Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Aretha's Christmas: 'Silent Night' with Four Tops (AP)

DETROIT ? Detroit's Queen of Soul knows how to throw a Christmas party, and she welcomed in the holiday with glitter, a jazzy musical backdrop and a finale of "Silent Night" with the Four Tops.

Aretha Franklin held her annual Christmas party on Friday at the Detroit Athletic Club, greeting guests in a teal blue gown accented with a silver sequined bodice.

The Detroit News reports ( http://bit.ly/tPkXO9) that Franklin exchanged gifts with family and friends as Ursula Walker, Buddy Budson, Marian Hayden and Gayelynn McKinney played jazz in the background.

During a meal of filet mignon and salmon, guests were entertained by performances by Gwen & Charles Scales and Franklin's son Eddie Franklin, who sang "Some Enchanted Evening."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_en_mu/us_people_aretha_franklin

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Monday, December 26, 2011

New Air Jordans cause nationwide shopping frenzy (AP)

SEATTLE ? Fights, vandalism and arrests marked the release of Nike's new Air Jordan basketball shoes as a shopping rush on stores across the country led to unrest that nearly turned into rioting.

The outbursts of chaos stretched from Washington state to Georgia as shoppers ? often waiting for hours in lines ? converged on stores Friday in pursuit of the shoes, a retro model of one of the most popular Air Jordans ever made.

In suburban Seattle, police used pepper spray on about 20 customers who started fighting at the Westfield Southcenter mall. The crowd started gathering at four stores in the mall around midnight and had grown to more than 1,000 people by 4 a.m., when the stores opened, Tukwila Officer Mike Murphy said. He said it started as fighting and pushing among people in line and escalated over the next hour.

Murphy said no injuries were reported, although some people suffered cuts or scrapes from fights. Shoppers also broke two doors, and 18-year-old man was arrested for assault after authorities say he punched an officer.

"He did not get his shoes; he went to jail," Murphy said.

The mayhem was reminiscent of the violence that broke out 20 years ago in many cities as the shoes became popular targets for thieves. It also had a decidedly Black Friday feel as huge crowds of shoppers overwhelmed stores for a must-have item.

In some areas, lines began forming several hours before businesses opened for the $180 shoes that were selling in a limited release.

As the crowds kept growing through the night, they became more unruly and ended in vandalism, violence and arrests.

A man was stabbed when a brawl broke out between several people waiting in line at a Jersey City, N.J., mall to buy the new shoes, authorities said. The 20-year-old man was expected to recover from his injuries.

In Richmond, Calif., police say crowds waiting to buy the Air Jordan 11 Retro Concords at the Hilltop Mall were turned away after a gunshot rang out around 7 a.m.

No injuries were reported, but police said a 24-year-old suspect was taken into custody. The gun apparently went off inadvertently, the Contra Costa Times reported.

Seventeen-year-old Dylan Pulver in Great Neck, N.Y., said he's been looking forward to the release of the shoes for several years, and he set out at 4:30 a.m. to get a pair. After the first store he tried was too crowded, he moved on to a second location and scored a pair.

"I probably could have used a half a size smaller, but I was just really happy to have the shoe," he said.

The frenzy over Air Jordans has been dangerous in the past. Some people were mugged or even killed for early versions of the shoe, created by Nike Inc. in 1984.

The Air Jordan has since been a consistent hit with sneaker fans, spawning a subculture of collectors willing to wait hours to buy the latest pair. Some collectors save the shoes for special occasions or never take them out of the box.

A new edition was launched each year, and release dates had to be moved to the weekends at some points to keep kids from skipping school to get a pair.

But the uproar over the shoe had died down in recent years. These latest incidents seem to be part of trend of increasing acts of violence at retailers this holiday shopping season, such as the shopper who pepper-sprayed others at a Wal-Mart in Los Angeles on Black Friday and crowds looting a clothing store in New York.

Nike issued a statement in response to the violence that said: "Consumer safety and security is of paramount importance. We encourage anyone wishing to purchase our product to do so in a respectful and safe manner."

The retro version of the Air Jordan 11 was a highly sought-after shoe because of the design and the fact that the original was released in 1996 when Jordan and the Bulls were at the height of their dominance.

Pulver said they were a "defining shoe in Jordan's career."

Other disturbances reported at stores in places like Kentucky and Nebraska ranged from shoving and threats to property damage.

In Taylor, Mich., about 100 people forced their way into a shopping center around 5:30 a.m., damaging decorations and overturning benches. Police say a 21-year-old man was arrested.

In Toledo, Ohio, police said they arrested three people after a crowd surged into a mall.

In Lithonia, Ga., at least four people were apparently arrested after customers broke down a door at a store selling the shoes. DeKalb County police said up to 20 squad cars responded.

In Northern California, two men were arrested at a Fairfield mall after crowds shoved each other to get in position for the Nikes, police said.

In Stockton, Detective Joe Silva said a person was taken into custody at Weberstown Mall on suspicion of making criminal threats involving the shoes. Police also were investigating an attempted robbery in the mall's parking lot. The victim was wrongly believed to have just purchased Air Jordans.

In Tukwila, Officer Murphy said the crowd was on the verge of a riot and would have gotten even more out of hand if the police hadn't intervened.

About 25 officers from Tukwila and surrounding areas responded. Murphy said police smelled marijuana and found alcohol containers at the scene.

"It was not a nice, orderly group of shoppers," Murphy said. "There were a lot of hostile and disorderly people."

The Southcenter mall's stores sold out of the Air Jordans, and all but about 50 people got a pair, Murphy said.

Shoppers described the scene as chaotic and at times dangerous.

Carlisa Williams said she joined the crowd at the Southcenter for the experience and ended up buying two pairs of shoes, one for her and one for her brother. But she said she'll never do anything like it again.

"I don't understand why they're so important to people," Williams told KING-TV. "They're just shoes at the end of the day. It's not worth risking your life over."

___

AP Business Reporter Sarah Skidmore contributed to this report from Portland, Ore. AP Writer Michelle Price contributed from Phoenix.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_sp_ot/us_air_jordan_crowds

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Internet Changes How We Remember

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

Knowing we can retrieve facts online later alters memory

Image: Mike Kemp/Corbis

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

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

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


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

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

German Court Rules Muslim Student Disturbed the Peace by Praying (Time.com)

This post is in partnership with Worldcrunch, a new global-news site that translates stories of note in foreign languages into English. The article below was originally published in S?ddeutsche Zeitung.

(MUNICH) -- Yunus M., an 18-year-old Muslim high school student at Diesterweg Gymnasium in Berlin, Germany, has failed in his fight for the right to pray in the public corridors at school. The latest decision concerns this individual case only, judges at the Federal Administrative Court emphasized. But should the plaintiff, who is near graduation, opt to pursue the matter, the only further legal recourse open to him is the Federal Constitutional Court.

The question that the case raises, however, remains: should Muslim students be able to pray openly at school?

Four years ago, Yunus M. and seven friends gathered in the school corridor to bow in the direction of Mecca. The school's director forbid them to do it again, and the case went through a local court, then a court of appeal, before being heard at the Federal Administrative Court in Leipzig. (See photos of Ramadan in the year of the Arab Spring.)

According to chief justice Werner Neumann, students have a fundamental right to pray at school. He said, however, that religious freedom has its limits if it threatens to cause social friction within the school, as was the case here. The court agreed with the position of the school, whose director stated that there had been repeated religious conflicts at the school, and that at an establishment where 90% of the students were not German it was impossible for them all to claim a right to pray there publically. In addition, the director stated, Yunus M. had been offered a space where he could pray privately.

A case-by-case issue?

The case had previously resulted in contradictory court decisions. In September 2009, the Berlin Administrative Court decided in favor of Yunus M., a ruling which the Administrative Appeals Tribunal overturned six months later.

The Berlin Administrative court called in jurist Matthias Rohe, an expert on Islam, who said that the Muslim boy's stance was a "plausible opinion in the spectrum of religious freedom" and that Yunus M. was not an extremist. The Appeals Tribunal called in a colleague of Rohe's, Tilman Nagel, who stated that even the prophet Mohammed had put off praying to make community life simpler.

Yunus M.'s case underscores a basic tension: Do state institutions have to accept strict, conservative, even fundamentalist practices when other interpretations are possible? (See the top 10 world stories of 2011.)

The Leipzig court avoided this debate by stressing the individual nature of its decision. For this the court earned praise from some Christian churches. Spokespersons for the Berlin-Brandenburg Evangelical Church and the Archdiocese of Berlin said the court's decision aligned with the freedom of religion guaranteed by the Basic Law of the Federal Republic of Germany.

Yunus M.'s lawyer said they were waiting for the written decision before deciding whether or not to go to the Supreme Court, a move he described, nevertheless, as unlikely.

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-- Die Welt

EU to Restrict Sale of Lethal Injection Drug to U.S.
-- S?ddeutsche Zeitung

See TIME's special report "The Middle East in Revolt."

See TIME's 140 Best Twitter Feeds.

View this article on Time.com

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/religion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/time/20111225/wl_time/08599210227700

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A new way of approaching the early detection of Alzheimer's disease

ScienceDaily (Dec. 23, 2011) ? One of our genes is apolipoprotein E (APOE), which often appears with a variation which nobody would want to have: APOE?4, the main genetic risk factor for sporadic Alzheimer's disease (the most common form in which this disorder manifests itself and which is caused by a combination of hereditary and environmental factors). It is estimated that at least 40% of the sporadic patients affected by this disease are carriers of APOE?4, but this also means that much more still remains to be studied. The researcher at the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) Xabier Elcoroaristizabal has opened up a channel for making a start by analysing candidate genes which, always in combination with APOE?4, could help to explain more cases.

His thesis is entitled "Molecular markers in mild amnestic cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease" (Marcadores moleculares en deterioro cognitivo leve tipo amn?sico y enfermedad de Alzheimer). An initial article on this can be read in the journal BMC Neuroscience.

The long-term aim is to contribute towards the early detection of Alzheimer's disease by identifying signs that could be detectable in the very early phases. And, as Elcoroaristizabal explains, while there is no cure for this disorder, the alternative is to get ahead of it and delay its development: "Certain preventive measures involving cognitive stimulation delay its appearance. There are even new drugs that could start to be used earlier. Today there is no solution, but the more we maintain a person's correct cognitive state, the better."

Mild amnestic, cognitive impairment

The individuals who develop Alzheimer's go through a transition period first of all, and this could be the key moment for the effective application of preventive measures. This is mild cognitive impairment (MCI), in which slight cognitive alterations take place but do not affect everyday activities. Among the different types of MCI, one affects memory almost exclusively (amnestic MCI), and those people who suffer from it have a high probability of developing the disorder. The difficult and interesting part is knowing which genetic components are linked to this impairment and also in determining by what percentage the risk of developing the disease increases, a task which Elcoroaristizabal has set himself. "If we can identify which genes are involved and what susceptibility factors there are, preventive measures could be taken," he explains.

So a contrast study has been carried out among a sample of patients with MCI, ones with Alzheimer's and healthy people. This can be used to observe the changes and narrow down the field for the zones to be studied, so that candidate genes can be sought there. Elcoroaristizabal himself notes one example among the many others identified: "It has been observed that the brain's capacity to control cholesterol levels seems to play a key role throughout the illness. So, protein encoding genes linked to this control have been analysed."

In this quest for candidate genes, Elcoroaristizabal has confirmed that the APOE?4 genetic variation is, in fact, the main risk factor for developing Alzheimer's disease. But it does not end there; he has identified several genes which, as long as they are manifested in combination with APOE?4, could take us one step further towards the early detection of this disorder. "Genes that in some way are connected with neurotransmission channels, oxidative stress or the effectiveness of oestrogens seem to be linked to a greater risk for APOE?4 carriers," he explains. Specifically, the candidate genes are as follows: COMT (neurotransmission), SOD2 (oxidative stress elimination) and ESR1 and ESR2 (oestrogen action facilitators).

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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/~3/epdE6_KyX6g/111223091447.htm

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Texas, N.M. under winter storm warning

By the CNN Wire Staff

updated 5:32 AM EST, Sat December 24, 2011

Travelers move through security lines Friday at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • No significant weather-related delays are reported at major airports
  • A winter storm warning remains in effect for parts of New Mexico and Texas
  • Travel is discouraged in parts of southeastern New Mexico

Is winter weather threatening your holiday travel plans? Share your photos, videos and stories.

(CNN) -- Air travelers scurrying across the country on Christmas Eve will likely get a reprieve from weather-related delays Saturday, as no major delays were reported at the country's largest airports Saturday morning.

According to the Federal Aviation Administration's website, airports from Boston to Los Angeles and from Miami to Seattle had delays of 15 minutes or less.

The relatively travel-friendly weather came a day after high winds and snow prompted airport and highway delays in several areas across the country.

On Friday, delays were reported at New York's LaGuardia airport, and Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport tried to play catch up after 5,200 flights were affected following severe weather on Thursday.

But road travel in southeastern New Mexico remained dangerous on Saturday, as parts of the state -- along with far western parts of Texas -- were under a winter storm warning.

About 1 to 4 inches of snow was expected to fall in parts of New Mexico, according to the National Weather Service

"Travel is still discouraged throughout the region due to slick and hazardous roadways," the weather agency said.

Source: http://www.cnn.com/2011/12/24/travel/holiday-weather/index.html?eref=rss_topstories

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Social Media Summoning Aid for Disaster Relief in Japan (ContributorNetwork)

In times of crisis, social media such as Youtube.com, Facebook.com, Linkedin.com and Twitter.com can help raise awareness, bridge communication gaps and gain support for relief efforts, such as those needed right now in disaster-ravaged Japan. There is a worldwide outpouring of support and many efforts are being made by social media to help people cope with the ongoing tragedies striking Japan in the last week.

Youtube.com

There are many videos being posted on YouTube by disaster relief organizations, people participating as onlookers and caring or concerned individuals asking that we give to charities.

In a video titled "Dispatch from Sendai," Save the Children UK (user: savethechildrenuk) has released a video about the plight of Japanese children who have been displaced by the recent events. The video says that Save the Children has sent teams to Sendai to help these children by setting up "Child Friendly Spaces" where anxiety-ridden children can spend time with other children and play while being supervised by responsible adults. The play areas also enable parents to dedicate time to finding accommodation, food sources, locating other friends and family and work.

EUXTV on YouTube, which handles European Union press releases, announced in a video titled "EU to send Search & Rescue teams to Japan: Barroso" that European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced early on Saturday that the "EC has activated its crisis response mechanism in order to coordinate European search & rescue teams which are being sent to Japan to deal with the aftermath of Friday's earthquake and tsunami." This also brings the European economic community together with volunteer efforts, going to Japan in teams to offer individual support.

Facebook.com

Several "Japan Relief" users have also set themselves up on Facebook asking for support - please be careful who you give your money to. There is no guarantee that the majority of funds will end up with the Japanese people, so make sure it's a reputable charity.

Voice of America on Facebook has links to their website, www.voanews.com , where they're "live blogging" as events are occurring. They are asking for input from people on location in Japan. There's also a list of agencies (and their links) that are taking donations in relief efforts such as the American Red Cross, Doctors Without Borders and Mercy Corps.

Twitter.com

People are tweeting like crazy on Twitter asking people to donate to charities like the Red Cross via texting. As donations are taking place, those too are being tweeted with messages of thanks to those who gave, like Sandra Bullock, who has given $1 million of her own money. Thank you Ms. Bullock!

Linkedin.com

There are several fund-raising events being posted on LinkedIn by various organizations and social groups. So sign up on linkedin.com and see where you can help by participating in these events.

I also hope that these channels of social outreach help get more people involved in creating awareness and summoning support for the Japanese people.

Red Cross is asking that you donate $10 to relief funds via text message to REDCROSS at 90999. Contact the Consulate-General of Japan in Los Angeles at http://www.la.us.emb-japan.go.jp/ for more information.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111222/us_ac/8085808_social_media_summoning_aid_for_disaster_relief_in_japan

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Friday, December 23, 2011

White Castle tests adding booze to its menu

White Castle, a 90-year-old hamburger chain known for its square "slider" burgers, is sipping on the idea of offering alcoholic beverages as it tests beer and wine sales at a restaurant in Indiana.

  1. More on Food trends

    1. Satisfy your craving

      Look for more?exciting eats and foodie trends on the Bites blog

The food famously craved by stoners in the 2004 movie "Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle" can be had with a glass of wine or a domestic or seasonal beer at a Lafayette, Ind., restaurant that fuses a conventional White Castle with a new concept for the company called Blaze Modern BBQ. Wine costs $4.50 and beers start at $3.

"This was something that customers had been suggesting," said Jamie Richardson, a spokesman for Columbus-based White Castle System Inc. "They thought that beer and wine might go nicely with the barbecue that was available at Blaze. We're certain that we might have some customers who might enjoy some sliders and a beer or wine as well."

Other fast-food restaurants also are dabbling with alcohol. Earlier this year, Burger King opened the Whopper Bar South Beach, a restaurant in Miami Beach offering beer, and Starbucks Corp. has been testing beer and wine at a few sites.

The companies see alcoholic beverages as a growth opportunity after years of flat sales, said David Henkes, a vice president with the Chicago-based food research firm Technomic. "Alcohol is one of those things that is extremely profitable to the operator," he said.

White Castle's beer and wine tryout is part of a broader experiment with three new concepts that the company has been studying for a little over a year, Richardson said Wednesday. Besides Blaze Modern BBQ, there's also an Asian food brand, Laughing Noodle, at a White Castle in Springfield, Ohio, and a triple-decker sandwich concept, Deckers, in Lebanon, Tenn.

Customers have had a "very positive" reaction to the alcoholic beverages offered in Indiana, but for now, White Castle is considering only whether to expand them to the two other co-branded restaurants, Richardson said.

White Castle would face challenges trying to roll out beer and wine on a wider scale, Henkes said.

"What we find with fast-food places is, there's very strict regulations around training. Typically, a lot of the employees in fast food are under 21, so you get into some service issues," he said. "You get into some inventory issues. You get into whether distributors are willing to deliver to you because you're generally not doing a whole lot of volume in these categories."

Adding beer and wine to the menu sounds fine to lifelong White Castle fan Jim Kreml of Elk River, Minn. ? even though he's a teetotaler. "I know my wife would love that because she is a wine drinker," said Kreml, the operator of a chimney-cleaning business who acknowledged he eats at the restaurants "a couple of times a week."

Kreml, named in 2009 to White Castle's Cravers Hall of Fame, said Wednesday that he would expect alcoholic beverage options to be popular with many slider aficionados. "If they're of age and they drink that already, I think they'd be happy with that. As long as they're responsible and don't sit in there, and that's not party time," he said.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45753069/ns/business-retail/

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Transforming Buffalo Bayou (Offthekuff)

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Being told painting is fake changes brain's response to art

ScienceDaily (Dec. 20, 2011) ? Being told that a work of art is authentic or fake alters the brain's response to the visual content of artwork, Oxford University academics have found.

Fourteen participants were placed in a brain scanner and shown images of works by 'Rembrandt' -- some were genuine, others were convincing imitations painted by different artists. Neither the participants nor their brain signals could distinguish between genuine and fake paintings. However, advice about whether or not an artwork is authentic alters the brain's response; this advice is equally effective, regardless of whether the artwork is genuine or not.

The study, recently published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, was carried out by Professor Andrew Parker and Mengfei Huang of the Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, in collaboration with Dr Holly Bridge at the Oxford Centre for Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain (FMRIB) and Professor Martin Kemp of Oxford University's History Faculty.

Professor Martin Kemp, Emeritus Professor of the History of Art at Oxford University, said: 'Our findings support what art historians, critics and the general public have long believed -- that it is always better to think we are seeing the genuine article. Our study shows that the way we view art is not rational, that even when we cannot distinguish between two works, the knowledge that one was painted by a renowned artist makes us respond to it very differently. The fact that people travel to galleries around the world to see an original painting suggests that this conclusion is reasonable.'

When a participant was told that a work was genuine, it raised activity in the part of the brain that deals with rewarding events, such as tasting pleasant food or winning a gamble. Being told a work is not by the master triggered a complex set of responses in areas of the brain involved in planning new strategies. Participants reported that when viewing a supposed fake, they tried to work out why the experts regarded it not to be genuine.

Andrew Parker, Professor of Physiology at Oxford University and the study's senior author, said: 'Our findings support the idea that when we make aesthetic judgements, we are subject to a variety of influences. Not all of these are immediately articulated. Indeed, some may be inaccessible to direct introspection but their presence might be revealed by brain imaging. It suggests that different regions of the brain interact together when a complex judgment is formed, rather than there being a single area of the brain that deals with aesthetic judgements.'

Participants were shown a variety of portraits, some genuinely painted by Rembrandt and others not. This was chosen as a good test case, because recent scholarship has determined that many fakes and copies of his works exist. There was no evidence that the brain signals of the participants could reliably pick apart the true Rembrandts from the copies or fakes, so this research will not help to resolve the arguments that sometimes rage among connoisseurs and experts.

FMRIB is a multi-disciplinary neuroimaging research facility, which focuses on the use of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) for neuroscience research. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) measures brain activity by detecting the changes in blood oxygenation and flow that occur in response to neural activity -- when a brain area is more active it consumes more oxygen and to meet this increased demand blood flow increases to the active area. FMRI can be used to produce activation maps showing which parts of the brain are involved in a particular mental process.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Mengfei Huang, Holly Bridge, Martin J. Kemp, Andrew J. Parker. Human Cortical Activity Evoked by the Assignment of Authenticity when Viewing Works of Art. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2011; 5 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2011.00134

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/~3/XhXPGu-t--M/111220202627.htm

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Browns' McCoy out with concussion, Watson on IR (AP)

BEREA, Ohio ? Colt McCoy is expected to recover from his concussion and play for the Browns again this season. Benjamin Watson isn't as fortunate.

Watson was placed on injured reserve Friday, ending the tight end's season after he sustained his third concussion since July in last week's loss at Pittsburgh. Watson was injured when he banged his head on the ground following a tackle in the first half, couldn't get his balance and had to be helped to the sideline.

Watson who was Cleveland's leading receiver last season and had 37 catches for 410 yards and two touchdowns this year, visited a specialist on head injuries earlier this week.

Browns tight end Evan Moore was disappointed Watson's season ended prematurely, but understood the choice.

"That's a big loss," Moore said. "All of us are really close with Ben. He's doing well. I don't know the ins and outs of how the decision was made, but I know when it comes to the head, it's not something you mess around with. So I think he not only has to think about himself but his family. And Ben's a smart guy, so I'm sure he wanted to go with the right decision."

Shurmur said Watson, a father of three who will turn 31 on Sunday, has not discussed with him the possibility of retiring.

Watson was not available for interviews as players packed following practice for their flight to Arizona. A team spokesman said per league policy, "players are not available until cleared from a medical standpoint."

McCoy, who was flattened last week on an illegal helmet-to-helmet hit by Steelers linebacker James Harrison, has not yet been cleared to play by Cleveland's medical staff, which came under heavy criticism for its handling of the QB's head injury.

McCoy is still experiencing headaches and was sent home Friday for the fourth time this week to rest. He was seen driving away from the team's facility in his pickup truck and will not accompany the team to Arizona.

Shurmur said there has been no discussion about placing McCoy on IR.

"He's still having some symptoms and that's why we sent him home," Shurmur said.

With McCoy sidelined, backup Seneca Wallace will make his first start this season against the Cardinals. Wallace went 1-3 in four starts last season, and Shurmur expects the nine-year veteran who will be making his 19th start in the NFL to play well.

"I'm anticipating that Seneca's going to go out and execute efficiently and I think we saw Colt do that at times this year," he said. "As a quarterback, you're trying to go out and do everything right all the time. Every once in a while you'll make a bad throw or a poor decision and then you get right back on the horse and try to correct it.

"I would anticipate, based on what I saw in practice, Seneca will do a good job."

Shurmur added that rookie fullback Owen Marecic is also out this week. Like McCoy and Watson, Marecic sustained a concussion against the Steelers, his second concussion in a month.

To replace Marecic, the Browns activated fullback Eddie Williams.

The Browns' handling of McCoy's injury ? he was not given the standard sideline concussion test until the next day ? prompted the league to send medical personnel to Cleveland to meet with the Browns. Representatives of the Players Association also attended the meeting to discuss the team's treatment of McCoy and possible changes to the league's policies on head injuries.

Team president Mike Holmgren said the team did not check McCoy for a concussion on the sideline because he was not displaying symptoms and because the medical staff did not see Harrison's vicious hit while attending to other injured players on the sideline.

Shurmur said the team is not planning any major changes to their procedures on concussions this week, but that McCoy's injury "made an impression on us."

On Friday, the league denied Harrison's appeal of his suspension, which the league handed down for his fifth illegal hit on a quarterback in three years. Harrison is the first player suspended under stricter guidelines for player safety.

Moore, who sustained a concussion earlier this year, is pleased there is increased awareness on concussions and more emphasis on player safety. He's also in favor of the league using independent neurologists at games to help assess head injuries.

"That's something that we could've addressed in the CBA before we finished things up," Moore said. "I think we as players tried to push for health issues but I think we sacrificed a couple things in the interest of getting the business side of it done.

"I thought we could have done a better job as a union -- that's how I personally feel -- of making sure we look after players first. It's something we could have done better and the unfortunate thing is we have a 10-year CBA with no opt out, so we've gotta try to find a way to get it done before then."

Notes: K Phil Dawson was pleased to learn general manager Tom Heckert wants him back next season. "It's nice to hear that. It beats the alternative," Dawson said with a smile. "It's good to know they're not looking for a young guy in the draft." The Browns placed their franchise tag on Dawson this season and could do so again. The 36-year-old is having another solid season, his 14th with the franchise. ... Williams, who wears No. 44, has been popping pads at practice for weeks. "He can drop his weight and block a guy so he'll get a chance to do it live on Sunday," Shurmur said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_sp_fo_ne/fbn_browns_mccoy

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

RealClearMarkets - Finance Now Exists For Its Own Exclusive Benefit

Looking through the Byzantine maze of accounting interpretations and black box calculations that compose Bank of America's latest quarterly balance sheet presentation, you get the idea that the company has increased its exposure to derivative positions in the first three quarters of 2011 by about $6 billion on the asset side. In the context of these dangerous and volatile times, knowing what happened in 2008, that may not seem like a very good thing for the bank. There was also an increase in derivative liabilities, about $4 billion, so at least most of that increase was funded in the same arena (banks always want to match risks or net them out somehow).

A $6 billion increase for a bank that has $2.219 trillion in assets seems rather trivial, however. Even looking at the derivative "exposure" in total, $79 billion, it does not appear to be anything out of the ordinary. That $79 billion cumulative position only takes up 3.5% of the entire bank's portfolio.

Moving further into the financial notes, conversely, and you begin to see just how the bank arrives at that critical $79 billion calculation. That $79 billion figure comes from a "Gross Derivative Asset" summation of total contract exposures across various derivative products: $2.172 trillion. From there, the company subtracts $2.027 trillion in "legally enforceable master netting agreements" and then further subtracts $65.6 billion of "cash collateral applied" to whittle that $2.172 trillion all the way down to the balance sheet presentation of $79 billion.

The tricky part here is the "legally enforceable master netting agreements", which essentially transforms what would be some other financial risk (interest rate risk, default risk, etc.) into counterparty risk. In other words, Bank of America gets to redefine its riskiness simply because it has a contract from someone else that says such counterparty will pay Bank of America if Bank of America gets something wrong in its calculations and ends up on the wrong side of a trade or, more likely, trades. It seems that these derivative contracts are designed for exactly this kind of risk transformation, especially since financial statements were created to measure typical financial risks. Operating outside the bounds of traditional risk measurements then, it is easy to see why derivatives are so attractive, especially in light of the real cash flows that they can produce.

By now most people are pretty well acquainted with the idea of a Shadow Banking system. It was the off-balance sheet arrangements that brought the system to near collapse in 2008, primarily consisting of securitized mortgage bonds of subprime mortgages. The financing for the Shadow Banking system was accomplished through repo deals and commercial paper. At the most basic level, these structured finance products only sought to quantify and disperse default risk.

The Shadow Banking system was really a cross between the traditional banking system and something newer and more complex. In many ways this hybrid system increasingly relied on synthetically derived exposures, so the Shadow Banking system, in historical terms, acted as a bridge between the traditional bank model and the derivative model that has largely taken up the marginal attention of the system.

The synthetic, derivative exposures at these huge banks have created brand new risks that are not even accounted for correctly. Counterparty risk is still more of an emotional consideration than financial disclosure. By allowing such a state to grow, regulators have allowed the creation and establishment of a Synthetic Banking system. Bank of America has $2.172 trillion in gross exposure, but that only measures the contract values of each individual position.

For example, an interest rate swap is in many ways a synthetic bond position. Currently the 30-year U.S. treasury swap rate is 2.77%, meaning that you agree to swap paying 2.77% in order to receive 3-month LIBOR from some financial counterparty (you would do so because you speculate that interest rates are going to be much higher over the life of the swap, and so your floating LIBOR receipts will rise much higher than the 2.77% fixed you continually pay out). These positions replicate the cash flows that you would have received by investing directly in bonds of some form (a U.S. treasury for the fixed rate receiver, or a eurodollar loan for the floating rate receiver).

At the inception of the swap, you and the counterparty specify the "notional" amount of the contract. That is, you agree how big of a synthetic bond you want to replicate. The attraction here is that these cash flows take place without ever having to come up with the full principal amount of that theoretical bond - the notional amount is simply a phantom calculation - leading to an important form of financial leverage.

In terms of accounting for this contract, Bank of America in its "Gross Derivative Asset" total only counts the contract values, disregarding the notional amount entirely. That contract value is a function of whether the particular derivative is at a profit or loss, and by how much. This is a much smaller calculation, intentionally, than accounting for the notional values. This makes some sense because neither counterparty will ever lose the full notional amount of the derivative because that notional amount simply does not exist. So a lot of the excitement about notional exposures is misplaced.

The total "notional" amount of derivatives contracts that Bank of America is involved with, on both the asset and liability side of its balance sheet, is about $74 trillion. That number means there is a lot of potential counterparty risk here, but what I believe is equally or more important is how Bank of America has transformed itself in terms of intermediation.

In the old days of boring banking (all the way back to the 1970's and 1980's), Bank of America would have had to "invest" $74 trillion into some economy somewhere, creating real credit of that amount, just to create these financial cash flows. If we look at this Synthetic Banking system as a means of avoiding the complications arising from actually having to lend out money, in some form or another, Bank of America has actively engaged in synthesizing the cash flows from $74 trillion in financial assets. These assets don't exist, only the derived cash flows do. But that means that Bank of America has dedicated resources to engaging in lending activities that never lend money to anyone in the real economy.

If the banking system as a whole performs a vital economic function, the only argument in favor of the Synthetic Banking system is price discovery. But do we need to conjure $74 trillion from nothing to discover the real price of U.S. treasury rates or U.S. equities (through futures contracts) or even U.S. dollars? Are currency trades not liquid enough that we need to have $64.6 trillion in synthetic arrangements? Anyone paying attention to markets as they operate in 2011 (and have for several years) knows that the synthetic money now drives the cash money. In other words, the futures and derivative markets lead the cash markets in a fit of the theoretical tail wagging the very real dog. That is not price discovery, it is dysfunction and disconnect.

The use of derivatives, especially interest rate and currency swaps, has exploded since the middle of the last decade. That trend has continued even recently. The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) estimates that the total notional amount of derivative contracts synthesized rose by $106 trillion in the first six months of 2011. There are estimated to be, as of June 30, 2011, about $707 trillion in notional exposures across derivative classes. Even in terms of gross market values, the BIS' equivalent of Bank of America's "Gross Derivative Asset" total, the number is still a confounding $19.5 trillion.

For a global economy that is supposed to run on credit, after all that is what central banks have been telling us that we need for a robust recovery, that is a lot of financial resources expended to not have to deal with the real world. If these derivatives did not exist and banks were unable to robustly synthesize cash flows of these immense sizes, they would be forced to lend out tens of trillions of dollars in the real world. In terms of price discovery alone, I sincerely doubt that financial firms would expend so much effort.

The massive liquidity support that central banks have been providing these past three years was done with the intent on stimulating real lending, not synthetic lending. But this is exactly the outcome that they should have expected. Financial firms, in the age of monetary supremacy, are simply systems of maximizing monetary growth. That was their usefulness to the economic plan of central bank management of the larger economy. Credit, especially credit advanced through the new investment banking model, became the marginal factor of real economic activity. Wall Street became the marginal source of the economic fudge factor that allowed the Fed to try to overcome the business cycle by smoothing out bumps with debt.

Unfortunately for us, Wall Street became very good at finding ways to achieve maximization (this is referred to as innovation, but that has a very positive connotation to it that may not be appropriate in this context). The Synthetic Banking system represents one of the "pinnacles" of financial evolution. Think about it, massive banking firms manage the cash flows of what would be $707 trillion in financial assets - a feat that outside of the dire circumstances of the current economy would be extremely impressive.

In terms of the overall financial economy, though, this impressive accomplishment means that the financial system devotes an increasing amount of time, energy and attention to matters that have nothing to do with actual intermediation in the real economy. Not only that, as with all asset bubbles, success in one area leads to increasing desires to commit more resources to that area. So as the Synthetic Banking system grew it attracted more and more "capital", or, to get around capital charges, increasingly complex and opaque ways to minimize impacts on capital ratios. These complexities are playing the primary role in generating and sustaining the negative emotions of uncertainty and fear, hampering system operations since uncertainty and fear are largely and liberally applied to unscientific estimations of that erstwhile unimportant counterparty risk.

While this is efficient in terms of bank profitability, it is inherently inefficient toward the real economy since it is essentially a siphoning of vital resources. The ages old fear of machines breaking away from their human masters to create their own civilization has been somewhat realized by a banking system that no longer exists to service the real economy. The technological innovations of finance have allowed that sector to almost completely disengage from the traditional notion of intermediation. Central banks (especially the Federal Reserve) have created trillions of dollars to plug a disastrous hole in the Shadow Banking system. In the process it appears as if they are simply blowing another asset bubble, this time in the Synthetic Banking system, much to their own consternation since this latest bubble has no real connection with the real world.

All of this contributes to narrow the margin of safety for the entire banking system since, as AIG amply demonstrated, real money collateral is needed to cover inevitable miscalculations. The potential for further strain is elevated directly by the size of "legally enforceable master netting agreements", leaving a large wake of instability since small moves and mistakes are magnified and amplified as they transmit through the trillions in synthetic positions.

The Fed likes to pat itself on the back for returning the financial system to normal functioning shape (which it obviously is not), but how much of that perceived normal functioning is synthetic? If banks are making money on interest rate and currency swaps, what incentive do they have to foster real economic growth? It is worth noting that while Bank of America's total asset portfolio was declining by $45 billion from the end of 2010 to the end of September 2011, net derivative assets on the balance sheet rose by that $6 billion I referenced above (gross derivative assets rose by $635 billion).

AIG nearly destroyed the modern financial system because it's synthetic mistakes required real solutions, real capital and money. All of these phantom activities, because they have no direct bearing on the real economy, are fairly classified as speculation. The near-destruction of the financial system because of an imbalance of speculation is not all that surprising.

But the bailout of the system afterward was supposed to restore some kind of balance between speculation and true "investment". Instead, the monetary policies of the global central bank cartel have simply allowed the previous imbalance to grow even further as the incentives to synthesize assets now so far outweigh real intermediation. Why lend to individuals or governments that exhibit far too much traditional risk when you can create the same cash flows without having to actually come up with the principal amount by swapping with Dexia or Credit Agricole?

The pyramid of money into shadow money into synthetic money has grown immense. Central banks have created an inefficient Frankenstein of a financial system that no longer can operate within the bounds of the traditional notions of intermediation and banking. There is simply not enough real credit in existence to generate the cash flows and profits banks need to maintain the capital ratios that keep the system from imploding.

If we think about the banking system in terms of being able to grow retained earnings, and thereby strengthen their weakened capital ratios, the $107 trillion increase represents obviously necessary cash flows that would be impossible without the synthetic option. Therefore, the financial system is simply unable to make enough money off the real economy in order to even survive its past episodic spasm of over-speculation, describing the scale of dysfunction as something far greater than anyone perhaps realizes.

In many ways the system is at a terminal crossroads, as it cannot function without the synthesization of so much credit, but the real economy may not be able to survive the resource drain and monetary inefficiency that this much synthesization requires. Intermediation was supposed to be a tool for the real economy. Now the real economy is nothing more than a support system for the global investment banking regime.

In bailing out the banking system, central banks have put their money on the wrong horse since banks are almost completely disconnected from their true role as a tool of the real economy. The labyrinth of complexity and intentional opacity is designed to hide this fact. Real credit is shrinking throughout the system, but synthetic credit is alive, well and flourishing. The financial system now exists to its own exclusive benefit.

Source: http://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2011/12/16/finance_now_exists_for_its_own_exclusive_benefit_99422.html

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Bonds to be sentenced for obstruction of justice

(AP) ? Barry Bonds lives on a two-acre estate in Beverly Hills in a house with six bedrooms and 10 bathrooms.

That's important because he may be spending most of his time there after he is sentenced Friday for his felony conviction of obstruction of justice. Federal probation officers are recommending U.S. District Judge Susan Illston sentence Bonds to some form of house arrest and community service rather than the prison term that prosecutors seek.

Legal analysts expect Illston to follow most of the probation department's suggestions and "downward depart" from federal sentencing guidelines calling for 15 months to 21 months in prison when the last of the defendants directly connected to the investigation of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative is sentenced Friday.

The analysts, Bonds attorneys and the probation department all cite Illston's sentencing of cyclist Tammy Thomas and track coach Trevor Graham as the more appropriate guidelines to follow in considering Bonds' punishment. Thomas and Graham were convicted of similar crimes. Thomas was sentenced to six months of home detention after a jury convicted her of perjury for denying she used steroids. Graham received a year's home arrest after a jury convicted him of lying to a federal agent about his relationship with a steroids dealer.

A jury convicted Bonds in April of purposely answering questions about steroids with rambling non sequiturs in an attempt to mislead a grand jury investigating sports doping in December 2003. Bonds' trial jury deadlocked on three other charges accusing Bonds of perjury for allegedly lying when he denied taking performance-enhancing drugs and receiving injections from someone other than his doctor.

Prosecutors in September dropped those deadlocked charges, foregoing another trial.

Prosecutors are asking for a prison sentence of 15 months and note that baseball's career home runs leader has never accepted responsibility for his actions.

"Bonds' pervasive efforts to testify falsely, to mislead the grand jury, to dodge questions, and to simply refuse to answer questions in the grand jury makes his conduct worthy of a significant jail sentence," prosecutors wrote the court last week.

Bonds will have 14 days to file his intention to appeal his conviction after sentencing Friday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-16-Bonds%20Steroids/id-e6156a9f906b4c5d86ade91ed15b00f9

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Video: Tea Party favorite reappears on the 2012 political scene

10 chilling super-nerdy snow sculptures

By Sean FallonNerd Approved? If there's one thing that I miss about living in an area that sees snowy, wintry weather, it's making snowmen. I mean, it just doesn't feel right to make a snowman out of dirt while wearing shorts.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45689454#45689454

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'New Girl': The Guys Turn On The Lights To Make Jess' Christmas Wish Come True (VIDEO)

In the first Christmas episode for "New Girl" (Tue., 9PM ET on Fox), the gang found themselves at Schmidt's company holiday party, where he reluctantly has to dress as "sexy" Santa every year. It's a humiliating experience for him, and an interesting gender reversal as he is the only man in his office.

While Schmidt was learning to assert himself and find some self-respect, his terrible homemade perfume was helping Cece realize that maybe she was with the wrong gay. And thanks to Nick, she wasn't the only one who realized their relationship wasn't going to work. In an attempt to console Paul, Nick accidentally revealed that Jess didn't love him.

Paul had dropped the l-bomb on Jess the night before, receiving an awkward "thank you" in return. But he's such a nice guy, and the sex is so great, that Jess wasn't ready to just end it because he reached that emotional point before she did. Unfortunately, he wasn't willing to slow down.

In an interesting turn of events, Winston proved himself adept at connecting with troubled kids, and may have landed himself a potential new job working for guest star Michaela Watkins, based on hints Lamorne Morris gave in an interview recently. Of all the characters, latecomer Winston is the one who still needs the most direction and finding him a job could go a long way to better defining him. That same interview teased that Nick will be getting a new girlfriend, in the form of Lizzy Caplan, which is the one thing his character needed to give him some definition, and push off any of the "will they/won't they" questions about Nick and Jess.

The cast is clearly growing more comfortable with one another, which they'd have to after essentially seeing one another nude, thanks to the TV nude underwear they've worn for various scenes. That comfort and chemistry is finding its way on-screen, creating a tighter show that's working more as an ensemble than a star vehicle for Zooey Deschanel.

This also helps make it more believable when the guys come together to cheer Jess up after her break-up with Paul by forcing the neighborhood that goes crazy with Christmas decorations to light them up at 4:00 AM. In earlier episodes, it made less sense that these people who barely knew Jess would drop everything for her happiness, but now that friendship feels real among them.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/14/new-girl-guys-turn-on-christmas-lights-for-jess-video_n_1147614.html

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Verizon Galaxy Nexus review

It's the Galaxy Nexus. It has LTE. It's the phone we've been waiting (and waiting) for. Sure, some of our more globe-trotting members of the staff were suitably sated by the HSPA+ version that shipped a few weeks ago, but the rest of us domestic types simply need more bandwidth. Or, at least, we like to think that we do, and this $300 (on-contract) Verizon release certainly has that in spades.

However, there's something missing: Google Wallet. That company's attempt at reinventing commerce isn't here and, while nobody's saying for sure, it surely has something to do with Verizon not wanting to kneecap the Isis payment service it has invested in. That leaves us wondering: with restrictions on what apps can be installed, and some rather prominent carrier branding on the back, is this really a Nexus device at all? And, more importantly, is it a good phone? Those answers and more wait for you below.

Continue reading Verizon Galaxy Nexus review

Verizon Galaxy Nexus review originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Dec 2011 11:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Aj56bdsu8cM/

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NASA's Voyager spacecraft that toured outer planets nearing solar system edge

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

In 1977, Jimmy Carter was sworn in as president, Elvis died, Virginia park ranger Roy Sullivan was hit by lightning a record seventh time, and two NASA space probes destined to turn planetary science on its head launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla.

The identical spacecraft, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2, were launched in the summer and programmed to pass by Jupiter and Saturn on different paths. Voyager 2 went on to visit Uranus and Neptune, completing the "Grand Tour of the Solar System," perhaps the most exciting interplanetary mission ever flown. Now NASA has announced that Voyager 1 -- about 11 billion miles from Earth -- has now sailed to the edge of the solar system and is expected to punch its way into interstellar space in the coming months or years. Voyager 2 is not far behind, but on a different trajectory.

University of Colorado Boulder scientists, who designed and built identical instruments for Voyager 1 and Voyager 2, were as stunned as anyone when the spacecraft began sending back data to Earth. The discoveries by Voyager started piling up: Twenty-three new planetary moons at Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune; active volcanoes on Jupiter's moon, Io; Jupiter's ring system; organic smog shrouding Saturn's moon, Titan; the braided, intertwined structure of Saturn's rings; the solar system's fastest winds (on Neptune, about 1,200 miles per hour); and nitrogen geysers spewing from Neptune's moon, Triton.

Charlie Hord, a former planetary scientist at CU-Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, remembers the salad days of the Voyager program, which was managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. Hord, the principal investigator for a time on the LASP instrument known as a photopolarimeter built for Voyager, still shakes his head in wonder as he recalls some of the discoveries.

"All of the scientists were dazzled by the pictures of the moons of Jupiter and Saturn coming back," recalled Hord, 74, who still lives in Boulder. 'To finally look at them up close was the most remarkable thing I've ever seen in my life." Since the early Voyager days were pre-Internet, "We used to send people over to the JPL news room to steal press kits so we could look at the pictures taken by the imaging team," he laughs.

The LASP photopolarimeter, a small telescope that measured the intensity and polarization of light at different wavelengths, was used for a variety of observations during the mission. The instrument helped scientists distinguish between rock, dust, frost, ice and meteor material. And it helped scientists determine the structure Jupiter's Great Red Spot, which Hord called "a giant hurricane that has blown for 200 hundred years," as well the properties of the clouds and atmospheres of Jupiter, Saturn Uranus and Neptune, and Saturn's largest moon, Titan.

The CU-Boulder instrument also was used to learn more about the make-up of the Io torus, a doughnut-shaped ring around Jupiter formed by volcanic eruptions from it's moon, Io, as well as determining the distribution of ring material orbiting Saturn, Uranus and Neptune and the surface compositions of the outer planet moons.

One of the finest mission moments for Hord was analyzing the data returned from the photopolarimeter when it was locked on the star Delta Scorpii as it emerged from behind Saturn and passed behind the elegant rings in a "stellar occultation" when the light from a star is blocked by an intervening object. The processed photopolarimeter data showed each ring was made up of numerous smaller ringlets. "They were beautiful -- they looked just like the grooves on a phonograph record," he said.

On the off chance either spacecraft is encountered by an alien civilization, each are carrying what are known as "Golden Records" -- gold-plated copper, audio-visual phonograph records with greetings in 50 languages, photos of people and places on Earth, the sounds of surf, wind, thunder, birds, and whales, diagrams of DNA and snippets of music ranging from Bach and Beethoven to guitarist Chuck Berry's classic rock-and-roll song, Johnny B. Goode. The spacecraft even carries a stylus set up in the correct position so that aliens could immediately play the record, named "Murmurs from Earth" by Carl Sagan, who conceived the Golden Record effort.

"I thought adding the Golden Record to the mission was a neat thing to do," said Hord. A guitar player himself who performs jazz and Big Band music with a trio that visits Boulder retirement homes, Hord recalled that JPL threw the Voyager team a party to celebrate the end of Voyager 2's Grand Tour as it passed by Neptune in 1989 (Pluto was in a distant part of its orbit at the time). "We even had Chuck Berry playing his guitar on the steps of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory," he said. "It was really something."

In 1990, Voyager 1 turned around one last time and took a portrait of the solar system -- a sequence of photos that revealed six of the nine planets in an orbital dance. From nearly 4 billion miles away, Earth took up only a single pixel.

"To me, Voyager was the most fun and interesting planetary mission ever," said Hord, who enlisted the help of then-graduate students Carol Stoker (now a NASA planetary scientist) and Wayne Pryor (now a professor at Central Arizona University) to analyze data from the mission. Over its lifetime, the CU-Boulder photopolarimeter science team also included LASP Professor Larry Esposito, Senior Research Associate Ian Stewart, retired faculty members Karen Simmons, Charles Barth and Robert West, as well as tireless work by many undergraduate and graduate students.

Esposito, who is still at LASP and is the principal investigator on a $12 million CU-Boulder instrument package aboard NASA's Cassini Mission to Saturn, said his biggest thrill of the Voyager mission was the Neptune fly-by in 1989 when the gas giant "went from being a small blurry dot to a planet with bright clouds and numerous moons and rings. "Triton erupted before our eyes, and Neptune's partial rings were punctuated and variable like a type of sausage that the French make."

Then-CU President Gordon Gee was so impressed with the blue image the LASP team made of Neptune's ring system that he used it on his Christmas cards, said Esposito, a professor in the astrophysical and planetary sciences department.

Esposito believes the biggest discovery by CU-Boulder's Voyager photopolarimeter team was the intricate structure of Saturn's F ring -- a ring he discovered in 1979 using data from NASA Pioneer 11 mission. The CU-Boulder team determined the faint F ring was made up of three separate ringlets that appeared to be braided together, and that the inner and outer limits of the ring were controlled by two small "shepherd satellites."

In addition, Esposito said that density waves -- ripple-like features in the rings caused by the influence of Saturn's moons -- allowed the team to estimate the weight and age of Saturn's rings.

As for Hord, the Casper, Wyo. native went on to be the principal investigator for two spectrometers designed for NASA's Galileo Mission to Jupiter that launched in 1989 to tour the Jovian system, including its bizarre moons. Hord officially retired in 1997, but returns to campus for occasional visits with his colleagues.

Rocketing at roughly 35,000 miles per hour, Voyager 1 will float within 9.3 trillion miles of the star AC+793888 in the constellation Camelopardalis in about 40,000 years. In 296,000 years, Voyager 2 will pass within 25 trillion miles of Sirius, the brightest star in the sky. Perhaps on the way, the spacecraft will encounter some musically inclined aliens up for a little Bach, Beethoven or Berry.

###

University of Colorado at Boulder: http://www.colorado.edu/news

Thanks to University of Colorado at Boulder for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115962/NASA_s_Voyager_spacecraft_that_toured_outer_planets_nearing_solar_system_edge

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Early Russian polls show surprise setback for Vladimir Putin

Exit polls from Sunday's State Duma elections show Vladimir Putin's ruling party winning less than half the votes.

The results of exit polls, reported on Russian state TV, suggest that the Kremlin might be in for a huge shock when the votes from?Sunday's State Duma elections?have all been counted.

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The polls, conducted by two of Russia's most venerable public opinion services, indicate that Vladimir Putin's United Russia party (UR)?has won less than half the votes. It would mark the party's first failure to top 50 percent in a national election since its creation?a decade ago to provide a legislative backstop for then-President Putin's ambitious plans to remake Russia.

In the last Duma elections, in 2007, United Russia won 64 percent of the popular vote, giving it a two-thirds supermajority in the Duma, which enabled it to ram through any legislation it wished and even change the Constitution.

But according to one exit poll conducted by the independent, Moscow-based Public Opinion Foundation, UR saw its support slip by 18 points to just 46 percent on Sunday. A similar poll by the state-funded Russian Public Opinion Research Center (VTsIOM) put UR's support at 48.5 percent.

The fact that the polls were reported by state-owned news agencies suggests that Russian authorities may be resigned to the loss of a pro-Kremlin Duma majority.?

Most public opinion surveys in recent weeks have indicated a sharp erosion of support for UR -- though not on such a scale -- and many experts connect that trend to weariness with the authorities and lack of enthusiasm for Mr. Putin's personal decision to run again for president, on the UR ticket, in elections slated for next March.

The same exit polls show substantial gains for the opposition Communist Party, which appears to have boosted its support from around 12 to 20 percent, and the left-wing A Just Russia party, which surged from 8 to around 12 percent. The ultranationalist party of Vladimir Zhirinovsky also appears to have gained a few points, to about 12 percent.

Some experts warn that the official count will only be finished sometime on Monday, and it might differ from exit poll results for a variety of reasons. These include the tendency of exit pollers to disproportionately query urban voters, who tend to be more restive than voters in the remote and hard-to-reach deep provinces, where people tend to be far more conservative and obedient to authority.

Russia's?complicated electoral system also provides that votes given to parties that fail to hurdle the 7 percent barrier needed to enter the Duma, as well as spoiled ballots, will be divided up among the winners according to a pro-rated formula that would benefit UR. Hence, experts say, a result of 46 percent for UR could transform into a narrow majority in the 450-seat Duma.

In snow-swept Davlekanovo, an impoverished agro-industrial town about 1,000 miles east of Moscow, local observers noted that Communist Party voters appeared more numerous than in the past, but in early counting more than half the votes were going to United Russia.

"I like Putin, he's a man who gets things done,"?said Yelena Kuzmina, a social worker, after voting Sunday. "So, I supported United Russia, because it's the party of Putin."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ZAE7jvUYuG0/Early-Russian-polls-show-surprise-setback-for-Vladimir-Putin

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Posthumous Amy Winehouse album leading UK charts (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) ? Amy Winehouse's posthumous album "Lioness: Hidden Treasures" was on course to top the British album charts by the end of the week, the Official Charts Company (OCC) said on Tuesday.

Although not yet at the halfway point for the weekly ranking, the collection of 12 tracks recorded from as early as 2002 but not used on either of Winehouse's studio albums was well ahead of the competition.

In a brief statement, the OCC said Lioness: Hidden Treasures had sold nearly 70,000 copies so far.

Winehouse's father Mitch, writing on Twitter, said the figure was 140,000, although it was not clear whether that was projected sales for the whole week or reflected more up-to-date data.

"Just been told. Amy at number 1. 140,000 sold = ?140,000 to foundation in one day. Well done baby," he wrote.

"My heart is sad but bursting with pride. Mitch"

Winehouse died in July aged 27, ending a promising career that was marred by highly publicized battles with drug and alcohol addiction.

The "Back to Black" singer, known for her beehive hairstyle and distinctive soulful voice, had high levels of alcohol in her blood at the time of her death.

Mitch has set up a charity in her name aimed at helping children and young adults suffering ill health and addiction, and for every copy of the album sold, one pound goes to the Amy Winehouse Foundation.

Reviews of the album have been mixed, with several critics saying the music pointed to Winehouse's huge potential but also failed to live up to the high standards she would have demanded when at her peak.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111206/music_nm/us_amywinehouse_abum

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Moscow knocks U.S. for "silence" on dead Russian child (Reuters)

MOSCOW (Reuters) ? The United States "inexcusably" failed to inform Moscow about the death of a Russian-born toddler adopted by an American couple, a Kremlin official said on Friday, highlighting tensions over an adoption accord the two countries signed in July.

Russia's children's rights commissioner Pavel Astakhov criticised U.S. authorities for not informing Russia that an American man had been acquitted of the murder of his Russian-born son.

In November a jury in U.S. state Iowa decided that Brian Dykstra was not guilty of second-degree murder following the death of his 21-month year old son Isaac in 2005, U.S. news reports said.

"The American authorities have only now informed us (of this case). For almost six years they were silent and said nothing. It is inexcusable," Astakhov told Reuters in an interview.

A U.S. official who did not wish to be named told Reuters on Friday they were preparing a response to Astakhov's remarks.

The adoption of tens of thousands of Russian children by foreigners since the collapse of the Soviet Union 20 years ago has been a touchy subject since Russia opened up to would-be Western parents.

Cases of abuse amongst Russian-born children in the United States have outraged both politicians and the public alike in Russia.

"Nineteen of our children have died," Astakhov said referring to all deaths of Russian-born children in the U.S. since 1991. "This situation is a permanent fiasco."

In August, Astakhov criticised the suspended sentence handed to an Alaskan mother seen on a U.S. television program after she punished her seven-year old son by making him swallow spicy sauce and stand in a cold shower.

Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has spoken out against a Tennessee woman who abandoned her adopted son and put him on a plane alone back to Russia last year.

Around 371,700 children were living in Russian state institutions in 2009, according to the Moscow-based organization Right of the Child. The Russian government is now seeking to boost domestic adoption to care for orphans or abandoned children as an alternative to foreign adoption.

Astakhov, also a lawyer and TV personality, is seeking to strip a U.S. couple from Pennsylvania, the Cravers, of their parental rights after they were convicted of the involuntary manslaughter of their seven-year old son adopted from Russia.

He now wants to ensure the couple's adopted daughter, Dasha Skorobogatova and also from Russia, has no further contact with the couple, according to an official statement on the commissioner's website.

In July, Lavrov signed an agreement with his U.S. counterpart, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, to tighten adoption rules, meaning only agencies authorized by the Russian government will be able to operate in the country, while monitoring of families after adoption will be stepped up.

The Russian Duma, the lower house of parliament, must now ratify the agreement before it comes into force.

"American officials must inform us of every case when a Russian citizen dies," Astakhov said.

(Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111202/wl_nm/us_russia_usa_adoption

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