Sunday, September 30, 2012

Ex-NY Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger dies

NEW YORK (AP) ? Few moments in American journalism loom larger than the one that came in 1971, when New York Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger had to decide whether to defy a president, and risk a potential criminal charge, by publishing a classified Defense Department history of U.S. involvement in Vietnam.

His choice, to publish the Pentagon Papers and then fight the Nixon administration's subsequent attempt to muzzle the story, cemented Sulzberger's place as a First Amendment giant ? a role being celebrated after he died Saturday at age 86.

The former publisher, who led the Times to new levels of influence and profit while standing up for press freedom, died at his home in Southampton, N.Y., after a long illness, his family announced.

During his three-decade tenure, Sulzberger's newspaper won 31 Pulitzer prizes while he went about transforming the family business from perpetually shaky to the muscular media behemoth it was when he retired.

Weekday circulation climbed from 714,000 when Sulzberger became publisher in 1963 to 1.1 million when he stepped down as publisher in 1992. Over the same period, the annual revenues of the Times' corporate parent rose from $100 million to $1.7 billion.

Yet it was Sulzberger's positions on editorial independence that made him a hero of the profession, like when he rejected his own lawyers' warnings that even reading the Pentagon Papers, let alone publishing them, constituted a crime.

Sulzberger, who went by the nickname "Punch" and served with the Marine Corps, privately worried that he had doomed the newspaper but gave interviews saying the Times wouldn't allow the U.S. government to cover up its mistakes under the guise of national security.

"That is a wonderful way, if you've got egg on your face, to prevent anybody from knowing it: Stamp it SECRET and put it away," he said.

"Punch, the old Marine captain who never backed down from a fight, was an absolutely fierce defender of the freedom of the press," his son, and current Times publisher, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., said in a statement.

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

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

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

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

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

"You forget the unbelievable outrage that greeted those sections. But in retrospect it was the right decision both editorially and economically," said Nicholas Lemann, dean of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.

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

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

"As an editor, you knew that if you went to the publisher and sought his support on an issue that you deemed to be of high importance, you could pretty much count on getting it. He knew how to back his people," Lelyveld said.

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

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

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

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

In 1971, the Times led the First Amendment fight to keep the government from suppressing the Pentagon Papers.

Sulzberger read more than 7,000 pages of the documents and presided over a dramatic internal debate before deciding to publish. Then, he resisted a demand by Attorney General John Mitchell that the paper halt the series after two installments.

A federal judge delayed publication of additional installments, but in a landmark decision, the U.S. Supreme Court eventually sided with the Times and The Washington Post, and allowed the series to continue.

"There were those that thought some kind of deal or reconciliation with the government should have been sought," said First Amendment lawyer Floyd Abrams, who represented the Times in the court case. "It was Punch Sulzberger who made the decision to resist the government's effort. In making that decision he set in motion a litigation which not only preserved but protected the First Amendment for generations."

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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HOME IMPROVEMENT WALTIP.COM: Full Mitt Romney Fundraiser ...

----PARIS,TEXAS, TOPIX FORUM DISCUSSION---We reported on the PEDC?s (Paris Economic Development Corporation) plan to get a coordinated plan through a unified plan by paying a Gregg County, Texas, firm to act as "third-party facilitators" at a meeting or two.

Which, in and by itself, is a heck?ova plan ?
Taxpayers, who pay the PEDC?s bills, coughed up at least $1,710 for the consultants. Evidently, an outside firm was needed to ?facilitate? the meeting to get a plan to get a plan, because. . . ?
Surely, the PEDC doesn?t believe no one in our Paris-Lamar County area knows how. . .?
The PEDC also have taxpayers on the hook to pay for a study by an Oklahoma retail development ?expert? they hired, and to pay for a long-term contract for his help in soliciting retail businesses to Paris (see Drowning on Dry Land).
Why is the PEDC even considering bringing in competition for local merchants and businesses? They have enough problems without the PEDC adding to them. The PEDC should be helping, not bringing in competition. It is as if the PEDC has never heard of the ongoing retail campaign urging everyone to "Shop Paris". (But, why is the PEDC involved in ?retail development?? It?s NOT something they're chartered to do...)
A PEDC employee, a ?community development specialist?, has moved or is moving to Georgia. The PEDC will pay her $800 per month for the next 10-months to handle "electronic media? and to maintain the PEDC website. But according to previous reports, the website and its maintenance is being done by CDSuites of Longview, Texas ( see job_creation).
And, no, it is not the money: It is the thinking that leads to the actions -
Taxpayers, through the PEDC, have guaranteed for ten years, $5.8 million for the financing of existing and new debt and around $1.8 million for operating capital for a local firm. The firm?s headquarters are in Paris, but they also have offices in Dallas, Waco, Sulphur Springs, and other Texas communities, as well as in North Carolina.
In exchange, we?re getting a promise of 25 new jobs within the next five years. And the PEDC has given a $105,000 ?cash incentive? for another 10 jobs at the company?s headquarters.
No report of how much money or what kind of guarantees, if any, taxpayers in the firm?s other locations chipped in or provided.
Shouldn?t Paris taxpayers know if the guarantees and/or operating capital they?re providing will be used to help underwrite the firm?s business operations in those communities? How could it not help . . . ?
But, how would we know?
These PEDC actions signal it can do what it wants, and spend the taxpayer?s money for whatever purpose they want, as long as they have some kind of semi-plausible deniability. This is a moral hazard, and weakens confidence in what they say and do.
In all these actions, the PEDC is funding jobs and job creation opportunities for communities ? and states ? in competition against us!
And the PEDC calls what they?re doing ?Economic Development"?
Our question is, ?For whom??

Source: http://waltip.blogspot.com/2012/09/full-mitt-romney-fundraiser-video-part.html

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The Samsung Sales Injunction May Lift

Fans of Samsung prepare to smile: a U.S. appeals court has ruled that a lower court can take a second look at the sales ban of Samsung?s?Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet device.

After a lengthy and bruising legal battle with Apple, the trial?s jury decided that Samsung had not in fact committed patent infringement on the issue that led to an injunction banning the sale of its Tab tablet device. Put another way, the jury decided that Samsung hadn?t in fact breached Apple?s IP in the way that was claimed to cause the sales blockage of its hardware.

However, the injunction couldn?t be lifted as Samsung had appealed the ruling, moving it into a sort of legal quagmire. Friday?s ruling clears the path for it to be looked at again. According to Reuters, this means that U.S. Judge Lucy Koh can now ?consider the issue.?

Judge Koh became something of a cult figure in tech circles during the trial between the two giants for her sharp wording and scant patience for tactics that she found slow and?ponderous.

If you aren?t brushed up on the legal spat between Apple and Samsung, don?t worry; it?s but one of the larger battlefield of IP conflicts going on at the moment. What matters in this moment is that even though Samsung took a spanking at the hands of Cupertino in court, the foundational argument for the banning of its tablet?s sales here in the United States has been undermined, and the injunction itself is now in danger.

That?s good news for fans of Samsung?s devices, and likely irksome to those in Apple?s corner.

Top Image Credit:?opopododo

Source: http://thenextweb.com/insider/2012/09/29/us-appeals-court-rules-sales-ban-samsungs-galaxy-tab-10-1/

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Robots to keep farmed fish fit and healthy?

22 hrs.

The fish we eat for dinner may soon be fit and healthy, not because they spend their lives swimming out in the open ocean, but because a robot of sorts gave them a daily workout in an aquaculture pen.

Fish farms are far from perfect. Some research has shown, for example, that?sea lice from salmon farms are detrimental to migrating wild salmon. And inside the farm, mortality can creep up to around?20 percent due to illness and wounds.?

But as the world?s?wild fish populations continue to plummet?and?human populations continue to increase, aquaculture is likely to play an increasingly important role in feeding the world.

The robotic technology is getting a closer look as one way to improve the industry.

?Exercise in fishes -- as in humans! -- should have a positive effect? on their well-being,?Claudio Rossi?at the Center for Automation and Robotics at the Polytechnical University of Madrid, told NBC News in an email.

Fish that get a daily workout, for example, will have less fat and stronger immune systems as well as be less aggressive.

?Fish would die less because of illness or wounds caused by other fishes, which is an economic advantage,? Rossi said.

He and colleagues contributed a chapter to ?Swimming Physiology of Fish,? a recently published policy book to guide future research on fisheries science and aquaculture.

Their basic idea is to ?devise a system ? that would trigger the natural behavior of schooling, and that could make fish swim in a given way,? Rossi said.

Such a system could be a fish-like robot, such as one under development by Maurizio Porfiri at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University to?steer fish away from pollution and around dams.?

Another possibility is something akin to the?OptoSwim lighting?technology?that stimulates schooling behavior in fish.

Developing the most effective system is a challenge, Rossi noted, given the need for reliability and endurance in a wet environment as well as understanding fish behavior.

?It is not completely clear which are the factors that would ?fool? live fishes and make them behave in a determined way,? he noted.

???hat tip?to?Scientific American?

John Roach is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. To learn more about him, check out his?website. For more of our?Future of Technology?series, watch the featured video below.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/robots-keep-farmed-fish-fit-healthy-6170467

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Multiple similarities discovered between cancer cells and induced pluripotent stem cells

ScienceDaily (Sep. 28, 2012) ? UC Davis investigators have found new evidence that a promising type of stem cell now being considered for a variety of disease therapies is very similar to the type of cells that give rise to cancer. The findings suggest that although the cells -- known as induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) -- show substantial promise as a source of replacement cells and tissues to treat injuries, disease and chronic conditions, scientists and physicians must move cautiously with any clinical use because iPSCs could also cause malignant cancer.

The article, "Induced pluripotency and oncogenic transformation are related processes," is now online in the journal, Stem Cells and Development.

"This is the first study that describes the specific molecular pathways that iPSCs and cancer cells share from a direct comparison" said Paul Knoepfler, associate professor of cell biology and human anatomy, and principal investigator of the study. "It means that much more study is required before iPSCs can be used clinically. However, our study adds to a growing knowledge base that not only will help make stem cell therapies safer, but also provide us with new understandings about the cancer-causing process and more effective ways to fight the disease."

Since 2007, cell biologists have been able to induce specialized, differentiated cells (such as those obtained from the skin or muscle of a human adult) to become iPSCs. Like embryonic stem cells, iPSCs are a type of stem cell that is able to become any cell type. This "pluripotent" capability means that iPSCs have the potential of being used in treatments for a variety of human diseases, a fundamentally new type of clinical care known as regenerative medicine.

iPSCs are considered particularly important because their production avoids the controversy that surrounds embryonic stem cells. In addition, iPSCs can be taken from a patient's own skin and induced to produce other needed tissues, thereby evading the possibility of immunologic rejection that arises when transplanting cells from a donor to a recipient. In contrast to therapies based on ES cells, iPSCs would eliminate the need for patients to take immunosuppressive drugs.

Earlier research indicated that both ES cells and iPSCs pose some health risks. Increasing evidence suggests that pluripotency may be related to rapid cellular growth, a characteristic of cancer. iPSCs, as well as embryonic stem cells, are well known by scientists to have the propensity to cause teratomas, an unusual type of benign tumor that consists of many different cell types. The new UC Davis study demonstrates for the first time that iPSCs -- as well as ES cells -- share significant similarities to malignant cancer cells.

The investigators compared iPSCs to a form of malignant cancer known as oncogenic foci that are also produced in laboratories; these cell types are used by medical researchers to create models of cancer, particularly sarcoma. Specifically, the scientists contrasted the different cells' transcriptomes, composed of the RNA molecules or "transcripts." Unlike DNA analysis, which reflects a cell's entire genetic code whether or not the genes are active, transcriptomes reflect only the genes that are actively expressed at a given time and therefore provide a picture of actual cellular activity.

From this transcriptome analysis, the investigators found that the iPSCs and malignant sarcoma cancer cells are unexpectedly similar in several respects. Genes that were not expressed in iPSCs were also not expressed in the cancer-generating cells, including many that have properties that guide a cell to normally differentiate in certain directions. Both cell types also exhibited evidence of similar metabolic activities, another indication that they are related cell types.

"We were surprised how similar iPSCS were to cancer-generating cells," said Knoepfler. "Our findings indicate that the search for therapeutic applications of iPSCs must proceed with considerable caution if we are to do our best to promote patient safety."

Knoepfler noted, for example, that future experimental therapies using iPSCs for human transplants would most often not involve implanting iPSCs directly into a patient. Instead, iPSCs would be used to create differentiated cells -- or tissues -- in the laboratory, which could then be transplanted into a patient. This approach avoids implanting the actual undifferentiated iPSCS, and reduces the risk of tumor development as a side effect. However, Knoepfler noted that even trace amounts of residual iPSCs could cause cancer in patients, a possibility supported by his team's latest research.

Encouragingly, the UC Davis team also found important differences between the cell types that could provide clues to making iPSCs safer. As part of this study, the researchers transformed tumor-generating cell types into iPS-like cells by manipulating their genetic make up. Although the reprogrammed cancer cells did not behave identically to iPSCs, and had reduced ability to produce different cell types, the findings are exciting because they suggest that cancer cells can be reprogrammed into more normal cell types, possibly opening the door to new cancer therapies.

"We found that we could reprogram the cancer cells to behave more akin to normal stem cells," said Knoepfler. "This suggests that such cancer cell reprogramming could become a new way of treating cancer patients, in essence telling their tumors to turn into normal stem cells."

Knoepfler said the team is continuing to study the differences and similarities between iPSCs and cancer cells, as well as investigate possible ways to make iPSCs safer. It appears that targeting specific metabolic pathways may enhance iPSC formation, while modulating other pathways may improve safety.

Other study authors are John Riggs, Bonnie Barrilleaux, Natalia Varlakhanova, Kelly Bush and Vanessa Chan, all of the UC Davis Department of Cell Biology and Human Anatomy.

The study was funded by grants from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine and from the National Institutes of Health (NIH grant 5R01GM100782-01).

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Davis Health System.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. John W Riggs, Bonnie Barrilleaux, Natalia Varlakhanova, Kelly Bush, Vanessa Chan, Paul Knoepfler. Induced pluripotency and oncogenic transformation are related processes. Stem Cells and Development, 2012; : 120921101948002 DOI: 10.1089/scd.2012.0375

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/cxC7BCZc-5g/120928141100.htm

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Yikes! Fish sports a penis with 4 hooks

A male fish from Mexico has some fearsome genitalia. Equipped with four hooks, the male's sex parts might allow him to grab onto a resistant female during mating, researchers say.

The freshwater llanos mosquitofish, or Gambusia quadruncus, was described this month in the Journal of Fish Biology by a team led by researcher Brian Langerhans of North Carolina State University. Langerhans explained that the male's hooked genitals may be a counter-response to the female's own defenses against undesirable mates.

"Typically, reproduction is more costly in females, so females favor ways of reducing mating with 'lower quality' males, but reproduction is cheap in males and so selection favors ways of mating with as many females as possible," Langerhans said in a statement.

Females of this species have evolved to have a big ball of tissue that blocks most of the genital pore. This means the female would have to deliberately allow the male to mate with her unless the male evolved a counter-response, Langerhans explained.

The four-hooked genitalia could help the males overcome resistance and latch onto a female's genital pore and deposit sperm inside her. (Fertilization in the Gambusia genus takes place inside the female's body and she gives birth to live young.)

Strange as it seems, such hooks aren't unheard of. Another new species (Phallostethuscuulong) that was recently discovered in Vietnam sports sex parts that jut out of its head and are equipped with a rod and a jagged hook to clasp the female during mating.

  1. Science news from NBCNews.com

    1. Can a plug-in change your politics?

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: If your Web browser told you that your online reading habits leaned toward the conservative or liberal side of the political spectrum, would you seek out more diversity?

    2. 'Frozen Dead Guy' may move to Michigan
    3. Tired of killing, tribe resorts to old traditions
    4. China volcano shows signs of unrest

The researchers who described that fish in a July edition of the journal Zootaxa similarly said hooking onto his mate probably helps ensure the male's fertilization success. [ Image Gallery: Weird 'Penis Head' Fish ]

Langerhans also described another strange feature in the llanos mosquitofish. The females have a colorful spot on their anus that seems to indicate the location of the female's genital pore, reproductive status and species. The latter could reduce cross-breeding, Langerhans said.

"So it may be thatG. quadruncus evolved different anal spots to help reduce interspecies matings and possible formation of hybrids," he said in a statement.

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

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49215686/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Facebook gets generous with new Facebook Gifts feature

Jim Bell, an executive producer at?Today, wants you to know that "it was absolutely" his "call" to fire Ann Curry, throwing himself in front of the criticism Matt Lauer was getting from Curry fans.?Even though Today's ratings have been sagging? ?and the ,?nothing too terrible has happened?the show hasn't ended, the cheeriness is still there, Kathie Lee is still drinking before noon?and now Bell has come forward to claim responsibility for the call. "It was definitely not Matt?s call," . ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/technology-blog/facebook-gets-generous-facebook-gifts-feature-224855030.html

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Gold 401k Investing Basics | Avid Investor Group

?

Gold is the only rare metal that?s well worth millions of dollars in the whole world. When invested wisely, it can secure the sum of money saved for the future. Almost all people who are employed need to have the Individual Retirement Account as well as a 401k account. Generally, 401k plans are handled by professional people, whereby the employees and the business owners participate in the savings. This form of investment is commonplace in society to say the least.

Gold 401k investing is a way of keeping some gold within the 401k account that?s later on converted into cash during retirement. The lone person who will understand the significance of 401k gold investment will be the individual who has a strategy for his retirement.

For any person to make certain that the plan is holding some gold, he should make an investment with a program which includes a good reputation for frequent audits of gold inventory. Those are the only accounts that will help them save a bit of gold in the IRAs.

Everyone can convert the gold 401k program into money after retirement. Usually, all of the invested gold is preserved in the trustees. These internationally recognized trust companies provide twice a year reports to each individual who has invested in them, to show them their asset reports, the recent price of gold, and earnings.

All those who have gold 401k accounts are free to invest in gold mining stocks. Gold mining stocks are affordable compared to other investment options.

It is quite unsafe to have your gold in your home. The thing you need would be to look for someplace that is secure. Starting a gold account may be an alternative in this. In the majority of nations, the prices of gold are considered to be quite steady, which means that, they are less influenced by monetary disasters. 401k plan holders may check with their own Individual Retirement Account managers, to open on their behalf a different gold plan, wherein they could purchase gold from some other assets and secure it in those accounts. After retirement, the precious metal in the gold 401k plans will steadily provide for these individuals.

Advantages Of 401k Gold Investing

* Several of the advantages of these investments are that everyone can rollover his 401k funds to gold and benefit from its immediate improvement.

* There are plenty of monetary planners who are consistently ready to give you advice about gold 401k investment methods.

Factors To Consider On The Gold 401k Investment Procedure

Before selecting if he should continue or stop such procedure, it is always essential for everyone to ask himself the following questions:

* Just how much gold would his first investment obtain

* How much for every ounce did he invest to get the gold, and lastly

* Exactly what is the regular price of this gold after 1, 2, or 3 months

Each of these things can help the investor to determine whether he?ll terminate or continue with the 401k gold investing procedure.

This guide is concerning the fundamentals of gold 401k investing. There are far more in-depth information that you must learn about 401k gold.

Source: http://avidinvestorgroup.com/2012/09/122790/

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Communication Items You'll Want Before TSHTF | silveristhenew

Be prepared for the next great transfer of wealth. Buy physical silver and storable food.

alt-market.com / September 27, 2012

This article (part one of a series) was contributed by Dan and Sheila of SurvivingSurvivalism.com

Having good radio equipment is important for many reasons.? What will you do when there is no Internet?? What will you do when there is no cellphone service?? How will you know what?s going on in other parts of the country, let alone the world?? Radio signals don?t need an intermediary, they just bounce all over the earth and are received by radios.

It?s not even necessary that you transmit (speak) on the radio, but the information you can garner from just listening to others from far away is worth the time it takes to understand how to use a radio.

There are many ways to go in purchasing a communications radio, depending on your budget.? You can buy yourself a brand new, state-of-the-art Kenwood or I-com for example, both of which are great radios.? But the expense can be quite high, typically in the many hundreds of dollars.

A less expensive but just as viable way to go is a ?free band radio?.? This is a 10 meter ham radio that has had additional freeband frequencies installed.?? This will expand coverage to include the 12, 11 (the CB frequency band) and sometimes 9 meter bands.? In a converted CB radio, this is called a radio with extra channels.

A 10 meter radio is very common and inexpensive, as well as their low-rent cousins, CB radios.? Many can be found on ebay for under $200 and may already have the additional frequencies installed.? Also any good SSB (single side band) CB radio can have what they call ?Extra Channels Added? by? any good tech.? (Lots of mods here http://www.dxzone.com/tag-cb-mods/.) CB shops at truck stops? often times have used free band radios for sale at good prices, but check Ebay for prices on used radios before going.

Any frequency on the radio can be used in various modes, the most common being AM, Single Side Band (SSB), Upper Side Band (USB) and CW. CW means constant wave mode, which is the mode used for Morse Code and RTTY.? It is possible to send several and receive multiple? pages of text files via RTTY.? The software needed can be found here (http://gmfsk.sourceforge.net/ ). Radios with a? CW mode like the RCI 2950 (et al) and the Uniden HR2510 have the CW mode installed.? There are other models that also have CW mode, however no CB radios have CW mode.? You can send pictures and text files to others, similar to a fax. This will be an excellent way for the people to maintain contact with others during times of crisis or total collapse.

READ MORE

Thanks to BrotherJohnF

Source: http://silveristhenew.com/2012/09/28/communication-items-youll-want-before-tshtf/

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Domestic Short Hair - Tiger - Small - Young - Female - Cat ...

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Squats! So easy a child can do them! ? North Jersey Health & Fitness

?

?A quick fact about squats: squatting below parallel is not only NOT bad for your knees, but they are actually good for them. Why? Because squatting above parallel actually results in putting unnatural stress on your knees. By not allowing the quads, hips, hamstrings, and glutes to perform the complete range of motion, it creates muscular imbalances that produce shearing forces on the knees. In other words, not squatting below parallel is what?s really bad for your knees and it?s full squats that will actually increase knee joint stability (when performed correctly).

The only way squats can be bad for your knees is if you don?t work on your form. That?s why when it comes to this exercise you have to leave your ego at the door before you set foot in the gym. It?s not about how heavy you can squat, but how heavy you can squat WITH GOOD FORM.?

?

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Source: http://www.northjerseyhealthandfitness.com/2012/09/27/squats-so-easy-a-child-can-do-them/

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'Anarchy' actor dies in fall, is suspect in death

Matt Carr / Getty Images file

By Associated Press

Johnny Lewis, an actor who played Kip "Half Sack" Epps on the cable TV show "Sons of Anarchy," has fallen to his death after apparently beating to death his elderly landlady at a hillside home, authorities said.

The Los Angeles County coroner's office on Thursday identified the bodies as those of Lewis, 28, and Catherine Davis, 81.

Coroner's Watch Cmdr. Larry Deitz said he could not identify Lewis as being the actor. But the name and date of birth match, and both victims lived at the same address.

The causes of their deaths were unknown pending autopsies.

Neighbors called police Wednesday morning to report a woman screaming and three men fighting.

Officers went to a home in the Los Feliz area near Hollywood and found the body of a woman in the driveway, Sgt. Frank Preciado told the Los Angeles Times. Investigators believe she was struck or beaten.

The body of the suspected killer, who may have rented a room from the woman, was found about six feet from a wall, Preciado said.

The man climbed a wall and fought with a housepainter at a neighboring home, returned to the woman's home and climbed the wall again to fight with the painter and the owner of the second house, Preciado said.

The man apparently fell while trying to scale the wall again, Preciado said.

The men who fought with him were treated at the scene for minor injuries, he said.

Jonathan Kendrick Lewis had a career spanning more than a decade, mainly in small roles. He played Ricky in the 2007 movie "AVPR: Aliens vs Predator ? Requiem" and was Dennis 'Chili' Childress for two seasons on TV's "The O.C." He played Epps on FX's "Sons of Anarchy" in 2008 and 2009 episodes.

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Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2012/09/27/14124188-sons-of-anarchy-actor-dies-in-fall-is-suspect-in-landladys-death?lite

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

BoE's Fisher: UK economy's supply capacity has suffered

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NFL upholds Seahawks' disputed win over Packers

NEW YORK (AP) ? The NFL put its stamp of approval on the still-smoldering outcome of the Green Bay-Seattle game:

Wrong call.

Right review.

Wrong team still wins.

Seahawks 14, Packers 12.

With frustration mounting among coaches, players and fans, the worst fear finally materialized: a mistake by a replacement official would decide the outcome of a game.

It came while the NFL and its regular officials, locked out since June, were in resumed talks in an attempt to resolve the impasse.

That was still a day late for the Packers.

The fiasco, which unfolded on the prominent stage of "Monday Night Football," was deconstructed by the league Tuesday in a way that surely rendered little comfort for Cheeseheads.

The NFL said Seattle's last-second touchdown pass should not have counted because Seahawks receiver Golden Tate should have been called for offensive pass interference, ending the game with Green Bay winning.

Instead, officials ruled it a touchdown, and penalties either way are not reviewable.

That left it to whether Tate and Green Bay safety M.D. Jennings both had possession of the ball. The officials said they did, but the Packers insisted Jennings had clear possession for a game-ending interception. The NFL agreed that the replay was inconclusive, upholding the touchdown and giving Seattle the victory.

Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers, normally a soft-spoken player who didn't say much after the loss, lashed out on his radio show Tuesday..

"First of all, I've got to do something that the NFL is not going to do: I have to apologize to the fans," he said on ESPN 540-AM in Milwaukee.

Even President Barack Obama got in on the conversation Tuesday, tweeting: "NFL fans on both sides of the aisle hope the refs' lockout is settled soon."

The controversy began on the final play when Russell Wilson heaved a 24-yard pass into a scrum in the end zone with Seattle trailing 12-7. Tate shoved away a defender with both hands, and he and Jennings got their hands on the ball.

"It was pinned to my chest the whole time," Jennings said.

Instead, the officials ruled on the field that the two had simultaneous possession, which counts as a reception.

"The NFL Officiating Department reviewed the video today and supports the decision not to overturn the on-field ruling following the instant replay review," the league said in a statement.

Saying there was no indisputable evidence, though, is not the same as confirming the initial call was correct.

The Packers, one of sports' most storied franchises and Super Bowl champs two years ago, fell to 1-2. The Seahawks are 2-1.

Fans' fascination with the finish was evident in the number who stayed with ESPN to watch the highlights on "SportsCenter" after the game: 6.5 million viewers, the most for the full-length show since records started being kept in 1990.

On his weekly appearance on Seattle radio station 710 KIRO-AM, Seahawks coach Pete Carroll made no apologies Tuesday, saying, "The league backed it up and game over. We win."

"Golden makes an extraordinary effort. It's a great protection. It's a great throw. It's a great attempt at the ball and he wins the battle," he said. "They were right on the point looking right at it, standing right over the thing and they reviewed it. Whether they missed the push or not ? obviously they missed the push in the battle for the ball ? but that stuff goes on all the time."

But Rodgers, in a reference to referee Wayne Elliott not seeing indisputable evidence, said: "I mean, come on, Wayne. That's embarrassing."

NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith posted a statement to members saying the lockout "jeopardizes your health and safety."

"This decision to remove more than 1,500 years of collective experience has simply made the workplace less safe," he wrote, adding, "We are actively reviewing any and all possible actions to protect you."

The NFL locked out the officials in June after their contract expired. Unable to reach a new collective bargaining agreement, the league opened the season with replacements, most with experience only in lower levels of college football.

Coaches and players began griping about the officials in the preseason, but the tension seemed to boil over this past weekend.

Scuffles after the whistle were frequent with players appearing to test the limits of the new officials, and coaches were fined for berating them.

Las Vegas oddsmakers said $300 million or more changed hands worldwide on Monday's call. The Glantz-Culver line for the game opened favoring the Packers by 4?. Had the play been ruled an interception, Green Bay would have won by 5.

The call also found its way into Wisconsin politics, with Republican Gov. Scott Walker tweeting for the regular officials to return. Opponents noted that he seemed to be supporting the referees union after going after public employee unions last year, though Democratic state Sen. Jon Erpenbach added: "We're all fans, first and foremost."

Green Bay coach Mike McCarthy was stoic after the game, but Packers guard T.J. Lang vented on Twitter, using some expletives to say Green Bay was robbed by the refs. A day later, he said he regretted only his use of profanity.

"It was just heartbreaking to have a game taken from us like that," he told 97-FM The Ticket in Detroit. "We put way too much effort, and blood, sweat and tears into these games to have one absolutely stolen from us."

__

AP Pro Football Writer Barry Wilner in New York, AP Sports Writers Tim Booth in Seattle and Larry Lage in Detroit, and Associated Press writers Scott Bauer in Madison, Wis., Ken Ritter in Las Vegas, and Oskar Garcia in Honolulu contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-09-25-Replacement%20Furor/id-248c8bacdfd94cf7afba923c1cb0ccd1

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Alternate Dimensions: Future Design

Alternate Dimensions: Future Design

This is a private RP between me, ShadowsoftheNine, and ReaperGirl4.

Owner:

Game Masters:

Topic Tags:

Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.


Ok, I'm very interested. I was wondering What are the races involved/allowed. Is there still a school for teaching supernaturals? How do Supernaturals and Magicians get along?

Oh and one more question. Can I join this RP?

User avatar
Merchant
Member for 0 years



Post a reply

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

White House said to plan executive order on cybersecurity

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No action on flood cover nearly a year on ? Clune ? Deirdre Clune

Filed under: Cork, General News , also relevant to: Cork Floods, deirdre clune

Senator Deirdre Clune has criticised the lack of clarity on the situation for those affected by the Cork floods in a debate in the Seanad with the Minister for the Office of Public Works Brian Hayes. Senator Clune is calling on the Minister to engage with the Irish Insurance Federation immediately to address the issue of businesses and homes which are high risk due to flooding in the Cork area.

?Minister Brian Hayes expressed his frustration in engaging with this matter when he addressed the Seanad.

?Before this debate I have made my own efforts to gain answers on the flood risk in Cork. Almost a year ago I

wrote to Mr. Michael Kemp, the Chief Executive of the Irish Insurance Federation. I have also raised this in the Seanad many times including with Minister Hayes last year in response the severe flooding in Cork in 2009.

?Time and time again I have received the same answer ? the Office of Public Works is working with the IIF to improve the information supplied and to prioritise areas where flood defences can usefully contribute to improved insurability.

?However I have yet to see any real progress in the dealings between the insurance companies and the Office of Public Works. Clarity is needed on which department is directly responsible for the area of flooding.

?In response to flooding the local authorities prepare reports which are sent to the OPW and the Department of the Environment, Community and Local Government. It is unclear which of these parties is responsible for final decisions.

?The Minister of State indicated that he and his officials are currently engaged with the insurance industry to agree a suitable arrangement to address this problem.

?It is evident that this process is still ongoing nearly a year later. This is far too long for the affected individuals to wait, officials need to sit down with the insurance industry representatives to agree what measures should be put in place.

?It is my view that there should be a forum set up where local people could communicate with the OPW and local authorities. For example there are local flood action groups in the UK which use their local knowledge and expertise to liaise with the relevant authorities to come up with practical solutions to flooding.?

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Source: http://deirdreclune.ie/latest-news/general-news/no-action-on-flood-cover-nearly-a-year-on-%E2%80%93-clune/

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Major security vulnerability in some Samsung phones could trigger factory reset via web page

Samsung Reset

Updated: Clarifications on which phones are affected, and the nature of the vulnerability.

A major security vulnerability has been discovered in some TouchWiz-based Samsung smartphones, including the Galaxy S2 and certain Galaxy S3 models on older firmware. The bug was first demonstrated days ago by security researcher Ravi Borgaonkar at the Ekoparty security conference. It involves the use of a single line of code in a malicious web page to immediately trigger a factory reset without prompting the user, or allowing them to cancel the process. Even more serious is the possibility that this could be paired with a similar glitch to render the user's SIM card inoperable. And as the malicious code is in URI form, it can also be delivered via NFC or QR code.

Our Verizon Galaxy S3 was not reset by the malicious code embedded in a web page, though we were able to trigger a reset using similar code tied to a hyperlink. Mobile dev Justin Case tells us the issue is fixed in the latest AT&T and international Galaxy S3 firmwares, though devices that have not been updated may remain vulnerable. Others have reported that devices like the Galaxy Ace and Galaxy Beam are also affected. As far as we can tell, though, the bug does not affect Samsung phones running stock Android, like the Galaxy Nexus.

The vulnerability is the result of the way the native Samsung dialer app handles USSD codes and telephone links. USSD codes are special combinations of characters that can be entered in the keypad to perform certain functions, like enabling call forwarding, or accessing hidden menus on the device. On Samsung phones, there's also a USSD code for factory resetting the phone (and presumably another for nuking your SIM). This, combined with the fact that the dialer automatically runs telephone links that are passed to it by other apps, results in a particularly nasty issue for anyone unfortunate enough to run by a malicious web page.

There are, of course, other applications of this glitch -- for example, the ability to automatically run numbers through the dialer could be used to call premium-rate phone numbers. But the fact that just visiting a web site could factory reset your phone, wipe your internal storage and nuke your SIM is a very serious issue. So we'd advise you update your software if you're running an S3, and if you're not, we'd recommend using a third-party dialer like Dialer One until all this has blown over.

We've reached out to Samsung for comment on this issue, and we'll keep you updated with any information they provide.

Source: @Paul Olvia; via SlashGear, @backlon, @teamandirc



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/hsKdlLcf0oM/story01.htm

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