Thursday, February 28, 2013

River regulation influences land-living animals

Feb. 28, 2013 ? Forest-living insects and spiders become less abundant and birds are adversely affected along regulated rivers. Three different studies by ecologists at Ume? University in Sweden show that river regulation has a negative effect also on land-living animals.

It is already well known that river regulation influences salmon migration, aquatic insects and streamside vegetation, but effects on land-living animals have been poorly studied.

When free-flowing rivers become regulated, there is a reduction in the number of aquatic insects that, during spring and summer, emerge and fly onto land where they become food for land-living animals.

"Our studies show that the number of flying insects is lower along regulated rivers than along free-flowing rivers. This results in fewer forest-living insects and spiders along regulated rivers, as the resource they feed upon -- emergent aquatic insects -- is reduced," says ecologist Micael Jonsson, the lead author on two of the articles.

Together with a group of researchers, he has compared the abundance of insect-feeding animals along similar river stretches at four regulated and four free-flowing large rivers in northern Sweden and the Finnish Kemi River. Along these rivers, flying and ground-dwelling insects were caught. The flying insects were caught with a net mounted on the top of a moving car, and the ground-dwelling insects and spiders were caught in pitfall traps.

The research team also shows that birds are adversely affected by river regulation. Besides a standardised bird survey, nest boxes were used to investigate breeding success of insectivorous birds. The study species, the Pied Flycatcher, is a relatively common species and prefers to use nest boxes.

The results show that adult Pied Flycatchers breeding along regulated rivers lost more weight after their eggs were hatched and fewer of the chicks survived, because their food resource -- the insects -- was less abundant. Along one of the regulated rivers, the survival of the chicks was even lower than what is required for the species to persist.

There were also signs of whole bird communities being impacted by river regulation. Aquatic insect emerge and fly onto land before terrestrial insects peak in numbers. The aquatic insects are therefore an important food resource for birds early in the season, while, normally, birds are seen foraging away from aquatic systems later in the season.

"We could see that such seasonal movements of whole bird communities differed between regulated and free-flowing rivers," says Micael Jonsson.

That the effects are still visible half a century after regulation of these rivers was initiated clearly indicates that the changes are permanent. The studies also highlight the fact that different types of ecosystems influence each other via resource flows, and that changes in one ecosystem therefore affect plant and animals in nearby ecosystems.

"Therefore, there are even stronger reasons to question the use of biological insecticides to reduce the numbers of mosquitoes along rivers in central Sweden and elsewhere in the world, because it most likely results in poorer living conditions for a range of land-living animals."

The studies are published in the international journals River Research and Applications, Ibis, and Ecological Research.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ume? universitet, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal References:

  1. M. Jonsson, P. Deleu, B. Malmqvist. PERSISTING EFFECTS OF RIVER REGULATION ON EMERGENT AQUATIC INSECTS AND TERRESTRIAL INVERTEBRATES IN UPLAND FORESTS. River Research and Applications, 2012; DOI: 10.1002/rra.2559
  2. Darius Strasevicius, Micael Jonsson, Erik Nyholm, Bj?rn Malmqvist. Reduced breeding success of Pied Flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca along regulated rivers. Ibis, 2013 DOI: 10.1111/ibi.12024
  3. Micael Jonsson, Darius Strasevicius, Bj?rn Malmqvist. Influences of river regulation and environmental variables on upland bird assemblages in northern Sweden. Ecological Research, 2012. 27: 945-954

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/~3/bnoXJ3F6MP4/130228080238.htm

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Camera inside spiraling football provides ball's-eye view of field

Camera inside spiraling football provides ball's-eye view of field [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Feb-2013
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Contact: Byron Spice
bspice@cs.cmu.edu
412-268-9068
Carnegie Mellon University

Carnegie Mellon, Japanese researchers produce wide-angle video with single camera

PITTSBURGHFootball fans have become accustomed to viewing televised games from a dozen or more camera angles, but researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Electro-Communications (UEC) in Tokyo suggest another possible camera position: inside the ball itself.

The researchers have shown that a camera embedded in the side of a rubber-sheathed plastic foam football can record video while the ball is in flight that could give spectators a unique, ball's-eye view of the playing field. Because a football can spin at 600 rpm, the raw video is an unwatchable blur. But the researchers developed a computer algorithm that converts the raw video into a stable, wide-angle view.

Kris Kitani, a post-doctoral fellow in Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute, is aware that a football league is unlikely to approve camera-embedded footballs for regular play. Even so, the BallCam might be useful for TV, movie productions or training purposes. Two demonstration videos are available on his website: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~kkitani/Top.html.

One of his co-authors, UEC's Kodai Horita, a visiting graduate student last year at the Robotics Institute, will present a paper about BallCam on March 8 at the Augmented Human International Conference in Stuttgart, Germany.

Kitani said BallCam was developed as part of a larger exploration of digital sports. "We're interested in how technology can be used to enhance existing sports and how it might be used to create new sports," he explained. In some cases, athletic play may be combined with arts or entertainment; a camera-embedded ball, for instance, might be used to capture the expressions on the face of players as they play catch with it.

Other researchers have developed throwable cameras that produce static images or use multiple cameras to capture stabilized video. The BallCam system developed by Kitani and Horita, along with

Hideki Sasaki and Professor Hideki Hoike of UEC, uses a single camera with a narrow field of view to generate a dynamic, wide-angle video.

When the ball is thrown in a clean spiral, the camera records a succession of frames as the ball rotates. When processing these frames, the algorithm uses the sky to determine which frames were made when the camera was looking up and which were made when it was looking down. The upward frames are discarded and the remaining, overlapping frames are stitched together with special software to create a large panorama. Similar stitching software is used by NASA to combine images from Mars rovers into large panoramas and is increasingly found in digital cameras.

The algorithm also makes corrections for some distortions in the image that twist yard lines and occur because of the speed of the ball's rotation. Further work will be necessary to eliminate all of the distortion, Kitani said, and a faster camera sensor or other techniques will be needed to reduce blurring. Multiple cameras might also be added to the football to improve the finished video.

###

The Robotics Institute is part of Carnegie Mellon's School of Computer Science. Follow the school on Twitter @SCSatCMU.

About Carnegie Mellon University:

Carnegie Mellon is a private, internationally ranked research university with programs in areas ranging from science, technology and business, to public policy, the humanities and the arts. More than 12,000 students in the university's seven schools and colleges benefit from a small student-to-faculty ratio and an education characterized by its focus on creating and implementing solutions for real problems, interdisciplinary collaboration and innovation. A global university, Carnegie Mellon's main campus in the United States is in Pittsburgh, Pa. It has campuses in California's Silicon Valley and Qatar, and programs in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe and Mexico. The university is in the midst of "Inspire Innovation: The Campaign for Carnegie Mellon University," which aims to build its endowment, support faculty, students and innovative research, and enhance the physical campus with equipment and facility improvements.


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?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Camera inside spiraling football provides ball's-eye view of field [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Feb-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Byron Spice
bspice@cs.cmu.edu
412-268-9068
Carnegie Mellon University

Carnegie Mellon, Japanese researchers produce wide-angle video with single camera

PITTSBURGHFootball fans have become accustomed to viewing televised games from a dozen or more camera angles, but researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Electro-Communications (UEC) in Tokyo suggest another possible camera position: inside the ball itself.

The researchers have shown that a camera embedded in the side of a rubber-sheathed plastic foam football can record video while the ball is in flight that could give spectators a unique, ball's-eye view of the playing field. Because a football can spin at 600 rpm, the raw video is an unwatchable blur. But the researchers developed a computer algorithm that converts the raw video into a stable, wide-angle view.

Kris Kitani, a post-doctoral fellow in Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute, is aware that a football league is unlikely to approve camera-embedded footballs for regular play. Even so, the BallCam might be useful for TV, movie productions or training purposes. Two demonstration videos are available on his website: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~kkitani/Top.html.

One of his co-authors, UEC's Kodai Horita, a visiting graduate student last year at the Robotics Institute, will present a paper about BallCam on March 8 at the Augmented Human International Conference in Stuttgart, Germany.

Kitani said BallCam was developed as part of a larger exploration of digital sports. "We're interested in how technology can be used to enhance existing sports and how it might be used to create new sports," he explained. In some cases, athletic play may be combined with arts or entertainment; a camera-embedded ball, for instance, might be used to capture the expressions on the face of players as they play catch with it.

Other researchers have developed throwable cameras that produce static images or use multiple cameras to capture stabilized video. The BallCam system developed by Kitani and Horita, along with

Hideki Sasaki and Professor Hideki Hoike of UEC, uses a single camera with a narrow field of view to generate a dynamic, wide-angle video.

When the ball is thrown in a clean spiral, the camera records a succession of frames as the ball rotates. When processing these frames, the algorithm uses the sky to determine which frames were made when the camera was looking up and which were made when it was looking down. The upward frames are discarded and the remaining, overlapping frames are stitched together with special software to create a large panorama. Similar stitching software is used by NASA to combine images from Mars rovers into large panoramas and is increasingly found in digital cameras.

The algorithm also makes corrections for some distortions in the image that twist yard lines and occur because of the speed of the ball's rotation. Further work will be necessary to eliminate all of the distortion, Kitani said, and a faster camera sensor or other techniques will be needed to reduce blurring. Multiple cameras might also be added to the football to improve the finished video.

###

The Robotics Institute is part of Carnegie Mellon's School of Computer Science. Follow the school on Twitter @SCSatCMU.

About Carnegie Mellon University:

Carnegie Mellon is a private, internationally ranked research university with programs in areas ranging from science, technology and business, to public policy, the humanities and the arts. More than 12,000 students in the university's seven schools and colleges benefit from a small student-to-faculty ratio and an education characterized by its focus on creating and implementing solutions for real problems, interdisciplinary collaboration and innovation. A global university, Carnegie Mellon's main campus in the United States is in Pittsburgh, Pa. It has campuses in California's Silicon Valley and Qatar, and programs in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe and Mexico. The university is in the midst of "Inspire Innovation: The Campaign for Carnegie Mellon University," which aims to build its endowment, support faculty, students and innovative research, and enhance the physical campus with equipment and facility improvements.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-02/cmu-cis022713.php

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3 dead in Swiss workplace shooting

Police stand in front of a wood-processing company in Menznau, central Switzerland, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013, where several people were killed in a shooting. Police in Lucerne canton (state) said in a statement that the shooting occurred shortly after 9 a.m. at the premises of Kronospan, a company in the small town west of Lucerne. They said there were ?several dead and several seriously injured people? and that rescue services were deployed and the scene sealed off. (AP Photo/Keystone, Urs Flueeler)

Police stand in front of a wood-processing company in Menznau, central Switzerland, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013, where several people were killed in a shooting. Police in Lucerne canton (state) said in a statement that the shooting occurred shortly after 9 a.m. at the premises of Kronospan, a company in the small town west of Lucerne. They said there were ?several dead and several seriously injured people? and that rescue services were deployed and the scene sealed off. (AP Photo/Keystone, Urs Flueeler)

A police stands in front of a wood-processing company in Menznau, central Switzerland, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013, where several people were killed in a shooting. Police in Lucerne canton (state) said in a statement that the shooting occurred shortly after 9 a.m. at the premises of Kronospan, a company in the small town west of Lucerne. They said there were ?several dead and several seriously injured people? and that rescue services were deployed and the scene sealed off. (AP Photo/Keystone, Urs Flueeler)

BERLIN (AP) ? A shooting at a wood-processing company in central Switzerland on Wednesday left three people dead and seven wounded, some of them seriously, prosecutors said.

The shooting occurred shortly after 9 a.m. at the premises of Kronospan, a company in the small town of Menznau, west of Lucerne.

Three people were killed, among them the suspected assailant, police in Lucerne said in a statement. A further seven were wounded, several of them seriously. Officials gave no further details.

The local Neue Luzerner Zeitung newspaper cited a witness as saying that the shooter opened fire in the company canteen. It was not immediately clear who the shooter was, what the motive might have been or whether the assailant worked for the company.

According to the local town council, Kronospan has some 450 employees.

"At the moment we're all in a state of shock," Urs Fluder, a manager at Kronospan, told Radio Pilatus, a local station. "We will see that the families are properly informed," he added.

Gun ownership is widespread in Switzerland, thanks to liberal regulation ? a 2012 referendum to tighten controls failed ? and a long-standing tradition for men to keep their military rifles after completing compulsory military service.

An estimated 2.3 million firearms are owned by the country's 8 million people.

But gun crime is relatively rare, with just 24 gun killings in 2009, which works out to a rate of about 0.3 per 100,000 inhabitants. The U.S. rate that year was about 11 times higher.

Still, there have been several high-profile incidents over the years, including the killing of 14 people at a city council meeting in Zug, not far from Lucerne, in 2001.

Last month a 33-year-old man killed three women and wounded two men in a southern Swiss village.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-27-Switzerland-Shooting/id-05a06c01958c4e45944b823a2ede33e0

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Clearwire borrows $80 million from Sprint but still flirts with Dish

Clearwire borrows $80 million from Sprint but still flirts with Dish

Who knew that the greatest love triangle of the decade would involve the mobile industry's own Bella Swan, Clearwire? The network provider has accepted an $80 million loan from nailed-on suitor and sparkly vampire, Sprint, but Clear is still pondering a buyout offer from Jacob, sorry, Dish Network. The scuttlebutt around Forks the industry is that Dish will withdraw its bid after spurned by Clearwire one too many times -- but you never can tell with true love, or multi-billion business deals.

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Source: Reuters, WSJ

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/27/clearwire-borrows-sprint-cash/

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imgZine brings real-time communications platform to the U.S. ...

imgZine (pronounced ?imagine?), a Dutch app development company, today announced the U.S. launch of its real-time social publishing platform for mobile devices. Ideal for commercial publishers as well as internal and external communication programs for enterprises, imgZine offers a complete customizable app development platform, from concept to launch, including design, content management and app store placement, as well as all the necessary iOS and Android approval processes.

imgZine has spent the last 18 months fine-tuning the product since its launch in the Netherlands in August 2011. During that period, imgZine completed more than 30 apps for commercial publishing companies, large enterprises and the Dutch government. Most recently, imgZine produced a novel publishing app for DNP (De Nieuwe Pers), offering the world?s first digital newspaper that enables subscriptions to individual journalists. Earlier this month, imgZine also launched an externally targeted app for RaboBank, one of the largest banks in the Netherlands. This was the third app developed for RaboBank, who have adopted the platform for internal and external communication programs.

?Having spent our first year working with a few early adopters, we now have a fully optimized product and development process. With a proven product and an established European customer base, the timing is right to bring the benefits of our technology to the U.S. market,? stated Bert Kok, founder and president of imgZine. ?The key to our technology is engagement. Whether you?re a publisher providing relevant content to your readers, or you?re an enterprise communicating with your internal and external audiences, the content needs to be delivered in an engaging fashion. We have a platform that presents your content in real-time and in an interactive environment, keeping your audiences engaged at all times.?

Described as a white label Flipboard or Zite, imgZine?s platform requires no extra content creation, IT or design support and offers secure connections into private intranet networks to share sensitive information to employees in real-time. The technology leverages open APIs and web standards to push content in real-time to customized apps on smartphones and tablets running iOS, Android and Windows operating systems. Content channels can also be personalized by the user and are fully integrated with social media platforms.

Publishers in the Netherlands have been amongst the early adopters as the platform offers newspapers and magazines many unique and innovative features to help commercial publishers transitioning into the digital age. As with DNP?s novel publishing app, the platform allows readers to subscribe to individual journalists behind a paywall, creating potential new revenue streams for publishers while giving readers more control, selecting the content they want. In addition, publishers can incorporate full-page advertisements, which have significantly higher click-through rates than web-based or banner advertisements.

?While the real-time mobile publishing aspect of the platform shows obvious returns to newspapers and magazines, we believe the real opportunity lies in our ability to facilitate secure, customizable internal and external enterprise communications to engage and educate different communities with exceptional control. Our timing couldn?t be better. The self-publishing model is gaining rapid momentum and we?re extremely well-positioned with a fast, cost-effective and engaging platform,? concluded Kok.

imgZine has partnered with San Francisco-based media agency Impress Labs to facilitate the launch and U.S. sales of the imgZine platform. Both companies will be co-located at 811 Sansome Street, San Francisco, CA 94111. For further information please contact usa@imgzine.com or call 415-395-0941.?

Source: http://imgzine.pressdoc.com/40071-imgzine-brings-real-time-communications-platform-to-the-u-s

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Monday, February 25, 2013

J&J sees 4 cent per share Q1 charge for Venezuela devaluation

(Reuters) - Diversified healthcare company Johnson & Johnson, which makes consumer products like the Neutrogena-brand line, said on Monday that Venezuela's February 13 devaluation of its currency would cut first quarter profit by 4 cents per share.

The company said it would take the $100 million charge to make changes to its balance sheet to reflect the 32 percent cut in the bolivar's value. It does not expect that cut to change its earnings-per-share forecast for 2013.

In January, the company forecast 2013 earnings in a range of $5.35 per share to $5.45 per share.

Venezuela lowered the value of its currency to shore up government finances. It is the fifth devaluation in the past decade. Because of the move, other companies that sell consumer products in Venezuela have also announced charges this quarter.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/j-j-sees-4-cent-per-share-q1-132417502--finance.html

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Cutting edge Calif. tunnels poised to open

(AP) ? Two slick new mile-long tunnels are undergoing final safety tests this month, poised to divert motorists away from an ocean cliff-hanging roadway dubbed Devil's Slide south of San Francisco to a smooth, Alpine-like passageway unlike any in the U.S. today.

The $439 million project, paid with federal emergency funds, features massive exhaust fans, carbon monoxide sensors and a pair of 1,000-foot bridges soaring 125 feet above a grassy horse ranch. A series of 10 fireproof shelters are staggered between the double bores, and remote cameras dangle from the ceiling, monitored by an around-the-clock safety staff of 15.

The tunnels, the first in the U.S. designed and built with an Austrian technique, have a Euro-glossiness to them, with white, glistening walls and shiny pipes gliding down a rounded ceiling. There's a bit of theme park vibe as well, with retaining walls and fake boulders at the entrance sculpted by the man who shaped and molded Disneyland's Indiana Jones ride.

"A new highway tunnel is a rare beast in this country, and what they are doing at Devil's Slide is certainly different than anything we've seen in the U.S.," said Neil Gray, director of government affairs at the Washington, D.C.-based International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association.

The Tom Lantos Tunnels, named after the late congressman, are the first tunnels built in California in more than 50 years. There are only a handful of tunnels under construction in the U.S. today, including the Alaskan Way Tunnel in Seattle, and the fourth bore of the Caldecott Tunnel, just 34 miles east of Devil's Slide in the eastern San Francisco Bay area.

Unlike those tunnels built to relieve commuter congestion, this new pair, 15 miles south of San Francisco, will divert a treacherous 1.2-mile stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway that constantly erodes and frequently collapses.

It's a spectacular section of road that was never meant to be.

Just three years after its 1937 completion, the road tumbled into pounding waves below. The road has fallen eight times since, causing costly closures that have devastated communities to the south ? Montara, Moss Beach, El Granada, Princeton and Half Moon Bay ? that depend on the route for daily commutes and for tourism from motorists heading south from San Francisco.

Each closure turns a 7-mile scenic drive from Pacifica to Montara into a 45-mile detour through the hills, and some have lasted for months.

In addition to slides, every year there are serious ? often deadly ? accidents on the narrow roadway, which twists so sharply that safe drivers are forced to slow to less than 25 mph. Reckless motorists have plunged hundreds of feet down the cliffs or drifted into oncoming traffic, resulting in horrifying head-on collisions. Plans are to turn the road, once closed, into a pedestrian and cycling park.

The new route, once bitterly contentious, became a model of Californian cooperation in 2006 after local voters declared 3-to-1 that they wanted the more expensive tunnels instead of a state-backed 4.5-mile road that would cut inland around a rugged, sage-covered mountain, crossing streams and paving over sensitive plants and habitat.

But not everyone wants to be rerouted.

For decades, Capt. William "Smitty" Smith, has eased his SUV every morning through the stretch, driving south from San Francisco to his charter boat in Half Moon Bay.

"I come around the Devil's Slide bend and the whole world opens up, the entire coast, and I can see what kind of day I'm going to have," he said.

Now, instead of dense fog, rainbows, choppy seas and rolling currents, he'll face a tunnel long enough to challenge the toughest breath holders in the back seat.

Other residents are apprehensive about earthquakes. The tunnels cut through a seismically flashy area, where the notorious San Andreas fault grumbles and jolts.

"I'm not going to like going through those tunnels, but it's mind over matter," said Phoebe McGaw, working in a coffee shop a few miles south of the project. "And it's about time they finish."

Neither on budget nor on time, it was a 5-year, $240 million project when it launched in 2006. Seven years and $439 million later, Y. Nien Wang, project manager for design contractor HNTB Corp., said seismic concerns, along with few existing standards and regulations, made it a particularly challenging project.

The Federal Highway Administration is only now developing national tunnel inspection standards, and doesn't track information on tunnels in any systematic way. And since this was the first tunnel constructed in decades in California, there were many first-time decisions to be made about seismic safety and design.

"A lot of what we did will be a model for future tunnel work in California," said Wang.

The one-lane tunnels with wide shoulders for stalled cars and bicycles are built to withstand a magnitude 7.5 to 8.0 earthquake, the maximum movement geologists estimate for this reach of the San Andreas fault.

Caltrans spokesman Bob Haus said the site's geology also added costs. With one set of machinery for soft rock, a different set for hard rock, crews dug with what were at the time the two largest excavators in the country, 148 tons each. Each time they bumped into a different type of rock, they would have to swap out the entire set of machinery.

"We had to demobilize, remobilize, demobilize, remobilize," said Haus. "That adds up."

And then there were the red-legged frogs. Early on, planners realized that at least one of the 256 streams this protected species lives in ran close to the tunnel sites. Thus, a team of three biologists were hired to protect whatever frogs they could find.

Going from sliding roadway to high-tech tunnels has been a grinding process for U.S. Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., who spent hours in emotional hearings about the slide as a county supervisor 25 years ago.

"When we first started debating this issue, I was young and frisky. Now I'm old and color my hair," she said. "But residents on the coast no longer have to live in fear that their road will wash out and they'll be stranded."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-25-US-Devil's-Slide-Tunnel/id-1e64df0ac153460ab160d827bf2f871f

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What Is Covert Surveillance?

Covert surveillance essentially means watching something or someone without their knowledge. The Security Services carryout surveillance on suspected criminals or terrorists, Councils can carryout surveillance on suspected benefit cheats or private companies may carryout surveillance on employees they suspect of wrongdoing. Covert surveillance can be a powerful way to gather information which, when collated and analyzed along with other information, can help to inform you about a situation or a persons behaviour.

There are many ways of conducting surveillance operations. Modern technology has provided a whole raft of extra capability, including covert cameras or listening devices or the ability to snoop on peoples email or online communications although this latter one is only really available to police or security services who have a warrant! There are also the more 'traditional' ways of carrying out covert surveillance. One, which any avid viewer of police type movies or police shows before this decade will be more than familiar with, is the physical covert surveillance method which tends to see the surveillance operator following the target either on foot or in a vehicle and observing where they go and who they meet.

Although covert surveillance sounds quite an easy thing to do, it can be fraught with problems. Firstly, knowing whether your target is aware they are or maybe under surveillance will heavily influence how you carryout and plan your operation. Also understanding what the end result will be. Will the surveillance form part of an investigation that could see its result's been used in court? And then there are the moral questions. Whilst most people support the activities of the security services that target dangerous elements of society as they look to protect us, surveillance carried out on a suspected errant husband falls into different category.

Carrying out covert surveillance on a partner who is suspected of cheating can be construed as significant invasion of privacy and should not be undertaken lightly but it can also provide categorical evidence of the truth. Ensuring a correctly planned operation, with properly analyzed results is essential to getting to the truth, which is un-swayed and unbiased.

What is the different between covert and overt surveillance? Whilst covert surveillance is aimed at catching people's real behaviour and attitudes, overt surveillance aims at moderating and shaping peoples behaviour to ensure it is socially acceptable and does not intrude negatively on people around them. It also acts as an effective deterrent where people looking to break the law, or do something morally wrong, will look for another location or target when faced with the real possibility of being caught in the act.

Intelligent Investigations don't just look to provide you with information, we provide you with intelligence which you can base your decisions on with confidence. Whether that's for hiring a new employee, tracing a missing person or a decision to stay or leave your partner, we can provide you with accurate and timely intelligence.

http://www.intelligent-investigations.co.uk

Source: http://articles.submityourarticle.com/what-is-covert-surveillance--317993

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Vin Diesel shares new 'Riddick' photo with fans on Facebook - See pic

Vin Diesel gave his Facebook fans a special treat on Friday, February 22, when he shared a photo from his upcoming film "Riddick."

Diesel will be reprising his role as Richard B. Riddick in the film, which is the third movie in the "Riddick" franchise.

"It has been 9 years since 'The Chronicles of Riddick' was released... all along I knew I would eventually have to return to that dark place, the mind of an Alpha Furyan...," Diesel wrote as a caption for the photo on Facebook.

The 45-year-old actor is active on the social networking site and often shares personal photos and videos, including this video of him singing the Rihanna song "Stay."

"Riddick" is the follow-up film to the 2000 movie "Pitch Black" and the 2004 film "The Chronicles of Riddick." The new movie, simply titled "Riddick," will hit theaters on September 6.

Diesel is also set to reprise his role as Dominic Toretto in the film "Fast & Furious 6." The latest film in the "Fast & Furious" franchise reunites Diesel with Paul Walker, Michelle Rodriguez and Jordana Brewster. Dwayne Johnson, who appeared in "Fast Five," will also return to the franchise in the role of Luke Hobbs.

"Fast & Furious 6" hits theaters on May 24. Check out the trailer below.

(Copyright ?2013 OnTheRedCarpet.com. All Rights Reserved.)

Source: http://www.ontheredcarpet.com/Vin-Diesel-shares-new-Riddick-photo-with-fans-on-Facebook---See-pic/9004431

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

White House calls for wider access to research

FNAL

The White House directive seeks to make federally funded research easier to get to.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

Responding to calls for more open access to publicly supported research, the White House has directed a wide range of federal agencies to come up with plans to make the studies they fund freely available within 12 months of publication.

In a memo issued Friday, White House science adviser John Holdren also called on agencies to develop better digital systems for managing research data. The memo comes in response to a "We the People" online petition that was created last May and has since garnered more than 65,000 signatures.

The debate over access to federally funded studies has been simmering for years. Some in the scientific community have argued that such studies should be made freely and publicly available immediately because taxpayers have footed the bill for the research. Others have voiced concern that a government requirement to distribute the studies at no cost would deal a blow to the scientific publishing industry.

"We wanted to strike?the balance between the extraordinary public benefit of increasing public access to the results of federally-funded scientific research and the need to ensure that the valuable contributions that the scientific publishing industry provides are not lost," Holdren wrote in his response to the online petition. "This policy reflects that balance, and it also provides the flexibility to make changes in the future based on experience and evidence."

Policy changes required
The 12-month deadline for open access applies only to agencies that spend more than $100 million a year on research and development. The National Institutes of Health have already been following that policy, but now other agencies such as the Defense Department, the Energy Department, the Environmental Protection Agency, NASA and the National Science Foundation will as well. Exemptions to the policy may be made for national security or legal reasons.

"Full public access will require changes in policies, procedures and practices from the many stakeholders who participate in NSF's broad research portfolio spanning all scientific and engineering disciplines," NSF Director Subra Suresh said in a statement. "We stand with our federal science colleagues, as well as our non-governmental partners, to collaborate in accomplishing this transition on behalf of science and our nation's future."

A bill currently under consideration in Congress ??known as the Fair Access to Science and Technology Research Act, or FASTR?? would set a six-month time limit for providing free online public access to published research. However, the prospects for passage of that bill are uncertain. The Public Library of Science, a non-profit organization that has pioneered the open-access concept with such journals as PLOS ONE, hailed Friday's White House directive but said "we now need to take the next step and make open access the law of the land, not just the preference of the president."

One of PLOS' founders, biologist Michael Eisen of the University of California at Berkeley, delivered a sharper response in a Twitter comment: "That anyone is celebrating 12-month embargoes with no reuse rights to publicly funded research just shows how much further there is to go." He called the White House directive a "massive sellout of public interest to publishers."

The publishers of some of the best-known scientific publications, such as Science and Nature, make most of their money from institutions and individuals who purchase access to the published articles, one way or another. Open-access journals, in contrast, may?charge researchers a fee to publish their studies, and then make the studies freely available online. Alternatively, they may receive subsidies from institutions, or take contributions, or earn revenue from advertising and premium products.

The case of Aaron Swartz
The open-access debate figured in the controversial case of Internet activist Aaron Swartz, who faced federal felony charges for surreptitiously downloading more than 4 million academic papers from a controlled-access database at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2011 with the intent of making them freely available. If Swartz went to trial and was convicted, he could have been sentenced to more than 30 years in prison and fined as much as $1 million. But Swartz never went to trial. He committed suicide last month at the age of 26.

Swartz's death touched off a series of protests, as well as calls to reform the law under which Swartz was prosecuted. A piece of proposed legislation known as "Aaron's Law" seeks to decriminalize the kinds of terms-of-service violations that Swartz was alleged to have committed. ?At a memorial for Swartz held this month in Washington, Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., said he backed legislative reforms and declared that access to information is a "human right."

More about scientific publishing:


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/23/17062042-white-house-tells-agencies-to-widen-access-to-federally-funded-research?lite

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CLICK TO WIN: Can you join EWG President Ken Cook and Michael Pollan for dinner...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/ewg.org/posts/424863720934185

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Obama treats himself to boys' weekend in Florida

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. (AP) ? Faced with a lonely weekend of rattling around the White House without his wife and daughters, President Barack Obama arranged a golf outing with some buddies. In Florida.

Immediately after a speech Friday in his hometown of Chicago on building a stronger middle class, Obama flew into the airport in West Palm Beach and was driven for nearly an hour to coastal Palm City and behind the gates of the Floridian Yacht and Golf Club, an exclusive resort that will serve as the president's home away from home until he returns to Washington on Monday.

It's a weekend with the boys, presidential style.

Eyebrows might have been raised at the thought of the president, any president, high-tailing it out of Washington, without his family, for some "me time" hundreds of miles away from the Oval Office. First lady Michelle Obama and daughters Malia and Sasha are on an annual, President's Day weekend ski vacation out West.

As it turns out, a president going on vacation alone isn't all that uncommon.

And, Obama has taken "vacations for one" in the past, too.

During the weekend, Obama ? an avid golfer ? was expected to take full advantage of the club's private, 18-hole regulation golf course, which opened in 1996 and is owned by Jim Crane, a Houston businessman who also owns Major League Baseball's Astros, according to golfnow.com.

"A quiet weekend of golf," said White House spokesman Josh Earnest.

The president was not expected to leave the private club, which fronts the St. Lucie River, until he heads back to Washington. Members of the club and their guests have access to one of eight cottages, a 68-slip deep water marina, the club's 61-foot Viking yacht, a 24-foot Hurricane Deck Boat and the club's private helicopter service with two on-site helipads.

The White House arranged for the reporters who travel with the president to stay at a hotel in Port St. Lucie, about a 20-minute drive away from Palm City. They were not expected to see the president until it's time for the return trip home.

Obama's longtime buddy from Chicago, Eric Whitaker, joined him aboard Air Force One for the trip from Chicago to Florida. The two have played golf together in the past. Another regular member of Obama's golf foursomes is White House trip director Marvin Nicholson, who also traveled with the president on Friday.

America's presidents have been taking solo vacations for decades, according to Larry Knutson, a former White House reporter for The Associated Press who wrote a book about presidents and their vacations.

Although Bess and Margaret Truman visited him there just a couple of times, Harry Truman vacationed most often by himself in tropical Key West, Fla. Many aides, all men, accompanied him.

Truman enjoyed the male companionship and his wife may have stayed away out of a desire to not interrupt his cherished late afternoon and evening games of poker. Truman vacationed in Key West 11 times between November 1946 and March 1952; his wife and daughter joined him for the first time in November 1948, after his surprise win in that year's election campaign.

Franklin D. Roosevelt often visited his cottage at Warm Springs, Ga., alone; wife, Eleanor, didn't much care for the place or the Southern atmosphere. Roosevelt was at Warm Springs, on his own, when he died in April 1945. He also often traveled solo to his home in Hyde Park, N.Y., during World War II. The first lady often did not accompany Roosevelt on his wartime visits to Shangri-La, which is now the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland, or when he traveled on the presidential yacht or on Navy warships.

In 1997, Bill Clinton was in southern Florida for fundraising and to play in a golf tournament when he stumbled on steps at the home of golf pro Greg Norman and needed surgery to repair a torn tendon in his right knee. He was treated at a hospital in West Palm Beach before being flown to Washington for the operation.

Obama's stay at the Floridian isn't his first vacation without his wife and daughters.

In 2010, Obama was left alone in Washington as his 49th birthday approached. The first lady had taken Sasha with her to Spain for a vacation with friends, and Malia was away at camp. Rather than stay in the big White House by himself, he fled, with family dog Bo, home to Chicago for an intimate dinner with friends there that included Oprah Winfrey, Whitaker and White House senior adviser Valerie Jarrett, a fellow Chicagoan.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-treats-himself-boys-weekend-florida-095913407--politics.html

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Ex-Nokia Brand Vertu Selling TI Android Smartphone for $10,500

Vertu, the luxury brand Nokia sold 90 percent of in 2012, has introduced a new smartphone, the $10,500 Android-running TI.

As Nokia works to court developing markets with its new Asha 310, one of the least-expensive dual-SIM smartphones ever made, its former-brand Vertu is working to woo those on the far opposite end of the user spectrum. Its newest smartphone, the Vertu TI, retails for about $10,500. The TI is constructed of Grade 5 titanium, black leather, polished black ceramic and precious gems, and looks as though it was designed by Cadillac. Nokia, in need of cash to back its Windows Phone efforts, in June 2012 sold 90 percent of the high-end Vertu line to EQT VI, part of a private equity group in Northern Europe. "This is a logical next step in the evolution of Vertu as the world leader in luxury mobile products," Vertu President Perry Oosting said in a statement at the time. Another logical step, apparently, was to ditch the Symbian platform, as Nokia also has. But while Nokia put its eggs into Microsoft's Windows Phone basket, Vertu instead opted for Google's Android 4.0 to power the TI. Each TI is handmade by a single craftsman in England and bears the craftsman's signature. A Vertu Key at the top of the device includes a ruby in its design, and the phone's 3.7-inch screen?the largest on a Vertu device to date?is made of sapphire crystal and said to be both "virtually scratchproof" and four times stronger than the average screen. The TI's Titanium casing is said to be five times stronger than most smartphone cases, while also lightweight?though the first claim is surely more accurate than the second. The lightest version of the T1 weighs 6.4 ounces, while the Samsung Galaxy S III, by contrast, weighs 4.7 ounces and the Apple iPhone 5 weighs 3.9 ounces. The TI measures 2.3 by 5.1 by 0.5 inches, features an 8-megapixel camera on the back, a 1.3-megapixel camera up-front, a 1.7GHz processor, an audio experience designed by experts at Bang & Olufson and?did we mention??a concierge service. With a press of that ruby Vertu Key, users are provided "instant access to a curated world of benefits and services and a team of people available to the customer, 24/7 wherever they may be," Vertu says on its site. The Concierge service can also deliver briefings on 150 global destinations, "independently written with you in mind," and invitations to "experiences and exclusive events." Users can choose from four TI designs?Titanium Black Leather; Titanium Black Alligator; Titanium Pure Black; and a Titanium Black PVD Red Gold model that, as the name suggests, includes polished 18-carat red gold. While Nokia is hustling to save every dime it can and keep its business in the black, The Wall Street Journal reports that Vertu?which has about 1,000 employees and 470 retail points around the globe?increased sales in 2012 to roughly $400 million, up from 2011's $355 million. With its 10 percent share, Nokia may want to steal a marketing phrase and tell potential buyers to go ahead, they're worth it. Vertu instead tells them: "Nothing will ever feel the same."

Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/tech/~3/5uixVSxwVmI/

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Power Up Your Sense of Smell with a Little Practice

Power Up Your Sense of Smell with a Little PracticeYour sense of smell isn't quite the survival skill it used to be, but it's still important for detecting dangerous food, or rooting out uncommon odors. As it turns out, your sense of smell deteriorates over time, but the Wall Street Journal shows you how to protect that sense and even sharpen it a little.

Unlike sight, you can actually increase your ability to smell. This is great, because not only does losing your sense of smell make it so you can't sniff out odors, it also affects taste and how you perceive flavor. The good news? You can increase your sense of smell with a little practice. First off, you need to test how good at smelling you are:

Close your eyes and taste a little vanilla and chocolate ice cream. "If you can't taste the difference, you may have a problem," he says. Or hold a pad soaked in rubbing alcohol just beyond your chin. If you can smell it, your sense of smell is probably fine.

Next up, it's time for a couple of the easiest exercises you've ever done:

Be scent-conscious in your day-to-day life. "If you're drinking a cup of coffee or tea, actually smell it before you drink it, and when eating food, smell it first." he says. "If you do this on a regular basis, you will increase your sense of smell."

Alternately, you can take a more proactive approach:

To help train the brain to discern differences among scents, Dr. Hirsch recommends what he calls "sniff therapy." Choose three or four different types of scents that you find pleasant?say, a floral scent, such as those found in shampoo or soap; a fruity scent from berries, a banana or some other resilient fruit; and another, different scent, like coffee... Sniffing these scents frequently, around four to six times each day, will eventually spark different receptors in the nose to work.

It might seem silly, but losing your sense of smell means you can't detect gas leaks or spoiled foods. Head over to the Wall Street Journal for a few more exercises.

Uncork the Nose's Secret Powers | Wall Street Journal

Photo by Tobyotter.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/qDFQApdUGrk/how-to-power-up-your-sense-of-smell

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4 in 10 have had an office romance, survey finds

ABC

Workplace romance is a staple of TV shows, and not that uncommon in real life, either.

By Allison Linn, TODAY

Love across the cubicle walls is pretty commonplace, but you may not want to hold out for your co-worker sweetheart to put a ring on it.

A just-in-time for Valentine?s Day survey from jobs website CareerBuilder finds that 39 percent of workers have dated a co-worker at least once over the course of their career.

Still, only 30 percent of those who had dated a co-worker said the romance led to marriage.

The online survey of more than 4,000 workers was conducted by Harris Interactive in November.

The survey also found that most co-workers had dated a peer, but three in 10 admitted to dating their boss or someone else above them in the hierarchy.

Most people were open about their office romance, but a substantial minority ? 35 percent ? said they?d kept their romance confidential.

Are office romances common at your workplace?

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Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2013/02/13/16938796-4-in-10-have-had-an-office-romance-survey-finds?lite

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Boy Scouts Board Member ?Shamed? at Pebble Beach Pro-Am Golf Tournament

SHAME ON YOU, RANDALL


FOREST, Va., Standard Newswire?AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson was publicly confronted yesterday at the PGA golf tournament in Pebble Beach, California for his role in pushing homosexuality on the Boy Scouts of America.

Family Policy Network contracted an aerial advertising company that flew an airplane banner with the words, ?SHAME ON YOU, RANDALL? over the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am on Sunday morning from 11 a.m to noon, local time.

AT&T was the main corporate sponsor of the tournament. Randall Stephenson is the Boy Scouts of America National Executive Board member who is pushing to remove Christian virtues from the scouting experience.

FPN President Joe Glover said, ?Randall Stephenson?s support for open homosexuality in the Boy Scouts of America is an affront to the values of the institution. It would be impossible for a scout to be ?morally straight? while simultaneously rejecting God?s prohibition against same-sex behavior.?

Glover added, ?Homosexuality, like any other sin, should never be embraced as an identity. It leads to devastating emotional, physical and spiritual consequences. Therefore, individual scouts should urge friends trapped in its snare to repent and seek God?s forgiveness through the Lord, Jesus Christ.?

For more information:


Source: http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/53034

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Sunday, February 10, 2013

So-Called 'Snowpocalypse' Brings a Day of Constant Snowfall, but Not Much Else

Yahoo! News is gathering brief first-person accounts, photos and video from the severe winter weather in the northeastern United States. Here's one resident's story.

FIRST PERSON | STAMFORD, Conn. -- As night falls in Connecticut, the sky remains alive with fat flakes of snow weaving gentle paths to the six inches already accumulated and the even deeper banks and piles. Bodies of snowmen built during daylight hours succumb to the relentless white tides, blown by the occasional gusts. In the morning, only heads will remain, peering out over a frozen wasteland.

Or so was predicted by early forecasts. In truth, the snow is indeed still falling and the occasional snowman can be seen (and is being buried ever-deeper), but Winter Storm Nemo, snowpocalypse, Nemogeddon, or whatever it's being called has ended its first day with a whimper.

Six inches, no match for my Toro Power Max snow-blower, once sat in my driveway, but now grace my lawn in piles; another layer of snow softening their edges. There's probably an inch or so that has since fallen, which will be handled in the morning.

The day was largely uneventful. Nothing distinguishes Nemo from a typical heavy snowstorm. The temperature has been a moderately cold (30 degrees), the wind has not been a significant player, and the snow itself has accumulated, but not greatly and only over 12 hours.

Personal highlights included my 1-year-old's first appearance in falling snow, sledding with my 3-year-old, and sipping hot chocolate with the family in front of a non-functional fireplace. Sure, I worked remotely, cleaned up a bit, and spent some time clearing snow off the pavement, but at no point did the storm create any real problems in my household.

One recent reports calls for the heaviest snowfall to begin at 9 p.m. Another indicates the snow will taper-off at nine and be finished by midnight. Either way, tomorrow will be another day of shoveling, sledding, and hot chocolate. Time will tell whether it will bring more.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/called-snowpocalypse-brings-day-constant-snowfall-not-much-015200201.html

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Saturday, February 9, 2013

Beth Fish Reads: Weekend Cooking: Teen Cuisine New Vegetarian ...

Weekend Cooking is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book (novel, nonfiction) reviews, cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, quotations, photographs. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend. You do not have to post on the weekend. Please link to your specific post, not your blog's home page. For more information, see the welcome post.

_______

Nowadays, there's hardly a family or group of friends that doesn't include at least one vegetarian and perhaps even a vegan. Cookbook author, chef, and ex-TV star, Matthew Locricchio is an expert in recipes suited to kids and teens, which means his Teen Cuisine New Vegetarian is sure to be a hit with many young cooks and their parents.

Locricchio starts out with simple tips and information for beginning cooks and for those who are just starting out as vegetarians. His goal is to provide a core repertoire of dishes that have a range of flavors, are fairly easy to put together, and are appealing to both teen and adult vegetarians of all kinds. The book's mouth-watering recipes, from breakfast to dessert, offer modern versions of familiar foods plus some surprises.

Teen Cuisine New Vegetarian is printed on sleek but nonglossy paper and uses an earthy green and gold color scheme. Handy icons quickly point out which recipes are good for vegans and which for vegetarians who prefer raw foods. Scattered throughout the book are helpful chef's tips that ensure success. Besides introductions, beautiful full-page photographs, and clear ingredient lists, recipes are divided into fun and helpful "On your mark," "Get set," and "Cook!" sections that help teens develop the habit of preparing ingredients and gathering supplies before turning on the heat.

Most teens will appreciate the obvious respect Locricchio has for them. The recipes have not been dumbed down for young cooks and provide a global range of flavors. None of the recipes is difficult to make, but some require more time and perhaps a bit of patience. There is a quick egg scramble with Mexican seasonings as well as several versions of hand-rolled vegetarian sushi.

Another plus is that Teen Cuisine New Vegetarian doesn't rely heavily on soy products and fake meats. One or two recipes call for tempeh and at least one calls for tofu, but in general, Locricchio has developed dishes based on fresh vegetables, beans, and some grains. Vegans will, however, welcome the optional soy dairy products.

Here are a few of the recipes that look particularly good to me and I know would also appeal to my teenage, vegetarian niece (who also likes to cook):

  • Sloppy Janes, which are full-flavored and mushroom based
  • New Waldorf salad, which includes jalapenos and fennel
  • Hodgepodge, which is quinoa based and has bright flavors
  • Curried vegetarian stir-fry, which is perfect for summer and is shown in the scan
  • Cupcakes, chocolate and vanilla with both flavors of frosting
If you have a vegetarian teen in your house, Teen Cuisine New Vegetarian would be a welcome addition. But note that the cookbook is perfect for beginning cooks of all ages and anyone who is new to vegetarianism. I was also happy to see that most of the recipes would work for people on a gluten-free diet, and of course the vegan dishes are perfect for those with a dairy allergy.

Here's quick drink snack that works for both vegetarians and vegans.

Strawberry Lassi
Serves 2

  • 1 cup (10 to 12) fresh or frozen strawberries
  • 1? cups plain whole-milk yogurt or soy yogurt
  • ? cup cold water
  • 2 tablespoons sugar
  • 1 teaspoon ground cardamom
  • 5 to 6 ice cubes, plus more for serving
On your mark, get set . . .

If you are using fresh strawberries, wash them and let them drain in a colander, tossing them lightly, to remove any excess water. Cut away any dark spots or soft brown sections from the berries. Remove the stems. The tip of a teaspoon works well for this. Slice the strawberries in half and put in a blender.

If you are using frozen strawberries, let the whole berries partially thaw in a bowl. Transfer them to a blender.

Blend!

Add the yogurt, water, sugar, cardamom, and ice to the blender in the order given and press firmly in place.

Blend at high speed for 20 seconds, or until smooth.

Divide between two glasses and serve immediately.

Buy Teen Cuisine New Vegetarian at an Indie or a bookstore near you. This link leads to an affiliate program.
Published by Amazon publishing, 2012
ISBN-13: 9780761462583
Rating: B+
Source: Review (see review policy)
Copyright ? cbl for Beth Fish Reads, all rights reserved (see review policy).

Source: http://www.bethfishreads.com/2013/02/weekend-cooking-teen-cuisine-new.html

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What Are Dogs Saying When They Bark? [Excerpt]

In this excerpt from a new book, two canine intelligence researchers explain how dogs use barks to communicate


The Genius of Dogs, Image: Dutton, a Member of Penguin Group

Excerpt from The Genius of Dogs: How Dogs Are Smarter Than You Think, by Brian Hare and Vanessa Woods. Published by Dutton, a Member of Penguin Group (USA), Inc. ? 2013 Brian Hare and Vanessa Woods. Excerpted with permission from the publisher. All Rights Reserved.

Mystique is a dog who lives at Lola ya Bonobo, [the wildlife sanctuary in the Democratic Republic of the Congo] where Vanessa and I study bonobos. During the day, she is sweet and demure, but at night she becomes a different animal. She guards our house, barking ferociously every time someone comes within earshot. Usually in Congo, a little extra security is appreciated. The only problem is that our house is on the main trail where the night staff walk back and forth after dark. Mystique dutifully barks at all passersby whether she has known them for a day or all her life. Eventually, we just learned to sleep through it. But if there was really a cause for concern, like a strange man with a gun, I wonder if Mystique would bark in a way that would alert me that there was something dangerous and different about the person approaching the house.

Dog vocalizations may not sound very sophisticated. Raymond Coppinger pointed out that most dog vocalizations consist of barking, and that barking seems to occur indiscriminately. Coppinger reported on a dog whose duty was to guard free- ranging livestock. The dog barked continuously for seven hours, even though no other dogs were within miles. If barking is communicative, dogs would not bark when no one could hear them. It seemed to Coppinger that the dog was simply relieving some inner state of arousal. The arousal model is that dogs do not have much control over their barking. They are not taking into account their audience, and their barks carry little information other than the emotional state of the barking dog.

Perhaps barking is another by-product of domestication. Unlike dogs, wolves rarely bark. Barks make up as little as 3 percent of wolf vocalizations. Meanwhile, the experimental foxes in Russia [that have been bred to be docile] bark when they see people, while the control foxes do not. Frequent barking when aroused is probably another consequence of selecting against aggression.

However, more recent research indicates that there might be more to barking than we first thought. Dogs have fairly plastic vocal cords, or a ?modifiable vocal tract.? Dogs might be able to subtly alter their voices to produce a wide variety of different sounds that could have different meanings. Dogs might even be altering their voices in ways that are clear to other dogs but not to humans. When scientists have taken spectrograms, or pictures, of dog barks, it turns out that not all barks are the same?even from the same dog. Depending on the context, a dog?s barks can vary in timing, pitch, and amplitude. Perhaps they have different meanings.

I know two Australian dogs, Chocolate and Cina, who love to play fetch on the beach. Each throw sends them plunging through the waves, racing for that magic orb of rubber. When Chocolate retrieves the ball, inevitably Cina wrestles the ball from Chocolate?s mouth, even while Chocolate growls loudly. The girls also eat together, but when Cina tries the same trick with Chocolate?s food, the result is very different. A quiet growl from Chocolate warns Cina away.

It is difficult to see how Cina knows when it is okay to take something from Chocolate?s mouth, since both growls are made when Chocolate is aggravated and unwilling to share. If anything, Chocolate?s growl seems louder and scarier when she is playing than when she is eating.

Experiments have now shown that dogs use different barks and growls to communicate different things. In one experiment, researchers recorded a ?food growl? where a dog was growling over food, and a ?stranger growl? where a dog was growling at the approach of a stranger. The researchers played these different growls to a dog who was approaching a juicy bone. The dogs were more hesitant to approach if they heard the food growl rather than the stranger growl.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=4bc36a725d938a03568c52cabd8b25d4

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Male caregivers face gender bias at work

By Martha C. White

As a growing number of men adopt the role of caregiver to their children or elderly parents, they?re fighting outdated gender norms in the workplace ? a battle experts say will eventually usher in changes that benefit both male and female employees.

?Men who do take the time as caregivers are more likely to be seen as less committed to work because they?re violating gender norms,? said Kelli K. Garcia, a former fellow at O?Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law and current adjunct professor at the Georgetown University Law Center.

?The law does in this country does protect the ability to take leave? for both men and women, said Eileen Appelbaum, senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research. ?I think a lot of companies don?t realize that,? she said.

Joan Williams, director of the Center for WorkLife Law at the University of California ? Hastings, said both men and women can be subject to what she termed a ?flexibility stigma.? It can be an issue for women seeking a part-time or flex-time schedule, but for men, ?It?s typically triggered if they even try to take leave,? she said.

Demographic factors are behind the increasing number of men taking on the role of caregiver. The recession relegated many men, especially young men, to periods of unemployment or underemployment. At the same time, women have taken on more of their families? financial obligations. A Prudential Financial study published last year?found that 53 percent of women are the primary breadwinner, and 22 percent make more money than their spouse. ?Among female breadwinners, nearly a third say they earn more than their spouse as a direct result of the challenging economy,? the report said.

There also has been a shift in cultural norms that?s propelled men into caregiving roles, said Williams. ?A group of young men is really drawing a line in the sand and saying ?I don?t want to do it the way my father?s generation did it,?? she said. ?They?re caught between that ideal and workplaces that haven?t caught up.?

?As women have learned, you have to assert the fact that this is not a ?choice,?? Appelbaum said. It appears that more of them are doing just that: roughly 12 percent of the lawsuits filed alleging family responsibilities discrimination in the workplace are filed by men.

The experts think this number is bound to grow. According to a study published in 2009 by the National Alliance for Caregiving in collaboration with the AARP, nearly 30 percent of Americans perform at least some caregiving tasks for relatives, and about one-third of caregivers are men. ?I think it?s clear that the demands on men as well as women are going to increase in terms of family care,? Appelbaum said.

In California, which began mandating paid family leave in 2004, the effect on men?s participation in caregiving is measurable, Appelbaum said. The number of men taking leave to care for a relative rose slightly between 2004 and 2012, from 30 percent to 33 percent, but the number taking time off after the birth of a child nearly doubled, climbing from 17 percent to 29 percent in that same time. ?When we talk to HR managers about this... they told us that once the leaves were paid, it became more acceptable,? Appelbaum said.

Advocates for more flexible workplaces say men?s involvement ultimately will have a snowball effect that will lead to positive change. ?The real advantage of having men taking leave is that when the issue of leave and the issue of caregiving is not just a women?s issue, you?re more likely to get good policies and not get gender-based judgments,? Garcia said.

?The more that men start taking leave and it becomes normalized and expected, then those judgments are going to change,? she said. ?We?re at a moment where... we have this opportunity to change the workplace culture."?

Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2013/02/08/16887815-male-caregivers-face-gender-bias-at-work?lite

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