Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Hartford School Board Appoints Four School Principals; Postpones A Fifth After Union Concerns

HARTFORD ? ?

The board of education confirmed the appointments of four school principals Tuesday night, including new leaders for Jumoke Academy at Milner School, Breakthrough Magnet School and Pathways Academy of Technology and Design.

But in a rare move, the Hartford Federation of Teachers publicly objected to a fifth administrator, Gerardo Heredia, who has been acting principal at America's Choice at S.A.N.D. School since 2011. The district sought to make that a permanent appointment; the board postponed a vote on him.

Union President Andrea Johnson said the union has filed numerous grievances against Heredia and has lodged complaints about "unfair labor practices." One area of concern, Johnson said, involves teacher evaluations.

"Unfortunately, teachers fear speaking freely at S.A.N.D. School," Johnson told the board, saying there was a "fear of retribution."

Heredia declined to comment when reached late Tuesday.

After Superintendent Christina Kishimoto asked if it was "appropriate" for Johnson to air detailed concerns ? "I feel you're violating my constitutional rights," Johnson responded ? the five board members at the meeting decided to postpone their vote on Heredia.

The other principal candidates received unanimous board approval.

Karen Lott will soon take over at Milner, a low-performing school on Vine Street that is completing its first year as part of the state Commissioner's Network. Lott, the principal of Brennan-Rogers School of Communication and Media in New Haven, will receive a $131,355 salary and begins July 1.

In the city's Behind the Rocks neighborhood, Breakthrough Assistant Principal Julie Goldstein will be just the second person to lead the 355-student magnet school on Brookfield Street, following Norma Neumann-Johnson.

Neumann-Johnson, a proponent of the Sheff v. O'Neill desegregation case who founded Breakthrough in her push for quality integrated education, is retiring after a 45-year career in the Hartford school system. Breakthrough practices character education and is the only public school in Connecticut to use mindfulness-based stress reduction, a form of meditation, in classes each day, according to Goldstein.

After the board's vote, Neumann-Johnson gave Goldstein a bouquet of flowers.

Goldstein told the board that becoming a principal was a personal "culmination." In 1990, right out of college, she started as a Teach for America high school language arts teacher in Los Angeles before becoming a social worker and, eventually, an administrator who was mentored by Neumann-Johnson. Her salary is set at $115,388.

At Pathways, a technology-focused, regional magnet high school, the new principal will be David Goldblum, now an assistant principal at New Haven's James Hillhouse High School. Goldblum replaces longtime school leader Steven Dellinger-Pate, who accepted an administrative job in the district's central office starting in July.

Goldblum, whose salary will be $120,657, will oversee Pathways' move from its temporary location in Windsor to a $40 million building being constructed near Goodwin College in East Hartford. The new school should be ready for students and staff by February 2014, Dellinger-Pate said.

The board also approved Jay Mihalko as the permanent principal at Noah Webster Microsociety Magnet School, effective Wednesday. Mihalko has been acting principal this year at the high-performing West End school where Tuesday's meeting was held. The district listed his salary as $113,930.

Source: http://hartfordcourant.feedsportal.com/c/34278/f/623719/s/2c3ab2fd/l/0L0Scourant0N0Cnews0Cconnecticut0Chc0Ehartford0Eschool0Eboard0E0A5220E20A130A5210H0A0H51875320Bstory0Dtrack0Frss/story01.htm

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Cambridge and Oxford top university sex toys league table

Oxbridge students have topped the sex toy spending league table (Picture: File)
Oxbridge students have topped the sex toy spending league table (Picture: File)

Students with an impressive IQ may have a higher sex drive than the average undergraduate, new sex toy sales figures suggest.

Cambridge University tops the sex toy spending league table, with its students splashing out ?9,793 on bedroom aids in the past 12 months.

They were closely followed by their Oxford rivals who spent ?9,689 on luxury sex toys including rabbit vibrators and soft bondage gear, online retailer Lovehoney revealed.

Lovehoney said its Google Analytics analysis of customer addresses appeared to show a ?heightened interest in sex amongst students in the Russell Group of elite universities?.

?I think the reason Oxford and Cambridge came top of the university league tables is because their students have always had a healthy interest in sex,? a spokesman told the Oxford Student.

?Fifty Shades of Grey was a big hit with young women and we have found students? orders reflecting that.

?We are getting a lot of orders for soft bondage gear ? handcuffs, floggers and spankers are all popular.?

Oxford Bar Society secretary, Victoria Adelmant, added: ?Maybe the single Tabs have less enjoyable sex than Oxonians do and thus need more supplementation. ?

Manchester University came third in the spending league table, while seven out of the top ten spending colleges are from the Russell Group representing the UK?s leading top 24 universities.

Top 10 spenders on sex toys

1. Cambridge ?9,793

2. Oxford ?9,689

3. Manchester ?5,441

4. Lancaster ?4,103

5. York ?3,751

6. Leeds ?3,484

7. Southampton ?3,383

8. Warwick ?3,213

9. Surrey ?3,203

10. Loughborough ?2,981

Source: http://metro.co.uk/2013/05/22/does-a-higher-iq-mean-a-higher-sex-drive-oxbridge-tops-sex-toys-league-table-3804825/

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Fighting to save an endangered bird -- with vomit

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

An adult marbled murrelet, a rare and endangered type of bird, floats atop the water.

By Becky Oskin
LiveScience

A psychological warfare program centered on vomit could help save the marbled murrelet, an endangered seabird that nests in California's old-growth redwood forests.

The robin-sized murrelet lives at sea but lays one pointy, blue-green egg each year on the flat, mossy branch of a redwood. While breeding, its back feathers morph from black to mottled brown to better match the forest. For two months, both parents race back and forth to the coast as far as 50 miles (80 kilometers) each day at speeds of up to 98 mph (158 km/h) while evading peregrine falcon and hawk attacks. After the chick hatches, it pecks off its redwood-colored down and, flying solo, launches straight for the ocean. Penguins have nothing on the murrelet.

"They're a seabird like a puffin, and they have this crazy lifestyle that's like a living link between the old-growth redwood?forests and the Pacific Ocean," said Keith Bensen, a biologist at Redwood National Park. "It's strange to have an animal with webbed feet in the forest," he said.

?Despite its amazing skills, the marbled-murrelet population is down by more than 90 percent from its 19th-century numbers in California, thanks to logging, fishing and pollution. Murrelets live as far north as Alaska, but the central California population is most at risk. Yet even though the state's remaining old-growth redwood trees are now protected, the murrelets continue to disappear.

The culprit: the egg-sucking, chick-eating Steller's jay.

USGS

A young marbled murrelet chick.

About 4,000 murrelets remain in California, with about 300 to 600 in central California's Santa Cruz Mountains. Squirrels, ravens and owls also swipe murrelet eggs, but jays are the biggest thieves in California, gobbling up 80 percent of each year's brood. Unless more eggs survive, the central California population will go extinct within a century, according to a 2010 study published in the journal Biological Conservation.

To boost California's murrelet numbers, biologists in California's Redwood National and State Parks are fighting back against Steller's jays and their human enablers.

The art of avian war
With cash earmarked for murrelets from offshore-oil-spill restoration funds, the parks have the rare ability to fund research studies and restore habitat. The two-pronged approach will teach the black-crested jays to avoid murrelet eggs on pain of puking. More importantly, it will shrink the jay population by thwarting access to their primary food source ? human trash and food. [Image Gallery: Saving the Rare Marbled Murrelet]

"Every time folks throw out crumbs to bring out jays and squirrels, it's having a real impact on a very rare bird nesting overhead in an old-growth redwood tree," Bensen told OurAmazingPlanet.

A Western bird, the blue and black Steller's jays like to frequent cleared forest edges ? which are filled with bugs and berry bushes ? and campgrounds littered with tasty trash and crumbs. As humans spend more time in the forest, the jay's numbers are booming. Their density in campgrounds is nine times higher than in other forest areas, said Portia Halbert, an environmental scientist with the California State Parks.

"We see this crazy overlap of jays in campgrounds because of the density of food," Halbert told OurAmazingPlanet. The overpopulation also menaces federally protected species, such as snowy plovers, desert tortoises and California least terns ? the jays eat their eggs too.

Richard Golightly

A Steller's jay inspects a fake egg meant to mimic the egg of a murrelet, another type of bird. The egg contains a vomit-inducing ingredient meant to discourage the jays from eating real murrelet eggs.

Steller's jays don't seek out murrelet eggs. But when the birds circle picnic areas near murrelet nests, some discover the chicken-size eggs make a fine treat. The smart, savvy birds?will return to the same spot over and over, searching for food. Murrelets, to their misfortune, nest in the same tree every year.

Masters of disguise, the first marbled murrelet nest wasn't discovered by scientists until 1974, in Big Basin Redwoods State Park. The seabird doesn't actually build a nest, instead choosing a flat branch covered in cozy moss and needles, with cover to hide from airborne predators. At dawn and dusk, parents switch roles, flying offshore to dive for fish and invertebrates. [Watch the mysterious marbled murrelet]

"For an animal that lives for some 20 years, losing an egg is a terrible, terrible loss," Bensen said. "They're investing an enormous amount of energy into that one baby."

Killing Steller's jays won't help the murrelets; even more of the marauding birds will invade campgrounds to compete for vacant territory, biologists have concluded. Plus, jays are part of the natural ecosystem, said Richard Golightly, a biologist at Humboldt State University in California. Instead, researchers think aversion training is the cheapest, most effective way to stop Steller's jays from snacking on murrelets.

"It freaks everybody out to train wild animals to do what you want, but it surprised the heck out of all of us how much more feasible it was than we thought," Bensen said.

World's worst Easter egg hunt
The plan, the brainchild of Humboldt State graduate student Pia Gabriel, centers on carbachol, an odorless, tasteless chemicalthat provokes vomiting with just a small swallow. Researchers fine-tuned the correct dose with lab tests at Humboldt State in 2009. Small chicken eggs, dyed blue-green and speckled with brown paint, were offered as meals to jays, with carbachol hidden inside. Wild Steller's jays in this first treatment group usually tried just one taste of the carbachol-filled fake eggs.

Portia Halbert

A graphic developed by the Redwood National and State Parks to encourage campers to clean up their food crumbs.

"All of a sudden, their wings will droop, and they throw up. That's exactly what you want ? a rapid response ? so within five minutes, they barf up whatever they ate," Bensen said. The quick action helps the jays link the eggs with the illness.

Some jays wouldn't even touch the eggs ? evidence that murrelet egg-nabbing is a learned behavior, Golightly said.

In spring 2010 and spring 2011, a team zip-tied hundreds of the copycat eggs to redwood-tree branches in several parks. Each chicken egg was painstakingly colored (Benjamin Moore Oceanfront 660) and speckled to resemble murrelet eggs. A control batch of red speckled eggs also decorated the forest.

"We've been accused of being the Easter bunny in the woods," Golightly told OurAmazingPlanet.

A second wave of eggs set out a few weeks later measured whether wild jays learned to avoid tossing their lunch. The mimic eggs reduced egg-snatching by anywhere from 37 percent to more than 70 percent, depending on where the eggs were deployed. For instance, one spot lost eggs to bears, so not as many jays got to sample the carbachol. (The bogus eggs were set low on branches, to avoid drawing jays toward real murrelet eggs.)

A retched success
The tests were so successful that Halbert applied for oil-spill restoration funds to start training Steller's jays in the state parks. In spring 2012, during murrelet nesting season, researchers spread hundreds of vomit-inducing eggs throughout Butano State Park and Portola Redwoods Park in the Santa Cruz Mountains. This year, the project included Memorial Park, a county park with old-growth redwoods. [Nature's Giants: Tallest Trees on Earth]

"It's worked amazingly well," Halbert said."We've found a significant decrease in predations by jays, the number of times eggs get broken," she said. The effects were monitored with camera traps and a second wave of mimic eggs.

Reducing predation on murrelet nests by 40 percent to 70 percent would stabilize the Santa Cruz Mountains murrelet population, according to the 2010 study published in the journal Biological Conservation. That 40 percent minimum would drop the extinction risk from about 96 percent to about 5 percent over 100 years, and result in stable population growth, reported lead study author Zach Peery of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

In 2012, the smallest cutback in egg attacks by Steller's jays and other predators was 44 percent, and the biggest was as much as 80 percent in the two state parks, researchers reported. The project cost $80 per treated hectare (2.4 acres).

When the enemy is full, starve them
Here's why taste aversion?works so well for Steller's jays. Their fiercely territorial social structure keeps out untrained birds. Long-lived, with excellent memories, the jays will recognize and avoid those rare blue-green eggs that made them retch. Nothing else in the forest looks like a murrelet egg. If taste-aversion training were to spread through the murrelet's range, it would not be the first time a bird would require human babysitters to survive ? think of condors, who need devoted monitoring and care..

But Halbert said all the efforts to stop egg-stealing won't matter if the parks can't shrink the jay population by getting rid of their campground crumb food source. That's where the human psychology comes in. The parks hired an expert in public education and natural resources, Carolyn Ward, to help craft a message as finely tuned as any advertising company's.

"We're coming up with creative ways to change people's behavior," Halbert said.

Ward's research revealed most park visitors only read the first sentence on signs, so starting with the marbled murrelet's history was wasted effort. Now, with everything from stickers on the back of bathroom stalls to new signs at campsites, Redwood Parks visitors are warned to "Keep it crumb clean." This summer marks the new program's first big push, with campfire talks, tchotchkes for kids, brochures and YouTube videos that highlight the murrelet's plight.

At Big Basin Redwood State Park, Halbert has also installed animal-proof food lockers and trash cans. At Redwood National Park, the staff reconfigured the outdoor sinks so jays and squirrels can't steal leftovers from dishes.

While Redwood National Park is going ?crumb clean,? the park will wait on the vomit eggs, Bensen said. "We're basically trying to prevent any food access to even the smallest crumb," he said. "With Steller's jays, just a couple Cheetos is enough. They'll keep coming and coming, and then eat the marbled murrelets. We want to cut that process off at the knees."

Future development
The "crumb clean" push comes as Big Basin gears up for a struggle over its first general plan, which will guide the park's future. The proposed plan, published in 2012, will expand areas of the park to new public use. But some groups, including the California Audubon Society and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, think the park should either close or restrict certain areas during murrelet breeding season, to help the endangered species recover.

A public hearing on the draft plan was?held Friday?in Santa Cruz, Calif., and a copy of the plan?is available online.

"If people are looking for someone to blame for the problem the murrelet is having, I think everybody has some of that blame," Golightly said. "Cutting of the old-growth forests in the past is the primary thing that put us to this point, but presently, if you visit the parks and feed the animals, you're contributing, too. It is coming at the expense of the murrelet."

Email Becky Oskin or follow her @beckyoskin. Follow us?@OAPlanet, Facebook?and Google+. Original article on LiveScience's OurAmazingPlanet.

?

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2c2a0177/l/0Lscience0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A50C20A0C183768470Efighting0Eto0Esave0Ean0Eendangered0Ebird0Ewith0Evomit0Dlite/story01.htm

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Exposure to traffic pollution increases asthma severity in pregnant women

Exposure to traffic pollution increases asthma severity in pregnant women [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Nathaniel Dunford
ndunford@thoracic.org
American Thoracic Society

ATS 2013, PHILADELPHIA ? Air pollutants from traffic are associated with increased asthma severity levels in pregnant asthmatic women, according to a new study.

"Air pollution is a known trigger for asthma symptoms," said lead author Janneane Gent, PhD, Research Scientist in Epidemiology (Environmental Health) at the Yale School of Public Health. "In our study, exposures were assessed using a sophisticated air pollution modeling system (Community Multiscale Air Quality, CMAQ) that permits community-level estimates (i.e., close to where the subject resides) instead of assigning regional measurements made at Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) central site monitors to all subjects. Using community-level estimates, we found that exposure to nitrogen dioxide at levels much lower than the current EPA standard was associated with increased risk of asthma morbidity."

The results of the study will be presented at the ATS 2013 International Conference.

The study enrolled 637 pregnant women (

Exposure to nitrogen dioxide, fine particulate matter, and the elemental carbon content of fine particulate matter were estimated using the CMAQ modeling system. Analyses of the relationship between exposure to traffic-related pollutants and asthma severity were adjusted for a number of possible confounding factors, including month of pregnancy, pre-pregnancy body mass index, demographics, health, household exposures and season.

Mean community-level predicted concentrations for nitrogen dioxide, elemental carbon and fine particulate matter were 23.7 parts per billion (ppb), 0.67 micrograms (one-millionth of a gram) per cubic meter of air (g/m3) and 11.1 g/m3, respectively.

Each 10 ppb increase in community-level nitrogen dioxide was associated with an increased risk of wheeze, with an odds ratio (the odds that an outcome will occur after a particular exposure, compared to the odds of the outcome occurring in the absence of that exposure) of 1.27. Each 10 ppb increase in nitrogen dioxide was also associated with a higher asthma severity score (odds ratio 1.31). Similarly, each 0.5 g/m3 increase in elemental carbon was associated with an increased risk of wheeze (odds ratio 1.30) and higher asthma severity score (odds ratio 1.32).

Exposure to fine particulate matter did not significantly increase asthma morbidity or asthma severity score.

"Exposure to air pollution from traffic is known to have a number of deleterious effects on human health," said Dr. Gent. "Our study suggests that exposures to community-level concentrations of traffic-related pollutants are associated with increased asthma morbidity, and that these pollutant concentrations are likely to be lower than those measured at EPA central monitoring sites."

###

* Please note that numbers in this release may differ slightly from those in the abstract. Many of these investigations are ongoing; the release represents the most up-to-date data available at press time.

Abstract 38621

Asthma Severity During Pregnancy: Effect Of Community-Level Exposure To Traffic-Related Pollutants
Type: Scientific Abstract
Category: 01.08 - Asthma: Epidemiology (EOH)
Authors: J.F. Gent1, J.M. Kezik1, T.R. Holford1, M.E. Hill1, L. McKay1, K. Belanger1, M.B. Bracken1, K. Demerjian2, B.P. Leaderer1; 1Yale University School of Public Health - New Haven, CT/US, 2State University of New York - Albany, NY/US

Abstract Body

Rationale: In a study of pregnant, asthmatic women (n=637) living in Connecticut and Western Massachusetts, we assessed the association between symptoms and medication use and community-level exposures to nitrogen dioxide (1-hr maximum NO2), fine particles (24-hr mean PM2.5), and elemental carbon content of PM2.5 (24-hr mean). Exposures were estimated using the high-resolution Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model which predicts community-level values in 12x12 km grids. Methods: Women with active asthma (physician-diagnosed asthma plus symptoms and/or asthma medication use in the previous 12 months) were recruited before 24 weeks gestation. Subjects' home addresses were geocoded for assignment to pollution exposure grids. Symptoms and medication use for each 28-day gestational month were collected through phone interviews. Outcome measures included days of wheeze (categorized as 0, 1-7, > 7 but not daily, daily) and monthly 5-level asthma severity score (adapted from Global Initiative for Asthma guidelines). Effects of exposures (daily estimates averaged over gestational month) to NO2, elemental carbon and PM2.5 on asthma morbidity were examined with hierarchical, ordered logistic regression analyses using generalized linear mixed models adjusted for covariates related to pregnancy (month of pregnancy, pre-pregnancy body mass index); demographics and health (age, ethnicity, education level, allergies, [asthma medication use for models with wheeze]); household exposures (gas stove, reported mold or mildew, use of tobacco);and season. Results: Mean (standard deviation) community-level concentrations for NO2, elemental carbon and PM2.5, respectively were: 23.7 (8.6) ppb, 0.67 (0.25) g/m3 and 11.1(2.7) g/m3. In single pollutant models adjusted for covariates, each 10 ppb increase in community-level NO2 was associated with an increased risk of wheeze (odds ratio [OR] 1.27, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.10, 1.46) and higher asthma severity score (OR 1.31, 95% CI 1.16, 1.49). Each 0.5 g/m3 increase in elemental carbon was associated with an increased risk of wheeze (OR 1.30, 95% CI 1.06, 1.58) and higher asthma severity score (OR 1.32, 95% CI 1.10, 1.58). No significant effects on asthma morbidity were observed for exposure to PM2.5 (wheeze OR 1.09, 95% CI 0.95, 1.25; severity score OR 1.08, 95% CI 0.96, 1.21). Conclusion: Risk of increased asthma morbidity during pregnancy is significantly associated with exposure to ambient levels of traffic-related pollutants NO2 and the elemental carbon content of PM2.5. Health effects were associated with community-level estimates of NO2 at concentrations much lower than the EPA 1-hr maximum standard of 100 ppb. There currently is no EPA standard for elemental carbon.


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

?


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


Exposure to traffic pollution increases asthma severity in pregnant women [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Nathaniel Dunford
ndunford@thoracic.org
American Thoracic Society

ATS 2013, PHILADELPHIA ? Air pollutants from traffic are associated with increased asthma severity levels in pregnant asthmatic women, according to a new study.

"Air pollution is a known trigger for asthma symptoms," said lead author Janneane Gent, PhD, Research Scientist in Epidemiology (Environmental Health) at the Yale School of Public Health. "In our study, exposures were assessed using a sophisticated air pollution modeling system (Community Multiscale Air Quality, CMAQ) that permits community-level estimates (i.e., close to where the subject resides) instead of assigning regional measurements made at Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) central site monitors to all subjects. Using community-level estimates, we found that exposure to nitrogen dioxide at levels much lower than the current EPA standard was associated with increased risk of asthma morbidity."

The results of the study will be presented at the ATS 2013 International Conference.

The study enrolled 637 pregnant women (

Exposure to nitrogen dioxide, fine particulate matter, and the elemental carbon content of fine particulate matter were estimated using the CMAQ modeling system. Analyses of the relationship between exposure to traffic-related pollutants and asthma severity were adjusted for a number of possible confounding factors, including month of pregnancy, pre-pregnancy body mass index, demographics, health, household exposures and season.

Mean community-level predicted concentrations for nitrogen dioxide, elemental carbon and fine particulate matter were 23.7 parts per billion (ppb), 0.67 micrograms (one-millionth of a gram) per cubic meter of air (g/m3) and 11.1 g/m3, respectively.

Each 10 ppb increase in community-level nitrogen dioxide was associated with an increased risk of wheeze, with an odds ratio (the odds that an outcome will occur after a particular exposure, compared to the odds of the outcome occurring in the absence of that exposure) of 1.27. Each 10 ppb increase in nitrogen dioxide was also associated with a higher asthma severity score (odds ratio 1.31). Similarly, each 0.5 g/m3 increase in elemental carbon was associated with an increased risk of wheeze (odds ratio 1.30) and higher asthma severity score (odds ratio 1.32).

Exposure to fine particulate matter did not significantly increase asthma morbidity or asthma severity score.

"Exposure to air pollution from traffic is known to have a number of deleterious effects on human health," said Dr. Gent. "Our study suggests that exposures to community-level concentrations of traffic-related pollutants are associated with increased asthma morbidity, and that these pollutant concentrations are likely to be lower than those measured at EPA central monitoring sites."

###

* Please note that numbers in this release may differ slightly from those in the abstract. Many of these investigations are ongoing; the release represents the most up-to-date data available at press time.

Abstract 38621

Asthma Severity During Pregnancy: Effect Of Community-Level Exposure To Traffic-Related Pollutants
Type: Scientific Abstract
Category: 01.08 - Asthma: Epidemiology (EOH)
Authors: J.F. Gent1, J.M. Kezik1, T.R. Holford1, M.E. Hill1, L. McKay1, K. Belanger1, M.B. Bracken1, K. Demerjian2, B.P. Leaderer1; 1Yale University School of Public Health - New Haven, CT/US, 2State University of New York - Albany, NY/US

Abstract Body

Rationale: In a study of pregnant, asthmatic women (n=637) living in Connecticut and Western Massachusetts, we assessed the association between symptoms and medication use and community-level exposures to nitrogen dioxide (1-hr maximum NO2), fine particles (24-hr mean PM2.5), and elemental carbon content of PM2.5 (24-hr mean). Exposures were estimated using the high-resolution Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model which predicts community-level values in 12x12 km grids. Methods: Women with active asthma (physician-diagnosed asthma plus symptoms and/or asthma medication use in the previous 12 months) were recruited before 24 weeks gestation. Subjects' home addresses were geocoded for assignment to pollution exposure grids. Symptoms and medication use for each 28-day gestational month were collected through phone interviews. Outcome measures included days of wheeze (categorized as 0, 1-7, > 7 but not daily, daily) and monthly 5-level asthma severity score (adapted from Global Initiative for Asthma guidelines). Effects of exposures (daily estimates averaged over gestational month) to NO2, elemental carbon and PM2.5 on asthma morbidity were examined with hierarchical, ordered logistic regression analyses using generalized linear mixed models adjusted for covariates related to pregnancy (month of pregnancy, pre-pregnancy body mass index); demographics and health (age, ethnicity, education level, allergies, [asthma medication use for models with wheeze]); household exposures (gas stove, reported mold or mildew, use of tobacco);and season. Results: Mean (standard deviation) community-level concentrations for NO2, elemental carbon and PM2.5, respectively were: 23.7 (8.6) ppb, 0.67 (0.25) g/m3 and 11.1(2.7) g/m3. In single pollutant models adjusted for covariates, each 10 ppb increase in community-level NO2 was associated with an increased risk of wheeze (odds ratio [OR] 1.27, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.10, 1.46) and higher asthma severity score (OR 1.31, 95% CI 1.16, 1.49). Each 0.5 g/m3 increase in elemental carbon was associated with an increased risk of wheeze (OR 1.30, 95% CI 1.06, 1.58) and higher asthma severity score (OR 1.32, 95% CI 1.10, 1.58). No significant effects on asthma morbidity were observed for exposure to PM2.5 (wheeze OR 1.09, 95% CI 0.95, 1.25; severity score OR 1.08, 95% CI 0.96, 1.21). Conclusion: Risk of increased asthma morbidity during pregnancy is significantly associated with exposure to ambient levels of traffic-related pollutants NO2 and the elemental carbon content of PM2.5. Health effects were associated with community-level estimates of NO2 at concentrations much lower than the EPA 1-hr maximum standard of 100 ppb. There currently is no EPA standard for elemental carbon.


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/ats-ett051313.php

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Monday, May 20, 2013

PFT: Super Bowls L & LI to be?awarded? |? Voting

Tampa Bay Buccaneers v Carolina PanthersGetty Images

If Buccaneers coach Greg Schiano ever gets tired of having to tell people Josh Freeman is his starting quarterback, someone should probably mention to him that it?s kind of his own fault.

Schiano started singing like Tammy Wynette again in relation to Freeman Monday, the day after he was quoted as saying he was ?not against? the notion of starting rookie Mike Glennon instead.

?We have a starting quarterback, and it?s Josh Freeman,? Schiano said, via Stephen Holder of the Tampa Bay Times.

According to the report, Schiano said he?s trying to be honest, and doesn?t mean to put pressure on Freeman by saying such things in the national media.

?I guess nationally, they don?t sit here with me every day like you guys [local media] do,? Schiano said. ?From the day we arrived, our whole program has [been based on] competition, . . . That?s what we believe in. It?s the most competitive sports league in the world. It?s competition, and I love it.

?But we have our starting quarterback, and it?s Josh Freeman. I?m not looking to find another.?

If he really wanted to clear things up, he could always, you know, stop leaving the door open a crack every time he talks about Glennon.

Or, if he wanted a stronger statement on Freeman and how much he loves him under center, he could give him a new contract to replace the final year of his rookie deal.

But it doesn?t appear at the moment that Schiano intends to do either.

And that?s fine, as long as everyone?s clear about the implication sent by those actions.

He likes Freeman, right up until the point he decides he doesn?t.

So Schiano?s apparently going to have to keep clarifying all the things that he keeps saying, whether to the national or local media.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/05/19/super-bowls-l-and-li-to-be-awarded-this-week/related/

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Will Power grabs early lead in race for Indy pole

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ? Will Power was the most relieved man in Roger Penske's garage Saturday.

After spending most of the week frustrated as he tried to find speed, Roger Penske's team finally came up with the answers the Australian needed to move into position for his first Indianapolis 500 pole.

Power posted a four-lap average of 228.844 mph ? significantly faster than defending series champion Ryan Hunter-Reay, who was second at 228.282 ? heading into Saturday's nine-car shootout for the top starting spot in the May 26 race.

It was a refreshing change.

"We struggled early in the week, we just finally got quicker and quicker," Power said. "One more step and I think it would be 230."

He'll get that chance in the shootout.

But it was a stark contrast to the guy who looked demoralized following another frustrating practice session Thursday. Back then, Power seemed resigned to the fact he wouldn't be in contention for the shootout.

His perspective started to change Friday following a major jump up the speed charts. Power's steady progression continued Saturday morning when he posted the fastest lap in pre-qualifying practice. Then, after waiting through a rain delay of roughly 2? hours and watching 17 other drivers making qualifying attempts, Power finally got a chance to show the crowd what the No. 12 car could do.

Unlike so many others cars on Indy's tricky 2.5-mile oval, Power didn't lose a thing as temperatures cooled and the rain washed away some of the grip and drew loud roars by posting back-to-back laps of 229.422 and 229.170. He finished the run with laps of 228.526 and 228.260.

Nobody else had a lap faster than 228.684, putting Power in a strong position.

What changed? Power's crew switched to the setup rookie AJ Allmendinger was using in practice, a setup that kept him among the fastest drivers in practice.

"There was one change that we did that it definitely made the car quick and we know what that is," Power said.

He wasn't giving away the secret, though it clearly worked for his teammates, too.

For part of the afternoon, Penske's three drivers -- Power, Brazil's Helio Castroneves, a three-time 500 winner, and Allmendinger --held the top three spots.

Then the Andretti Autosport drivers who dominated this week's practice suddenly turned the shootout into a two-team race.

Defending series champ Ryan Hunter-Reay broke up the Penske monopoly. Two cars later rookie Carlos Munoz of Colombia, moved to third on the starting grid with a four-lap average of 228.171.

"That was a great run for us. I'd like to do a few things differently, but not many," Hunter-Reay said.

Two cars after that, Marco Andretti, wound up in the sixth spot after posting an average of 227.893. Two-time race winner James Hinchliffe and E.J. Viso, Michael Andretti's other drivers, were seeded eighth and ninth heading into the shootout. Hinchcliffe is from Canada, and Viso is Venezuelan.

The only non-Penske or non-Andretti driver to make the shootout was Ed Carpenter, the stepson of IndyCar founder Tony George. He was fifth fastest at 227.952.

There weren't many surprises.

Each of the nine drivers in the shootout were powered by the strong Chevrolet engines. That left the Honda teams, including all four drivers for Chip Ganassi's heavyweight team ? Australian Ryan Briscoe, New Zealand's Scott Dixon, Scotland's Dario Franchitti and Charlie Kimball ? out of the front three rows. Franchitti, like Castroneves, is trying to become the fourth member of the four-time winners club and will start from the middle of the sixth row, 17th, after going 226.069.

Also out of pole contention was points leader Takuma Sato of Japan. He posted a four-lap average of 225.892 and will start 18th, the outside of Row 6.

Eight drivers qualified but were later bumped out of the top 24 starting spots. Jakes and Briscoe were the only ones to make it back in.

The list of drivers still trying to make the field includes 1996 Indy winner Buddy Lazier, British driver Pippa Mann, who hasn't raced since suffering injuries in the tragic season-ending race at Las Vegas in 2011 and Brazil's Ana Beatriz. Mann and Beatriz, who drive for Dale Coyne Racing, are trying to become the first female teammates to start the 500.

Two drivers, Conor Daly and Michel Jourdain Jr., weren't quick enough to even qualify for the 33-car starting field and James Jakes' first qualifying attempt was later disqualified after failing post-qualifying inspection. Jakes tried to requalify two more times, finally making it into the 24th spot late in the day.

The final nine starting spots will be filled during the second and final day of qualifications Sunday ? a day Britain's Katherine Legge is expected to complete her first laps since being hired by Schmidt Peterson Motorsports to drive the No. 81 car. The late addition gives race organizers 34 driver-car combinations, meaning one driver won't start May 26.

And it won't be Power.

"Pole is not the most important thing for the race, but it is a very big deal at this place to get pole," Power said. "I've been very close a couple of times. I would love to get it and I think we have a chance today."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/power-grabs-early-lead-race-indy-pole-204735227.html

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Pope warns Church against closing in on itself

By Catherine Hornby

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis warned the Catholic Church to not close in on itself at a Mass to mark Pentecost Sunday attended by more than 200,000 people, urging the faithful to be open and present in a new and changing world.

The Church should ask itself daily whether it is resisting new challenges and remaining "barricaded in transient structures which have lost their capacity for openness to what is new," he said.

"Newness always makes us a bit fearful, because we feel more secure if we have everything under control," Francis said in his homily in front of a packed St. Peter's Square, adding that change can bring fulfillment.

The Pentecost Mass marks the day the Church says the Holy Spirit descended on Christ's apostles, or disciples, and is regarded as the birthday of the Church.

Francis warned of the threat of an institution which is "self-referential, closed in on herself," and spoke of the courage to "take to the streets of the world" and reach "the very outskirts of existence".

Later he toured the square in an open-top white vehicle, greeting cheering crowds and kissing young children.

Since his election in March as the leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics, Francis has been urging Church leaders to go out into their communities and help the poor and suffering, rather than focusing on internal politics.

Morale among the faithful has been hit by a widespread child sex abuse scandal involving Catholic priests and in-fighting and careerism in the Church government or curia.

The 76-year-old former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Buenos Aires has given clear signs he will bring a new broom to the papacy, favoring humility and simplicity over pomp and grandeur.

He has set up an advisory board of cardinals from around the world to help him reform a Vatican administration which has been held responsible for some of the mishaps and scandals that plagued the eight-year reign of his predecessor Benedict.

At a vigil on Saturday evening, Francis said Catholics must become courageous and seek out the people who need help the most rather than sitting around, dissecting theology.

(Reporting by Catherine Hornby; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-warns-church-against-closing-itself-133121705.html

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Last-minute fortune seekers buy Powerball tickets

Joe Fajardo poses holding his Powerball lottery ticket after buying it at a store Saturday, May 18, 2013, in the Barrio Logan neighborhood of San Diego. With the majority of possible combinations of Powerball numbers in play, someone is almost sure to win the lottery game's highest jackpot on Saturday night, a windfall of hundreds of millions of dollars ? and that's after taxes. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

Joe Fajardo poses holding his Powerball lottery ticket after buying it at a store Saturday, May 18, 2013, in the Barrio Logan neighborhood of San Diego. With the majority of possible combinations of Powerball numbers in play, someone is almost sure to win the lottery game's highest jackpot on Saturday night, a windfall of hundreds of millions of dollars ? and that's after taxes. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

Armous Peterson figures out what numbers he is going to play in the Powerball lottery at Jimmy's Mart on Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Columbia, S.C. Peterson keeps track of what numbers he plays from week to week. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Collins)

Armous Peterson fills out his slip for the Powerball lottery at Jimmy's Mart on Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Columbia, S.C. Peterson keeps track of what numbers he plays from week to week. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Collins)

Kelly Branscom, of Zionsville, buys 2 Powerball lottery tickets, one for her and one for her cat Token, from a walk up window at a Hess gas station on the corner of Brodhead Avenue and Broadway, Saturday, May 18, 2013 in Bethlehem, Pa.. At left, is Alex Lopez, of Bethlehem, with Powerball tickets in hand. (AP Photo/The Express-Times, Stephen Flood)

A clerk dispenses a Powerball Lottery ticket in Oklahoma City, Friday, May 17, 2013. Powerball officials say the jackpot has climbed to an estimated $600 million, making it the largest prize in the game's history and the world's second largest lottery prize.(AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

(AP) ? It's all about the odds.

With four out of every five possible combinations of Powerball numbers in play, someone is almost sure to win the game's highest jackpot, a windfall of hundreds of millions of dollars ? and that's after taxes.

The problem, of course, is those same odds just about guarantee the lucky person won't be you.

Lottery officials said Saturday night that the latest Powerball jackpot figure results are still pending. Estimates have put the jackpot at around $600 million.

The chances of winning the prize remain astronomically low: 1 in 175.2 million. That's how many different ways you can combine the numbers when you play. But lottery officials estimate about 80 percent of those possible combinations have been purchased.

The winning numbers drawn Saturday night were: 10, 13, 14, 22 and 52, with a Powerball of 11. Officials conducted the drawing live from Tallahassee, Fla.

"This would be the roll to get in on," Iowa Lottery CEO Terry Rich said earlier Saturday. "Of course there's no guarantee, and that's the randomness of it, and the fun of it."

That didn't deter people across Powerball-playing states ? 43 plus Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands ? from lining up at gas stations and convenience stores Saturday for their chance at striking it filthy rich.

At a mini market in the heart of Los Angeles' Chinatown, employees broke the steady stream of customers into two lines: One for Powerball ticket buyers and one for everybody else. Some people appeared to be looking for a little karma.

"We've had two winners over $10 million here over the years, so people in the neighborhood think this is the lucky store," employee Gordon Chan said as he replenished a stack of lottery tickets on a counter.

Workers at one suburban Columbia, S.C., convenience store were so busy with ticket buyers that they hadn't updated their sign with the current jackpot figure, which was released Friday. Customer Armous Peterson was reluctant to share his system for playing the Powerball. The 56-year-old was well aware of the long odds, but he also knows the mantra of just about every person buying tickets.

"Somebody is going to win," he said. "Lots of people are going to lose, too. But if you buy a ticket, that winner might be you."

The latest jackpot was expected to be the world's second largest overall, behind a $656 million Mega Millions jackpot in March 2012. If $600 million, the jackpot would currently include a $376.9 million cash option.

Charles Hill of Dallas said he buys lottery tickets every day. And he knows exactly what he'd do if he wins.

"What would I do with my money? I'd run and hide," he said. "I wouldn't want none of my kinfolks to find me."

Clyde Barrow, a public policy professor at the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, specializes in the gaming industry. He said one of the key factors behind the ticket-buying frenzy is the size of the jackpot ? people are interested in the easy investment.

"Even though the odds are very low, the investment is very small," he said. "Two dollars gets you a chance."

That may be why Ed McCuen has a Powerball habit that's as regular as clockwork. The 57-year-old electrical contractor from Savannah, Ga., buys one ticket a week, regardless of the possible loot. It's a habit he didn't alter Saturday.

"You've got one shot in a gazillion or whatever," McCuen said, tucking his ticket in his pocket as he left a local convenience store. "You can't win unless you buy a ticket. But whether you buy one or 10 or 20, it's insignificant."

Seema Sharma doesn't seem to think so. The newsstand employee in Manhattan's Penn Station purchased $80 worth of tickets for herself. She also was selling tickets all morning at a steady pace, instructing buyers where to stand if they wanted machine-picked tickets or to choose their own numbers.

"I work very hard ? too hard ? and I want to get the money so I can finally relax," she said. "You never know."

___

Associated Press writers Jeffrey Collins in Columbia, S.C., Betsy Blaney in Lubbock, Texas, Russ Bynum in Savannah, Ga., John Rogers in Los Angeles and Verena Dobnick in New York contributed to this report.

___

Follow Barbara Rodriguez at http://twitter.com/bcrodriguez .

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-05-18-US-Powerball-Jackpot/id-98dc82294dbb4090af4a87fb47fd7e15

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

RolePlayGateway?

A word, before I let this loose: This is entirely of my own creation. If any pieces of it sound familiar, it was unintentional, and I'll do my best to either work that out, or to augment it. This is also a WORK IN PROGRESS, but also OPEN TO CRITIQUE. Very open, in fact. I want you guys to come at me with hammers of literary expertise. Take my work to its knees if it needs it.

Without further adieu, I present, for your enjoyment...




Kenna couldn?t believe nobody else had noticed the cloud.

As it was, she glanced with wide and disbelieving eyes at her oblivious companions. They still milled around, talked, and overall did their business as though there wasn?t a reddish purple cloud spreading and scrabbling across the sky like some sort of giant, ugly lesion.

She stared at it, and while she did, she wondered about its origin, because obviously no one else was going to bother to. Her vantage point, that is, a bench in the courtyard of May Yard Prep, gave her an almost unobstructed view of the haze. Unfortunately, she could only follow it so far with her eyes before the woods and the bushy tops of the trees ate it up.

With a huff and one last glance to her friends, Kenna walked out of the courtyard and towards the thicket.

?Alright, Mr. Cloud, where are you coming from?? she muttered softly. The branches around her seemed unwilling to move, as though they?d stiffened and tensed up before she?d entered. The whole of her being seemed to have to push through an invisible layer, like walking into a cellophane or scotch-tape trap.

It actually hurt.

Like, hurt in the sense that her skin began to crawl and sting, like she had just belly flopped into a pool from a diving board. Her face tingled and her scalp itched. And as soon as she touched her hand to her head, the itch spread like wildfire to every inch of her body, inside and out.

Her organs itched.

She was almost about to scream when it stopped, and she went numb. The sudden loss left her gasping and brought her to her knees. A few seconds passed. Then a few more. Slowly Kenna rediscovered the ground underneath her, found her bearings, and stood up.

?Oh,? a voice said, almost sounding surprised. ?I thought you were dead. My apologies.?

She glanced up at the new voice. A tall, thin man stood a mere couple feet away from her. His back was against the tree, letting the shade cover him. His eyes were dark red and had both an intelligent glimmer to them and a bestial, feral one.

He stepped over to her, his hand outstretched. She stared at it.

Noting the odd look she gave it, he scoffed, ?Oh, come now. I won?t hurt you.? As if to emphasize this, he grabbed her hand gently and pulled her to her feet. ?You are interesting. Most humans don?t make it past the barrier.?

Kenna didn?t want to say anything to this man, not a word. He clearly also didn?t understand that she was not a touchy-feely person. She jerked her arm back.

Or at least she tried to.

His grip was firm. Far firmer than his scrawny form would point to.

??Interesting? and ?letting you go? do not go hand in hand, darling,? the man snapped. ?Don?t you see where you are??

?Yes, I do. Now let go of me, creep!? She squirmed. This guy was bad news. He?d called her ?human?, which would be fine, but he said it in the most distant way possible, like he didn?t consider himself human.

?Obviously you do not, flesh bag.? His voice had dropped to a furious snarl. ?Others here besides myself will take an interest in you, and that will not bode well for you.?

?Okay, let?s say you?re right. Why do you think you?re so much better than anyone else I might meet??

?I can, at any point, kill you, or maim you, or otherwise take advantage of you.?

Ice water ran in her veins. She whispered, ?And??

?And I haven?t. Nor do I plan to,? he added with a grin. ?Now, may I introduce myself, or must I further dispel your paranoia??

Kenna threw her shoulders back and gave him a once over glance. ?Doesn?t the saying go ?ladies first?? My name is Kenna.?

?Good day to you, Kenna. I am Dreyson Nocturne, but you may call me Drey. Nearly no one does.?

She laughed aloud and, then and there, decided that she might just be able to tolerate this guy, insane or not.

Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/RolePlayGateway

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MOUNTAIN FILM: FULL LINE-UP OF FESTIVAL FILMS | Telluride ...

?Our films are really strong this year across the board,? he said.??Whether they are climbing, environmental or just general interest films, we have been struck by how well-made they are. While there are always lots of compelling subjects for us to choose from, it?s very unusual to see such consistent high quality up and down the playlist.?

At the heart of Mountainfilm?s mission, and reflected clearly throughout the final list of some 90 films that will screen at this year?s festival, are ?issues that matter.? Holbrooke says there will be plenty of fun on the silver screen, thrilling adventure and lots of adrenaline, but films that take a penetrating look at critical contemporary matters are at the forefront of his programming.

?I feel that our lineup encompasses a lot of what is happening right now around the world,? he said. ?For instance, there is a strong group of films about the environment, particularly about how we get our energy. Then, we have three films that look at combat: ?Dirty Wars,? ?Manhunt? and ?Which Way is the Front Line from Here?? Together they are a commentary on America?s perpetual state of war.?

Holbrooke offered the following further examples of this year?s powerful and varied line up:

The Crash Reel? An unflinching film by Oscar-nominated director Lucy Walker that chronicles the traumatic brain injury suffered by Olympics-bound snowboarder Kevin Pearce and his arduous road to recovery. (Mountainfilm Commitment Grant recipient.)

Dirty Wars - A disturbing story about American military might gone bad that weaves together the tragic effects of a drone strike intended for a cabal of terrorists that ended up hitting a Yemeni wedding party instead.

Gasland 2? Director Josh Fox takes us all around the world to show what is happening to the vast landscapes that are being fracked for natural gas. And he introduces us to the people ? many of them reluctant environmentalists ? who are organizing and fighting against fracking.

God Loves Uganda- After introducing the memorable ?Music by Prudence? to Mountainfilm in 2009, Director Roger Ross Williams returns with a different look at Africa ? virulent anti-gay legislation in Uganda that is systemically supported by American Christian missionaries.

High and Hallowed- In May of 1963, a team of brave Americans assembled on Mt. Everest in an effort to be the first from the U.S. to stand atop the world?s tallest mountain. This is primarily the story of those first Americans on Everest 50 years ago, but it also incorporates a modern-day attempt on the West Ridge in 2012. (World Premiere.)

Life According to Sam? Sixteen-year-old Sam Berns is older than his years because he has progeria, a rare disease that ages the heart rapidly and kills most by age 13. Despite the challenges, he doesn?t stop trying to live the life of a normal teenager and, in the process, achieves extraordinary success.

Lunarcy - This film follows several characters who have gone completely bonkers for the moon: Alan Bean is one of the 12 men who have walked on the moon and is now creating moon art; Dennis Hope discovered a loophole in the 1967 U.N. Outer Space Treaty that would seem to allow individual ownership of extra-terrestrial bodies; and, Christopher Carson aims to be the first citizen of a colonized moon.

Maidentrip? The story of Laura Decker who, at age 14, after a long legal battle with the Dutch government over her right to do so, cast off to become the youngest person ever to sail alone around the world.

Pandora?s Promise - A film that questions much of what we accept as fact about the negative side of nuclear as an alternative to fossil fuels. Surprising, given that the director?s first film was an anti-nuclear weapons documentary called Radio Bikini, nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1988

Rising from Ashes - In a year when cycling has suffered with the disgrace of Lance Armstrong, it?s a relief to see racers who recognize that it?s not all about the bike. This film relates the remarkable story of the Rwandan race team, cyclists who are pedaling away from the horror of genocide.

Uranium Drive-In ? Some 50 miles northwest of Telluride is a cluster of dusty, hardscrabble towns where many locals hope a proposed uranium mill will bring back economic vitality. Given its potential health and environmental risks, however, the mill is controversial. Uranium Drive-In looks at this conundrum from both sides. World Premiere. Mountainfilm Commitment Grant recipient.

Please click here for a complete look at Mountainfilm in Telluride?s 2013 festival line up. And here for special guest profiles.

__ __

About Mountainfilm: Established in 1979, Mountainfilm in Telluride is dedicated to educating and inspiring audiences about environments, cultures, issues and adventures. Working at the nexus of filmmaking and action, its flagship program is the legendary Mountainfilm Festival? a one-of-a-kind combination of films, conversations and inspiration. Mountainfilm also reaches audiences year round through its worldwide tour, on Outside Television, with its online Minds of Mountainfilm interviews and in classrooms through its educational outreach initiative, Making Movies that Matter. Mountainfilm has the power to change lives. To learn more, visit www.mountainfilm.org. To join the conversation, please visit the Mountainfilm in Telluride blog, follow us on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook.

Source: http://www.tellurideinside.com/2013/05/mountain-film-full-line-up-of-festival-films.html

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D (for Nintendo 3DS)


Donkey Kong Country was a classic game series for the Super Nintendo, and it returned four years ago in, well, Donkey Kong Country Returns. It was bright, colorful, and very, very difficult. And now it's on the Nintendo 3DS as Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D, a $39.99 (direct) title available as a game card or straight from the Nintendo 3DS eStore as a digital download. It's aged very well since the Wii version came out, and the latest version adds a few welcome features to the mix, making it an Editors' Choice for 3Ds games.

3DS Changes
Donkey Kong Country Returns plays much better when you take all of the Wii controller gimmicks out and replace them with optional 3DS display gimmicks. Unlike the Wii version of the game, the 3DS version doesn't require you to shake the remote to pound the ground or roll?this alone makes the game play much more smoothly. Just press Y, as in the Super Nintendo Donkey Kong Country games. That change improves the game greatly, and makes it much more pleasant to casual players.

Another change to help casual playing is slightly less savory for dedicated gamers, but still useful. A "New" mode lets you play an easier version of the game, with three hearts per character instead of two and more items. The game remains challenging, because Donkey Kong Country Returns was unforgivingly difficult to begin with, so it's a welcome addition for people who pulled their hair out at the Wii version of the game. A limited local multiplayer mode lets players cooperate through levels. However, it doesn't support 3DS Download Play, so you both have to own the game.

The Game World
The world of Donkey Kong Country Returns is satisfyingly large, with the original collection of over 60 stages, plus an unlockable world with eight new stages made for the 3DS version. Each level takes several minutes and, New Mode or not, multiple lives to beat unless you play perfectly. Each level also has tons of items to find, like K, O, N, and G letters, puzzle pieces, banana coins, and 1-up balloons. In fact, any given screen's width of the game probably has something hidden that you can find by interacting with the environment in some way. Besides in-game bonuses, like 1-ups and items you can buy in Cranky Kong's shop with banana coins, the secrets can also unlock art and dioramas in the Extra section of the game.

If you've already played Donkey Kong Country Returns, you know exactly what to expect from the gameplay, and if you've played any Donkey Kong Country game in the past you probably have a good general idea. Run, climb, ride (on mine cards), and fly (on rocket barrels) to the end of each stage to get Donkey Kong's banana hoard back from bad guys. This time, instead of the charismatic King/Captain K. Rool and his alligator army, you fight animals possessed by tiki masks, or instruments, or something like that. They're not interesting or engaging villains, but fortunately you don't deal with them much. The levels themselves and the regular enemies are the biggest challenge in the game, and the boss fights, while slightly more involved than the Super Nintendo Donkey Kong Country games' boss fights, still feel like an afterthought compared to the massive set-piece obstacle courses of the levels leading up to them.

Graphics
The game looks as good as it did on the Wii, with the added benefit of the 3DS' glasses-free 3D screen to really make the game pop out. The game wasn't designed to be 3D, but its layered, detailed levels really look good with the added depth. The animations are smooth and the framerate stays consistent?both are important for difficult platform games like this.

Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D packs a lot of content and some of the best Nintendo side-scrolling action this side of New Super Mario Bros. 2 into a portable package that will keep you playing (and growing increasingly frustrated) for hours. Even with the easier New Mode, it's a lot less forgiving and more full of tiny secrets to find than New Super Mario Bros. 2, making it an excellent addition to your 3DS library. It will keep you playing, if you don't end up throwing your 3DS on the ground first. Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D earns our Editors' Choice for fiendishly difficult 3DS games.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/yLou8yrb6t0/0,2817,2419093,00.asp

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Christina Aguilera Shares Sexy Photo From Music Video Set

Singer, who's just confirmed return to 'The Voice,' shows off her slimmed-down figure on set of Spanish-language track.
By Jocelyn Vena

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1707473/christina-aguilera-video-set-photo-hoy-tengo-ganas-a-ti.jhtml

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Thursday, May 16, 2013

Google challenger in Vietnam redirecting queries

HANOI, Vietnam (AP) ? A Russian-financed search engine seeking to challenge Google's dominance in Vietnam is redirecting queries for some politically sensitive terms to the American company's website, apparently as a way of avoiding government anger or legal liability for sending surfers to sites containing criticism of the ruling party.

The move Thursday follows an Associated Press story on the well-funded start up, Coc Coc, that noted it didn't seem to be censoring results. The shift appears to illustrate the difficulties facing companies in Vietnam's booming Internet sector, which must negotiate the government's intent on stifling online dissent that is posing a challenge to its authoritarian, one-party rule.

For Coc Coc, it sends a message to the ruling party that it doesn't have to worry about it encouraging dissent. But it points to possible difficulties for Google if it wants to open offices and promote its products in Vietnam ? and not have to act as a government censor. Google currently doesn't have a presence in Vietnam because it is concerned about liability for content on its servers. Coc Coc has more than 300 staff and a large office in Hanoi, the capital.

The AP story Wednesday noted that Coc Coc searches for "Viet Tan," a well-known overseas pro-democracy group outlawed in Vietnam, were similar to Google's. Each brought up the English and Vietnamese language websites of the organization. By Thursday, that had changed. Searchers were greeted with a message saying the search "was not valid" before being automatically redirected to the Google page displaying the returns for "Viet Tan." Searches for one of the country's most well-known dissidents, Le Quoc Quan, were dealt with in the same way.

In an interview with a Coc Coc representative over an instant message service, the company said it "decided not to serve the segment of political queries at all."

"We are computer geeks completely out of politics and keen on technologies only," the representative said. "It's not our focus at all. So that whenever you want to find something in English, French or about politics in Vietnamese ? just please use Google."

Google declined comment.

In 2010, Google shifted its search engine division in China to Hong Kong after censorship requests from Beijing's one-party government. The decision allowed Baidu, a Chinese search engine that censors on behalf of the government, to dominate the market. Google does take down some material at the requests of governments around the world, but balks at wholesale censoring of content at the request of authoritarian governments.

Coc Coc, which means "Knock Knock" in Vietnamese, is the latest in a series of challengers to Google's dominance in Vietnam, a country of 90 million people with one of the fastest-growing Internet penetration rates in the world. It believes that its algorithms make for a better search in the Vietnamese language. It is also photographing and filming commercial businesses on streets around the country, data that is used for a richer search experience.

Shaken by the explosion in online dissent, the government is drafting laws that would tighten freedom of expression on the Internet and possibly force companies such as Google to keep their servers inside the country. It routinely blocks and filters sensitive sites, sentences bloggers to long jail terms and is alleged to be involved in hacking attacks on websites critical of the ruling party.

___

Follow Chris Brummitt on Twitter at twitter.com/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-05-16-Vietnam-Google%20Challenger/id-cebf0071bc444ee3a40281201cbd236b

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Video: Tea Party Resurgence in 2014?

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/51898640/

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Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Beer Viz Suggests New Beers to Try Based on What You Already Like

If you're looking for a new brew to try, or just want to expand your palate a little bit, Beer Viz asks you a couple of questions about the beer you already enjoy and presents you with a plethora of alternatives that might suit you nicely. It's kind of like Pandora for beer.

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Beer Viz | via Hacker News

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/jc9Cg0sF8kI/beer-viz-suggests-new-beers-to-try-based-on-what-you-al-506013514

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US, Russia and Iran to wrestle in New York

The governments of the United States and Russia can sometimes be at odds.

Americans and Iranians rarely see eye to eye on anything.

But the possibility of wrestling losing its Olympic spot has given these three often-divergent nations a cause to rally around.

The U.S., Russian and Iranian wrestling teams will meet on Wednesday for an historic exhibition in New York. It's a showcase event for what the sport's international governing body has dubbed "World Wrestling Month."

The IOC in February recommended that wrestling be dropped from the Olympic program starting in 2020. Wrestling now has to plead its case to the IOC to be included as a provisional sport in St. Petersburg, Russia on May 29.

The New York exhibition, known as "The Rumble on the Rails" and to be held at Grand Central Terminal, is designed to highlight the sport's international appeal and popularity. The pre-meet news conference is even being held at the United Nations, and the meet will be televised live by the NBC Sports Network and Universal Sports ? a rarity for a sport struggling for ways to make itself more viewer-friendly.

The Iranians, who will be competing in the U.S. for the first time in 10 years, will also compete against the Americans at an exhibition in Los Angeles on May 19.

"In this crisis, we all stick together. Wrestlers maybe can do, sometimes, what politicians cannot," said Nenad Lalovic, the acting president of FILA, the sport's governing body. "We love our sport, and we are united to save it."

If there's one thing that the U.S., Russian and Iran have in common, it's a proud tradition of wrestling success and a deep passion for the sport that's been re-ignited by the IOC.

The Americans have won more Olympic medals in wrestling than any other country. When put in certain context, it can be argued that the U.S. wrestling team has been more successful than any other American Olympic team.

The Russians are now the world's premier wrestling nation. They won 11 medals in the recent London Olympics, including four golds, when no other nation claimed more than six medals.

The Russians were furious at the IOC's recommendation, and their angst over the sport's Olympic future stretches all the way to the top.

"The removal from the Olympic program of traditional forms of sports, which were its basis from the beginning and were in the program of the Olympic Games even in the time of ancient Greece ... is unjustified," Russian president Vladimir Putin said in March.

But wrestling holds a place in Iranian culture that likely exceeds that of even the U.S. and Russia.

It's often been said that wrestling is the national sport of Iran, where it doesn't have to compete with the likes of baseball, American football and hockey. The Iranians won three golds in London, backed by a fan section more boisterous than any other nation.

Tehran also served as the first place for the international wrestling community to come together and start formulating a plan to save its Olympic status.

The first major meet of the year, the World Cup, was held in Tehran roughly a week after the IOC decision, and the world's top 10 wrestling nations ? including the U.S., Russia and Iran ? met to discuss how to respond to the IOC.

U.S. Olympic champion Jordan Burroughs said the fans inside the arena were overwhelmingly supportive of the competitors, regardless of what country they wrestled for.

"It was probably the best wrestling venue, in terms of fan support and excitement, that I've ever been a part of," Burroughs said after the World Cup. "We're competitors on the mat. But with the decision by the IOC, now everyone is coming together."

The New York and Los Angeles exhibitions highlight a busy week for wrestling. FILA, the sport's international governing body, will meet in Moscow on Saturday to discuss major changes designed to improve wrestling's standing with the IOC.

The matches in New York and Los Angeles won't count for much more than pride. But wrestling officials are hoping to show the IOC and the world that a sport which can bring three such powerful but often clashing nations together is one worthy of a spot in the Olympic Games.

In fact, a photo of Burroughs and Iranian wrestler Sadegh Saeed Goudarzi locked arm-in-arm on the medal stand in London has become a symbolic image on social media sites for the movement to save Olympic wrestling.

"It is an exciting opportunity for wrestling to show the world its ability to bring together nations of different political, cultural and geographic backgrounds," USA Wrestling Executive Director Rich Bender said in announcing the New York meet last month.

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Follow Luke Meredith on Twitter: www.twitter.com/LukeMeredithAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-russia-iran-wrestle-york-080711756.html

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