65. Apparently, the FDA has already issues two warning letters to Celestial Seasonings in regards to poor quality control. Meanwhile, thousands continue to drink the popular teas.

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Although Celestial Seasonings claims to sell products aimed towards those wanting a healthy lifestyle, there are grave concerns with the quality of its products.

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Teavana's tea is also high in pesticides and toxins

Celestial Seasonings is, after all, a less expensive tea. Are we really surprised that the tea isn't top-notch? But the price of tea isn't always evidence of quality control. Teavana is a company that sells loose tea for top price. They have also long claimed to be "pesticide-free," or organic or "European organic." The tea that I have sampled from them also tastes great.

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It sounds good on paper, right?

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The lab results for this company were not great, unfortunately. Its tea was tested by an independent lab and 100 percent of it was found to contain pesticides. One tea, Monkey Picked Oolong, contained 23 pesticides. Strike one.

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77 percent of the teas would fail European Union pesticide import standards, and would be banned from import. Strike two.

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62 percent of the teas tested contained traces of Endosulfan, a pesticide which has been banned by the U.S., China, the E.U., and 144 other countries because it has been linked to impaired fertility and could harm unborn babies. Strike three.

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It's maddening, especially when you consider how the company comes off as toxin-free. But in some ways, I am not surprised. I bought a Teavana tea thermos, which has a design I absolutely love. But I wondered if the company was purposely deceptive in how the employees were trained. I was told that it was a stainless steel product. But when I read through the package's fine print, it became clear that only the tea strainer is stainless steel, not the actual thermos itself. When I asked the employee about it, and pointed to what the package actually said, he grew confused. He said something along the lines of, "Well, the package does say that only the tea strainer is stainless steel, but when I was trained I was told that all of the metal was stainless steel, so I think it has to be." Deceptive? I think so. If it was all stainless steel, I am sure it would have said so clearly on the package. The employee was obviously just saying what he had been told to say.

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I thought about this when I read about how almost all of the employees said that Teavana was pesticide-free when asked. This was part of their training, and they had no reason to doubt its validity.

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The source of information

So who paid for all of this testing? A short sell firm called Glaucus Research (you can read reports here). If you haven't heard of short sell before, in simple terms, they make financial bets against companies, so that if the stocks for these companies fall, they make money. Guess who they are betting against?

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Does this make them a biased source? Yes. Does it make the above untrue? No. They did not put out this information so all of the health freaks (like me) would know not to buy from these companies. But they released these findings to explain their investment against these companies. They also have analysis on other products from Hain (the flagship brand name that Celestial Seasonings is under). As it says in the group's disclaimer, "We are short sellers. We are biased. So are long investors. So is the company. So are the banks that raised money for the company. If you are invested (either long or short) in Teavana, so are you. Just because we are biased does not mean that we are wrong."

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And, so far, although Teavana has had since November to refute the evidence presented against it, the company hasn't released any hard facts in its favor.

?

Better brands to purchase

I am not invested in either of these companies (long or short), but I do want to invest my consumer money into companies worth supporting. Teavana has lost my support, and Celestial Seasonings was already towards the bottom of the list, and it will stay there.

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One company that I have enjoyed buying from is Mountain Rose Herbs. After reading through the lab testing of above, I am thankful for its commitment to test all of its organic (or wild-crafted) products for chemical and pesticide residues before selling. I have always been impressed with the quality of the products ? including Mountain Rose Herbs' line of teas ? when I have personally bought and used them.

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A tea that I am sipping right now is from a local brand, Tao of Tea, whose organic tea I have also really enjoyed. Tao of Tea's website says, "We are firm believers in the organic tea movement and have supported many small tea gardens and farmers to practice this style of agriculture. The tea industry in many parts of the world is known to use pesticides, often in high doses. Though the number is growing, only a small portion of tea gardens and tea farms are currently certified organic. We are proud to offer one of the largest selections of certified organic teas in the United States. Our teas and our facilities are duly inspected and certified by internationally accredited certifiers."

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Both of these companies will continue to get my support.

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Do you have any favorite tea companies that you trust?

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Source: http://www.mnn.com/food/healthy-eating/blogs/is-teavana-and-celestial-seasoning-tea-safe-to-consume

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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Girl Passes Condom Challenges, Grosses Out the Internet

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/girl-passes-condom-challenges-grosses-out-the-internet/

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Do Customers Actually Care about Your Company's Values ...

Image of a compass

There?s a lot of back and forth about the value of online ?engagement? for businesses.

Do customers want more engagement with the businesses they frequent? Do they care about it? Does the word engagement actually mean anything at all? Or is it just another feel-good buzzword?

A recent article from Harvard Business Review asserts that customers don?t care much about interaction with businesses ? instead they feel most engaged (and buy more) when they believe they share values with the company.

HBR?s position is that customers want to share a ?higher purpose? with business. This is extremely fashionable at the moment, with businesses all over the web switching to taglines that start with the words: We believe.

So do customers care what you believe?

For some businesses, the answer is clearly Yes. Matt Frazier over at No Meat Athlete runs a values-based business. Brands like Patagonia and Prius get a lot of mileage out of building a tribe around shared values.

But for dog food? Software? Web design? Air travel?

The Zappos model

One of the poster children for the ?values? argument is Zappos ? the online shoe store that operates around a celebrated set of core values.

Zappos uses their value statement as a kind of corporate DNA. Values like ?Deliver WOW through service? and ?Pursue growth and learning? let employees and customers know who the company is.

Their values statement informs the way the company looks and behaves. It tells the company how it should grow. It?s the template for the decisions they make and the processes they put into place.

Their core values are such an important part of Zappos that they print them on the packaging.

So the question becomes ? what is it that?s attracting the customer? Is it the statement of values on the side of the shoe box? Or is it the embodiment of values in the behavior of their employees?

Marketing is communication ?

My definition of marketing is ?Everything you communicate to your customers and prospects.?

Note that ?communication? isn?t always explicit. It isn?t even always conscious.

We ran through a Zappos-style values exercise at our recent all-hands company meeting for Copyblogger Media. And the conversations were fascinating.

Did we unearth any values that truly surprised anyone? Not really. We believe in making our customers more powerful. When there are problems, we believe in pitching in together to make things right. We treat each other with kindness and respect.

It was the process of articulating and sharing them that created the benefit. Maybe it?s as simple as standing up and saying that Yes, we believe in profit ? but that?s not the only thing we believe in.

So do you need a Zappos style values statement?

Sitting down together and figuring out your values can be a silly corporate time-waster, or it can be a meaningful and moving process. What makes the difference?

For me, working on our values with our whole team was tremendously powerful. (That?s a technique I stole from Tony Hsieh, Zappos? CEO.) Our developers and support crew and writers and designers are all very different from one another ? but seeing how similar we were in certain ways was eye-opening. And cool.

For another, we weren?t trying to come up with messages to print on the side of a shoe box. We were trying to figure out our own best selves ? how to behave in line with our strongest, wisest internal compass. And that translates directly into how we treat people ? customers, guest writers, colleagues, vendors, prospects ? everyone.

It?s still all about them. Always.

Back to the dog food and air travel question. Harvard Business Review asserts that people fly Southwest because they share the value of ?democratization of air travel,? and buy Pedigree dog food because they share the value that ?every dog deserves a loving home.?

Does that ring true to you? It doesn?t to me.

People buy the kind of dog food that they think will keep their dog happy and healthy, and that fits their family budget.

People fly Southwest because the people who work there are nice and the fares are cheap.

The values inside those companies may very well help deliver what customers want. Southwest?s values are key to that nice, friendly work force. Their values also allow them the efficiency to keep fares ultra low.

The secret isn?t necessarily in the values. It?s in giving customers what they want.

So if your values statement exists to make you feel awesome about yourself, maybe you should skip it. But if it helps you give customers exactly what they want, the way they want it, you?re probably on to something.

How about you?

Ever sat down and tried to figure out a formal values statement for your company, whether as a team or for yourself as a professional?

What was the most interesting thing you learned? I?d love to hear about it in the comments.

About the Author: Sonia Simone is co-founder and CMO of Copyblogger Media. Get more from Sonia on Twitter and Google+.

Source: http://www.copyblogger.com/corporate-values/

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Drinking cup of beetroot juice daily may help lower blood pressure

Apr. 15, 2013 ? A cup of beetroot juice a day may help reduce your blood pressure, according to a small study in the American Heart Association journal Hypertension.

People with high blood pressure who drank about 8 ounces of beetroot juice experienced a decrease in blood pressure of about 10 mm Hg. But the preliminary findings don't yet suggest that supplementing your diet with beetroot juice benefits your health, researchers said.

"Our hope is that increasing one's intake of vegetables with a high dietary nitrate content, such as green leafy vegetables or beetroot, might be a lifestyle approach that one could easily employ to improve cardiovascular health," said Amrita Ahluwalia, Ph.D., lead author of the study and a professor of vascular pharmacology at The Barts and The London Medical School in London.

The beetroot juice contained about 0.2g of dietary nitrate, levels one might find in a large bowl of lettuce or perhaps two beetroots. In the body the nitrate is converted to a chemical called nitrite and then to nitric oxide in the blood. Nitric oxide is a gas that widens blood vessels and aids blood flow.

"We were surprised by how little nitrate was needed to see such a large effect," Ahluwalia said. "This study shows that compared to individuals with healthy blood pressure much less nitrate is needed to produce the kinds of decreases in blood pressure that might provide clinical benefits in people who need to lower their blood pressure. However, we are still uncertain as to whether this effect is maintained in the long term."

The study involved eight women and seven men who had a systolic blood pressure between 140 to 159 millimeters of mercury (mm Hg), did not have other medical complications and were not taking blood pressure medication. The study participants drank 250 mL of beetroot juice or water containing a low amount of nitrate, and had their blood pressure monitored over the next 24 hours.

Blood pressure is typically recorded as two numbers. Systolic blood pressure, which is the top number and the highest, measures the pressure in the arteries when the heart beats. Diastolic blood pressure, the bottom and lower number, measures blood pressure in the arteries between heart beats.

Compared with the placebo group, participants drinking beetroot juice had reduced systolic and diastolic blood pressure -- even after nitrite circulating in the blood had returned to their previous levels prior to drinking beetroot. The effect was most pronounced three to six hours after drinking the juice but still present even 24 hours later.

In the United States, more than 77 million adults have diagnosed high blood pressure, a major risk factor for heart diseases and stroke. Eating vegetables rich in dietary nitrate and other critical nutrients may be an accessible and inexpensive way to manage blood pressure, Ahluwalia said.

Getting people to eat more fruits and vegetables is challenging, but results of the study offer hope, she said. "In the U.K., the general public is told that they should be eating five portions of fruit or vegetables a day but this can be hard to do. Perhaps we should have a different approach to dietary advice. If one could eat just one (fruit or vegetable) a day, this is one more than nothing and should be viewed as positive."

The USDA recommends filling half your plate with fruits and vegetables, and the American Heart Association recommends eating eight or more fruit and vegetable servings every day.

Co-authors are Suborno M. Ghosh, B.Sc.; Vikas Kapil, M.A., M.B.B.S., M.R.C.P.; Isabel Fuentes-Calvo, Ph.D.; Kristen J. Bubb, Ph.D.; Vanessa Pearl; Alexandra B. Milsom,BSc PhD; Rayomand Khambata, B.Sc., Ph.D.; Sheiva Maleki-Toyserkani, B.Med.Sci.; Mubeen Yousuf, B.Med.Sci.; Nigel Benjamin, M.D., F.R.C.P.; Andrew J. Webb, Ph.D., M.R.C.P.; Mark J. Caulfield, M.D., F.R.C.P.; and Adrian J. Hobbs, B.Sc., Ph.D. Author disclosures are on the manuscript.

The British Heart Foundation funded the study.

The American Heart Association has tips on adding more fruits and vegetables to your diet.

Follow @HeartNews on Twitter for the latest heart and stroke news.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Heart Association.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Amrita Ahluwalia et al Advanced search Other content in.. Categories Health Keywords Medical Regions Europe North America. Enhanced vasodilator activity of nitrite in hypertension: critical role for erythrocytic xanthine oxidoreductase and translational potential. Hypertension, 2013

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/cc5iarpe-4A/130415172230.htm

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Monday, April 15, 2013

Relief sought as grim fishing year approaches

BOSTON (AP) -- Deep cuts in catch limits will hit New England's fishing fleet in less than three weeks, and there's little hint any real relief is coming. But regulators and fishermen are still seeking ways to lessen a blow fishermen warn will finish them off.

In recent months, federal regulators have pushed several measures that aim to give fishermen more fish to catch by the May 1 start of the 2013 fishing year. Meanwhile, fishing groups and lawmakers are lobbying for changes that would make year-to-year cuts in the crucial Gulf of Maine cod species less severe.

As time grows short, Gloucester's Al Cottone said he and his fellow fishermen seem to be facing the future in a sort of "state of shock."

"Everyone's in denial. They still think, you know, someone's going to come in on their white horse and save us," he said.

The 2013 catch limit reductions come as science indicates key populations of bottom-dwelling groundfish ? such as cod and flounder ? are weak and recovering too slowly.

In January, regional managers approved a broad slate of cuts in catch limits to rebuild fish stocks, including a 77 percent year-to-year reduction in catch of cod in the Gulf of Maine and 61 percent in the catch of cod on Georges Bank.

Fishermen predict the range of cuts will kill the centuries-old fleet, while regulators acknowledge industry upheaval is ahead.

The cuts follow a down 2012 fishing year that's seen fishermen catch well below their allotments on several key species.

That's proof, some have argued, that the fish are in trouble, and it also shows the coming cuts might not be as brutal as feared.

For instance, the 61 percent year-to-year cut on the quota for Georges Bank cod doesn't look as harsh when the total allotment for the cod in 2013 is still more than fishermen are on pace to catch this fishing year.

But fishermen say the cuts are so broad, and involve so many key species, that they simply leave the industry with too few fish to make a living. So the aim of many mitigation measures proposed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is to make more fish available to the fleet.

For instance, regulators have proposed increasing catch allotments for healthier species such as white hake, dogfish and monkfish, which are alternatives species for many groundfishermen.

The winter flounder that swim in southern New England and the mid-Atlantic could again be available to catch for the first time since 2009, with regulators saying the species is now healthy enough to fish.

Fishermen could also boost their quotas by transferring over a percentage of whatever they didn't catch from their 2012 allotments.

One controversial proposal opens up segments of long-closed fishing areas off New England, so fishermen can better chase robust stocks that live there, including redfish and haddock. But that's strongly opposed by environmentalists who worry fishermen could devastate a last refuge for a struggling species. The issue won't be decided before May.

Federal regulators have also pledged to find $6.7 million to cover the cost of hiring required at-sea catch monitors.

The Northeast's top fishing regulator, John Bullard, said no one's pretending the proposals will help fishermen escape the pain of the cuts.

"Cushion the blow is probably the right term," he said. "We're not going to avoid the blow."

Jackie Odell of the Northeast Seafood Coalition, an industry group, said the measures will help some fishermen, but most won't see much difference.

Her group is seeking broader relief through the extension of emergency interim measures ? first enacted for 2012 ? that could significantly reduce the cuts on Gulf of Maine cod and haddock.

Bullard, though, has been unconvinced, saying that it's not legal and that easing the cuts will do nothing for fishermen or species that are clearly struggling.

Massachusetts lawmakers are trying to go over Bullard's head and have asked Gov. Deval Patrick to lobby his close friend President Barack Obama to get the interim measures enacted.

Meanwhile, various requests for federal disaster aid for fishermen have circulated in recent months, so far to no effect.

Odell emphasized that stocks are struggling even though fishermen haven't exceeded their fishing limits for years.

There is a fundamental problem with how fisheries are managed, she said, and the industry urgently needs support until changes can be made.

"People have got to be focused on opportunities and bridges, whether it's money, whether it's policies, whether it's programs, whether it's interim rules," she said. "What are people doing to help the industry?"

Cottone, the Gloucester fisherman, said he hasn't a clue what he'll do when May 1 comes. He's also unsure of what, if anything, could make a real difference for an industry on the brink of disaster.

Cottone said he's been allotted so few fish this year that he could hit his catch limits on all of them in a single tow. And then what?

"No one knows what they're going to do," he said. "Nobody."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/relief-sought-grim-fishing-approaches-144746127.html

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Dinosaur Could Swim Long Distances, Claw Mark Fossils In Chinese Riverbed Suggest

By: Live Science Staff
Published: 04/14/2013 02:26 PM EDT on LiveScience

Claw marks on a 100-million-year-old riverbed in China reveal how some dinosaurs doggy-paddled over long distances, scientists say.

"What we have are scratches left by the tips of a two-legged dinosaur's feet," study researcher Scott Persons, of the University of Alberta, said in a statement. "The dinosaur's claw marks show it was swimming along in this river and just its tippy toes were touching bottom."

Stretching over a distance of 50 feet (15 meters), the markings show that the dinosaur had a coordinated, left-right, left-right swimming style, Persons said. The researchers believe the scratches belong to a carnivorous theropod -- a type of dinosaur that walked on two legs -- that stood roughly 3 feet (1 meter) at the hip.

While it's tough to determine the identity of the swimming dinosaur from these marks alone, Persons suspects it could have been an early tyrannosaur or a Sinocalliopteryx, predators known to have roamed this prehistoric landscape in China.

The paddle-scratches were found in a dried-up river in China's Szechuan Province, which Persons described as a "dinosaur super-highway," full of the footprints of other Cretaceous-era theropods and long-necked, four-legged sauropods.

The research was detailed April 8 in journal Chinese Science Bulletin.

It's not the first time dinosaur paddle prints have turned up in the fossil record. In 2007, paleontologists found S-shaped prints on the bottom of what was a lake in the Cameros Basin in Spain 125 million years ago. The unusual tracks indicate the animal's body was floating in about 10 feet (3.2 m) of water when it scratched the lakebed, researchers said at the time.

Earlier this year, a group of scientists published a study in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology arguing that a set of up to 4,000 fossilized footprints in Australia is evidence of a dinosaur river crossing -- not a stampede over land, as was long thought.

Follow us @livescience, Facebook& Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/15/dinosaur-swim-claw-mark-fossils-china_n_3081467.html

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Chinese data weighs on stocks as gold tanks again

(AP) ? Weaker-than-expected Chinese economic growth figures weighed on markets Monday as the price of gold slid another $100 to hit a two-year low amid concerns that a 12-year bull run for the commodity has come to an end.

Though Beijing government figures showed that the world's second-largest economy expanded 7.7 percent in the first quarter of the year compared with a year earlier, the figure was down on the previous period's 7.9 percent rate and was worse than expectations for a modest increase to 8 percent.

The report stoked worries about the strength of China's economy at a time when a run of U.S. economic data has disappointed and Europe remains embroiled in its crisis over too much government debt.

"Weak economic growth in China has taken investors by surprise," said Mike McCudden, head of derivatives at stockbroker Interactive Investor. "With the recent run or weaker global economic data investors have reached an impasse and without a great deal in sight this week to inspire them, we should see markets drift lower."

In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was down 1.1 percent at 6,313 while Germany's DAX fell 1 percent to 7,678. The CAC-40 in France was also 1 percent lower at 3,692.

Wall Street was poised for a lower opening, with Dow futures down 0.3 percent and the broader S&P 500 futures 0.5 percent lower. The focus during the U.S. session will be on the next batch of quarterly corporate earnings statements from financial companies, including Citigroup, Charles Schwab and First Republic Bank.

Much of the interest in financial markets though is centered on gold, which has taken a battering over recent sessions.

By late-morning London time, an ounce of the yellow metal was trading $100.10, or 6.7 percent, lower at $1,401.50. Gold has fallen sharply over recent trading sessions from over $1,600 10 days ago and there is talk in the markets that a number of institutions are cashing in following a reduction in gold price predictions from leading investment banks, including Goldman Sachs. Earlier, it fell to $1,398.80, its first foray below $1,400 since March, 2011.

Many reasons have been put forward to explain the sudden change of course, including speculation that Cyprus may sell a chunk of its reserves to finance its part of its financial rescue. Though that may not materialize, it was enough to prompt some investors to think that a gold-selling strategy may be used elsewhere in the troubled eurozone.

Another reason put forward is that the Federal Reserve will outline a strategy to withdraw its monetary stimulus later this year despite recent mixed signals out of the U.S. economy, the world's largest. One of the reasons why the price of gold has been so well-bid in recent years is a direct result of the Fed's policy ? the new dollars created under so-called quantitative easing have found themselves recycled in financial markets and many of them have gone to the perceived haven of gold.

"Investors are clearly turning away from gold here, using the price action as justification for unwinding positions and taking capital away from what was once considered as almost a one-way bet," said David White, a trader at Spreadex. "Even those naturally contrarian are struggling to find reasons to own gold."

The sharp decline in the price of gold has had knock-on effects throughout commodity markets. The price of oil has been in retreat too and the benchmark New York rate was down another $2.70 at $88.59 a barrel.

Subdued investor appetite for risk, as evidenced by the performance of stocks, was evident in the currency markets too, where the euro was trading 0.4 percent lower at $1.3057.

Earlier in Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 finished 1.6 percent lower at 13,275.66, falling for a second straight trading day after a series of gains. The Bank of Japan's aggressive monetary easing to lift borrowing and spending drove Japanese stocks to their highest close in nearly four years last week as well as weighing heavily on the yen. However, the yen has gained some ground over the last couple of sessions, and the dollar was 0.4 percent lower at $97.77 yen.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng sank 1.4 percent to 21,772.67 while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 declined 0.9 percent to 4,967.90 and China's Shanghai Composite Index shed 1.1 percent to 2,181.94.

South Korea's benchmark index narrowed its losses amid expectations that policymakers in major economies may put pressure on Japan to halt the yen's slide, which has hurt South Korean exporters. The Kospi closed at 1,920.45, down 0.2 percent.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-04-15-World%20Markets/id-ca73139fc38a4750b6e5515844a06af9

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New York's 'assault weapon' registration to begin

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) ? Key measures of New York's tough new gun law are set to kick in, with owners of guns now reclassified as assault weapons required to register the firearms and new limits on the number of bullets allowed in magazines.

As the new provisions take effect Monday, New York's affiliate of the National Rifle Association said it plans to head to court to seek an immediate halt to the magazine limit.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo calls those and other provisions in the state's new gun law common sense while dismissing criticisms he says come from "extreme fringe conservatives" who claim the government has no right to regulate guns.

"Yes, they are against it, but they are the extremists and the extremists shouldn't win, especially on this issue when it is so important to the majority," Cuomo said in a radio interview Wednesday. "In politics, we have to be willing to take on the extremists, otherwise you will see paralysis."

New York's new gun restrictions, the first in the nation passed following December's massacre at a Connecticut elementary school, limit state gun owners to no more than seven bullets in magazines, except at competitions or firing ranges.

The new regulations in New York commence as the U.S. Senate prepares to debate expanded gun legislation and weeks after Connecticut joined Colorado in signing into law tougher new gun restrictions.

The New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, the state's NRA affiliate, has a pending federal lawsuit against the new provisions. It plans to ask a judge Monday for an immediate halt to the magazine limit. The new registrations, required over the next year, will be the group's focus later.

The law violates the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens "to keep commonly possessed firearms" at home for self-defense and for other lawful purposes, the New York State Rifle & Pistol Association said in court papers. It is advising members to obey the law in the meantime.

"We are lawful and legal citizens of New York state and we always obey the law," association President Tom King said. "It's as simple as that."

State Police planned to post forms on their website for registration starting Monday. Owners of those guns, now banned from in-state sales, are required within a year to register them. Alternatively, they can legally sell them to a licensed dealer or out of state by next Jan. 15.

Rich Davenport, recording secretary of the Erie County Federation of Sportsmen's Clubs, said their nearly 11,000 members are united in opposition to the law, which he considers a hasty, illogical and emotional response to the Newtown, Conn., school shooting. He also questioned likely compliance with the registration requirement.

"I'm guessing it'll be pretty low," said Davenport, a longtime hunter. He said that even though he's not personally affected by the registration provision, "I'm offended as an American."

The toughest part of the new statute ? banning in-state sales of those guns newly classified as "assault weapons" ? immediately took effect Jan. 15. The new classification related to a single military-style feature, such as a pistol grip on semi-automatic rifles with detachable magazines. Other listed features include a folding or thumbhole stock, bayonet mount, flash suppressor, or second protruding grip held by the non-trigger hand.

It requires owners to register an estimated 1 million guns previously not classified as assault weapons by April 15, 2014, though law enforcement officials acknowledge they don't know exactly how many such guns New Yorkers have.

The assault weapon definition also applies to some shotguns and handguns. They include shotguns that are semi-automatic, or self-loading, and have another feature, such as a folding stock, a second handgrip held by the non-shooting hand or the ability to accept a detachable magazine.

Also covered are semi-automatic pistols that can take detachable magazines and have another feature, such as a folding or thumbhole stock, a second handgrip and a threaded barrel that can accept a silencer.

Many county boards in New York have passed resolutions urging at least partial repeal of the law while warning that new registration requirements would be a costly burden on them.

Herkimer County Clerk Sylvia Rowan said Thursday she had received no registration forms for those guns. "There's a lot of confusion on this," she said.

Rowan noted that she had received few formal requests filed from the holders of the county's 12,000 pistol permits to exempt their information from public disclosure, something else authorized under the new law.

Passed Jan. 15, a month after the school shooting in Newtown, Conn., the statute originally banned magazines with more than seven bullets effective April 15. Connecticut officials said that shooter Adam Lanza used a semi-automatic Bushmaster AR-15 and five 30-round magazines to kill 20 children and six adults in minutes.

However, acknowledging that manufacturers don't make seven-bullet magazines, the Cuomo administration and New York lawmakers amended their law on March 29, keeping 10-bullet magazines legal but generally illegal to load them with more than seven bullets.

The new Colorado bill, signed into law last month, bans ammunition magazines that hold more than 15 rounds.

____

Online:

State Police gun law guidance, registration form:

http://www.governor.ny.gov/nysafeact/gun-owners

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/yorks-assault-weapon-registration-begin-070029231.html

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