Friday, November 30, 2012

Tax Relief For Homeowners Hurt By Sandy - Business Insider

On his personal website, Mike Bloomberg recently announced property tax relief measures to help homeowners who suffered damage from Hurricane Sandy.

From Bloomerg?s website:

To provide immediate relief, the Finance Department, with the authorization of the City Council, will issue an interest-free extension on the next property tax bill for residential properties damaged beyond repair or in need of extensive structural repairs before they can be re-inhabited. The grace period will postpone payments due on January 1, 2013 to April 1, 2013.

The interest-free extension applies to all properties that received a red tag ? notice of required structural repairs ? from the Department of Buildings. Mayor Bloomberg has also enacted other homeowner relief programs enacted since Sandy, including NYC Rapid Repairs, a $500 million program which helps restore utilities to damaged areas.

The City requires the State Legislature to approve another measure that would reimburse homeowners for a portion of this year?s property taxes.

The total damage from Hurricane Sandy has been estimated at $62 billion.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/tax-relief-for-homeowners-hurt-by-sandy-2012-11

barry sanders barry sanders john scott jimmie johnson juan pablo montoya crash chardon high school shooting mark martin

Canadian bank group says cooler housing market may be good for ...

The Canadian Press - ONLINE EDITION

TORONTO - One of the country's big banking groups has issued a report saying that a cooling in Canadian house prices may not be all bad news.

The CIBC World Markets says the slowing of Canadian home sales will "take a bite" out of economic growth but adds there could be "winners as well as losers across the economy."

CIBC economist Avery Shenfeld recognizes that a home owner may have to lower retirement spending if the property brings in less money when it's sold.

On the other hand, Shenfeld says, first-time buyers may welcome a letup in home prices and may have more money available for retail spending.

It's the latest in a series of CIBC reports that downplay some of the concerns about the potential for a devastating U.S.-style crash in residential real-estate.

More pessimistic analysts have warned some types of Canadian real-estate in some markets are overpriced and at risk of tipping into a rapid decline.

Source: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/business/finance/canadian-bank-group-says-cooler-housing-market-may-be-good-for-parts-of-economy-181349411.html

nfl playoff picture rose bowl 2012 sat cheating scandal hangover cure lebron james engaged auld lang syne end of the world 2012

Staff Sergeant Finds Inspiration in Cancer-Survivor Mother | DoDLive

Then-U.S. Army Private 1st Class Michael Dick and wife, Cynthia, take a couples photo during Michael’s Christmas leave from Army basic training, Dec., 1982. Cynthia was diagnosed with breast cancer in early 2003 and is now cancer free. (Courtesy photo)

Then-U.S. Army Private 1st Class Michael Dick and wife, Cynthia, take a couples photo during Michael?s Christmas leave from Army basic training, Dec., 1982. Cynthia was diagnosed with breast cancer in early 2003 and is now cancer free. (Courtesy photo)

During the first year of college, the world can seem so bright, cheery and hopeful. You can?t imagine anything could come along and taint life as you know it.

For me, I remember the day that darkened my life ? something my 18-almost-19-year-old self never thought would happen ? the day I found out my mother had been diagnosed with breast cancer.

According to the American Cancer Society?s website, one in eight women will develop breast cancer during their lifetime. Eighty-five percent of those women will have had no family history of the disease. For those of us with family history in the form of a ?first-degree relative? (mother, daughter, sister), the risk of getting breast cancer doubles.

In the days leading up to her disclosure, I knew something was a little off. I had been feeling homesick and a little down. Instead of encouraging me to keep going and telling me it would be okay, my mom actually offered to pay for me to come home.

The day I arrived in Hawaii, it was a beautiful, sunny day ? a stark contrast to the news I was about to receive.

My mother sat me down and began to tell me she had breast cancer. I remember just sitting there, still and quiet with tears pouring down my face, thinking, ?How could this be? How could my mother, a pillar of strength in our family, have cancer? Is she going to die??

You see, when my mom was 14, she found out she had a lump in her breast that turned out to be a cyst. Every so often, she would go in to the doctor?s office to have the liquid removed and tested, always with negative findings. Then in early 2003, when she was 44 years old, the cyst became cancerous, and it was then I learned how a woman who I thought was strong could become even more so.

I always looked up to and respected my mother as a symbol of a strong woman and someone whom I wanted to be like when I grew up. She always maintained a positive outlook and was strong in her faith. We may have had our moments like any mother and daughter would, but I always knew how much she loved me, and I could go to her for anything.

After her surgery as she lay in her hospital bed, I watched her struggle not to get sick from the morphine the doctor?s had given her.

The only thing that kept going through my mind was, ?Is my mom going to die? She seems so weak. I can?t believe this is happening.? We still at the time didn?t know yet if the cancer had only been in the cyst or if it had spread. And, she still had to go through chemotherapy.

For a teenager who?d had a pretty easy life, this was the scariest thing I?d ever gone through.

Luckily, my mother had a great group of friends from church and work, who helped give her the extra support she needed ? and they helped my sister and me out, bringing us meals and providing emotional support.

Michael and Cynthia Dick celebrate Easter together in Petersburg, Ky., 2009. Cynthia was diagnosed with breast cancer in early 2003 and is now cancer free. (Courtesy photo)

Michael and Cynthia Dick celebrate Easter together in Petersburg, Ky., 2009. Cynthia was diagnosed with breast cancer in early 2003 and is now cancer free. (Courtesy photo)

During her battle to recovery, the tables were turned. At the young age of 18, I was the one who had to take care of her, making sure she was clean and comfortable.

My mother seemed so frail when I took her home, but I knew she really wasn?t.

In the coming weeks, I saw strength pour out of her as she went through chemotherapy and did her best to take care of her two daughters. Never once did I hear her complain or wish for a different life. Never once did I see her turn from her faith ? if anything, this ordeal made her grow stronger in her faith.

When the results came back, she was told the cancer had in fact been only in her cyst, which had been removed during the surgery before chemo treatments. As she continued through chemo, she lost her hair and decided to wear her baldness proudly (part of the reason was because wigs made her head itch). By the fall, she had gained much of her strength back, and I headed off to college again.

I remember when I saw her later in the spring of 2004; she walked up to my dorm, looking healthy as ever. Her hair was growing back in, curlier than before, and all I could think was how weird it was to see hair on my mother?s head again. I had gotten so used to her bald head, that it was weird to see the ?salt and pepper? color of her hair.

Cancer is not unknown to us, as it runs in our family. My mother?s mother had breast cancer, and then later died of ovarian cancer when my mom was young. Because of the family history, my mother knew what to watch out for and caught the cancer early. However, family history or not, everyone should know the signs and symptoms.

As women, we should be doing our own breast self examinations and going to our women?s health appointments. Once at the right age, we should have our mammograms annually.

But, women are not the only people who can get breast cancer. I remember my mother talking about the man in her breast cancer group who had been diagnosed ? he never thought it could happen. According to the American Cancer Society?s website, about one out of 1,000 men are at risk. The Society estimates that more than 2,000 men were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer in 2011.

That?s why it?s so important to be aware of the factors and risks that can increase our chances, and, to be aware of the disease itself.

My mother, whom I already respected, became my biggest hero the year she survived cancer. As October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, help spread the word and raise awareness. I know I will. And if I am ever diagnosed, I hope I will fight and survive like my mother and the 2.6 million U.S. citizens who have survived breast cancer.

By Staff Sgt. Amanda Dick
Air Force Public Affairs Agency

Check out these other posts:

Source: http://www.dodlive.mil/index.php/2012/11/family-focus-friday-staff-sergeant-finds-inspiration-in-cancer-survivor-mother/

quadrantid norv turner jerry angelo work it amy chua iowa gop meteor shower tonight

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Women 16-49 at risk of multiple pollutants, which could harm brain development of fetuses and babies

ScienceDaily (Nov. 28, 2012) ? In a new analysis of thousands of U.S. women of childbearing age, Brown University researchers found that most exceeded the median blood level for two or more of three environmental pollutants that could harm brain development of fetuses and babies: lead, mercury, and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs).

In a recent study, more than half of women of childbearing age had median or higher levels of at least two of three pollutants that could harm brain development. Nearly 23 percent of American women of childbearing age met or exceeded the median blood levels for all three environmental chemical pollutants -- lead, mercury, and PCBs -- tracked in an analysis of data on thousands of women by Brown University researchers. All but 17.3 percent of the women aged 16 to 49 were at or above the median blood level for one or more of these chemicals, which are passed to fetuses through the placenta and to babies through breast milk.

The study, published in advance online Nov. 15 in the journal Environmental Research, identified several risk factors associated with a higher likelihood of a median-or-higher "body burden" for two or more of these chemicals.

The three pollutants are of greatest interest because they are pervasive and persistent in the environment and can harm fetal and infant brain development, albeit in different ways, said study lead author Dr. Marcella Thompson. But scientists don't yet know much about whether co-exposure to these three chemicals is more harmful than exposure to each chemical alone. Most researchers study the health effects of exposure to an individual chemical, not two or three together.

"Our research documents the prevalence of women who are exposed to all three of these chemicals," said Thompson, who began the analysis as a doctoral student at the University of Rhode Island College of Nursing and has continued the research as a postdoctoral research associate for Brown University's Superfund Research Program with co-author Kim Boekelheide, professor of pathology and laboratory medicine. "It points out clearly the need to look at health outcomes for multiple environmental chemical co-exposures."

Most of the childbearing-age women -- 55.8 percent -- exceeded the median for two or more of the three pollutants.

Risks of exposure

Data were collected between 1999 and 2004 from 3,173 women aged 16 to 49 who participated in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). The survey was designed to represent the national population of 134.5 million women of childbearing age. Because the original study also elicited a wide variety of information on health behaviors, socioeconomic and demographic characteristics, Thompson and Boekelheide were able to identify specific risk factors associated with increased odds of having higher blood levels of lead, mercury, and PCBs.

They found several statistically significant risk factors. The most prominent among them was age. As women grew older, their risk of exceeding the median blood level in two or more of these pollutants grew exponentially to the point where women aged 30 to 39 had 12 times greater risk and women aged 40 to 49 had a risk 30 times greater than those women aged 16 to 19.

Thompson said women aged 40 to 49 would be at greatest risk not only because these chemicals accumulate in the body over time, but also because these women were born in the 1950s and 1960s before most environmental protection laws were enacted.

Fish and heavy alcohol consumption also raised the risk of having higher blood levels. Women who ate fish more than once a week during the prior 30 days had 4.5 times the risk of exceeding the median in two or more of these pollutants. Women who drank heavily had a milder but still substantially elevated risk.

Fish, especially top predators like swordfish and albacore tuna, are known to accumulate high levels of mercury and PCBs, Thompson said. However, there is no known reason why they found a statistically higher association between heavy drinking and a higher body burden of pollutants.

One risk factor significantly reduced a woman's risk of having elevated blood levels of the pollutants, but it was not good news: breastfeeding. Women who had breastfed at least one child for at least a month sometime in their lives had about half the risk of exceeding the median blood level for two or more pollutants. In other words, Thompson said, women pass the pollutants that have accumulated in their bodies to their nursing infants.

Although the study did not measure whether women with higher levels of co-exposure or their children suffered ill health effects, Thompson said, the data still suggest that women should learn about their risks of co-exposure to these chemicals well before they become pregnant. A woman who plans to become pregnant in her 30s or 40s, for example, will have a high relative risk of having higher blood levels of lead, PCBs, and mercury.

"We carry a history of our environmental exposures throughout our lives," Thompson said.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Brown University.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Marcella Remer Thompson, Kim Boekelheide. Multiple environmental chemical exposures to lead, mercury and polychlorinated biphenyls among childbearing-aged women (NHANES 1999?2004): Body burden and risk factors. Environmental Research, 2012; DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2012.10.005

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/mind_brain/child_development/~3/czoJlwzWH6g/121128143944.htm

whitney houston i will always love you breaking news whitney houston carmen whitney houston last performance cpac straw poll i will always love you whitney cummings

Angus T. Jones Apologizes for 'Two and a Half Men' Slam

Spoke to soon? Perhaps Angus T. Jones had a change of heart or maybe he realized that you shouldn't bite the hand that feeds you -- either way, the 19-year old star has issued an apology for encouraging people to stop watching Two and a Half Men. Yes, the very show that pays him a reported $350,000 per episode.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/angus-t-jones-apologizes-slamming-two-and-half-men/1-a-504821?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Aangus-t-jones-apologizes-slamming-two-and-half-men-504821

i robot the big c the visitor king of kings ostara andy kaufman masters 2012

O'Brien Earns Big Ten Coach of the Year Honors

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa., November 27, 2012?-- Penn State coach Bill O'Brien has been selected 2012 Big Ten Coach of the Year by the coaches and media and defensive end Deion Barnes (Philadelphia) has been named the conference's Thompson-Randel El Freshman of the Year.

O'Brien and Barnes join the seven Nittany Lions who were named All-Big Ten on Monday, six of whom were first-team honorees.

O'Brien is the recipient of the Dave McClain Coach of the Year (media vote), which has been selected since 1972 and is named for the former Wisconsin head coach. O'Brien also is the recipient of the Hayes-Schembechler Coach of the Year, which was established in 2011 and is voted on the by the head coaches. The award is named for former Ohio State coach Woody Hayes and former Michigan coach Bo Schembechler.

Named Penn State's 15th head football coach on January 6, 2012, O'Brien is the seventh first-year head coach to earn the Dave McClain Coach of the Year in the 41 years it has been awarded. Former Nittany Lion coach Joe Paterno earned the Big Ten honor in 1994, 2005 and 2008.

"This is a fantastic honor; it's very humbling," O'Brien stated. "Any time you are named coach of the year, it has a lot to do with two groups of people - it's your coaching staff and obviously your players. ?We have a great coaching staff that did a nice job of keeping everything together and teaching our players. ?And our players did a great job of going out there every week and playing as hard as they could. ?It's an honor for our program."

On the Watch List for the Bear Bryant National Coach of the Year, O'Brien led the Nittany Lions to victories in eight of their final 10 games, earning an 8-4 overall record and a 6-2 mark in the Big Ten, with the only losses coming to division winners Ohio State and Nebraska. O'Brien's eight wins are the most by a first-year Penn State coach in the 126 years of the program.

Penn State reeled off five consecutive victories after an 0-2 start, as O'Brien tied George Hoskins (1892) and Dick Harlow (1915) for the most consecutive wins by a first-year Nittany Lion coach. Penn State also won its initial three Big Ten road games, making O'Brien just the fifth Big ten coach since 1950 to win his first three conference away contests.

O'Brien engineered a dynamic, fast-paced offense that featured the Big Ten's passing leader (Matt McGloin), top receiver (Allen Robinson) and a running back (Zach Zwinak) who gained 100 yards six times in eight Big Ten games. Penn State led the Big Ten in total offense (437.0 ypg) in conference games and was second in scoring offense (32.6 ppg) and second in pass offense (283.1 ypg) against Big Ten foes this season. Penn State gained more than 500 yards of total offense three times in conference play, topped by 546 yards vs. Indiana, its highest total against a Big Ten foe since gaining 557 yards against Michigan State in 2008.

O'Brien came to Penn State after five years on the New England Patriots' coaching staff, serving as the quarterbacks coach from 2009-11 and as offensive coordinator last year in helping the Patriots to the AFC Championship and a berth Super Bowl XLVI. O'Brien began his coaching career at his alma mater, Brown University, in 1993-94. He then coached at Georgia Tech (1995-2002), Maryland (2003-04) and Duke (2005-06) before joining Bill Belichick's New England staff.

"From the time I first met Bill in February, I thought he was the perfect fit for Penn State Football," said Gerry DiNardo, Big Ten Network analyst. "He had an immediate and great connection with the team and quickly became their leader following a legendary leader in Joe Paterno. When you watch him call plays, he is one of the best play callers in college football. He is a passionate football man who has connected with the players and the community."

A redshirt freshman, Barnes joins tailback Curtis Enis (1995) as Nittany Lions to win the Thompson-Randel El Freshman of the Year, which is named for Darrell Thompson (Minnesota) and Antwaan Randel El (Indiana). The Big Ten Freshman of the Year was first awarded in 1986.

"It's a great honor to be the Freshman of the Year," said Barnes. "It feels good, but I am looking forward to next season. I need to play better than I did this year."

Barnes led Penn State with six sacks (minus-30), tied for No. 5 in the Big Ten, and with 10.0 tackles for loss, good for No. 13 in the conference. The former Northeast High School standout was tied for fourth in the Big Ten with three forced fumbles. Playing in every game, Barnes made 26 tackles (14 solo) and had one pass break-up. Barnes was named Big Ten Co-Freshman of the Week after recording five tackles and a sack in Penn State's 34-7 win over Navy. He made a season-high six tackles (four solo) and 3.0 TFL for minus-13 yards at Nebraska on Nov. 10.

--PSU Athletic Communications--

Source: http://wearecentralpa.com/fulltext?nxd_id=416812

face transplant maundy thursday fab melo google glasses kim kardashian and kanye west henrik stenson jobs act

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Janesville, WI 2013 Ford Focus ST New Hatchback Rockford, IL Beloit, WI Gordie Boucher Ford Lincoln of Janesville for $29,065

  • $29,065
  • Tangerine Scream Tri-Coat
  • Smoke Storm
  • 13F436
  • 2.0L 4 cyls
  • 1FADP3L97DL175560
  • Manual 6 Speed
  • 16 mi.
  • FWD Hatchback (4 Door)

?

  • Convenience

    • Compass
    • Bluetooth
    • Tachometer
    • Boost gauge
    • Power mirrors
    • Trip computer
    • Cruise control
    • Power steering
    • Air conditioning
    • Remote power door locks
    • Interior air filtration
    • Clock - In-radio display
    • External temperature display
    • Power windows with 2 one-touch
    • Video Monitor Location - Front
    • Audio controls on steering wheel
    • Tilt and telescopic steering wheel
    • Multi-function remote - Trunk/hatch/door
  • Technical

    • 4 Doors
    • 252 hp horsepower
    • Front-wheel drive
    • Manual Transmission
    • Compressor - Intercooled turbo
    • Tire pressure monitoring system
    • 2 liter inline 4 cylinder DOHC engine
    • Keyless Ignition - Doors and ignition
    • Fuel economy EPA highway (mpg): 32 and EPA city (mpg): 23
  • Safety

    • Passenger Airbag
    • Stability control
    • 4-wheel ABS brakes
    • Dusk sensing headlights
    • Front fog/driving lights
    • Traction control - ABS and driveline
    • Head airbags - Curtain 1st and 2nd row
    • Signal mirrors - Turn signal in mirrors
  • Interior

  • Exterior

    • Rear wiper
    • Rear spoiler - Wing
    • Privacy/tinted glass
    • Intermittent window wipers

Payment $509.60

$29,065

$0

$29,065

0.0 %

0 %

100 %

8.0 %

0 %

12 %

72

12

72

?

Contact Us at (800) 421-7381

EPA mileage estimates are for newly manufactured vehicles only. Your actual mileage will vary depending on how you drive and maintain your vehicle.

Before purchasing this vehicle, it is your responsibility to address any and all differences between information on this website and the actual vehicle specifications and/or any warranties offered prior to the sale of this vehicle. Vehicle data on this website is compiled from publicly available sources believed by the publisher to be reliable. Vehicle data is subject to change without notice. The publisher assumes no responsibility for errors and/or omissions in this data the compilation of this data and makes no representations express or implied to any actual or prospective purchaser of the vehicle as to the condition of the vehicle, vehicle specifications, ownership, vehicle history, equipment/accessories, price or warranties. 2013 Ford Milwaukee, WI 2013 Ford Madison, WI 2013 Ford Waukesha, WI

Source: http://www.boucher.com/2013-Ford-Focus-ST-Janesville-WI/vd/12573527

Pretty Little Liars Ben Wilson Latest Presidential Polls trump debate presidential debate lance armstrong

Martian dust storm dissipating

ScienceDaily (Nov. 28, 2012) ? A regional dust storm on Mars, tracked from orbit since Nov. 10, appears to be abating rather than going global.

"During the past week, the regional storm weakened and contracted significantly," said Bruce Cantor of Malin Space Science Systems, San Diego. Cantor uses the Mars Color Imager camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to monitor storms on the Red Planet.

Effects of the storm on global air-pressure patterns have been detected at ground level by the Rover Environmental Monitoring Station (REMS) on NASA's Mars rover Curiosity.

"We are getting lots of good data about this storm," said Mark Richardson of Ashima Research, Pasadena, Calif. He is a co-investigator both on REMS and on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's Mars Climate Sounder instrument, which has been detecting widespread effects of the current storm on atmospheric temperatures.

Researchers anticipate that the unprecedented combination of a near-equatorial weather station at ground level, and daily orbital observations during Mars' dust-storm season, may provide information about why some dust storms grow larger than others.

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Project and the Mars Science Laboratory Project for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Spain provided the REMS weather station for the Mars Science Laboratory mission's rover, Curiosity.

For more information about the missions of NASA's Mars Exploration Program, visit http://marsprogram.jpl.nasa.gov/ .

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

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


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/space_time/nasa/~3/kJjeD91d8tc/121128070512.htm

chipper jones dancing with the stars cast mickael pietrus heart transplant the international preppers geraldo

Don't let military slide into obscurity, warns Canadian senator | Bullet ...

ANNIE SILVESTER/Bullet News

There is always the potential for a disconnect between the Canadian public and its military which must be guarded against, says a former broadcast journalist and member of the Senate.

Pamela Wallin says she is concerned that with the combat mission in Afghanistan over, it would be easy for the public to develop an ?out-of-sight, out-of mind? attitude toward the military.



?We have to make sure that the ties between our citizens and our military do not disappear,? Wallin told the crowd during an address Monday at the Scotiabank Convention Centre in Niagara Falls. ?That?s why we?re here today. We have to know why a country has a military. You have to know where you?re freedoms come from and sometimes we lose that connection?so it is up to us.? Leadership and maintaining this connection ? is the responsibility of all of us.?

Wallin, chairwoman of the Senate?s National Security and Defence Committee and member of the Veterans Affairs and International Trade Committee, was the keynote speaker at an event hosted by the Garrison Community Council of Niagara, an organization dedicated to building closer connections between Canadians and the military.

?The disconnect is somehow tied to the fact that when you?re in combat it?s on the news every night ? and people tend to connect. But the larger issue is when it?s not that the folks who are in our public life like our MPs, our senators, our leaders ? they don?t have those direct ties and connections to the military.? They don?t think about it.?

That?s a far cry from the days when large portions of the House of Commons and the senate were filled with veterans who had actually served and ?appreciated what the Canadian Forces means to our national interests.

?During World War One, one-tenth of our population signed up to serve. And after the war the veterans continued to play a prominent part in our society. But pretty soon the Second World Wars and the Koreas started fading from memory.?

Wallin cited several changes that contributed to the further separation of military ideals with the public, including the new peace-keeping ideology, which started in the 50s, and the unification of the Canadian forces, which began in the days of the Pearson government and killed off many reserves. She said the disappearance of military programs from university campuses during the Vietnam War further marginalized soldiers from the population at large.

?Again this vital citizen-military link at our universities, at that crucial age was just disappearing and has not yet been re-established.?

Even the end of the Soviet Union was led some to question the need for an expensive military.

?There seemed to be fewer enemies and defence was seen as a lesser priority and so the 90?s in order to balance the books the government drastically and disproportionately cut military spending.?

Wallin quoted former Canadian Gen. Rick Hillier, who called the 1990?s ?the decade of darkness? as funding and public support dried up.

She told the group it was only after 9/11 that things began to turn around when the Canadian forces were engaged in going after the Taliban and helping to rebuild Afghanistan that public opinion turned to one of support for the troops.

She said the Canadian military helped build 52 schools in Afghanistan since 9/11, and assisted in essential skill building for many by teaching locals basic literacy skills.

?When those kids go back to their own communities with the ability to pick up a pen and write a letter or fill out a form, they are now the hero in their community ? not the drug lord and not the Taliban leader.?

Return to FRONT PAGE.

Source: http://www.bulletnewsniagara.ca/2012/11/27/dont-let-military-slide-into-obscurity-warns-canadian-senator/

Eddie Murphy Dead michelle obama robin roberts Democratic National Convention 2012 myocardial infarction What Is Labor Day jersey shore

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Vast emissions of carbon dioxide and methane from warming permafrost, not accounted for in climate predictions

ScienceDaily (Nov. 27, 2012) ? Permafrost covering almost a quarter of the northern hemisphere contains 1,700 gigatonnes of carbon, twice that currently in the atmosphere, and could significantly amplify global warming should thawing accelerate as expected, according to a new report released November 27 by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP).

Warming permafrost can also radically change ecosystems and cause costly infrastructural damage due to increasingly unstable ground, the report says.

Policy Implications of Warming Permafrost seeks to highlight the potential hazards of carbon dioxide and methane emissions from warming permafrost, which have not thus far been included in climate-prediction modelling. The science on the potential impacts of warming permafrost has only begun to enter the mainstream in the last few years, and as a truly "emerging issue" could not have been included in climate change modelling to date.

The report recommends a special IPCC assessment on permafrost and the creation of national monitoring networks and adaptation plans as key steps to deal with potential impacts of this significant source of emissions, which may become a major factor in global warming.

"Permafrost is one of the keys to the planet's future because it contains large stores of frozen organic matter that, if thawed and released into the atmosphere, would amplify current global warming and propel us to a warmer world," said UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner.

"Its potential impact on the climate, ecosystems and infrastructure has been neglected for too long," he added. "This report seeks to communicate to climate-treaty negotiators, policy makers and the general public the implications of continuing to ignore the challenges of warming permafrost."

Most of the current permafrost formed during or since the last ice age and extends to depths of more than 700 meters in parts of northern Siberia and Canada. Permafrost consists of an active layer of up to two metres in thickness, which thaws each summer and refreezes each winter, and the permanently frozen soil beneath.

Should the active layer increase in thickness due to warming, huge quantities of organic matter stored in the frozen soil would begin to thaw and decay, releasing large amounts of CO? and methane into the atmosphere.

Once this process begins, it will operate in a feedback loop known as the permafrost carbon feedback, which has the effect of increasing surface temperatures and thus accelerating the further warming of permafrost -- a process that would be irreversible on human timescales.

Arctic and alpine air temperatures are expected to increase at roughly twice the global rate, and climate projections indicate substantial loss of permafrost by 2100. A global temperature increase of 3?C means a 6?C increase in the Arctic, resulting in an irreversible loss of anywhere between 30 to 85 per cent of near-surface permafrost.

Warming permafrost could emit 43 to 135 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent by 2100 and 246 to 415 gigatonnes by 2200. Emissions could start within the next few decades and continue for several centuries.

Permafrost emissions could ultimately account for up to 39 per cent of total emissions, and the report's lead author warned that this must be factored in to the treaty to address global climate change expected to replace the Kyoto Protocol.

"The release of carbon dioxide and methane from warming permafrost is irreversible: once the organic matter thaws and decays away, there is no way to put it back into the permafrost," said lead author Kevin Schaefer, from the University of Colorado's National Snow and Ice Data Center.

"Anthropogenic emissions' targets in the climate change treaty need to account for these emissions or we risk overshooting the 2?C maximum warming target," he added.

Most of the recent climate projections are biased on the low side relative to global temperature because the models do not at this time include the permafrost carbon feedback, the report says. Consequently, targets for anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions based on these climate projections would be biased high.

Ecosystems and Infrastructure under Threat

Warming permafrost also brings negative consequences in terms of ecosystem and infrastructure damage.

The dominant ecosystems in permafrost regions are boreal forests to the south and tundra to the north. Permafrost is impermeable to water, so rain and melt water pool on the surface -- forming innumerable lakes and wetlands which are used by migratory birds as summer breeding grounds.

Ecosystem disturbances due to permafrost degradation will change species composition, and with it animal habitat and migration, according to the report.

Longer growing seasons due to higher temperatures favour the growth of shrubs and woody vegetation resulting in a northward migration of the tree line. Permafrost degradation and the resultant drying of the land can also result in disturbances such as fires. Fire in boreal forests has recently increased in intensity and frequency, and could become more common in tundra regions.

However, thawing permafrost is structurally weak, resulting in foundational settling that can damage or even destroy buildings, roads, pipelines, railways and power lines. Infrastructure failure can have dramatic environmental consequences, as seen in the 1994 breakdown of the pipeline to the Vozei oilfield in Northern Russia, which resulted in a spill of 160,000 tonnes of oil, the world's largest terrestrial oil spill.

Roads, buildings and other infrastructure in discontinuous permafrost, which tends to be warmer, and along the Arctic coast, where salt content means small temperature changes can turn ice to ground water, are most vulnerable to damage.

Climate change already could add up to US$6.1 billion to future costs for public infrastructure in the US state of Alaska between now and 2030, for example, and while there are only a handful of studies and reports evaluating the economic impacts of permafrost degradation, these indicate infrastructure maintenance and repair costs will increase.

"Thawing permafrost represents a dramatic physical change with huge impacts to ecosystems and human infrastructure," said Mr. Schaefer. "Individual nations need to develop plans to evaluate the risks, costs, and mitigation strategies to protect human infrastructure in permafrost regions most vulnerable to thaw."

Recommendations

The report issues the following specific policy recommendations to address the potential economic, social and environmental impacts of permafrost degradation in a warming climate:

  • Commission a Special Report on Permafrost Emissions: The IPCC may consider preparing a special assessment report on how carbon dioxide and methane emissions from warming permafrost would influence global climate to support climate change policy discussions and treaty negotiations.
  • Create National Permafrost Monitoring Networks: To adequately monitor permafrost, individual countries may consider taking over operation of monitoring sites within their borders, increasing funding, standardizing the measurements and expanding coverage. This applies particularly to countries with the most permafrost: Russia, Canada, China and the United States. The International Permafrost Association should continue to coordinate development and the national networks should remain part of the Global Terrestrial Network for Permafrost.
  • Plan for Adaptation: Nations with substantial permafrost, such as those mentioned above, may consider evaluating the potential risks, damage and costs of permafrost degradation to critical infrastructure. Most nations currently do not have such plans, which will help policy makers, national planners and scientists quantify costs and risks associated with permafrost degradation.

UNEP report: http://www.unep.org/pdf/permafrost.pdf

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by United Nations Environment Programme.

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


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/~3/UKgm3h5FLT8/121127094250.htm

Sam Claflin Tony Farmer West Nile virus symptoms snooki ll cool j amy schumer amy schumer

Resolving conflicts over end-of-life care: Mayo experts offer tips

Resolving conflicts over end-of-life care: Mayo experts offer tips [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Alaine Westra
newsbureau@mayo.edu
507-284-5005
Mayo Clinic

ROCHESTER, Minn. -- It's one of the toughest questions patients and their loved ones can discuss with physicians: When is further medical treatment futile? The conversation can become even more difficult if patients or their families disagree with health care providers' recommendations on end-of-life care. Early, clear communication between patients and their care teams, choosing objective surrogates to represent patients and involving third parties such as ethics committees can help avoid or resolve conflicts, Mayo Clinic experts Christopher Burkle, M.D., J.D., and Jeffre Benson, M.D., write in the November issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings.

"Health care professionals in the United States have struggled with the importance of maintaining patient autonomy while attempting to practice under the guidance of treatments based on beneficial care," Dr. Burkle, the study's lead author, says.

Tips from Drs. Burkle and Benson to effectively discuss end-of-life care include:

  • Clear communication: Early and clear communication between health care providers and patients or their surrogates is the best way to avoid disagreement over whether medical care should continue. Recent studies show that more than 95 percent of such disputes are resolved through mediated meetings involving physicians and patients/surrogates.
  • Choose objective surrogates if patients cannot represent themselves: The surrogate's role is to stand in the shoes of the patient and suppress his or her own judgment in favor of what the patient would have done. However, it is important to acknowledge that medical surrogates often struggle to balance their wishes for the patient with the patient's own wishes. Studies have found that not only do many surrogates fail to accurately predict a patient's treatment wishes, but when asked to resolve disputes, they are more likely to show bias by overestimating the patient's desire for continued treatment.
  • Involve third parties when necessary: When health care providers and patients or their advocates cannot agree on end-of-life care, involving a third party becomes necessary. Beginning in 1992, the Joint Commission, the largest hospital accreditation organization in the United States, required hospitals to establish procedures for considering ethical issues. Hospital-based ethics committees have been the most common response to this requirement.

"End-of-life care will continue to be an ongoing discussion within the medical community; however, it is important that medical care providers and patients/medical surrogates continue to dialogue," Dr. Burkle says. "Only then can experts continue to offer insight into the effectiveness of systems used in countries that have moved to a more patient-centrist approach to end-of-life care treatment choices."

###

To interview Dr. Burkle or Dr. Benson about end-of-life care, contact Alaine Westra at westra.alaine@mayo.edu or 507-284-5005.

About Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in medical care, research and education for people from all walks of life. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.org/about and www.mayoclinic.org/news.

About Mayo Clinic Proceedings

The flagship journal of Mayo Clinic and one of the premier peer-reviewed clinical journals in general medicine, Mayo Clinic Proceedings is among the most widely read and highly cited scientific publications for physicians, with a circulation of approximately 124,000. While the Journal is sponsored by Mayo Clinic, it welcomes submissions from authors worldwide, publishing articles that focus on clinical medicine and support the professional and educational needs of its readers. www.mayoclinicproceedings.org


[ 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.


Resolving conflicts over end-of-life care: Mayo experts offer tips [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Alaine Westra
newsbureau@mayo.edu
507-284-5005
Mayo Clinic

ROCHESTER, Minn. -- It's one of the toughest questions patients and their loved ones can discuss with physicians: When is further medical treatment futile? The conversation can become even more difficult if patients or their families disagree with health care providers' recommendations on end-of-life care. Early, clear communication between patients and their care teams, choosing objective surrogates to represent patients and involving third parties such as ethics committees can help avoid or resolve conflicts, Mayo Clinic experts Christopher Burkle, M.D., J.D., and Jeffre Benson, M.D., write in the November issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings.

"Health care professionals in the United States have struggled with the importance of maintaining patient autonomy while attempting to practice under the guidance of treatments based on beneficial care," Dr. Burkle, the study's lead author, says.

Tips from Drs. Burkle and Benson to effectively discuss end-of-life care include:

  • Clear communication: Early and clear communication between health care providers and patients or their surrogates is the best way to avoid disagreement over whether medical care should continue. Recent studies show that more than 95 percent of such disputes are resolved through mediated meetings involving physicians and patients/surrogates.
  • Choose objective surrogates if patients cannot represent themselves: The surrogate's role is to stand in the shoes of the patient and suppress his or her own judgment in favor of what the patient would have done. However, it is important to acknowledge that medical surrogates often struggle to balance their wishes for the patient with the patient's own wishes. Studies have found that not only do many surrogates fail to accurately predict a patient's treatment wishes, but when asked to resolve disputes, they are more likely to show bias by overestimating the patient's desire for continued treatment.
  • Involve third parties when necessary: When health care providers and patients or their advocates cannot agree on end-of-life care, involving a third party becomes necessary. Beginning in 1992, the Joint Commission, the largest hospital accreditation organization in the United States, required hospitals to establish procedures for considering ethical issues. Hospital-based ethics committees have been the most common response to this requirement.

"End-of-life care will continue to be an ongoing discussion within the medical community; however, it is important that medical care providers and patients/medical surrogates continue to dialogue," Dr. Burkle says. "Only then can experts continue to offer insight into the effectiveness of systems used in countries that have moved to a more patient-centrist approach to end-of-life care treatment choices."

###

To interview Dr. Burkle or Dr. Benson about end-of-life care, contact Alaine Westra at westra.alaine@mayo.edu or 507-284-5005.

About Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in medical care, research and education for people from all walks of life. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.org/about and www.mayoclinic.org/news.

About Mayo Clinic Proceedings

The flagship journal of Mayo Clinic and one of the premier peer-reviewed clinical journals in general medicine, Mayo Clinic Proceedings is among the most widely read and highly cited scientific publications for physicians, with a circulation of approximately 124,000. While the Journal is sponsored by Mayo Clinic, it welcomes submissions from authors worldwide, publishing articles that focus on clinical medicine and support the professional and educational needs of its readers. www.mayoclinicproceedings.org


[ 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/2012-11/mc-rco112712.php

presidents george washington russell westbrook horsetail falls ice t downton abbey new york knicks

Today on New Scientist: 26 November 2012

Arafat's bones could reveal polonium poisoning

If the former Palestinian leader was poisoned, enough radioactive material would remain in his bones to prove it eight years on from his death

Mega-risks that could drive us to extinction

Technological hazards that could wipe out the human race will be studied by a proposed research centre at the University of Cambridge

UK consumers lose their taste for green energy

In a world of rising energy costs and consumer alarm, UK energy policy continues to lack focus, says Michael Brooks

Holiday gifts: What to give the scientifically curious

Stuck for gift ideas? There's something for everyone in CultureLab's selection of science-inspired goodies

Water-hating shoes repel (almost) any liquid

Watch how white trainers can stay clean on the mean streets, thanks to a superhydrophobic coating

A gorilla in the midst - of emotional rebirth?

A wild gorilla capers through a cloud of butterflies. A week before she had given birth to a stillborn fetus - is she over the death now?

Our true dawn: Pinning down human origins

The argument over when our lineage split from chimps is about to be settled, with colossal consequences for prehistory, finds Catherine Brahic

Fighting the flab means fighting makers of fatty foods

Now that Denmark's fat tax is no more, nutritionist Marion Nestle says only more targeted policies and the will to take on big business can combat obesity

Virtual economy looms as digital cash grows up

Online currency Bitcoin is maturing rapidly, so much so that it might soon be taken seriously by businesses - and become regulated by banks in the process

Animals are already dissolving in Southern Ocean

In a small patch of the Southern Ocean, the shells of sea snails are dissolving as a result of ocean acidification

New vaccine may give lifelong protection from flu

Messenger RNA from the flu virus produces an immune response that could do away with the need for annual flu jabs

Keystroke-logger checks your identity as you type

A biometric authentication system monitors the telltale gaps between the letters you type to continually authenticate that you are who you say you are

Papa pipefish's pregnancy good for young's immunity

In the role-reversed world of the pipefish, it is the males that carry the pregnancy - which helps deliver more resilient offspring

Curiosity result could confirm Mars life, says Levin

As the internet buzzes in anticipation of results revealing organic molecules on the Red Planet, ex-NASA scientist Gilbert Levin is more nervous than most

Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/25fb5be8/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Cshortsharpscience0C20A120C110Ctoday0Eon0Enew0Escientist0E260Enove0E20Bhtml0Dcmpid0FRSS0QNSNS0Q20A120EGLOBAL0Qonline0Enews/story01.htm

cnn debate equatorial guinea marine helicopter crash chicago weather star jones wheres my refund photo of whitney houston in casket

Walk, Bike, Swim Your Way to Better Hearing | Hearing Aid News ...

In this world of confusing and conflicting information it is sometimes difficult to know what is good for us, and what isnt. The latest hot diet or a popular herbal supplement might be touted as the miracle cure-all, only to be dispelled later when new scientific data unearths the harmful side effects.

With all the fads that are thrown at us, how do we separate fact from hype? How can we know what is truly beneficial for our health, and what is outright dangerous?

One way to debunk the myths beyond relying on common sense ? is to look at the validity and longevity of various claims. Ask yourself: has a particular claim been verified and endorsed by the mainstream medical and scientific community; does it withstand the test of time; or is it just a flash in the pan?

While many so-called facts will fall by the wayside, one steadfastly remains: a link between regular cardiovascular workout and improved hearing. Simply put, maintaining healthy blood vessels and heart through exercise can benefit your ears.

Be Fit, Hear Better

Past and current studies conducted at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio show a direct relation between cardiovascular (CV) fitness and better hearing.

Though hearing acuity and, ultimately, hearing thresholds, are not entirely under our control, changes in certain aspects of physiological health have been shown to impact hearing sensitivity, says Kathleen Hutchinson PhD, Chair and Professor of the universitys Speech Pathology and Audiology Department. Namely, cardiovascular health has been shown to have a synergistic relationship to a persons hearing. We have proven in prior studies that cardiovascular health is linked to hearing thresholds.

Dr. Hutchinson is referring to the research study she and her colleagues, Helaine Alessio, Ph.D., of the Department of Kinesiology and Health, and Rachel Baiduc, B.S., Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, conducted at Miami University several years ago.

At that time, we found striking consistency whereby persons with low CV fitness, regardless of age, always had worse hearing compared to age-matched individuals with moderate or high CV fitness, Dr. Hutchinson says. Cardiovascular health and fitness seems to be an important mediator of hearing sensitivity.

New Studies, Same Findings

The team is taking the research further, expanding on the knowledge already gained through its previous studies. For example, another variable, otoacoustic emissions ? sounds produced by healthy ears in response to acoustic stimulation have been added to the tests.

By investigating otoacoustic emissions, a way to evaluate the integrity of the cells in the nerve of hearing, we are provided with another lens to examine the relationship between CV fitness and hearing, Dr. Hutchinson explains. The nerve involved in hearing has the very important job of collecting sound gathered by the outer and middle ear and preparing it for transmission to the brain.

For this study, subjects underwent a battery of hearing tests, including otoscopic examination (observation into the subjects ear to ensure that occlusions interfering with the testing process, such as wax build-up, were not present), pure tone hearing thresholds (subjects would indicate when tones of various loudness and pitch were heard to determine a threshold), tympanometry (a measure of ear drum mobility), and others.

Preliminary analysis of the data, Dr. Hutchinson says, reveals a link between hearing and a high cardiovascular fitness level. Though these results clearly produce clinical significance for persons with hearing loss, they are also relevant to all listeners, she says. By maintaining a high level of cardiovascular fitness, even in older age, individuals can help to preserve their delicate hearing system. It is highly recommended that unfit individuals begin even a moderate-intensity workout regime if there is history of hearing loss in the family. Cardiovascular fitness levels do decrease in most people with age, regardless of sedentary or active lifestyles. However, by keeping as fit as possible, one not only lessens the chance of health concerns related to being unfit, but also increases the chance of sustaining normal hearing thresholds even into old age.

The Heart Knows

The fact that the heart muscle needs regular conditioning is nothing new. Doctors have been telling us for years that exercise makes us more resistant to stress, heart attack, and a slew of other health complications.

For optimum results, the American Heart Association advises doing 30 to 60 minutes of aerobic exercise at least three or four times each week. Unfortunately, studies show that 60 percent of American adults don?t get the recommended amount of physical activity, and a quarter of all adults are not active at all.

But too often the word exercise gets a bad rap, because many of us think of it in conjunction with feeling the burn, that unpleasant sensation of tears and pulls all over our bodies.

Relax; there is no need to huff, puff, sweat, or suffer because moderate exercise, if done regularly, is just as effective as the high-impact kind, and far less harsh on the joints. Such enjoyable and fun activities as walking, hiking, biking, and swimming are an excellent cardiovascular workout, doctors say, and dont require expensive equipment or gym membership.

As the studies clearly indicate, the key to a better hearing and a good overall health is, literally, just an easy step or lap away.

Remember: stay fit. Your heart and ears ? will thank you for it.

Article source: http://www.healthyhearing.com/content/articles/Hearing-loss/Protection/7864-Walk-bike-swim-your

Source: http://www.hearing-aid-news.com/walk-bike-swim-your-way-to-better-hearing/

paranormal activity 4 love and hip hop 2012 nfl mock draft iowa caucus lemonade diet steve jobs action figure chris jericho

Source: http://rueben575.typepad.com/blog/2012/11/walk-bike-swim-your-way-to-better-hearing-hearing-aid-news.html

michelle obama robin roberts Democratic National Convention 2012 myocardial infarction What Is Labor Day jersey shore Pasquale Rotella

Monday, November 26, 2012

frederick's Site - The football sport in world | Ardour.tv ...

A sport is an entertaining activity which certainly wants competitiveness, technique, dedication and a fair play. A sport will be organized in between two teams .Each sport is ruled with certain set of rules and regulations for enhancing a fair play. Sports include the bodily event of a person. The winner in each sport will be determined depending on the mental expertise and bodily expertise of the player. The well-known sports internationally are soccer, basketball, cricket and so forth? The sports are categorized into workforce occasions and private event. Card video games and board video games are categorized under thoughts sports.

The sport soccer is a workforce sport which includes the gamers of this sport to kick the ball and drive it towards the aim publish of the opponent team. The workforce with more objectives would be the winner of the game. In this sport each workforce consists of 11 gamers including a aim keeper on the sphere played with a spherical ball. Each workforce can improve seven further gamers and the sport will be played for 90 minutes which is divided into two equal halves. Records for the success and failures in each match are maintained by all of the sports channels and they are introduced within the sports talk categorized under soccer news.

Football sport is played on a rectangular fields embedded with grass or an artificial turf. There are lots of cups held in between the soccer teams. World cup soccer is a world foot ball competition held between all of the national teams from each particular person country. This cup is organized for each 4 consecutive years. Football sport is also known as as soccer sports bysome soccer associationsin some components of the world. American soccer is a well known sport in America. This is played in between two teams geared up with eleven gamers each side. The primary intention of the sport is to attain the points by driving the ball into the opponent?s finish level by operating with it or by throwing the ball.

Fantasy sport is a sport through which the gamers acts as house owners and build their own workforce to compete with the opposite fantasy owner team. These fantasy sports are broadly growing their market, as the current era may be very fond of those games. The gamers of the fantasy workforce will be chosen by depending within the statistics of the player. Fantasy soccer is an interesting interactive sport under fantasy sports.

Basketball is also a well-known sport within the current era and it may be categorized under NBA sports. This is the well-known association for basket ball in America. Now-a-days cricket has develop into the craziest sport within the public. This sport is categorized into three formats. They are at some point matches, take a look at cricket matches and twenty- twenty matches. The at some point matches are played for a single day by limiting 50overs per each side. Twenty- twenty is fast sport which is restricted to twenty over?s for both sides whereas the take a look at cricket is the ancient one and it is played for 5 steady days restricted for 80 over?s for each day.

This post is written by Nicholas Lee. Pay less than $20/month for Accident Insurance through insurance agency, wellnessplanusa.com, that will help pay for your deductible when you have an accident and are responsible for high out of pocket costs.

f1501c8e175a67bd5c3b6c521923b764

Tags: Recreation and Leisure: Sports: Football

Source: http://ardour.tv/the-football-sport-in-world/

Kourtney Kardashian Baby Girl Ashton Eaton London 2012 basketball London 2012 Slalom Canoe Alex Morgan Misty May Treanor Lolo Jones

Source: http://buckvvidella.typepad.com/blog/2012/11/the-football-sport-in-world-ardourtv.html

mario balotelli jenny mccarthy espn3 kevin youkilis Tropical Storm Debby legend of korra lebron james

Source: http://frederickmendes90.multiply.com/journal/item/1294/The-football-sport-in-world-Ardour.tv-Buckvvidella39s-blog

mary j blige dionne warwick patricia heaton arsenic and old lace leslie varez ward solar storms

Schapiro stepping down at SEC, Walter to step in

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The head of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Mary Schapiro, will step down next month after a tumultuous four years spent rehabilitating the agency's battered reputation, handing the reins temporarily to a close ally.

SEC Commissioner Elisse Walter, a career regulator who has sided with Schapiro on most of the critical issues before the agency, was named chairman-designate and could serve until December 2013, buying time for President Barack Obama to win Senate approval for a long-term replacement.

Obama plans to nominate someone soon, a White House official said. Walter is among the candidates likely to be considered, as is Treasury official Mary Miller, who spent nearly three decades at T. Rowe Price and has been outspoken about the need to make money markets safer for investors.

The new SEC chair will need to finish Schapiro's task of resurrecting the agency's reputation, which was badly tarnished by the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

The SEC is considering money market reforms, additional market structure safeguards, and still needs to write a number of major rules dictated by the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law, including a final version of the Volcker rule to ban banks from trading for their own accounts.

"Elisse has been viewed as being in tune with Mary Schapiro's agenda," said Barry Barbash, a former director of the SEC's division of investment management, now an asset management lawyer at Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP in Washington. "If the idea is to keep the SEC running the way it's been running with the same policies, Elisse would seem an appropriate choice."

Speculation has swirled for months that Schapiro would leave soon after the November 6 presidential election.

Her departure leaves the commission split 2-2 between Democrats and Republicans, which could make it harder for the commission to come to agreement. Obama could move to appoint a fifth commissioner before naming a new chairman.

When Schapiro took over in 2009, the agency was under heavy fire for regulatory blindspots that critics said helped fuel the crisis. It was also lambasted for failing to catch now-convicted Ponzi schemer Bernard Madoff, whose fraud cost investors an estimated $65 billion.

In addition to shoring up the agency's name, Schapiro had to fight numerous other fires - from the 2010 "flash crash" that sent the Dow Jones industrial average tumbling 700 points within minutes to high-profile court losses.

"We've gotten a lot done, I'm really proud of where the agency is today, so it seemed like a good time," Schapiro said in an interview on Monday after announcing her departure.

UNFINISHED BUSINESS

Other possible replacements for Schapiro include Sallie Krawcheck, a former top executive at Bank of America and Citigroup, and Richard Ketchum, chairman of FINRA, Wall Street's self-funded regulator. SEC enforcement director Robert Khuzami, a Republican, is considered a long shot.

While Walter is also a possibility, she has already been at the SEC for more than four years and served as acting chairman before Schapiro's confirmation.

In many ways, Walter and Schapiro have been joined at the hip in their career experience and orientations. They both spent years as attorneys at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and at the SEC, with stints in top positions at FINRA.

"She is a strong advocate of disclosure, of regulation and of consumer protection," former SEC Commissioner Edward Fleischman said of Walter.

SCHAPIRO's LEGACY

Schapiro's time at the SEC was marked by some controversy and her departure leaves uncertainty around major initiatives. But former SEC officials said Schapiro helped revive a moribund agency.

"I think she saved the SEC, which was close to extinction when she took over," former SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt told Reuters.

Schapiro said in the interview that steering the agency out of that period in its history was one of the highlights of her tenure there.

She streamlined the SEC enforcement process, hired new types of employees and created a new tips database and a whistleblower office. In the past two years, the agency logged a record number of enforcement actions and brought major financial crisis cases, including a record $550 million settlement in 2010 with Goldman Sachs.

It has also implemented reforms to protect markets against major swings caused by errant technology - as was the case with the flash crash.

"The SEC is stronger, and our financial system is safer and better able to serve the American people - thanks in large part to Mary's hard work," Obama said in a statement.

But the agency has also been bogged down with major rules the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial regulation law required it to write, many of which are still in process.

Business groups have challenged much of the SEC's recent rule-making efforts and won major battles, including convincing a federal appeals court to throw out the agency's "proxy access" rule, which would have empowered shareholders to nominate directors to corporate boards.

Schapiro did not say what she planned to do next.

(Additional reporting by Sarah Lynch, Mark Felsenthal and Rachelle Younglai in Washington and Suzanne Barlyn in New York; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Andrew Hay, Tim Ahmann, Dan Grebler and Bernard Orr)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/schapiro-stepping-down-sec-walter-step-002850723--sector.html

snl Election Election results 2012 exit polls Presidential Polls California Propositions Electoral College

Hallo!

guten Tag,, fellow roleplayers! I'm glad to be able to try this RPing forum! This is my first time on a RPing (forum) I came from serious RPIng on Garry's Mod (HL2RP) which recently, has declined in quality.

Suggestions for roleplay:Anyways, does anyone have any suggestions for RP threads already created; such as survival (Zombie RP), nuclear-holocaust roleplay, or sci-fi roleplay?

Hobbies: I have a few hobbies, of which are: Personally learning German, RPing (duh), playing strategy games such as Hoi3, playing Steam, and reading.

Danke for your time!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/v6M4zafIkw4/viewtopic.php

lollapalooza lineup joss whedon ronnie montrose melissa gilbert dancing with the stars dandelion wine cough matt groening

Laid-off workers more likely to get cut again

2 hrs.

For Kathy English, it was bad enough to get laid off the first time. Then, it happened again.

The two layoffs in the past?six years have set English on a veritable employment roller?coaster: Between?bouts of unemployment, she's?worked several different short-term?jobs and taken steep pay cuts. When she is working, she often worries about whether she will end up unemployed again.

??I think you have to be extremely strong-minded to endure these circumstances,? English said.

The good news for the approximately 12 million jobseekers out there is that the employment market is slowly improving.

The unemployment rate remains relatively high, however,?meaning jobs are hard to come by. That?s left many of the millions of people who were already laid off and then found a job?worried they could be unemployed?again.

Their feelings are justified: Experts say that if you are laid off once, a combination of factors makes it more likely that you will be cut again.

?Once you?ve lost one job, even when you?re re-employed, you?re kind of set up to lose (a job) again,? said Ann Huff Stevens, an economist at UC Davis who has researched the issue.

Stevens used data from the major recession in the 1980s to evaluate why people who are laid off are likely to still be earning less money than before they were laid off, even years later and after they have found other work.

A major problem she found?was that the workers who had been laid off once were more likely to have lost a job again.

Stevens said workers who lose a job will have lower tenure in their new job, making them more susceptible to layoffs. Another issue is that they tend to have been re-employed when the economy was still weak, meaning the new employer also may encounter problems and need to cut costs.

A person who is unemployed also?is likely to take the first ? or only ? job they get offered. That means they may give less thought than they normally would to whether the job is a good fit for them.

?You may get a new job, but it just may not be a good match for your skills and your personality,? she said.

Those and other factors mean that even people who do find a new job after a layoff also are likely to be earning less for years to come.

?It takes a very long time to recover your earnings level,? Stevens said.

Angela Kelley lost a job she?d held for eight years in January of 2008. It took her six months to find a new position as a purchasing agent, and she ended up taking a pay cut.

Then just six months later, in January 2009, she was laid off again.

By then, the job market seemed even tougher. She and her husband, who have a young son, ended up moving from Austin, Texas, to East Texas. He took a new teaching job and she took a position as a teachers' aide?in the school suspension room.

It was a severe pay cut, but she stayed in the job until December of 2011, when they moved back to the Austin area for her husband?s job. That left her again searching for work.

?I can?t tell you how many resumes I sent out between January and June,? she said.

Kelley finally landed another position?as a purchasing agent. She?s very happy in her new job, but she?s still making less than she was earning in 2008.

The financial hit to the family has been substantial. Kelley said they?had to sell their house at a loss and are living with relatives in Austin while they try to find a rental home that will accept their dog.

In the meantime, they?ve cut back on everything from groceries to movie nights with their son. They have little extra to save for big expenses such as their son?s college fund.

?We?re struggling to pay the bills, so we really don?t have anything to put into savings,? she said.

English is finally earning close to what she made in 2009, after her second layoff from an administrative job. But the years of unemployment have taken a toll, and she expects it to have an effect on long-term financial goals like retirement.

She also is still haunted by the fear and frustration she felt during the months in which she was looking for work or working jobs that paid very little.

At one low point, she and her boyfriend moved from Pennsylvania to Florida, where they lived in a trailer while she spent months trying to find a job. They eventually returned to Pennsylvania, where she found clerical work that paid half of what she?d been making in 2009.

?It?s extremely frightening,? said English, 44. ?Not only do you wonder where you?re going to work, but you almost get to a point where you don?t know where you?re going to live.?

Now she is happy to have her current job, as an administrative manager with an environmental cleanup company.

The job losses also have made her more?aware of any possible concerns about her employer's financial condition. She said she?s more likely to ask if she should be worried about layoffs. She also said she?s grown much more concerned with job security than with job satisfaction.

The only upside she sees is that she has become very good at putting together resumes and explaining things like unemployment gaps. She?s thought about taking on a second job as a career coach, helping people put together resumes and cover letters.

?I?m looking at, maybe I should step out of my security zone and do this,? she said.

?

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/economywatch/laid-workers-more-likely-get-cut-second-time-1C7121572

oklahoma city bombing robbie robertson the curious case of benjamin button secret service prostitute rich ross april 20 jennifer love hewitt