Friday, September 7, 2012

HTC eyes sales boost for Windows phones

NEW YORK | Thu Sep 6, 2012 7:18pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - HTC Corp has high hopes that Microsoft Corp software will boost its smartphone sales due to a strong new design and support from wireless service providers, according to Jason Mackenzie, HTC's president of sales and marketing.

Taiwan's HTC, which derives most of its revenue from phones based on Google Inc' Android software, is currently facing a sharp sales decline as it struggles to compete with iPhone maker Apple Inc and Android rivals such as Samsung Electronics.

HTC will face a stiff battle with smartphone makers Samsung and Nokia Oyj, Microsoft's main handset partner, in the market for phones using Microsoft Windows Phone 8 software.

But Mackenzie said on Thursday that HTC Windows devices will stand up well against its bigger rivals. Nokia did not name any wireless service provider partners when it unveiled its flagship Windows device at a New York event on Wednesday nor did it even give any general indication of operator support.

In comparison Mackenzie said his company has firm commitments from operators to sell its Windows Phone 8 devices.

"I feel very strongly we've got very concrete carrier support in every region around the world including the United States and I'm not talking about just one carrier," the executive told Reuters. "Our plan is to go big on Windows 8."

Mackenzie declined to give specifics on where and when the phone would be sold.

But he did promise that Taipei-based HTC would come out with "a unique (industrial design) language for Windows phones, a language that can be held up by Microsoft as a flagship."

In comparison, he said, other Windows phones makers who also produce Android devices "haven't typically given their A plus designs to Windows phones."

"They've been designating those to Android," he said.

While Android phones generate the bulk of HTC's revenue today, Mackenzie said it would like to see "a more balanced portfolio" in terms of Android and Windows revenue.

"That wouldn't mean we'd want to dial back on Android," he said. "We want to grow Android and grow Windows at the same time."

However, this could be a tough job. While HTC's One-branded Android phones unveiled earlier this year have been enjoying good reviews by analysts and tech blogs, this has not been reflected in its sales.

After its profit fell by more than half in the second quarter, HTC on Aug 3 forecast a third-quarter revenue decline of as much as 23 percent, which was much worse than analysts had feared.

Earlier on Thursday HTC said its August sales were weaker than its July sales.

But Mackenzie said that he sees HTC's current problems as "temporary" and that he hopes to turn the company's fortunes around with better marketing of its brand and its devices.

"We have to get more efficient with the dollars that we're spending and turn every dollar into five," he said, while promising to use social media and online advertising to greater effect in its marketing. "It's about being more bold."

(Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/businessNews/~3/0OB2sV15ysQ/us-htc-microsoft-idUSBRE8851DZ20120906

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Baseball Therapy: Is There Really Racism in the Broadcast Booth? by Russell A. Carleton

September 5, 2012

by Russell A. Carleton

Last week, in Atlantic magazine, two researchers published the results of a study with a very unsettling conclusion: there is subtle racism at work in the broadcast booth in Major League Baseball. The idea that Caucasian players are more often praised for being "gritty" and "scrappy," while African-American, Hispanic, and Asian players aren't similarly lauded, isn?t a new one. For the first time, someone decided to put the hypothesis to an empirical test.

I used to teach Intro to Psych, and when we got to the part of the class on subconscious vs. conscious behavior, I would use racism as an example. I'd start off class with a simple instruction: "Raise your hand if you are a racist." Not surprisingly, no one raised a hand. And truthfully, I believed that my students abhorred the idea that they would treat someone differently on the basis of their race. I'm guessing that if my audience were a gathering of MLB broadcasters, the results would be the same. And I?d believe them too.

The problem is that human behavior is influenced by much more than conscious thought. A person?s behavior can be influenced by cues that they don?t even recognize are there. This is the reason that the business of advertising exists. Companies spend millions on figuring out the proper shade of yellow to use in their ads, despite the fact that there?s nothing about the color yellow that should make a product more or less appealing. A lot of these messages are passed along through simply living in a culture. Some of these messages are delivered directly, some indirectly, but they are there.

A baseball-related example of how this might affect behavior: picture yourself walking on a lovely summer afternoon and seeing someone walking the other way whom you don't know and who is wearing a Red Sox hat. What can you reasonably conclude about this person by virtue of the hat? Not a lot, really. There's a higher likelihood that s/he was born in or around Boston or lives there now. But, I bet somewhere in your mind, you mumbled a few other words. "Bet you got that hat in November of 2004..." Maybe something a little more vulgar. Don't believe that the hat is affecting you? Now, pretend that it's a Twins hat and see how your thoughts change.

What if our behatted stranger stopped you and asked for directions. Would you treat her/him any differently? Maybe. Maybe not. But hopefully you can see that your thinking is different, based solely on an ultimately irrelevant hat, and that that might lead to differences in behavior. This is the sort of discrimination that the article in The Atlantic is talking about. It's not overt and may not be perceptible in an instant, but over time, it builds up.

Critiquing Methods
The authors of The Atlantic article were kind enough to send their raw data over to Colin Wyers and me, and Colin and I ran some secondary analyses (which is a nice way to say we were playing around with someone else's data set.) There were a few methodological issues that needed to be ironed out (we re-ran their data as a logit regression, rather than an OLS), but in general, the variables that they had previously found significant stayed significant. None of the "race" variables came out significant, but players who were short got lots of compliments while players who were born outside of the United States and Canada were less likely to get an "attaboy."

There are some technical limitations that the authors? data have that I wish weren't there. A single week is a rather short time period, although given the labor that goes into coding one game, I understand why they stopped there. However, it means that each player was seen by only three sets of broadcasters. (In the week, each team played two series, so his team's broadcasters and those of his two opponents.) To really dig into these findings, some sort of paneled or hierarchical model or GEE is needed to break apart the effects of individual broadcasters, and that would require a much larger sample size to work. There were a couple of other issues to note. For example, the authors didn?t control for what happened immediately before the comment was made (did the player just make a boneheaded play?) But as a preliminary investigation into the subject, the data that they present are pretty good. They showed a lot of hustle and grit in putting this together.

The real innovation in this study was the use of qualitative coding as a data set. It's something that has been woefully under-used in sabermetrics. The authors talk about how they took one week in August 2011 and watched 200 broadcasts of games listening for when announcers discussed players in terms of their intangibles, rather than just how many "nice plays" each player got. As someone who has done qualitative coding before (not in baseball), I can appreciate what an undertaking this was. Not only do you have to watch the game, but you have to strain to listen to it to make sure you hear everything that the announcer said. Try it for an inning tonight.

I think one of the reasons that qualitative coding has been under-used in sabermetrics is?as the authors point out?that it is equal parts art and science. In this case, the data are what the announcers say about the players. If we were looking to see how many doubles a player had hit, there's a well-established definition for a double, but there will always be an element of subjectivity in deciding whether what an announcer says is positive or negative. Some things are obvious, but what of the announcer who says that Smith "gets the most out of his talent." He has at once said that Smith is a hard worker (positive) and not very talented (negative). There are a thousand little quibbles that can be made with any qualitative project of this sort, but to dismiss the findings outright is foolish.

My main concern with the methodology is that the authors focused only on what was said by the broadcasters, ignoring what they might have held back. The coders paid close attention to which players received comments and then coded whether they were positive or negative. Figure that in that week in August, most of the 750 players who are on a major-league roster played at least one game. Yet, the majority of players had nothing at all said about them, positive or negative.

There are plenty of ways to be a racist, sadly. One is to actively hurl insults and slurs at someone. It's a really good way to get fired. Another?and this is what the authors of the study argue is happening?is to be quick to point out the negatives for one group and the positives for another.

But what about the sins of omission that can happen? Suppose that a player has worked hard all his life. Everyone around the game knows it and everyone, even people on other teams, admires him for that work ethic. This would make a fantastic tidbit to share on the air for a broadcaster. But what if a broadcaster simply swallows that and says... nothing. And what if he seems to omit the good things about one group and not another? On the flip side, what if a player is lazy and a jerk, but a broadcaster doesn't bring that up?

Of the comments that were made and logged in the data set, half were about Caucasian players, 29 percent were about Latino players, and 20 percent were about African-American players. (There were a grand total of four comments made about Asian players, which, as the authors observe, isn't much of a sample size.) MLB players in 2011 were 62 percent Caucasian, 27 percent Latino, and nine percent African-American. It seems that announcers talk about African-American players at a greater rate than might be expected by simple demographics, and less for Caucasian players. (These findings hold even after taking out Jim Thome and Carlos Zambrano, whom the authors noted got a lot of press that week; Thome for hitting his 600th career HR, Zambrano for a clubhouse blowout.) In fairness, the comments on African-American players were no more or less positive than the rest of the sample, but it seems that broadcaster in general felt just fine rendering opinions on African-American players, but were more tight-lipped about Caucasian players. This may be an un-answerable question, but what were they holding back?

Still, the variable that emerged as significant was not specifically the player's race, but whether he was born in the United States (or Canada, which I guess was annexed by the United States for the purposes of this study). While 87 percent of the comments that players born in the United States and Canada received were positive, only 77 percent were positive for those born in other countries. Again, most of the comments for both groups were positive, and within a single game, the difference might not be obvious. But if there's a fan base that can understand the difference that 10 percentage points makes, it's baseball?s. That's the difference between a .200 hitter and a .300 hitter.

The Meaning
Is there racism in the broadcast booth?or, given the variable that emerged from the analyses as significant, nativism? First, let's be aware of the emotional charge of such terms. I am loathe to apply them casually. I would instead suggest that if we are going to point a finger at the press box, we might note the three fingers pointing back at ourselves. It is a sad fact of life that there are a lot of discriminatory attitudes that are part of American culture. I would argue that one way to become a better human is to identify these and stamp them out, but I have to admit that I haven't conquered them in my own life.

Let me suggest that the other variable that emerged as significant in these analyses, the height of a player, can shed some light on a topic that is less emotionally charged. Height, especially among men, has cultural assumptions that go along with it too. Height is the second-most lied about fact in personal ads (erm, shall we say "marital status" is no. 1). Why would a man lie about something that has nothing to do with the goal of a personal ad, which is to find a partner for a happy and satisfying relationship? (For the record, I'm 5'11". And married. And I like long walks on the beach at sunset.) Granted that in the context of playing baseball, height may have its advantages, but why are short players given credit as having such an amazing work ethic when just about everyone who reaches MLB worked hard to get there?

If we're going to say that there is racism and/or nativism in the broadcast booth, let's be honest about what we're really saying. There is racism and nativism embedded in American culture, and it's hard to eradicate. Broadcasters bear the responsibility for addressing this in their own lives, the same way that I am responsible for addressing it in mine, and it looks like neither one of us has been completely successful. The data that have been presented here are preliminary, and there are some counter-hypotheses that can't be fully ruled out because of that. But for all the flaws that can be pointed out in this study, I think the greater danger lies in using those flaws to ignore what it suggests and pretend that we all still don't have work to do.

Russell A. Carleton is an author of Baseball Prospectus.?
Click here to see Russell's other articles. You can contact Russell by clicking here

Source: http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=18229

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Thursday, September 6, 2012

It's a girl? Isaac may spawn Tropical Storm Nadine

National Hurricane Center

This satellite image from Thursday shows a system that's been given a 40 percent chance of becoming a tropical storm.

By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

Is a remnant of Hurricane Isaac about to give birth to a tropical storm? The National Hurricane Center says there's a 40 percent chance of that, and it plans to send a monitoring aircraft into the system Friday to get a better idea.

The system "has a medium chance, 40 percent, of becoming a tropical cyclone during the next 48 hours," the center said in an advisory Thursday afternoon.

Already producing rain, the system is centered about 75 miles southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River, and slowly drifting south.?


A hurricane that deteriorates only to have a remnant redevelop into a tropical storm is not unheard of -- Ivan in 2004 was one case -- but it is unusual, Weather Channel meteorologist Jon Erdman reported.

"A?funny thing happened to this remnant," he wrote in describing what's brewing.?"Basically, the polar jet stream was never able to catch up" and whisk it away northward along with the rest of Isaac.

If a tropical storm does form it will not keep the name Isaac and instead would be Nadine, the next name on the official list.

Hurricane Michael became the first major Atlantic storm of 2012, while Hurricane Leslie continued to slowly move northward Thursday morning. Michael was not expected to make landfall, but Leslie was already creating waves in Bermuda. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

That's because the remnant in the gulf is only a small piece of the former hurricane. When a weakened Ivan regenerated into a tropical storm the name was kept because most of Ivan was still intact.

Isaac's daughter would be only the second time on record where a system regenerated along with a new name.

"This is the only example that we can find in the modern era where the partial remains of a system went on to regenerate and, so, get a different designation," National Hurricane Center meteorologist Todd Kimberlain told the Associated Press.?

The only other time? In 2005, a remnant from a tropical depression that dissipated near Puerto Rico eventually became part of a new depression -- which became the catastrophic Hurricane Katrina.?

This time, however, any new storm's impact will likely be minimal, Erdman stated.

Most of the rain could stay over the Gulf of Mexico "until it's kicked east or northeastward ... this weekend," he wrote. "Good news for those recovering from Isaac's surge and rainfall flooding in Louisiana and Mississippi."

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/06/13708761-its-a-girl-hurricane-isaac-may-spawn-tropical-storm-nadine?lite

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Smooth path seen to renewal of disaster aid

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Despite some sniping on the presidential campaign trail, negotiations on Capitol Hill are likely to ensure a smooth flow of disaster aid in the wake of Hurricane Isaac.

Congressional aides are working quietly on a six-month government funding bill that would prevent a shutdown of the government next month and ensure that the government's main disaster relief program gets a steady flow of money.

It's a different story from a year ago, when inadequate Federal Emergency Management Agency funding and a slew of expensive disasters combined to almost drain the government's main disaster program dry.

A spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Tuesday it's hoped lawmakers can reach agreement on the funding bill next week. The House and Senate then would pass it before the current budget year ends on Sept. 30 and avert a government shutdown.

Both GOP and Democratic aides said the talks seem to be going smoothly.

"I have heard of no hiccups," Boehner spokesman Kevin Smith said.

Boehner and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., announced in late July plans for the six-month funding measure, which is expected to keep most agency budgets funded essentially at current levels. A lame-duck session of Congress after the Nov. 6 elections is expected to focus on efforts to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff ? an austere, one-two punch combining the expiration of Bush-era tax cuts and automatic cuts to the Pentagon and other Cabinet agencies that were required after a congressional supercommittee failed to reach a debt-reduction agreement last year.

Democrats have jabbed Republicans over GOP vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan's past opposition to a new, more stable funding mechanism for disaster relief devised as part of last summer's budget and debt accord. But it's unclear how effective the attacks are, given that Isaac wasn't as bad a storm as had been feared and that disaster aid coffers are relatively flush.

On Monday, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney hit a partisan note as he criticized Ryan for opposing the new funding plan, under which disaster aid is added to the budget on top of the spending limits set for agency operating budgets.

"There was an effort to underfund the money that's used to provide relief to Americans when they've been hit by disasters," Carney said. "That effort was led by Congressman Paul Ryan, who is now running to be vice president."

FEMA's disaster relief fund, used to fund cleanup and rebuilding efforts and provide temporary housing for disaster victims, currently has a balance of $1.4 billion. That's enough to carry the program until the new funding measure would take effect on Oct. 1.

The FEMA fund received $7.1 billion for the current year. President Barack Obama requested $6.1 billion in his February budget.

Last year, a stopgap funding measure provided a $2.7 billion disaster aid down payment to FEMA; an alternative idea would be to allow funding to flow at current rates.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/smooth-path-seen-renewal-disaster-aid-065950198.html

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Democratic Platform Confirms Obama?s Drift on Middle East (Powerlineblog)

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Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Contour+2 action camera puts waterproof 1080p recording in your pocket for $400

Contour2 action camera puts waterproof 1080p recording in your pocket for $400

Just over a year later, Contour has released the Contour+2 camera as the follow up to its Contour+ model. Like its predecessor, the +2 shoots video at up to 1080p and 120fps, though that max frame rate's only available at 480p resolution. It also sports the same rail mounting design, a sliding power/record switch on top and a 270-degree rotating lens. Naturally, the camera comes with a waterproof case, for filming in hostile environments, and a couple of adhesive mounts, so you can get those super gnarly POV shots. The +2 stores clips on an included 4GB microSD card, but it can also stream live video using the mini-HDMI port round the back. GPS is onboard to track the location and elevation of any epic runs, and you can add a map of your route with speed and distance data and edit your videos using the free Storyteller app for PC and Mac. Once you've tweaked things, the app also does simple sharing of the results directly to Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Vimeo. The best part? Contour's latest will set you back $400, which is $100 less than the original Contour+. Hit the break for a video walkthrough of Contour's latest action cam courtesy of company CEO Marc Barros, and head on over to our review to see how this thing operates in the field.

Continue reading Contour+2 action camera puts waterproof 1080p recording in your pocket for $400

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Showing the way to improved water-splitting catalysts

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Scientists and engineers around the world are working to find a way to power the planet using solar-powered fuel cells. Such green systems would split water during daylight hours, generating hydrogen (H2) that could then be stored and used later to produce water and electricity. But robust catalysts are needed to drive the water-splitting reaction. Platinum catalysts are quite good at this, but platinum is too rare and expensive to scale up for use worldwide. Several cobalt and nickel catalysts have been suggested as cheaper alternatives, but there is still plenty of room for improvement. And no one has been able to determine definitively the mechanism by which the cobalt catalysts work, making it difficult to methodically design and construct improved catalysts.

Now chemists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have determined the dominant mechanism for these cobalt catalysts. Their findings illuminate the road to the development of better catalysts?even suggesting a route to the development of catalysts based on iron, an element that is plentiful and cheap and could offer part of the answer to our energy woes.

"We've worked out this mechanism, and now we know what to do to make a really great catalyst out of something that's really cheap as dirt," says Harry Gray, the Arnold O. Beckman Professor of Chemistry at Caltech and senior author of a paper that describes the findings in the current issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). "This work has completely changed our thinking about which catalyst designs to pursue."

A major barrier to improving the performance of man-made catalysts has been the lack of understanding of the mechanism?the chemical pathway that such catalysts follow leading to the production of hydrogen. As with any multistep manufacturing project, chemists need to know what is involved in each reaction that takes place?what goes in, what changes take place, and what comes out?in order to maximize efficiency and yield.

Three mechanisms have been suggested for how the cobalt catalysts help make hydrogen?one proposed by a French team, one developed by Caltech researchers, including Nate Lewis and Jonas Peters, and a third suggested more recently by a former graduate student in Gray's group, Jillian Dempsey (PhD '10). Until now, no one has managed to prove definitively which mechanisms actually occur or whether one was dominant, because the reactions proceed so quickly that it is difficult to identify the chemical intermediates that provide evidence of the reactions taking place.

These cobalt catalysts are complexes that involve the metal bound to many different functional groups, or ligands. In the current study, Caltech postdoctoral scholar Smaranda Marinescu was able to add a new set of ligands to cobalt, making the reaction slow down to the point where the researchers could actually observe the key intermediate using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. "Once we could see that key intermediate by NMR and other methods, we were able to look at how it reacted in real time," Gray says. They saw that Dempsey's mechanism is the predominant pathway that these catalysts use to generate hydrogen. It involves a key reactive intermediate gaining an extra electron, forming a compound called cobalt(II)-hydride, which turns out to be the mechanism's active species.

In a previous PNAS paper, work by Gray and lead author Carolyn Valdez suggested that the Dempsey mechanism was the most likely explanation for the detected levels of activity. The new paper confirms that suggestion.

"We now know that you have to put another electron into cobalt catalysts in order to get hydrogen evolution," Gray says. "Now we have to start looking at designs with ligands that can accept that extra electron or those that can make atomic cobalt, which already has the extra electron."

Gray's group is now working on this latter approach. Moreover, these results give his group the information they need to develop an extremely active iron catalyst, and that will be their next big focus.

"We know now how to make a great catalyst," he says. "That's the bottom line."

###

California Institute of Technology: http://www.caltech.edu

Thanks to California Institute of Technology for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/123221/Showing_the_way_to_improved_water_splitting_catalysts

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Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Romney's Bain Capital subpoenaed over taxes (Americablog)

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Neb., SD wildfires grow with help of strong wind

In this Saturday, Sept. 1, 2012 photo, smoke plumes rise from the West Ash Creek wildfire near Crawford Neb. The blaze is one of three wildfires burning in Nebraska and South Dakota, started earlier in the week by lightning. (AP Photo/Omaha World-Herald, Mark Davis) MAGS OUT; ALL NEBRASKA LOCAL BROADCAST TV OUT

In this Saturday, Sept. 1, 2012 photo, smoke plumes rise from the West Ash Creek wildfire near Crawford Neb. The blaze is one of three wildfires burning in Nebraska and South Dakota, started earlier in the week by lightning. (AP Photo/Omaha World-Herald, Mark Davis) MAGS OUT; ALL NEBRASKA LOCAL BROADCAST TV OUT

Nebraska Gov. Heineman, left, talks with Scott Josiah, state forester and director of Nebraska Forest Service, as they inspect fire damage at Chadron State Park, Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012, near Chadron, Neb. Officials estimated Sunday that the fires have now burned roughly 273 square miles, including at least 27,000 acres in South Dakota. That's up from roughly 93 square miles on Saturday and more than twice the size of Omaha. (AP Photo/Omaha World-Herald, Jeff Beiermann, Pool)

Black soot remains at the site of the West Ash fire at Chadron State Park near Chadron Neb., Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012. Nebraska Gov. Dave Heinaman toured the West Ash fire site and visited with local officials. (AP Photo/Omaha World-Herald, Jeff Beiermann, Pool)

(AP) ? Wildfires in northwestern Nebraska tripled in size in less than 24 hours, as strong winds pushed flames through the rugged, rural terrain.

More than 285 square miles ? an area more than twice the size of the state's largest city, Omaha ? had burned by Sunday afternoon, fire officials said. One of the fires had crossed into South Dakota this weekend and burned more than 50 square miles, including land on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

A day earlier, the fires had only burned roughly 93 square miles in the ranching territory that's favored by deer and turkey hunters.

"We've got a very challenging situation out here because of the winds and the very dry conditions," Gov. Dave Heineman said Sunday after touring the damage and meeting with officials.

Cooler weather moved through the area Saturday night, helping firefighters mostly contain two major fires ? the West Ash and Douthit fires ? near Chadron. But winds gusted up to 40 mph Sunday, helping spread the fires through drought-stricken trees and grasses.

The Wellnitz fire, north of Rushville, broke through containment lines Sunday, Heineman said. The Nebraska Emergency Management Agency said it had burned roughly 150 square miles by Sunday evening.

Heineman said it will likely take several more days to fully contain the fires, but he says firefighters appear to have all the resources they need to do that.

Overall, the fires have damaged at least 10 homes and more than 50 structures in Nebraska and South Dakota. The fires also forced the evacuation of several small communities, although residents of the small town of Whitney, southwest of Chadron, were allowed to return home Sunday.

Rushville Assistant Fire Chief Jerry Kearns said Sunday that firefighters are working hard to contain the fires and protect property, but they sometimes have to make difficult choices. Kearns said it's hard to watch a rancher's hay burn because of this summer's ongoing drought.

Those very ranchers know the wildfires will scar the land.

Verona Douthit, 65, has always lived in these hills on land her family bought in 1929. Because one of the current fires started on her ranch, officials have named it after her last name.

Douthit says she knows it takes a long time for the land to recover ? some of her family's land burned in 1989 ? and the pine trees she loves may never be the same.

"It probably will take a person's lifetime to see it like it was again, and it may never happen," Douthit said.

The Douthit fire is nearly contained, but it burned about 30,000 acres. The other fire in the area, the West Ash fire, had consumed nearly 58,000 acres by Sunday and was about half contained.

Douthit said it has been fantastic to see the way people came together to help fight the fire and support those affected. She and her 66-year-old husband especially appreciated the help because of their age.

"We're retirement age, so we're not as agile anymore," Douthit said.

Firefighters have already battled several wildfires in Nebraska this summer, and more than 35 volunteer firefighting departments are working with NEMA and federal incident command teams to contain these.

Conditions are likely to remain ripe for fires for at least several more weeks because the land is so dry.

"Firefighters have put more water on the ground than Mother Nature this year," Chadron Fire Chief Pat Gould said during the governor's tour.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-09-02-Wildfires/id-c93781fa2191451299be7b4f8ed256da

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On Friendship

The raw thrill of both ?How Should a Person Be?? and ?Girls? (and let me acknowledge here that I am hardly the first person to compare the two) is in the way they treat heterosexual coupling as secondary, and how they depict the profundity of female friendships, not to mention their real perils?which are quite different from the competitive jockeying that is so often imagined. It is other women, not men, Dunham and Heti seem to be saying, who most impact the evolution of girls into women. Other women, not men, who provide the opportunities for self-expression and self-discovery. Other women, not men, who bear witness to the triumphs and tragedies of young womanhood. Other women, not men, in whom we both find and lose ourselves.

? Anna Holmes, ?The Age of Girlfriends?

This has been a summer of discovering the profundity of my friendships. They are not all female friendships, as not all my friends are female; but I think they are the kind of friendships Holmes is talking about: aromantic, affecting, essential. And because I am female, all my friendships are deeply affected by my experiences of life, and of friendship, as a woman.

Friendship has always been strange and difficult for me. I am somewhat solitary by nature. My parents didn?t have close friends of their own when I was growing up, so they didn?t model good friendships for me. They created an insular, arrogant, antisocial family dynamic that discouraged me from intimacy outside of it. They never gave me any indication that friendships are important for human well-being.

Moreover, our society does a shitty job of teaching girls how to be friends or have them. Girls are mean to each other, we?re told. And, taught from early on to view each other as competitors and tools, secondary to boys, of course they are! My childhood relationships with other girls were fraught with manipulation, rejection, and outright bullying. My friendships with boys were distant or prohibitively awkward, as we all learned gendered expectations about emotional openness and heteronormative restrictions on emotional ties.

As a young adult, I have sabotaged friendship after friendship through awkwardness, prolonged silences, and mistrust. It feels like nothing short of a miracle that some friendships have endured anyway.

When my marriage ended in a clusterfuck that undermined some of my closest friendships, I woke up to how poorly I had been tending those friendships. I not only had failed to call or write, but had been unwilling or unable to trust my friends with the emotional depth and candidness that they deserved ? and I needed.

After 25 years of deluding myself with an illusion of self-sufficiency, I realized I need my friends. Haltingly and heartwarmingly, I discovered that they were there for me. As I?ve spent the last three months alone and adrift between homes, I feel like I?ve been learning friendship for the first time.

This wretched summer, my friends have casually done a million tiny and enormous things for which I am grateful.

I?m grateful for the friends who picked me up from my apartment, picked me up from the train station, and picked up my grocery bills. I?m grateful for those who?ve installed me on their couches and made their houses my homes. I?m grateful to friends for taking me out, and for staying in and watching tv with me when I wanted to hide from the city. I?m grateful for when they fed me and when they trusted me to take care of myself. I?m grateful for the friends who have reached out to me every week, or at times even every day, just to say hello. And for those who?ve reached out to me for the first time in months, or even years, like it?s no big thing. I?m grateful for those who?ve shared their problems with me so I wouldn?t have to think about my own, for those who?ve made it easy for me to talk about my troubles, and for those who haven?t pressed me to explain. I?m grateful to my friends who have forgiven me my failures and to those who?ve accepted my forgiveness for the same. I?m grateful for the friends who laugh at me in a way that lets me know they know me. I?m grateful for the friends who include me in their lives, giving me things to do and places to be.

Every one of these gifts has been more than I ever expected. Above and beyond what I ever imagined I would deserve, what I imagined my embarrassingly malnourished friendships could be. Knowing how noncommittal and undependable a friend I have often been, it is difficult to accept these kindnesses. I?m awed by them. It?s hard not to feel like I?m imposing, like even the smallest attention to my needs from another person is too much to accept.

But I?m learning that the sandwich means ?I love you.? I?m learning to stop saying ?I?m sorry? and just say ?thank you.? I?m learning that accepting help is a way of trusting and honoring my friends. It?s a way of being strong, not something for which I should be ashamed.

Many of my friendships are still in woeful disrepair. I have a list as long as my arm of people I should have called or written, like, yesterday. Friendship is a skill, and I?m bad at it. But friendship is a skill, and I can get better at it. I?m starting by making the choice to trust ? and so much of this does come down to trust ? that the foundations are solid. We?ll figure it out.

When I think about the ways I do feminism in my everyday life, cultivating and caring for friendship is one of the important ones. In a culture that pits women against each other and against men, intentionally forming bonds that we expect to endure is resistance. I think it?s important that we tell each other stories of friendship?s strengths as well as its dangers. Mean Girls is a truth, but it is not the only one. We should let each other know that it can get better: we can expect better; we can do better for each other and ourselves. I celebrate friendship as a feminist as well as a friend.

Source: http://www.feministe.us/blog/archives/2012/09/02/on-friendship/

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Monday, September 3, 2012

Obama vs. Romney 101: 3 ways they differ on Iran

From Day 1 of his presidency, Barack Obama said he was going to try a different approach to Iran to address its nuclear ambitions and support for regional extremist groups: "We will extend a hand if you are willing to unclench your fist," he said in his Inaugural Address. Three years later, a sputtering international diplomatic effort to curtail Tehran?s nuclear program is about all that remains of Obama's "extended hand."

Republican challenger Mitt Romney says a weak Iran policy has afforded the regime in Tehran 3-1/2 years to progress toward ?nuclear weapons capability? and to pursue its radical regional designs. In his specifics, however, Romney often doesn?t sound all that different from Obama.

Here are three areas where the candidates differ in their approach to Iran: Iran and the bomb, support for terrorism and the Assad regime in Syria, and dialogue versus regime change.

- Howard LaFranchi,?Staff writer

This Feb. 15, 2012, file photo, released by the Iranian President's Office, claims to show Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (second left) being escorted by technicians during a tour of a research reactor center in northern Tehran. (Iranian President's Office/AP/File)

1. Iran and the bomb: US military options

Both Mr. Obama and Mr. Romney say a nuclear Iran is ?unacceptable,? and both hold out the prospect of military strikes to stop Iran as a last resort. But they use different terminology to describe the threshold that would presumably trigger preemptive US military action.

Obama says he would not accept Iran possessing a nuclear weapon, while Romney says he would not accept Iran reaching ?nuclear weapons capability? ? a lower threshold that suggests a fuzzier point at which military action against Iran would be undertaken.

To halt Iran?s nuclear march, Romney says he would first impose ?crippling? sanctions ? the same word Obama administration officials use to describe the sanctions they have already put in place. Romney also says he would order aircraft carriers to maintain a regular presence in both the Persian Gulf and the eastern Mediterranean as a means of convincing Iran that the US is serious about a military option if it fails to halt its nuclear program.??

Both with and without the United Nations, Obama has imposed on Iran?some of the severest economic sanctions ever leveled against a country. ?

The Obama administration also launched covert operations against Iran?s nuclear facilities, part of a covert war, presumably in cooperation with Israel, that have included cyberworms attacking uranium enrichment operations, explosions at nuclear facilities, and assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists ? though it is not clear that the US is involved in all aspects of this war.?

Meanwhile, Obama and administration officials have focused on reassuring Israel that there is still time to see if sanctions and diplomacy can work before military action is necessary. Romney says he would respect Israel's right to take preemptive action against Iran nuclear sites if it decides to launch air strikes.

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Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/uL0hNiBJh-U/Obama-vs.-Romney-101-3-ways-they-differ-on-Iran

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Preserve Revenue Margins Up With Minimal Small business Website

Weary of one?s sluggish and out-of-date dial-up relationship? Plan to take pleasure in an improved on the net know-how? If you are pondering a completely new ISP support, then definitely, you?ve got been introduced with broadband word wide web to be a formidable method. The concern that is perhaps inside your head today is: ?do I actually will want broadband word wide web??

The small solution: certainly, you actually must have a broadband connection to the internet.

In this particular era, a broadband relationship happens to be the conforme for web products and services everywhere. With a lot more than five hundred million men or women throughout the world linked web-based by way of broadband products and services, the online world is speedily switching to accommodate people which have been related by using such a support.

At any time you definitely desire an extensive response to your dilemma ?do I actually have to have broadband world-wide-web?,? below are ten causes that ought to cause you to highly look into this ISP system:

one. About four hundred occasions a lot faster than dial-up. This really is the number 1 benefit of a broadband connection to the internet in excess of dial-up expert services. A lot quicker velocity opens up a society of advantages to the consumer, and it saves him a good deal more time as he would not must continue to be idle at the same time a site hundreds up or as an obtain completed.

two. Seamless Voice More than The web Protocol (VoIP) relationship. A lot more plus much more families are utilizing VoIP for a feasible plus more highly affordable choice to old fashioned phone products, particularly when it arrives to very long length calls. Which has a broadband world-wide-web subscription, VoIP turns into as seamless for a conventional telephone dialogue. Negligible latency and nil lag signifies that you?re going to listen to the opposite particular person in genuine time, at once, and he?ll listen to you the instant you are going to open up your mouth to talk.

three. Smoother online video streaming. Cyberspace is right now within the age of films, as 70% of buyers choose to view the knowledge they would like to digest rather of examining the very same. Also, with products and services like Netflix, the online market place is speedily getting transformed being an substitute system to regular media units this kind of as televisions, DVD gamers, and Blu-Ray devices. Along with a broadband link, you can reach like movie streaming providers ? even at completely higher resolutions ? free of any concerns.

four. Swift downloads of massive information. Are you interested in to obtain a file that is definitely in excess of five hundred MB in dimensions? Using a broadband link, you can find a way to down load the mentioned file inside an hour. Do a comparison of this to the dial-up provider, where by downloading a five hundred MB file will consider months, assuming as you can imagine the community is not going to outing by then.

five. Videoconferencing for the up coming stage. Drained of choppy, very low resolution shows all through your distant conferences? Using a broadband relationship, you may give you the chance to check out the opposite get together like they are just there before you. Transmission and reception time is short, and viewing visuals combined with listening to the corresponding audio shall be instantaneous.

six. Greater web-based gaming know-how. Whether or not you happen to be taking part in an FPS or an MMORPG, you are likely to reach relish an outstanding gaming practical experience with fairly very low latency.

seven. A lot quicker internet searching. This is often an offered, even for online pages which can be large with graphics, and website pages that will be introduced through Flash animation. Loading time is sort of instantaneous.

eight. It is typically on. One time you switch with your Computer, you?re going to be linked to the on-line world routinely. No want to log any account information.

nine. Fastened prices. Not like a dial-up support in which you are typically billed for every hour of use, you can only be billed a hard and fast level for the broadband subscription. It is not going to subject any time you utilize it for an hour or for twenty-four several hours on a daily basis, you can expect to stop up shelling out the identical sum. This may make broadband online an excellent solution for large web-based people.

ten. Increased bandwidth. In spite of simultaneous buyers linked to identical community, pace will continue to be steady. Slowdowns, if there?ll be any, are particularly minimum. That is an incredible gain for companies that need a web link for his or her personnel.

In case you are however inquiring the query ?do I actually want broadband the web?,? then you happen to be concentrating within the completely wrong dilemma. The interrogation try to be inquiring is that this: ?when should certainly I receive a broadband subscription??

Remember to go through Easy Methods To Choose A Minor Corporation Webhosting Services to receive other data concerning the matter.

Source: http://usafreelistings.com/preserve-revenue-margins-up-with-minimal-small-business-website-hosting/

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Sunday, September 2, 2012

Video: Patience runs thin in Louisiana

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/48873774/

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Biden: Paul Ryan 'Walked Away' From Deficit Commission

GREEN BAY, Wis. - Vice President Joe Biden launched a new attack on Rep. Paul Ryan in his home state of Wisconsin today, criticizing the Republican vice presidential candidate for not admitting in his convention speech that he was a member of the bipartisan deficit commission he railed against Wednesday evening.

"What he didn't tell you is he sat on that commission," Biden said at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay. "He sat on that commission, and were he and his house Republican friends that he leads, had they voted with the commission, it would have been voted on, but he voted no. He would not let it go to the floor. He walked away."

During his convention speech Wednesday, Ryan criticized the way President Obama initiated and handled the commission, but the Wisconsin congressman failed to mention his own role on it.

"[Obama] created a bipartisan debt commission. They came back with an urgent report. He thanked them, sent them on their way, and then did exactly nothing," Ryan said in Tampa.

Ryan was one of eight Republicans on the 18-member commission and was among three Republicans on the panel who voted against the commission's recommendations, which failed to be adopted.

Biden also highlighted how the commission recommended $3 in spending cuts for every dollar raised in tax revenue, a proposal Romney and Ryan oppose.

"Congressman Ryan failed to mention any of that - a convenient omission I'd say," Biden said.

"I love these guys how they claim to care about the deficit," Biden said. "Ladies and gentlemen, the thing I most love at them is about how they discovered the middle class at their convention. Isn't that amazing? All of a sudden their heart was bleeding for the middle class."

Biden repeated his attack on Romney's foreign policy positions, including Romney's stances on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and touched on the number of lives lost in each of those wars.

"In Iraq, where my son served for a year, we lost 4,488 fallen angels, 32,227 wounded, over 16,000 requiring care for the rest of their lives. Romney said it was a mistake to end that war by bringing all our warriors home. In Afghanistan, we have lost 1,980 fallen angels as of yesterday, and I'm precise because every single one of those lives deserves to be recognized," Biden said.

The vice president offered a critique of Ryan's Medicare plan, saying he and Romney supported "Vouchercare" not Medicare.

Biden, who some have nicknamed " Amtrak Joe ," spoke to the Green Bay crowd at the National Railroad Museum and recounted his frequent trips on the rails between Wilmington, Del., and Washington, D.C., declaring, "I am a railroad guy."

"Whoever set this up hit a soft spot in my heart. I'm the biggest railroad guy you've ever known," Biden said. "I have traveled round trip from Wilmington, Delaware, to Washington, D.C., a 250-mile round trip, over 7,900 times, man. I am a railroad guy."

And Biden shared with his crowd his love for the Green Bay Packers, which started when he attended a Catholic school that was led by a group of Norbertine priests, whose abbey was based in Wisconsin.

"We always started homeroom with a prayer in Catholic school, and in our school it was the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost and Vince Lombardi and it would go from there," Biden said. "We loved the Packers, man. If it wasn't your favorite team, it was your number two team."

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/biden-paul-ryan-walked-away-deficit-commission-000611594--abc-news-politics.html

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Rockstar Nanny | Margaret Doyle

For those of you who are regular readers, you?ll know I grew up in a family of 13. Second generation breeding eventually happened and there was born lashings of limbs and faces and screaming babies; it seemed that children were endlessly thrown onto your hip mid-hallway or some sweaty hot little body was crawling into your bed or asking you to play at some ungodly hour and since I was now an Aunt I had to act like one whatever that meant.

No one really ?watched? after children in our house. You were sort of shunned if you were high maintenance. In fact, as the smallest, and a girl, I always felt lucky to have survived the day. It often felt like a race and I loved the manic pace of it with all the near misses of botched explosions, bikes tearing off of jumps, torturous tickling, pranks, thievery, flailing fists, falling out of trees, and so much more on any given day that the phrase ?rough and tumble? simply sounded like laundry softener in comparison to our activities.

My mother alone had a pretty strict schedule, an army-like precision that formed itself around laundry and cooking while our days were spent out of doors, wild and free and game for whatever came our way. I was always determined to follow the group despite my small stature and heard many a time from the front of the pack ahead of me ?if you die, we?re not stopping? but I was not dissuaded. I just peddled harder and faster.

So when I was 15 and my friend asked if I wanted to babysit for this fancy pants music agency kingpin guy (that?s how he was described to me) I thought, babysit? My god, who wants to babysit? No one was ever ?babysat? in our family. You were left in the care of the mob. Besides, the idea of a clammy screaming baby in the middle of summer was not my idea of fun. It was all I could do to find a moment?s peace and quiet in my own house, why would I want to hold some other family?s baby?

Do me a favour? begged my brother?s friend, David Gray. I argued that it was beneath me to babysit; I was in theatre. At the time, I was volunteering for a Pirates of Penzance musical as an assistant stage manager so felt haughty and? theatrically superior; I likely resembled a strange stage version of Norma Desmond to the people in my life. But David was working as a clerk in an upper crust men?s clothing store in Kerrisdale and this was one of his important clients so I relented.

That is how I ended up becoming a nanny. This family also lived near Point Grey where I was raised but they were very different from my family. Not only were they a small family, they were not Catholic. As in, they were Jewish. I?d never met a Jewish family before then. But I didn?t know they were Jewish for many months and the first Christmas I knew them I brought over a Christmas cactus that was in full bloom. I knocked on the door and the mother said, oh, that?s lovely but we?re Jewish. I felt like a total fool but their wizened old grandma said that the Irish were a lost Jewish race anyway and so I was forgiven all my gentile shortcomings and taken into their fold.

I also learned how to negotiate from the first night I babysat. ?The dad (the mogul) made me defend why I should be paid. I got a little ticked, I mean, wasn?t he just supposed to pay me an hourly wage? Nope. He didn?t believe in that. What did I do that I should be paid for? Exactly? So I had to negotiate, every time I babysat. For six years. One time I refused to look after the children as I needed a day off and was at my friend?s hiding out poolside when I heard the crunch of tires outside the fence on the gravel drive. The dad popped his head over the fence. I barked from the hot diving board where I was tanning ?I?m not babysitting for love or money. I?m not. I won?t.?

He negotiated me into a babysitting but it cost him large. At 16 I was making 60 bucks an hour. Not bad for an afternoon?s nap time with babies.

I became a staple in their house. I loved being there because not only was there always great food (my first time seeing H?agen-Dazs in real life), deeply soft carpets, couches you never wanted to stand up from, Much Music blasting out of widescreen TV?s, but the dad was always-always-making deals on the phone. His business was pretty glamorous because it was the music industry and it wasn?t uncommon for me to chat on the phone with some well-known names. One musician in particular was invaluable to me when I couldn?t figure out the various clickers for the large screen TV?s. I would play on the floor quietly with the toddler and cock my ear to the pitching going on in the corner. I would smile as I could hear the familiar twists and turns of his sales technique and I learned an MBA?s worth of business intelligence from listening to him. I never tired of hearing him regale me with his stories. He?d crawled his way to the top, having never even graduated high school. He?d not been born rich but he?d make it to the big league. I admired him for his tenacity, humour and ability to see right through people in a moment?s exchange. He missed nothing.

There were always lot of galas and parties and I?d love sitting at the bottom of the stairs and look up at them in their tux and gown and watch as they stepped into the waiting limo. At the end of the night, maybe 2 am or so, I?d get to be driven home by the driver. Richard was one I remember well. One night I said, hey I don?t want to be driven home, can you take me to Club Soda? (the dad owned the nightclub so I knew I?d get in). I was 17 by this time but the rest of my friends had all turned 19 and I was forever lying about my age and trying to catch up. Nothing really new for me as the youngest.

Richard the driver lowered the window and said, are you sure? I said, oh yeah, just meeting up with my brother, no big deal. There was a long pause as he drove through the quiet streets then he turned right, towards the Granville St. bridge and I was screaming for joy on the inside. For years no one had ever seen me quietly being dropped off by stretch limos but for once I would be. I took my heels out of my backpack, tucked my sensible nanny shoes back in it and prepared to strike a pose.

It was a great moment to come up to that block long lineup that night, with Richard camping up the driver routine and opening the door as I stepped onto the sidewalk. The bouncer unclipped the rope and I? walked right in. Heady stuff for an underaged girl but for that brief moment I felt pretty rock star-ish.

I was a nanny for the first little girl from the time she was a small infant and held the second daughter the day she was born but as life would have it, I decided to pursue a Directing degree after my first year of college (which my nanny job paid for thank you very much). I had to say goodbye to my surrogate family. I loved the older daughter like my own having essentially been a third parent for her first 5 years and her wails and tears and my wails and tears on my last day holding her in my arms nearly kept me from leaving.

I learned so much with those children and that family. While watching the movie The Help the other day with my son he said, ?Wow, I can?t believe people treated their help that way back then.? I said, ?it?s not that far off the way some of the nannies were treated when I was in that world.?

It was true. Sometimes, as I?d be sitting in some mansion or other with a group of nannies, most of whom were Filipino, and the mothers would talk about us like we weren?t there. It shocked me but rolled off the backs of those young nannies, most of whom were thankful for the work. I felt a little sick they just took it like it was an ordinary part of their day.

One day we were in Shaughnessy at a birthday party and someone motioned to me and said, ?where you?d get her?? to the mother I worked for. She stood back and said, ?I didn?t ?get? her anywhere. Margaret is our friend and a part of our family.? And with that we left the party. A brave thing for her to do and I admired her for it.

For a job I never wanted, I gained a lifetime of lessons and memories. I?ve never regretted saying yes to holding that sweaty little baby and looking after her all those years. She was a handful but I loved her spirit and hope in some small way I made an impression on her life She certainly did on mine.

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Source: http://margaretdoyle.wordpress.com/2012/09/02/rockstar-nanny/

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Saturday, September 1, 2012

NCAA Division I women's scoreboard

[WEEK 3: Friday] In her first game back with the Bruins after playing with the New Zealand Olympic and Under-20 World Cup teams, Rosie White scored the game-winning goal in the 78th minute to lead No. 1 UCLA to a 2-0 win over No. 11 Wisconsin. Zakiya Bywaters added the insurance goal in stoppage on a 70-yard run with Badgers keeper goalkeeper Lauren Gunderson caught up field.

EAST. Seton Hall got goals from Ashley Clarke and German Marie Klemme to defeat Delaware, 2-1, and improve its record to 5-0-0.

EAST SCORES:
Boston Univ. 2 Monmouth 0
Bucknell 1 Buffalo 0
Colgate 3 Hofstra 2
Fairfield 0 St. Joseph?s 1
Hartford 1 Yale 2
Loyola (Md.) 1 Towson 1
Massachusetts 0 Harvard 2
Pennsylvania 2 James Madison 1
Pittsburgh 0 Miami (Fla.) 1
Providence 4 Lehigh 0
Quinnipiac 2 Vermont 1
Seton Hall 2 Delaware 1
St. Bonaventure 0 Syracuse 2
St. John?s 0 Brown 3

MIDWEST. Sophomore defender Sammy Scofield picked the perfect time to score her first career goal, heading in a pass from Elizabeth Tucker in the 71st minute to help Notre Dame defeat No. 16 Santa Clara, 2-1 before a crowd of 1,271 fans at Alumni Stadium. Freshman Crystal Thomas gave the Irish a 1-0 lead late in the first half on a penalty kick, but SCU tied the match 106 seconds into the second half on an unassisted goal by Olivia Klei.

MIDWEST SCORES:
Northwestern 0 #8 Marquette 2
#10 Missouri 4 Arizona State 1
SE Missouri State 0 #14 Louisville 4
Notre Dame 2 #16 Santa Clara 1
-----------------------------------------
Ball State 0? IUPUI 1
Dayton 2 Central Michigan 4
Evansville 0 Belmont 1
Kansas 3 Creighton 0
Iowa State 1 Iowa 3
Northern Illinois 0 Illinois State 1
Saint Louis 0 Denver 1
South Dakota State 1 Drake 2
Tulsa 2 Missouri State 1

SOUTH. U.S. international Christine Nairn scored a golden goal on a free kick with 82 seconds remaining in overtime to give the No. 6 Penn State a 2-1 victory over No. 24 West Virginia. A crowd of 2,057 watched the match ? the most-ever for a regular-season contest.
?
-- No. 7 Virginia posted its fourth straight shutout victory, downing Texas, 3-0, in Austin. The Cavaliers got goals from Molly Menchel, Makenzy Doniak and Caroline Miller. Doniak extended her streak of having scored in all five games of her freshman season.

-- Texas A&M rallied from a goal down to hand No. 25 Rutgers its first loss of the season with a 4-1 decision in front of 1,434 fans at Ellis Field. Kelley Monogue scored five minutes apart in the first half to lead the Aggies. Fellow sophomores Allie Bailey and Annie Kunz padded the lead in the second half.

-- Freshman Katie Bourgeois scored just over two minutes in and followed up with three more goals to give her four goals -- the third most ever scored in a single game by a Crimson Tide player -- in Alabama's 9-0 win at South Alabama.

SOUTH SCORES:
#2 Florida State 1 #15 Florida 0
UAB 2 #3 Oklahoma State 4
Texas 0 #7 Virginia 3
#9 UCF 2? Dartmouth 0
#17 Virginia Tech 4 Mount St. Mary's 0
#19 North Carolina 2 Connecticut 0
Princeton 1 #20 Wake Forest 2
#24 West Virginia 1 #6 Penn State 2
Texas A&M 4 #25 Rutgers 1
Kennesaw State 0 #25 Tennessee 2
-----------------------------------------
Appalachian State 1 High Point 2
Auburn 2 Samford 0
Baylor 3 Nebraska 0
Francis Marion 3 Alabama State 0
George Mason 1 Maryland 3
Houston Baptist 1 Texas State 1
Jacksonville 1 Navy 2
Lamar 0 Kent State 3
Memphis 4 Arkansas State 0
Mississippi 8 UALR 0
Mississippi State 3 Louisiana-Monroe 0
Richmond 3 Villanova 1
South Alabama 0 Alabama 9
TCU 2 Rice 0
Texas Tech 1 Nevada 0
USF 1 Georgia 2
UTSA 2 Eastern Michigan 1

WEST. Sophomore Stephanie McCaffrey scored her third goal of the season in the 56th minute as No. 12 Boston College tied No. 5 Stanford, 1-1, on the road. Stanford struck first in the 11th minute of play when Natalie Griffen chipped a loose ball over BC goalkeeper Alexa Gaul.

-- Junior Amanda Frisbie broke out in a big way with a four-goal performance in 56 minutes as No. 23 Portland routed Fresno State, 5-0, at the Husky Nike Invitational.

-- No. 13 Pepperdine fell, 1-0, at San Diego State in a battle of unbeaten and untied teams. The Aztecs struck on Megan Jurado's goal in the 58th minute and goalkeeper Rachel Boaz held off the Waves for the Aztecs fifth straight shutout win.

-- Kim DeCesare scored two second-half goals within a span of eight minutes to lift No. 4 Duke to a 2-1 come-from-behind victory over USC at the USC Futbol Classic.

WEST SCORES:
#1 UCLA 2 #11 Wisconsin 0
USC 1 #4 Duke 2
#5 Stanford 1 #12 Boston College 1
San Diego State 1 #13 Pepperdine 0
Thursday: BYU 1 #18 Long Beach State 0
Thursday: Cal State Fullerton 1 #21 Oregon State 2
Washington 2? #22 La Salle 0
Fresno State 0 #23 Portland 5
-----------------------------------------
Cal Poly 1 California 4
Loyola Marymount 2 CSU Bakersfield 0
UC Irvine 0 Oregon 1
UC Riverside 1 New Mexico State? 1
UNLV 2 Oklahoma 1
Washington State 2 San Diego 1
--------------------------------
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Source: http://www.socceramerica.com/article/48059/ncaa-division-i-womens-scoreboard.html

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Too busy to teach your child to ride a bike? Outsource it ...

By Lela Davidson

Getty Images stock

Cherished parent-child memory, or a major time suck? Some parents are outsourcing the job of teaching kids to ride a bike.

Teaching your child to ride a bike is so pass?. You may think it?s your job to teach balancing, pedaling, and braking, but busy parents now have options.

Canadian writer Rebecca Eckler recently confessed to hiring a professional bike-riding counselor?to school her daughter in the ways of training wheels and banana seats. Oh, the horror, right? What?s next ? a professional Tooth Fairy and an after-school nurse to kiss boo-boos?

The future of parenting is outsourcing!

Nick Pavlakis from Vancouver, B.C.-based Pedalheads says the bicycle instruction business is booming because parents don?t have time and they?lack skills. ?A lot of parents come to us and they?ve tried on their own and found it to be quite a struggle.?

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In Eckler?s case, squeamishness drove her to seek help. She couldn?t stand the thought of watching her kid fall, and argues?in a post on Mommyish that hiring someone to teach bike riding is no different than doing the same for swimming or music. ?At the end of the day, she knows how to ride a bike. End of story,? she told TODAY Moms. But her post sparked mommy judgment. Why? ?I think it?s just because a lot of people don?t know something like this is available,? she said.

Bike New York offers free bike-riding programs in city parks, summer camps, and after-school programs in New York City. No one seems to be outraged about that. Communications Manager Dan Suraci says demand for instruction is huge. Their weekend classes ? and the waitlist ? are always full.

?Our instructors teach every weekend so they know the common problems and can easily teach to overcome those,? Suraci said. He?also credits the group dynamic. ?Kids have a way of relating to other kids. When they get something and are energized about it, they share with each other.?

Bike riding and big moments

Rhonda Franz of Parenting Squad is a mother of three and holds a Master's Degree in Education, specializing in early childhood development. She doesn?t think it matters who teaches a child the actual skill of riding a bike.?She agrees with Pavlakis and Suraci that it's often easier for children to learn together with their peers than it is for mom or dad to teach a skill.

?We teach them so much, and they're just tired of us,? says Franz. ?If another person can more effectively teach a child a skill rather than a parent, who can argue with that??

Still, she said,?it does matter who's present for that major milestone in a child's life.

?The experience creates a memory for parents and children ? something they'll miss out on if it is outsourced,? Franz?said.?She encourages moms and dads to consider that before handing off the responsibility to someone else.?

Diane Mizota told TODAY Moms she might have hired out if she?d known she had the option, but is happy that she didn?t. As a single working mom in Los Angeles, Mizota always thought her ex-husband would be the one to teach their son to ride a bike. When that didn?t happen, she questioned whether she was up for the challenge.?

Remembering the moment she finally let go of that seat, she writes, ?I'm still claiming a major mommy victory. I overcame my mental block and earned the bragging rights and discovery that there is no feeling in the world like watching your kid ride a bike for the first time.?

Parenting is not as easy as riding a bike

Parents know that teaching a child to ride a bike can be difficult. Maybe that?s because you can?t really teach them. All we can do is support them while they learn. As in all things parenting, we are powerless over what happens after we let go. Sometimes we have to watch them fall. We can?t outsource that.

But what do I know? I subcontracted the whole thing to my husband.

Lela Davidson?is the author of?Blacklisted from the PTA. Her writing is featured regularly in family and parenting magazines throughout the United States and Canada. She blogs about marriage, motherhood,?and life-after-40 at?After the Bubbly.

Pedal, pedal to these related links:

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Mom-judging Olympics: The competition nobody meant to enter

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Source: http://moms.today.com/_news/2012/08/31/13571962-too-busy-to-teach-your-child-to-ride-a-bike-outsource-it

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TechKnowledgeIt: Windows Phone 8 to include Kid's Corner, a separate Start screen for parental control? http://t.co/8PYjlGw0 #tki

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Source: http://twitter.com/TechKnowledgeIt/statuses/241380916394590208

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ICU Misdiagnoses may Account for as Many Annual Deaths as Breast Cancer: Johns Hopkins Team


"Our study shows that misdiagnosis is alarmingly common in the acute care setting," says Bradford Winters, M.D., Ph.D., lead author and associate professor of anesthesiology and critical care medicine and neurology and surgery in the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "To date, there's been very little research to determine root causes or effective interventions," Winters says, noting that less lethal patient safety risks have received greater attention.

By reviewing studies that used autopsy to detect diagnostic errors in adult ICU patients, the experts in the Johns Hopkins Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality discovered that 28 percent of patients ? more than one in four ? had at least one missed diagnosis at death. In 8 percent of patients, the diagnostic error was serious enough that it may either have caused or directly contributed to the individual's death and, if known, likely would have changed treatment, researchers say. Infections and vascular maladies, such as heart attack and stroke, accounted for more than three-quarters of those fatal flaws.

Overall, the medical conditions most commonly missed by diagnosticians included heart attack; pulmonary embolism, an artery blockage in the lungs; pneumonia; and aspergillosis, a fungal infection that most commonly affects individuals with a weakened immune system. Cumulatively, these four conditions accounted for about one-third of all illnesses that doctors failed to detect.

Their review of 31 studies included 5,863 autopsies from a wide range of ICU types. The prevalence of autopsy-detected misdiagnoses, which were stratified by severity, ranged from 5.5 to 100 percent by study. Winters and his team categorized misdiagnoses based on four categories: vascular, which included conditions involving vessel blockages and bleeding, such as heart attack and stroke; all bacterial, viral and fungal infections; mechanical pathophysiological, a broad range of organ malfunction such as congestive heart failure and bowel obstruction; and cancer/other.

After collecting and classifying all error data, the researchers calculated how frequently misdiagnoses would be discovered if every patient who died in the ICU underwent an autopsy. Although autopsy is more frequently performed in complex patient cases in which the clinician may have a lower level of diagnostic certainty, the authors took this potential bias into account. Based on those adjustments, they say their calculations are conservative estimates.

Winters and his colleagues also found that, when compared with adult hospital patients overall, individuals in the ICU face up to a twofold risk of suffering a potentially fatal diagnostic mistake.

"It may be counterintuitive to think that the patients who are the most closely monitored and frequently tested are more commonly misdiagnosed, but the ICU is a very complex environment," Winters says. Clinicians face a deluge of information in a distracting environment in which the sickest patients compete for attention, most without being able to communicate with their medical team. "We need to develop better cognitive tools that can take into account the 7,000 or more pieces of information that critical care physicians are bombarded with each day to ensure we're not ruling out potential diagnoses," Winters says.

Although two-thirds of discovered misdiagnoses did not directly contribute to the patient's death, Winters says they're an important indicator of accuracy and aren't without costs. Patients may endure lengthened hospital stays, unnecessary surgical procedures and reduced quality of life because of non-fatal diagnostic mistakes, Winters adds.

The Armstrong Institute patient safety experts say the study points to the need for additional research to pinpoint the causes of misdiagnosis and identify tools to help diagnosticians more accurately assess patients.

Source-Eurekalert

Source: http://feeds.medindia.com/~r/allhealthnews/~3/GU9lXz1fFGA/icu-misdiagnoses-may-account-for-as-many-annual-deaths-as-breast-cancer-johns-hopkins-team-106282-1.htm

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