Wednesday, April 17, 2013

NEW YORK: Online nonprofit InsideClimate News wins Pulitzer ...

? In a sign of a rapidly changing media world, a relatively unknown New York-based online nonprofit news site joined some of the country's most well-known media outlets in claiming a Pulitzer Prize, the highest honor in journalism.

InsideClimate News won the Pulitzer Monday for national reporting for its reports on problems in the regulation of the nation's oil pipelines. Founded five years ago, InsideClimateNews reports on energy and the environment. Writers Lisa Song, Elizabeth McGowan and David Hasemyer were recognized for a project that began with an investigation into a million-gallon spill of Canadian tar sands oil into the Kalamazoo River in Michigan in 2010. The reporters went on to look more broadly at pipeline safety and the particular hazards of a form of oil called diluted bitumen, or "dilbit."

"I think it's a very hopeful sign. I think it really shows the way the journalism ethos reconfigures itself as times change," said Sig Gissler, the administrator of the prizes.

"This is a different way for journalists to practice their trade and make a contribution," McGowan said. "The fourth estate has lost a lot. This is a way we're making a gain."

The Pulitzers, journalism's highest honor, are given out each year by Columbia University on the recommendation of a board of journalists and others. Each award carries a $10,000 prize except for the public service award, which is a gold medal.

The Associated Press received the award in breaking news photography for its coverage of the civil war in Syria.

The Sun Sentinel of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., received the public service award for an investigation of off-duty police officers' reckless driving, and longtime Pulitzer powerhouses The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post were recognized for commentary and criticism, respectively.

The Star-Tribune of Minneapolis captured two awards, for local reporting and editorial cartooning.

Cheers erupted in the Denver Post's newsroom when word came that the newspaper had won the Pulitzer in the breaking news category for its coverage - via text, social media and video - of the movie theater massacre in Aurora, Colo., that killed 12 people during a midnight showing of a new Batman movie last summer.

The honor was bittersweet for some, and people teared up and shared hugs.

"We are part of this community. The tragedy touches us, but we have a job to do," said Kevin Dale, the Post's news director.

The New York Times' David Barstow and Alejandra Xanic von Bertrab won the investigative reporting award for stories that detailed how Wal-Mart Stores Inc. systematically bribed Mexican officials with millions of dollars to get permission to build several stores across the country. The Times' reporting spurred federal investigations.

The Times' David Barboza received the international reporting award for his look at a how a "Red Nobility," made up of relatives of top Chinese officials, has made fortunes in businesses closely tied to the government.

The Times staff won the explanatory reporting award for looking at the business practices of Apple Inc. and other technology companies and illustrating "the darker side of a changing global economy for workers and consumers," the judges said.

In the feature writing category, John Branch of the Times won for a gripping narrative of an avalanche that trapped 16 skiers and snowboarders in the Cascade Mountains of Washington state. Told through photos, video, graphics and magazine-style text, the piece was lauded in the industry as setting a new standard for multimedia journalism.

The paper's editors "view the wonderful bounty of prizes as a real tribute to the newsroom's excellence and dedication," Executive Editor Jill Abramson told the staff.

The AP's Rodrigo Abd, Manu Brabo, Narciso Contreras, Khalil Hamra and Muhammed Muheisen were recognized for "producing memorable images under extreme hazard" while covering the Syrian war, the judges wrote.

Their images depict the dazed and weeping wounded; a heartbroken man cradling the body of his bloodied, barefoot son; a sobbing, fatherless child; an 11-year-old aiming a toy rocket-propelled grenade.

AP Director of Photography Santiago Lyon called the winners "some of the bravest and most talented photographers in the world."

The same conflict was the subject of the winning entry in feature photography. Javier Manzano, a freelance photographer, won for an image of two rebel soldiers guarding their position as light streams through bullet holes in a nearby wall. The photograph was distributed by Agence France-Presse.

At the Sun Sentinel, reporters explored speeding by off-duty officers. The reporting led to suspensions, firings and police policy changes.

"It feels great to win for that story because it really changed things here for the better," Editor Howard Saltz said.

At the Star Tribune, Brad Schrade, Jeremy Olson and Glenn Howatt captured the Pulitzer for local reporting for examining a sharp rise in in infant deaths at day-care centers, reporting that spurred stronger regulation. Minnesota authorities reported last week that day care deaths have dropped significantly.

It was "really satisfying we had an impact," Schrade said.

Steve Sack, who has been at the paper for 35 years, won for editorial cartooning.

In opinion writing categories, Bret Stephens of The Wall Street Journal received the commentary award for columns on American foreign policy and domestic politics.

The Washington Post's chief art critic, Philip Kennicott, was honored for writing on the sociology of images. In one case, he focused on a picture of President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama hugging, calling it a portrait of a modern marriage.

The editorial writing award went to Tim Nickens and Daniel Ruth of the Tampa Bay Times for a series of editorials that helped reverse a decision to end fluoridation of the water supply in Pinellas County, home to 700,000 people. Formerly the St. Petersburg Times, the newspaper is owned by the nonprofit Poynter Institute.

Adam Johnson's "The Orphan Master's Son," about a man's travails in North Korea, won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction.

Other arts winners included Ayad Akhtar winning the drama prize for "Disgraced," a play about a successful Pakistani-American lawyer whose dinner party spins out of control amid a heated discussion of identity and religion.

The history prize went to Frederik Logevall for "Embers of War: The Fall of an Empire and the Making of America's Vietnam," about Vietnam under the French.

Tom Reiss won the biography prize for "The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal and the Real Count of Monte Cristo." He learned he won the Pulitzer while visiting the dentist, who waived the usual fee.

Sharon Olds' chronicling of her divorces in her 12th poetry collection, "Stag's Leap," won her the Poetry prize. "I'm in shock," she said Monday when reached by phone, adding that she was trembling and a "little weepy.

"And my eyes are very open and sticky."

The general nonfiction Pulitzer went to Gilbert King for "Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America." The book tells the story of a 1949 case, in which four black men were falsely accused of rape, and their attorney was Thurgood Marshall.

Caroline Shaw's composition "Partita for 8 Voices" took the music prize. The 30-year-old graduate student at Princeton University is also a violinist and a vocalist.

Associated Press writers Jake Pearson in New York; Jim Fitzgerald in White Plains, N.Y.; Brett Zongker in Washington; Alexandra Tilsley in Denver; Tamara Lush in St. Petersburg, Fla.; and Jeff Baenen in Minneapolis; and David Fischer in Miami contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.centredaily.com/2013/04/15/3580428/ny-times-wins-4-pulitzers-fla.html

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Obama: Boston culprits to feel 'weight of justice'

President Barack Obama speaks in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, Monday, April 15, 2013, following the explosions at the Boston Marathon. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

President Barack Obama speaks in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, Monday, April 15, 2013, following the explosions at the Boston Marathon. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

In this image from video provided by WBZ TV, spectators and runners run from what was described as twin explosions that shook the finish line of the Boston Marathon, Monday, April 15, 2013, in Boston. Two explosions shattered the euphoria of the Boston Marathon finish line on Monday, sending authorities out on the course to carry off the injured while the stragglers were rerouted away from the smoking site of the blasts. (AP Photo/WBZTV) MANDATORY CREDIT

The American flag on the East Front of the U.S. Capitol is lowered to half-staff on Capitol Hill, Monday, April 15, 2013, in Washington, to honor the victims of the explosions at the Boston Marathon. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

President Barack Obama pauses as he begins to speak in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, Monday, April 15, 2013, following the explosions at the Boston Marathon. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

(AP) ? A stony-faced President Barack Obama declared that those responsible for the explosions at the Boston Marathon "will feel the full weight of justice," but he urged a nervous nation not to jump to conclusions. Top lawmakers declared the deadly incident an act of terrorism, and a White House official said it was being treated that way.

Obama, speaking from the White House late Monday, pointedly avoided using the words "terror" or "terrorism," saying officials "still do not know who did this or why." However, a White House official later said the incident at the famous race was being treated as terrorism.

"We will find out who did this. We'll find out why they did this," Obama said in his brief statement. "Any responsible individuals, any responsible groups, will feel the full weight of justice."

Authorities say at least three people were killed and more than 140 injured during two explosions near the finish of the marathon. A senior U.S. intelligence official said two other explosive devices were found near the end of the 26.2-mile course.

The president said the government would increase security around the United States "as necessary," but he did not say whether his administration thought the incident was part of a larger plot.

Following a briefing with intelligence officials, Maryland Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said most urban areas in the country would be under high alert.

"We want to make sure this is not a pattern," Ruppersberger said, adding that people could expect to see greater security at public areas such as train stations, ports and baseball games.

On Capitol Hill, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., told reporters that she had been in contact with U.S. intelligence agencies and it was her understanding "that it's a terrorist incident." Feinstein, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the officials reported no advance warning that "there was an attack on the way."

California Republican Rep. Ed Royce, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said it was a "terrorist attack" and "yet another stark reminder that we must remain vigilant in the face of continuing terrorist threats."

The White House said Obama refrained from publicly calling the attacks terrorism because it was early in the investigation and the perpetrators were unknown. But the official said any time there is an event with multiple explosions going off at the same time and aimed at hurting people, the administration considers that terrorism.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation was still under way and the official was not authorized to be quoted by name.

The president was briefed on the incident Monday by several senior administration officials, including FBI Director Robert Mueller and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano. He also spoke with Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick and Boston Mayor Tom Menino and pledged to provide whatever federal support was needed.

Additionally, the president spoke with Republican and Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill, saying that "on days like this, there are no Republicans or Democrats, we are Americans united in our concern for our fellow citizens."

The Secret Service quickly expanded its security perimeter at the White House. The agency shut down Pennsylvania Avenue and cordoned off the area with yellow police tape. Several Secret Service patrol cars blocked off the entry points to the road.

The White House was not on lockdown, and tourists and other onlookers were still able to be in the park across the street from the executive mansion.

The Federal Aviation Administration created a no-fly zone over the site of the two explosions and briefly ordered flights bound for Boston's Logan International Airport held on the ground at airports around the country.

Security for outbound international flights has been increased, federal law enforcement officials said. Numerous runners were expected to leave Boston after the race, and the additional security was added as a precaution, the officials said. Those officials requested anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak publicly.

As authorities grappled to fill in the pieces of what happened, Obama said Boston and its "tough and resilient" residents would "pull together, take care of each other and move forward as one proud city."

In Washington Monday night, the American flag over the Capitol was flying at half-staff.

___

Associated Press writers Nedra Pickler, David Espo, Jim Abrams, Joan Lowy and Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.

___

Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-04-15-US-Boston-Marathon-Explosions-Obama/id-7ac74a927aa6413b8b395f7304536543

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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Marks & Spencer lingerie chief exits after three months

Apr 15 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $4,139,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $3,137,920 3. Matt Kuchar $2,442,389 4. Adam Scott (Australia) $2,100,469 5. Steve Stricker $1,935,340 6. Phil Mickelson $1,764,680 7. Dustin Johnson $1,748,907 8. Jason Day $1,659,565 9. Hunter Mahan $1,553,965 10. Keegan Bradley $1,430,347 11. Charles Howell III $1,393,806 12. John Merrick $1,375,757 13. Russell Henley $1,331,434 14. Michael Thompson $1,310,709 15. Kevin Streelman $1,310,343 16. Bill Haas $1,271,553 17. Billy Horschel $1,254,224 18. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/marks-spencer-lingerie-chief-exits-three-months-191149209--finance.html

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Engineers craft new material for high-performing 'supercapacitors

Apr. 15, 2013 ? Taking a significant step toward improving the power delivery of systems ranging from urban electrical grids to regenerative braking in hybrid vehicles, researchers at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science have synthesized a material that shows high capability for both the rapid storage and release of energy.

In a paper published in the April 14 issue of the journal Nature Materials, a team led by professor of materials science and engineering Bruce Dunn defines the characteristics of a synthesized form of niobium oxide with a great facility for storing energy. The material would be used in a "supercapacitor," a device that combines the high storage capacity of lithium ion batteries and the rapid energy-delivery ability of common capacitors.

UCLA researchers said the development could lead to extremely rapid charging of devices, ranging in applications from mobile electronics to industrial equipment. For example, supercapacitors are currently used in energy-capture systems that help power loading cranes at ports, reducing the use of hydrocarbon fuels such as diesel.

"With this work, we are blurring the lines between what is a battery and what is a supercapacitor," said Veronica Augustyn, a graduate student in materials science at UCLA and lead author of the paper. "The discovery takes the disadvantages of capacitors and the disadvantages of batteries and does away with them."

Batteries effectively store energy but do not deliver power efficiently because the charged carriers, or ions, move slowly through the solid battery material. Capacitors, which store energy at the surface of a material, generally have low storage capabilities.

Researchers on Dunn's team synthesized a type of niobium oxide that demonstrates substantial storage capacity through "intercalation pseudocapacitance," in which ions are deposited into the bulk of the niobium oxide in the same way grains of sand can be deposited between pebbles.

As a result, electrodes as much as 40 microns thick -- about the same width as many commercial battery components -- can quickly store and deliver energy on the same time scales as electrodes more than 100 times thinner.

Dunn emphasizes that although the electrodes are an important first step, "further engineering at the nanoscale and beyond will be necessary to achieve practical devices with high energy density that can charge in under a minute."

Co-authors of the study included Dunn; Sarah Tolbert, a UCLA chemistry and biochemistry professor; Augustyn and fellow UCLA Engineering graduate student Jong Woung Kim; Cornell University professor H?ctor Abru?a; Cornell postgraduate researcher Michael Lowe; Patrice Simon, a professor at the Universit? Paul Sabatier in Toulouse, France; and graduate student J?r?my Come and researcher Pierre-Louis Taberna of the Universit? Paul Sabatier.

The research from the Energy Frontier Research Centers, UCLA-based Molecularly Engineered Energy Materials and Cornell-based Energy Materials Center, was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy; a European Research Council grant supported researh from Universit? Paul Sabatier.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Los Angeles. The original article was written by Bill Kisliuk.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Veronica Augustyn, J?r?my Come, Michael A. Lowe, Jong Woung Kim, Pierre-Louis Taberna, Sarah H. Tolbert, H?ctor D. Abru?a, Patrice Simon, Bruce Dunn. High-rate electrochemical energy storage through Li intercalation pseudocapacitance. Nature Materials, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nmat3601

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/DOO8AUO1QQo/130415124813.htm

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Monday, April 15, 2013

Artist Interview: Filmmaker & Screenwriter Cillian Daly | Through My ...

Cillian Daly: Filmmaker and Overall Cool Guy

Interviewer: Kimberly Viveiros

Cillian Daly is a talented director and screenwriter living in Ireland. I was incredibly excited when he agreed to an interview with me, and even more surprised to find out so much about him through so few questions. From what I got out of him, I know he is a husband and father who juggles filmmaking and screenwriting in his busy schedule, and has an amazing work ethic. He?s passionate about his projects and once he gets an idea or vision, he never stops until he makes it come to life.

Cillian first did a Model Making & Special Effects Diploma course when he went to the National Film & Television School in Dublin. His hope was to work in the film industry by way of model making and VFX, a tiny industry in Ireland at the time. He ended up getting a job working for an architectural consultancy firm making digital models and inserting them into photographs using Photoshop.

He stayed there for four years but his love of cinema got the better of him and he left to make his first ever film; ?an appallingly bad horror movie ? it was rubbish!? (as he puts it).

It did, however, get him into the film degree course in the National Film school where he specialized in screenwriting with a minor in directing. And his eight minute graduation film cost him more than his first ill-fated feature. His graduation film is titled This Way They Came and it?s been aired on the national broadcaster in Ireland several times.

Interviewer: How did you come to realize your love of film, and what motivated you to actually become a screenwriter/director?

Cillian: My earliest cinema memory is when Return Of The Jedi was released here [Ireland] in 1983. It was shown in a local cinema as a double bill with The Empire Strikes Back. Watching the scenes on Hoth with the AT-AT?s and Snowspeeders, sandwiched between my dad and older cousin in the 3rd row: that?s what pushed me towards movies. (My cousin is now a Production Designer for film and TV, my sister is a camera person in a national TV station ? so it?s in the family!)

I wanted to do that, make those images outside my head, rather than contained in my imagination. That?s why I did model making first when I got out of school.

I had a very active imagination when I was a kid, still do! So making things up, acting out adventures on a grand scale with GI-Joe?s, and Star Wars figures, in a massive LEGO environment, during the summers after my Star Wars introduction, set me off.

My English teacher in secondary school (ages 13-18 here) always said I had a great imagination, and loved making stories up. Whenever we had to do essays, I?d be throwing in sci-fi references, weird stuff, rather than the usual everyday things. It drove him mad!

So my motivation was really a need to get these mad images out of my head, my own sort of catharsis I guess. And I?m still going!

Interviewer: When did you first start making films, and what was your first project??

Cillian: My first major film was my horror feature. My family never had 8mm cameras, or old VHS camcorders. But my dad was very much into photography and in a way he trained my eye. The first movie camera I ever got was the DV cam that I shot my feature on. I was 21. Not like Spielberg or anything! I suppose I was always writing above all else. And I read a heck of a lot. I used to read novels cover to cover in a day. Just hide away in my room, and read.?

Interviewer: How do you overcome writer?s block when writing a screenplay?

Cillian: I don?t really get writers block. If a scene gets sticky, or I become demotivated to write it I either move onto a completely different project, or I push through. Write anything as a place holder, and go back and edit it when I feel better about it. Or go play on Twitter.

Interviewer: Has screenwriting gotten easier for you over time than it was in the beginning? Or is it ?your process is still your process? and will not change?

Cillian: I guess with the continued practice of writing, writing, WRITING! it has gotten easier, at least as far as formatting because that has now become somewhat second nature. The main issue I have is putting cohesive ideas together so that they make for a compelling story, at least in my mind. I?ve learned a hell of a lot from feedback, mostly from my college peers and people I?ve met via Twitter. The thing with screenwriting, for me anyway, is that different movies can be tackled in many different ways. For the spec market, you can write in a specific style, quick, succinct, sparse with lots of white on the page, etc. But if you?re writing to direct, which my short scripts are, I can indulge myself, since I?m most likely to be the only one worrying about the description being right and clear. I?ve found it easier to differentiate between these types and edit my scripts accordingly.

To be honest, it has gotten easier. I?ve found a rhythm that I enjoy. Now I can write 18 page shorts in a few days, and get a few drafts of a feature turned over in a couple of months. Also, being married with a 2 year old son means I have to make time to write and just write in that time. So life experiences have honed my writing management?

So yes, it has gotten easier as I?ve matured, but whether it?s gotten any better content wise, is another thing entirely!

Interviewer: When you?re in-between projects, or coming up with your next idea, what are the things in life that inspire you or just kind of keep you turned on as an artist?

Cillian: I?ve usually got a few ideas going at the same time, I?m lucky in that I?ve yet to be short of any! I read a lot ? history, especially to research and develop a seed of an idea that I get, or a scene I imagine. I have a passion for science, specifically astrophysics. I was this close to doing a science degree instead of model making all those years ago!

So I read that kind of stuff, novels of all sorts. I get lots of inspiration through that, and observing life around me. I usually carry a notebook, and when I?m out shopping, in malls, in work (part time consulting) I?m writing notes and ideas, lines of dialogue, that sort of thing. I go to the cinema as much as I can too, and I?m lucky to have many good friends here in the Irish film and media industry whose work inspires me to improve and do better. And I get a lot of imagery and some crazy ideas from my dreams. I?m lucky (maybe!) that I remember pretty much all of my dreams. So I pull stuff from them. My parents and what they?ve had to deal with in life have inspired me too. And dealing with loss ? grandparents and pets, affects perspective, and I?ve used that grief and channeled it into my work, in a good way, hopefully. (I?m naturally dark when it comes to drama, I?m not content with the Hollywood happy ending, I like to keep a bit of an edge to it, keep it somewhat realistic. So life has informed that to some extent.)

Ideas are everywhere ? it?s how your voice explains them that makes you out as special I guess!

Interviewer: Do outlines play a big part in your process in the beginning of your script? Do you beat out the whole story, or just dive in after page 1?

Cillian: What I?ve done on the last few features I?m working on, and all the ones that are still in the development stage, is to start a word file that I just throw anything I come up with that might be relevant to that story into. They usually start with one scene that has no story. I?ve yet to start with a character. I don?t think I ever will. I find the images I get first are what dictates the story that comes from that. That eventually becomes big enough to construct a basic story from.

Obviously not everything I put in there makes it out, but it?s good to just free flow ideas. And they sometimes jump to other stories. Within that doc are the character description, traits, the world they inhabit etc.

From there, I print that doc, highlight the scenes, lines, dialogue I want to keep and then write them out onto index cards. Then I arrange them into story order, and number them. I?ve yet to keep the numbers in the same order ? everything changes! Then, I start with FADE IN. And then it all goes to hell in a handcart!?

But that?s the fun part.

Interviewer: Directing. Screenwriting. If you could only do one for the rest of your life, which would you choose to do??

Cillian: Screenwriting. I have to write. Can?t help it. It?s a primal need with me. It?s a solitary thing too, an escape sometimes and I like that. I do love directing, but that only happens after the writing. And knowing I could write, but have to wait around for someone else to do it, that?d wreck my head!

If I got a spec sale or a few jobs from my spec writing, I?d keep writing. In reality, it might lead to a chance to direct professionally. As it is now, I?m prepping that feature to direct my self, and a I?ve a few spec adverts I?m going to make this year, all self financed and/or crowd funded. And with every favour I?m owed cashed in!!!

So, yes, screenwriting, no doubt. It?s what I am, and I?m okay with that. For now?!

?

To find out more about Cillian Daly?s film work and to follow his growing success check out his website http://www.cilliandaly.com.

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Source: http://kimberlyviv.wordpress.com/2013/04/14/artist-interview-filmmaker-screenwriter-cillian-daly/

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Sunday, April 14, 2013

ABC's Jonathan Karl Challenges Sen. Marco Rubio On Immigration ...

Florida Senator Marco Rubio found himself on the defensive during a barrage of questions from ABC?s Jonathan Karl about his support for new immigration legislation. Rubio had to consistently explain that what he supports is not amnesty for illegal immigrants.

Rubio defended his support for the reform package as not giving anything to illegal immigrants beyond access to the legal immigration system. Many people here already won?t qualify for anything under the proposal and according to Rubio this just gives people the opportunity to be considered for legal status, it doesn?t actually grant them legal status immediately.

?It isn?t rewarded on day one, you have to pay an application fee and a fine. You?re gonna have to stay in the status and pay taxes while you prove that you?re not a public charge and you don?t qualify for federal benefits,? he said.

Several conservatives on Capitol Hill have been critical of this legislation calling it amnesty while saying that it shortchanges those who have followed the law and waited their turn in line. Rubio dismissed these charges because existing law allows those here illegal to get access to citizenship. ?The alternative we?ve created is gonna be longer, more expensive and more difficult to navigate. It would actually be cheaper for them to go home for ten years and wait for a green card,? he said.

Karl pressed him on whether this proposal is actually ?legalization first? over ?enforcement first? and said that because somebody could gain citizenship within six months it actually is ?legalization first.? ?The problem is what do you do in the meantime? While you?re doing all these enforcement mechanisms what do you do with the millions of people that are undocumented,? he said.

?What I want is to freeze the problem in place so it doesn?t get worse,? he said.

Rubio deflected Karl?s question on how the fight over immigration could impact the long term health of the Republican Party.

Watch clip below via ABC

Source: http://www.mediaite.com/tv/abcs-jonathan-karl-absolutely-grills-sen-marco-rubio-on-immigration-reform/

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BBC's Andrew Marr appears 3 months after stroke

LONDON (AP) ? Prominent BBC presenter Andrew Marr has made his first television appearance since he had a major stroke more than three months ago.

He told viewers of his show Sunday he was "frankly lucky to be alive." He said he needs extensive physical therapy to help him walk properly and be able to use his left arm.

The 53-year-old Marr said his voice and memory weren't damaged.

The former newspaper editor is one of the BBC's best known political reporters and talk show hosts.

Marr blamed overwork and excessive exercise for his stroke. He said he hopes to return to the show once his physical therapy has been completed.

He conducted two pre-recorded interviews for Sunday's show.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bbcs-andrew-marr-appears-3-months-stroke-155745599.html

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California pension fund to divest from gunmakers

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - California's pension fund for teachers made official on Friday its plan to divest holdings in firearms companies whose weapons are illegal in the state.

The California State Teachers' Retirement System will now sell holdings in two publicly traded gunmakers Sturm, Ruger & Co and Smith & Wesson Holding Corp. The investments are worth about $3 million.

The divestment plan has been in play since January at the $161.5 billion pension fund after State Treasurer Bill Lockyer advanced it in response to the mass shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut in December.

Lockyer sits on the board of the fund, best known as Calstrs, and also pressed it to divest holdings in manufacturers of high-capacity ammunition magazines that are illegal for the general public in California.

The Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting involved a type of semi-automatic rifle banned in California and sparked a national debate regarding gun control with some pension funds flexing their financial clout to weigh in on the issue.

Lockyer also sits on the board of the California Public Employees' Retirement System, the biggest U.S. public pension fund. Its investment committee voted in February to divest holdings in Sturm Ruger and Smith & Wesson in a move affecting about $5 million in investments.

(Reporting by Jim Christie)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-pension-fund-divest-gunmakers-233048858--sector.html

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Caroline Presno: Rachel Zoe Is So Superficial She's Profound

I started watching Bravo Media's The Rachel Zoe Project as an antidote to the unpleasant symptoms of my pregnancy a few years ago. Pregnancy has a way of getting you in touch with your earthy, organic self, but sometimes too much so. What better way to counteract new and scary biological processes than with glam?

Rachel Zoe gave me an overdose of glam and then some. I sat in front of the screen transfixed by a woman who was gloriously obsessed with couture.

In its 5th season, The Rachel Zoe Project is a reality series that follows celebrity stylist Zoe, her husband Rodger, and their fashion team as they grow her business. Anne Hathaway, Cameron Diaz, and Jennifer Lawrence are among the A-list clients Zoe has styled. In the past couple of seasons, Zoe took it to the next level by designing her own line of clothing and accessories together with other ventures.

Zoe leads a highly stylized existence overflowing with beautiful couture. At times, it's as if her life is airbrushed like the photo shoots she's famous for styling.

However, the series does a good job of depicting the mechanics behind the gloss--it's not easy. Painfully comical are the scenes in which Zoe and Rodger are dressing to go out. Getting ready for a polo match is a chaotic endeavor that takes on the importance of the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Until Rachel Zoe, I had never witnessed someone having a true peak experience over clothes and accessories. Characterized by overwhelming joy, rapture, and oneness with the universe, peak experiences are the aha moments of life.

This had me going back and forth in my mind: rapture and oneness over a designer shoe? Shoe. Oneness with universe. Shoe. Oneness with universe. Shoe. In fairness, couture is an art form, and art is often cited as a trigger for peak experiences along with sex, music, religion, and children. But still, a shoe?

Before I get judgy, I need to try to remember my first Gucci handbag given to me on my 16th birthday. Rapturous about sums that experience up.

There are a couple of things that separate Rachel Zoe from other devoted fashion divas. For one, Zoe seems to be captivated by the intrinsic value of the object. She gets outside of herself to see the inherent beauty in an Oscar de la Renta dress or a Chanel suit.

For some in the industry, you get the sense that it's all about them adorning their bodies. It takes on an air of narcissism that is distasteful.

The second thing distinguishing Zoe from the pack is that styling seems to be a calling for her. She's mentioned that glamour and all it's accoutrements were important to her since childhood, and is always aware of styling as an outlet for her creative expression.

A calling comes from an authentic place deep inside ourselves and is in fact, profound. A profound calling to celebrity styling--oh the paradox!

As you watch Zoe work in a state of flow, it seems to the viewer that she is in the moment and doesn't have an end goal like fame or money. Not that she isn't trying to get those things, it just seems like she would be some part of the fashion world whether she achieved the cherries on top or not. You get the sense that if she were a Midwestern mom, she would have the chicest family and even neighbors in suburbia because she couldn't help but use her talent.

As I've thought about it, I realize that Rachel Zoe provided me with more than a simple escape from the nausea and swelling of my pregnancy. She provided me with a Breakfast at Tiffany's moment.

The anxiety that you feel when you are pregnant is a world away from everyday fears. Holly Golightly, the heroine of Truman Capote's Breakfast at Tiffany's, captured what I felt. "...the blues are because you're getting fat or maybe it's been raining too long." But with the mean reds, "You're afraid and you sweat like hell, but you don't know what you're afraid of."

Of course, the way to escape the mean reds is Tiffany's, because how could anything bad ever happen where everything is glistening and glamorous? Very similar to the place Zoe puts herself and her viewers. How could anything bad ever happen when your wearing Prada? Rachel Zoe helped me get over the mean reds.

It makes me wonder how often Rachel Zoe gets the mean reds and how much her fashion passion is an escape. Sometimes the mean reds do need to be faced head on in a painful, yet in-depth way. Tiffany's can't always be enough.

The motto of The Rachel Zoe Project is "fashion is everything." Zoe now has a beautiful baby boy who is so far beyond any accessory it can't be defined, yet somehow redefines everything. It's nothing short of profoundly "maj."

?

Follow Caroline Presno on Twitter: www.twitter.com/drcaroline09

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/caroline-presno/rachel-zoe-is-so-superfic_b_3070727.html

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Podcast: Video marketing made easy | Flying Solo

Chris Savage is the Co-Founder and CEO of Wistia ? a smart and simple video marketing and hosting service.?

His Twitter profile outlines his obsessions as: marketing, analytics, IPAs, coffee, and ping pong. But what he?s known for is his passion for video marketing. As he says ?Every business that I have seen that has invested in video, has done better for it.?

In this episode of the?Small Business Big Marketing Show, Tim Reid?asks Chris why the small business owner should invest in video an how to go about creating engaging video so your business reaps the rewards.

In this fireside chat with Chris, Tim finds out whether video killed the radio star, how small business owners can implement a killer content-marketing strategy and in short, all things Wistia.

Chris answers the following questions:

  • How can I create a video for my small business?
  • What sort of content should I put in my video?
  • Is it for everyone?
  • Does it have to be high quality?
  • Would I really build authority & trust?
  • Do I need a dedicated space or studio? And plenty more.

The key tips are:

  • Include a call to Action
  • Utilise the Custom Designed Holding Frame
  • Make it short, 1-3 minutes
  • Have one message per video
  • Get Yourself on Camera
  • Focus on making content about stuff you teach

Remember: ?Advertising is what you do when you can?t go and see someone?. ? Fairfax M Cone

Video is an emotional medium ? it replaces the interaction that used to be a normal part of business before the days of online, e-commerce shopping carts. Video is an absolutely fantastic way to build relationships and emotional connections with your customers.

OK team, keep your content radar on, grab your smartphone and make some videos!

About these podcasts: The Small Business, Big Marketing?podcasts are characterised by plenty of chit chat from Tim who'll typically kick off with nuggets of advice and tell shaggy dog stories before diving in to the episode's topic. Sit back, relax and enjoy!?

Duration:?46:59 minutes?

Links to resources mentioned in the show:?http://smallbusinessbigmarketing.com/video-marketing-wistia/

To subscribe to this show in iTunes, please head here.

?

Tim Reid

Tim Reid is the host of the Small Business Big Marketing Show that discusses how other small business owners from around the world go about their marketing. It's fun, entertaining and always full of helpful ideas and insights for you to apply to your business....immediately!

Add your comment

You need to be a member to post a comment. Please login now?or become a member.

Join Australia?s micro business community!

Connect with over 55,000 others, promote your business, develop new skills
and make working on your business easy.

Free Membership takes seconds to activate and lets you participate in the community by connecting with other members online and via meet ups and events, gain exposure through commenting on articles and posting on the forums, access member-only downloads and receive our popular email newsletters. That?s on top of hundreds of?articles, videos and podcasts.

Join Flying Solo today.

Source: http://www.flyingsolo.com.au/technology/podcasting-and-video-tips/podcast-video-marketing-made-easy

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Happy 27th Birthday, Leighton Meester!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/happy-27th-birthday-leighton-meester/

new edition

Kim Jong Un: On a Horse! Firing a Gun! Trying to Look Hard!

Source:

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Treehouse Lands $7M From Kaplan, Social+Capital To Help You Learn To Code

treehouse (1)Treehouse launched in late 2011 on an ambitious mission: To help anyone learn to code and design for iOS, Android and the Web, regardless of their technical know-how. By combining the video-based approach of Lynda.com and learn-to-code platforms like Codecademy, Treehouse aimed to create an educational platform that leverages video, quizzes, a splash of gamification and project-based learning to help aspiring app developers and engineers learn the trade. By charging students between $29 and $49 for access to its content, Treehouse was quick to profitability and by September, more than 12,000 people (ages 7 to 50) were paying for its platform. Since then, its user base has grown to over 25,000 active students in its system, and, based on this traction, Treehouse is announcing today that it has raised $7 million in Series B financing from Kaplan Ventures, with participation from existing investor, The Social+Capital Partnership. The round follows the $600K in seed financing it raised in October 2011 from Kevin Rose, Reid Hoffman, David Sze and Mark Suster, among others, followed by its $4.75 million Series A in April of last year, bringing its total capital raised to over $12 million. In conjunction with its new capital, the startup is also announcing today that it is in the progress of launching its first high school pilot program, which aims to train high school seniors to be job-ready for engineering positions without needing a university degree. The program will run for six months and the total cost of the program will be $9/month. Treehouse’s move into high school follows its recent college scholarship program, in which it offered 2,500 free of its “Gold” accounts to college students in the U.S. for a full two years. Because Gold plans are $50/month, this worked out to $3 million-worth of free Treehouse — the equivalent of what students would have had to pay out of pocket. Treehouse Founder and CEO Ryan Carson told us at the time that the reasons for its move into high school and college are a response to the absurd cost of higher education, which is only expected to continue to rise. Treehouse wants to offer students of all ages a comparable quality of education that doesn?t involve student loans. Even though one might believe that a university degree is required for success in the job market, the founder has told us that he thinks that smart, interactive education

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/9NxRonUFjc8/

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Suicide blast in Syrian capital kills at least 15

This photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows smoke rising from burned cars after a huge explosion shook the Sabaa Bahrat Square, one of the capital's biggest roundabouts, in Damascus, Syria, Monday, April. 8, 2013. A car bomb rocked a busy residential and commercial district in central Damascus on Monday, killing more than a dozen with many more injured and sending a huge cloud of black smoke billowing over the capital?s skyline, Syrian state-run media said. (AP Photo/SANA)

This photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows smoke rising from burned cars after a huge explosion shook the Sabaa Bahrat Square, one of the capital's biggest roundabouts, in Damascus, Syria, Monday, April. 8, 2013. A car bomb rocked a busy residential and commercial district in central Damascus on Monday, killing more than a dozen with many more injured and sending a huge cloud of black smoke billowing over the capital?s skyline, Syrian state-run media said. (AP Photo/SANA)

This photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows Syrians inspecting a damaged car at the scene of a car bomb attack near the Sabaa Bahrat Square, one of the capital's biggest roundabouts, in Damascus, Syria, Monday, April. 8, 2013. A car bomb rocked a busy residential and commercial district in central Damascus on Monday, killing more than a dozen with many more injured and sending a huge cloud of black smoke billowing over the capital?s skyline, Syrian state-run media said. (AP Photo/SANA)

This photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows a Syrian fire fighter extinguishing a burning car after a huge explosion shook the Sabaa Bahrat Square, one of the capital's biggest roundabouts, in Damascus, Syria, Monday, April. 8, 2013. A car bomb rocked a busy residential and commercial district in central Damascus, killing at least a dozen people with more than fifty injured and causing heavy material damage, a Syrian government official said. (AP Photo/SANA)

This photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows Syrian fire fighters extinguishing burning cars after huge explosion shook the Sabaa Bahrat Square, one of the capital's biggest roundabouts, in Damascus, Syria, Monday, April. 8, 2013. A car bomb rocked a busy residential and commercial district in central Damascus, killing at least a dozen people with tens more injured and causing heavy material damage, a Syrian government official said. (AP Photo/SANA)

This photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows Syrians inspecting a damaged car at the scene of a car bomb attack near the Sabaa Bahrat Square, one of the capital's biggest roundabouts, in Damascus, Syria, Monday, April. 8, 2013. A car bomb rocked a busy residential and commercial district in central Damascus, killing at least a dozen people with tens more injured and causing heavy material damage, a Syrian government official said. (AP Photo/SANA)

(AP) ? A suicide car bomber struck Monday in the financial heart of Syria's capital, killing at least 15 people, damaging the nearby central bank and incinerating cars and trees in the neighborhood.

The attack was the latest in a recent series of bombings to hit Damascus in the civil war, slowly closing in on President Bashar Assad's base of power in the capital. Rebel fighters have chipped away at the regime's hold in northern and eastern Syria, as well as making significant gains in the south, helped in part by an influx of foreign-funded weapons.

The blast was adjacent Sabaa Bahrat Square ? near the state-run Syrian Investment Agency, the Syrian Central Bank and the Finance Ministry ? and dealt a symbolic blow to the nation's ailing economy.

In the early days of the 2-year-old uprising, the grandiose roundabout was home to huge pro-regime demonstrations with a gigantic poster of Assad hung over the central bank headquarters.

The area was a very different scene Monday.

State TV showed several cars on fire and thick black smoke billowing above the tree-lined street. At least six bodies were sprawled on the pavement. Paramedics carried a young woman on a stretcher, her face bloodied and her white shirt stained red. A man placed a T-shirt over a victim whose face was blown off.

Firefighters struggled to extinguish flames that engulfed the two buildings as well as a row of cars near the roundabout. State media put the toll at 15 dead and 146 wounded.

Witnesses said the suicide attacker tried to ram the vehicle into the investment agency but was stopped by guards, forcing the bomber to detonate the explosives at the gate.

Visiting a mosque across the street that was damaged in the blast, Prime Minister Wael al-Halqi described the attack as "the work of cowards" and vowed the army would crush all armed groups fighting the government. Shattered glass and torn curtains littered the mosque's red carpet.

Some people wandering through the twisted metal, body parts and rubble on the street and directed their anger at countries supporting the rebellion.

"I want to say to Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey that the Syrian people stand firm behind their leadership, and they are steadfast and will never kneel down, and we will emerge victorious," said engineer Saeed Halabi, 54, calling the attack a "terrorist and cowardly act."

The U.N. estimates that more than 70,000 people have been killed in the civil war.

The Syrian regime denies there is a popular uprising and refers to the rebels as "terrorists" and "mercenaries," allegedly backed by foreign powers trying to destabilize the country.

The last large explosion in central Damascus took place March 21, when a suicide bomber at a mosque killed 42 people, including a top Sunni Muslim preacher who was an outspoken supporter of Assad.

A month earlier, a suicide car bombing near the ruling Baath Party headquarters ? just blocks away from Monday's attack ? killed 53, according to state media. Anti-regime activists put the death toll from that bombing at 61, which would make it the deadliest in the conflict.

There was no claim of responsibility for any of those bombings.

In the past, the Islamic militant group Jabhat al-Nusra has claimed responsibility for some of the suicide bombings targeting regime and military facilities. The U.S. says the group, which is one of the most effective rebel factions fighting Assad's forces, is linked to al-Qaida and has designated it a terrorist organization.

The bombings, along with now near-daily mortar attacks in the capital, have punctured the sense of normalcy that the regime has tried to cultivate in Damascus. Until recently, the city was largely insulated from the bloodshed and destruction in other urban centers.

The rebels launched an offensive on Damascus in July but were swept out in a punishing counteroffensive. Since then, government warplanes have pounded opposition strongholds on the outskirts, and rebels have managed only small incursions on the city's southern and eastern sides.

The recently elected prime minister of the main Western-backed Syrian opposition bloc, Ghassan Hitto, visited the northern province of Idlib, the Syrian National Coalition said on its Facebook page. The coalition posted photos of Hitto, dressed in a gray suit, meeting with rebel fighters. It was his second trip to Syria since he was selected last month to lead the opposition's interim government, which the U.S. and its allies hope will emerge as the united face of those fighting to topple Assad.

Also on Monday, the Syrian government rejected a request by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to allow international inspectors to have access to the whole country to investigate allegations of chemical weapons use in the civil war.

The government is willing to allow the inspectors only into the village of Khan al-Assal in northern Syria, where an attack was alleged to have taken place on March 19.

Both the rebels and the regime have traded blame for the alleged attack, which has not been confirmed.

Speaking in the Netherlands, Ban said an advance team of inspectors is waiting in Cyprus, ready to move into Syria immediately to investigate the reported use of chemical weapons.

All reports of chemical attacks "should be examined without delay, without conditions and without exceptions," Ban said. "The longer we wait, the harder this essential mission will be."

His comments appeared aimed at increasing the pressure on Assad's regime and ensuring that U.N. inspectors are given access to all sites of reported chemical weapons attacks ? not just those the Syrian government wants them to see.

Syria's Foreign Ministry swiftly rejected the proposal, saying it would constitute "a violation of Syrian sovereignty."

"The secretary-general, while in The Hague, asked for additional tasks that would allow the team to deploy across all of Syrian territory, which goes against what Syria had asked from the U.N. and shows bad intentions," the ministry said in statement. "Syria cannot accept such maneuvers from the secretary-general of the U.N, taking into consideration the negative role played in Iraq which paved the way for the American invasion."

It added, however, that Syria is ready to grant inspectors access to Khan al-Assal.

Syria is widely believed to have a large stockpile of chemical weapons, but it is one of only eight countries in the world that has not signed up to the chemical weapons convention. That means it does not have to report any chemical weapons to The Hague-based organization that monitors compliance with the treaty.

Britain and France have followed up by asking Ban to investigate allegations of chemical weapons use in two locations in Khan al-Assal and the village of Ataybah, in the vicinity of Damascus, all on March 19, as well as in Homs on Dec. 23.

The delay in getting to the scene will hamper investigators, said Amy Smithson, a chemical weapons expert with the Center for Nonproliferation Studies in the United States.

"It is going to make it a bigger challenge. But it doesn't mean you should throw in the towel," Smithson said in a telephone interview.

Investigators will likely go after two key sources of evidence ? samples from the environment and from any possible victims or survivors of suspected chemical attacks.

"When the environment has changed, that makes it that much more challenging to get a clean environmental sample," Smithson said.

___

Lucas reported from Beirut. Associated Press writers Zeina Karam, Bassem Mroue and Barbara Surk in Beirut, and Mike Corder in The Hague, Netherlands, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-04-08-ML-Syria/id-868de211cfae4256b437a8f1dc1e0484

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Saturday, April 6, 2013

The Most Gorgeous Minimalist Gaming Posters You'll See Today

Atlanta-based artist Emily Lemay, AKA yamelme, does minimalist posters. She does them really well. She's done a whole series based on video games, in fact?from the Witcher to Far Cry. This is only a small sampling of her work, so make sure to visit her DeviantArt page to take a look at what else there is.

Source: http://kotaku.com/the-most-gorgeous-minimalist-gaming-posters-youll-see-470835956

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Walking can lower risk of heart-related conditions as much as running

Apr. 4, 2013 ? Walking briskly can lower your risk of high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes as much as running can, according to surprising findings reported in the American Heart Association journal Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology.

Researchers analyzed 33,060 runners in the National Runners' Health Study and 15,045 walkers in the National Walkers' Health Study. They found that the same energy used for moderate intensity walking and vigorous intensity running resulted in similar reductions in risk for high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, and possibly coronary heart disease over the study's six years.

"Walking and running provide an ideal test of the health benefits of moderate-intensity walking and vigorous-intensity running because they involve the same muscle groups and the same activities performed at different intensities," said Paul T. Williams, Ph.D., the study's principal author and staff scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Life Science Division in Berkeley, Calif.

Unlike previous studies, the researchers assessed walking and running expenditure by distance, not by time. Participants provided activity data by responding to questionnaires.

"The more the runners ran and the walkers walked, the better off they were in health benefits. If the amount of energy expended was the same between the two groups, then the health benefits were comparable," Williams said.

Comparing energy expenditure to self-reported, physician-diagnosed incident hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes and coronary heart disease, researchers found:

  • Running significantly reduced risk for first-time hypertension 4.2 percent and walking reduced risk 7.2 percent.
  • Running reduced first-time high cholesterol 4.3 percent and walking 7 percent.
  • Running reduced first-time diabetes 12.1 percent compared to 12.3 percent for walking.
  • Running reduced coronary heart disease 4.5 percent compared to 9.3 percent for walking.

"Walking may be a more sustainable activity for some people when compared to running, however, those who choose running end up exercising twice as much as those that choose walking. This is probably because they can do twice as much in an hour," Williams said.

Study participants were 18 to 80 years old, clustered in their 40s and 50s. Men represented 21 percent of the walkers and 51.4 percent of the runners.

"People are always looking for an excuse not to exercise, but now they have a straightforward choice to run or to walk and invest in their future health," Williams said.

Co-author is Paul D. Thompson, M.D.

The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute funded the study.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Heart Association.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Paul T. Williams and Paul D. Thompson. Walking Versus Running for Hypertension, Cholesterol, and Diabetes Mellitus Risk Reduction. Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology, April 4 2013 DOI: 10.1161/ATVBAHA.112.300878

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/top_news/~3/JV5Aqd_QSlQ/130404170225.htm

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Study: Mexican wages fall below Chinese levels

MEXICO CITY ? Mexico is looking to penetrate the Chinese market after a new report suggested that Mexican labor costs have fallen below those of China.

President Enrique Pena Nieto visited Hong Kong on Friday, and said "I am convinced that Mexican products should take advantage of the dynamism of China's markets."

Just a decade ago, Mexico's prospect of exporting much to China seemed distant. Mexican average labor costs were then almost double China's.

But a report by a chief economist for Bank of America Merrill Lynch this week estimated that Mexico's labor costs are now 19.6 percent lower than China's.

The study by chief economist Carlos Capistran cites the bank's own estimates and official data indicating that a big increase in China's costs have turned the balance.

Source: http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2013/apr/05/study-mexican-wages-fall-below-chinese-levels/

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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Australian Outsourcing Association to become ADMA expert group ...

Australian Outsourcing Association to become ADMA expert group

By Martin Conboy

The Australian Business Process Outsourcing Association (ABPOA) will be incorporated into the Association for Data-driven Marketing and Advertising (ADMA), the country?s largest marketing and advertising association, at the end of April.

Members of the ABPOA voted unanimously in late February to incorporate ABPOA into ADMA and create a new expert group. Catering for companies interested in outsourcing issues, the group will be named the Business Process Outsourcing Expert Group.

The BPO Expert Group will provide ABPOA with a sense of community and positioning within the ADMA organisation and framework.

ADMA will support the new expert group by providing the structure and resources for ABPOA to deliver on its mission and objectives, and to further the interests of its 50 corporate members.

The mandate of the BPO Expert Group will be to promote industry best practice, identify and respond to key industry issues and trends, provide thought leadership and networking opportunities.

ADMA, which has over 500 corporate members, currently runs 11 industry expert groups which focus on specific marketing specialisations such as multichannel marketing, big data, acquisition, retention and loyalty, B2B, agency and mobile.

?ADMA has a first-rate reputation and was one of the leading voices defending the industry against restrictive legislation and promoting best practice,? said ABPOA President Martin Conboy.

?ABPOA has grown from an idea to a membership organisation with over 50 corporate members. It had reached the stage where it needed to align itself with a bigger secretariat, so that the members can benefit from meeting and networking with all of the existing ADMA members,? he added.

ADMA CEO Jodie Sangster was delighted to welcome the ABPOA into the ADMA fold.

?We have some good experience in incorporating existing associations within our expert group structure and we look forward to representing this sector,? she said.

?We want to support the ability of our members to outsource business processes where it helps their businesses and to connect businesses that provide outsourcing services with those that want them.?

The incorporation approach will provide ABPOA with support through acquisition and retention of members. As well, the new expert group will be able to draw on the ADMA events team for assistance in events planning, ensuring focused and relevant events for their members in the process.

The new BPO Expert Group will determine the activities they wish to undertake which may include creating a code of practice, writing white papers or best practice guidelines on various topics, or undertaking content development, research or networking events. The ADMA secretariat will provide support and resources to help in delivering their annual plan.

To ensure the BPO Expert Group has a strong core base, which can be involved in facilitating the future of Australian business process outsourcing, ADMA is looking for eight current corporate members of ABPOA to commit to joining the expert group this year.

Members interested in participating should contact: Annette Bova, ADMA Membership Director, on 9277 5407 or annette.bova@adma.com.au.

Source: http://thesauce.net.au/australian-outsourcing-association-to-become-adma-expert-group/

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Send In Your Questions For Ask A VC With NEA's Pete Sonsini

NEA _ Team _ Peter SonsiniAsk A VC is back this week with NEA's Pete Sonsini. you may remember, you can submit questions for our guests either in the comments or here and we?ll ask them during the show. We're also asking readers to make a short video of your question, upload the video to YouTube and send us the link via email or in comments. We'll try to include the questions in the show.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ktPtx5aCaJ0/

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Visit the WrestleMania 29 Superstore at MetLife Stadium from April 4 to 7

Think WrestleMania 29 couldn?t be more spectacular? Guess again:?The WrestleMania 29 Superstore at MetLife Stadium will be open Thursday, April 4 to Sunday, April 7!

Thursday to Saturday, the Superstore is open to WrestleMania ticketholders and non-ticketholders alike. The WrestleMania 29 Superstore affords fans the opportunity to meet Superstars such as WWE Hall of Famer Jim ?J.R.? Ross, Divas Champion Kaitlyn and The Prime Time Players (details below) as you check out the largest selection of WWE merchandise under one roof.

All authentic WrestleMania 29 gear and many exclusive Superstore WrestleMania products will be available for purchase, as will N.Y./N.J.?themed WrestleMania T-shirts, WWE DVDs, WrestleMania souvenirs and much more.

Check out exclusive photos of Superstars and Divas in WrestleMania 29 gear

Visiting Axxess? Take the free shuttle bus over to the Superstore. The shuttle bus will be located at Gate B at the IZOD Center. When you arrive at the Superstore, show your Axxess ticket and receive a free gift with any purchase.* The shuttle will operate during Axxess hours on Thursday, Friday and Saturday until 9 p.m.

The store will be open on?Thursday, April 4 and?Friday, April 5 from noon to 11 p.m.;?Saturday, April 6 from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; and on?Sunday, April 7 from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and again from 4:30 p.m. until the gates close.

Superstar appearances**:

Thursday, April 4

1 p.m. ??Santino Marella

4 p.m. ??Zack Ryder

Friday, April 5

1 p.m. ??Hall of Famer ?J.R.? Jim Ross

4 p.m. ??Divas Champion Kaitlyn

Saturday, April 6

11 a.m. ??The Prime Time Players

Get information, directions to the WWE Superstore and more

*Limit one per customer. While supplies last.

**The first 350 fans to show up to WrestleMania 29 Superstore on signing days will be provided a wristband that guarantees them an autograph. Wristbands will be provided to only the first 350 people that show up. WWE also reserves the right to limit number of items signed or to refuse to allow certain items to be signed at WWE?s own discretion.?At their discretion, WWE will only allow photos if line/time permits.

View Comments

Source: http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/visit-the-wrestlemania-29-superstore-at-metlife-stadium-from-april-4-7

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Ghost of Chavez dominates Venezuela election campaign

By Brian Ellsworth

CARACAS (Reuters) - Weeks after his death, Venezuelan socialist leader Hugo Chavez still leads supporters in singing the national anthem.

The late president's recorded voice booms over rallies for his prot?g?, acting President Nicolas Maduro, who stands under billboards of Chavez's face and waves to crowds carrying signs emblazoned with his name.

Maduro, who is favored to win a snap election triggered by Chavez's death last month, rarely misses a chance to lionize the man many Venezuelans know as "El Comandante."

"All of the prophecies of Hugo Chavez, the prophet of Christ on this earth, have come true," intoned Maduro at a rally celebrating the anniversary of the former president's release from jail for leading a failed 1992 coup.

"In eternity, or wherever you are, you must be proud because you left our people the greatest inheritance of all: a free and independent nation on the path toward socialism," he said of the man loved by supporters as a savior but excoriated by adversaries as a dictator.

Seeking to tap into the emotional outpouring following his death, Maduro's presidential campaign has put Chavez's image on nearly everything except the ballot.

From thundering speeches celebrating Chavez's days as a leftist military conspirator to stories told in a low voice of his final days suffering from cancer, Maduro has made Chavez's ghost the centerpiece of his campaign.

Polls show the 50-year-old former bus driver, whom Chavez named his successor before dying, leading opposition challenger Henrique Capriles by at least 14 percentage points.

He enjoys ample state spending to back his candidacy, and has used the celebration of Chavez's legacy to keep attention away from high inflation, nagging product shortages and one of the world's highest rates of violent crime.

BALLOONS SENT TO CHAVEZ

At one rally, a symbolic dividend check from a telephone company that Chavez nationalized was tied to red helium balloons and released into the sky to thank him for a wave of state takeovers that put much of the economy under state control.

"This is a present for the person who most deserves it, the person who created this economic and social system to take us toward socialism," Maduro said, in a rally at the steps of the presidential palace. "There it goes, for our Comandante Chavez!"

He nearly always speaks to the backdrop of a large picture of Chavez. Some now include the words "To Maduro, from all my heart," above Chavez's signature.

The recording of Chavez singing the anthem usually ends with him shouting "Long live Venezuela!" to a background of cheering, then cuts to an awkward silence before Maduro speaks.

Adding to the seeming ubiquity of Chavez's persona still in Venezuela, state TV frequently plays a cartoon of him arriving in a green field, representing the after-life. A smiling Chavez is greeted by Venezuelan independence heroes and deceased leaders of the Latin American left including Argentina's Ernesto "Che" Guevara and Chile's Salvador Allende.

Though not as omnipresent, the shadow of Chavez also falls large on the opposition campaign.

Crisscrossing the country in a campaign similar to his unsuccessful 2012 bid against Chavez, youthful opposition candidate Capriles frequently invokes him too - but to try to belittle Maduro as a non-entity and pale imitation of his former boss.

"Nicolas, you are not Chavez!" he says.

Opposition strategists and supporters are intimidated and disgusted at what they see as the crass exploitation of the deceased leader's name by the government.

"They should let him rest in peace now. In our country, we don't stir up the dead, we leave them quiet to enjoy their eternal rest," said Elmira Pereira, 33, a shopkeeper in southern Bolivar state attending a Capriles rally.

"Maduro should have the courage to campaign on his own."

Opposition leaders say the latest clutch of opinion polls were taken in the immediate aftermath of Chavez's death, and they hope that new surveys due in coming days will show Capriles closing the gap as the sympathy factor wears off.

Chavez's corpse is in a military museum in the 23 de enero hillside slum overlooking the presidential palace and supporters still line up to pay their respects at his closed casket.

'NO ONE LIKE CHAVEZ'

Maduro launches his formal campaign on Tuesday with a caravan from Chavez's home town in the central plains to the presidential palace, mirroring the former soldier's ascent from childhood in a mud-floored hut to a global leader of the left.

He will start the tour by driving a bus to play up his working class roots and thumb his nose at critics who say a bus driver is incapable of running a country.

Though the fresh memories of Chavez may win him the vote, Maduro faces a tricky task beyond April 14 putting state finances back in order after blowout election-year spending in 2012 and balancing a disparate coalition that for years was kept in line by the sheer personality of the president.

Maduro's rallies usually open with the euphoric shouting of a well-known soap opera actor and television game show host who for years worked at a station that Chavez shut down in 2007 but this year announced he was backing the government.

A group of musicians and actors, often associated with the opposition, also recently announced their support for Maduro. And the section of Chavez's last public speech in which he endorsed Maduro as his successor should he die of cancer is played over and over at government rallies.

Maduro, though, still struggles to match Chavez's natural charisma, leaving him constantly invoking the late leader.

In a broadcast from a state-backed home appliance factory, Maduro played a video of Chavez describing plans to build the facility as he scrawled in typical style on a map of the region.

"And here we have in our hands the same map that Commander Chavez was working with that day," Maduro said, proudly displaying it to the camera. "You can see here the dots and the circles, for the construction of these factories. He left us the calculations, he left us everything."

His own conversations with housewives and factory workers appear stilted in comparison to his former boss's spontaneous chats with supporters.

"Venezuela will never have another president like Chavez, we could have one that tries to be like him or follows what he did, but no one like Chavez," said Fiama Barrios, 21, a supermarket cashier, at a Maduro rally in the poor west end of Caracas.

"As for Maduro I can't say, because he hasn't shown himself in the presidency. But we are going to insist he fulfill Chavez's legacy."

(Additional reporting by Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by Kieran Murray and Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ghost-chavez-dominates-venezuela-election-campaign-153602454.html

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