Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Flames rage anew in island town ravaged by Sandy

Helicopter aerials show an out-of-control blaze burning in Mantoloking, N.J., a community left devastated by Superstorm Sandy. TODAY's Natalie Morales reports.

By NBC News staff

A section of?Hurricane Sandy-ravaged Mantoloking, N.J., was ablaze again Wednesday morning, two days after 14 homes burned in the affluent barrier island enclave.

Video from NBCNewYork.com showed flames possibly fueled by broken natural gas lines raging in the town about 50 miles east of Trenton on Wednesday.


A large cluster of flames could be seen as smaller fires spread out from it, TODAY?s Natalie Morales reported.

Ocean County Emergency Management officials said they believed ruptured natural gas lines caused the flames to rekindle Wednesday.

Impassable roads hindered Bricktown firefighters? efforts to reach the blazes, NBCNewYork.com reported.

Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com?

Morales, who observed the fires from a helicopter early Wednesday, described the area as devastated.

Obama to visit stricken NJ

?What was shoreline and beautiful, waterfront properties were completely pushed back, gone, and covered by sand,? Morales reported.

?This is part of a barrier island; it?s very much cut off,? she said.

Superstorm Sandy made landfall Monday evening on a destructive and deadly path across the Northeast.

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/31/14833032-flames-rage-anew-in-mantoloking-nj-barrier-island-town-ravaged-by-sandy?lite

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Google?s New Voting Tool Finds Your Personalized Ballot And Nearest Polling Place

images (23)Election Day is creeping up. Fortunately, Google has made it easy to find your nearest polling place and the candidates representing your registered address. The newly launched Voter Info tool pinpoints Election Day essentials and elegantly displays them on top of Google maps. For those voters who still need to figure out how they’re voting on local candidates and ballot propositions. Here are a few resources: ElectNext and Project Vote Smart have a helpful wizard for matching political preferences to candidates. Many local newspapers endorse candidates and provide?in-depth?summaries on each position. Check out more than one to get multiple perspectives. State election guides are a handy non-partisan information source, especially if you live in a state like California with many ballot propositions. Update your Facebook profile with the voter registration status?and encourage your friends to be good citizens, too.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/bB_Y-6jOSjM/

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Home sweet home: Quake-displaced Pandas return

China Daily via Reuters

A giant panda is seen on a tree at the new base of the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda in Wolong, Sichuan province, on October 30, 2012.

Pandas displaced after an earthquake struck their reserve in 2008 have begun to return home.

The first batch of 18 pandas moved into?the new base of the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda?on Tuesday, according to local media reports cited by Reuters.?They had been relocated following the 2008 Sichuan earthquake which devastated the famed Wolong reserve, one of the earliest research bases set up by the Chinese government in the early 1980s.?

Behind the Wall: Counting China's wild pandas

June 17, 2008: The epicenter of China's massive earthquake was 15 miles from one of the last habitats for the giant panda, China's beloved national symbol. NBC's Mark Mullen offers a status report on the survivors.

Source: http://photoblog.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/30/14801762-home-sweet-home-pandas-return-four-years-after-china-quake?lite

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Nevada town named state's 'most bearded community'

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The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook

Deb Perelman's collection of recipes is mouth-watering and, despite a couple misses, features appealingly homey foods.

By Heller McAlpin / October 30, 2012

The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook By Deb Perelman Knopf Doubleday 336 pp.

Enlarge

Here's one way to rate cookbooks: by IQ, a measure not of their intelligence but of their Irresistibility Quotient, the ratio of irresistible to less tempting recipes.? On that scale, Deb Perelman's Smitten Kitchen Cookbook scores at the Mensa level.

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Are you among the five million monthly visitors who have been smitten by the appealingly homey recipes on Deb Perelman's Smitten Kitchen website? If you're wondering why you should spring for her cookbook?when you can access hundreds more of her recipes online, complete with enticing photographs and reams of reader commentary, the answer is editing: What we have here is a carefully curated mix of mainly exclusive new recipes plus a few previously posted winners. The result is that wonderfully high IQ.

Although her photographs are mouth-watering, this is not food porn. Perelman, a self-taught cook and photographer, aims at getting you cooking, not just gawking. She's a self-described picky eater and obsessive, and everything she publishes must pass this test: "Will this recipe be really, truly worth it?"

Like the best television cooking show hosts ? could that be next for her? ? Perelman projects an inviting warmth and chattiness. She's funny ? "The squares keep at room temperature for at least a week, although never in my apartment" ? and self-deprecating enough to ease your culinary insecurities.

She invites us into her household, with pictures of her toddler son sprinkled throughout: "Welcome. Welcome to my tiny kitchen. Wouldn't it be great if we could all fit in here? I'd make us mulled cider and gooey cinnamon squares. We could talk about pie." Alas, her kitchen is too small. But the message is, if she can produce all this bounty in such a shoebox, so can you.

Perelman, like many successful food bloggers ? including the Wednesday Chef, Luisa Weiss, whose memoir with recipes, "My Berlin Kitchen," I reviewed earlier this fall, and Julie Powell of Julie and Julia fame ? quit her day job once her site took off.???

She's upfront about her biases. On her website, she proclaims: "What I'm wary of is: Excessively fussy foods and/or pretentious ingredients. I don't do truffle oil, Himalayan pink salt... or single-origin chocolate." In her book, she confesses to disliking cold soups and fish, but she surmounts both prejudices with a Seared Halibut with Gazpacho Salsa and Tomato Vinaigrette. Halibut, she writes, "is a great gateway fish." It is also wildly expensive, though she says another flaky white fish, such as cod, can be substituted.

A former vegetarian, Perelman offers a bounty of healthful meatless entrees. These include linguine with cauliflower pesto and a rich and hearty mushroom bourgignon she created before she "decided that a life without pulled pork was no longer one I wanted to participate in."

She is also an inventive baker. One innovation involves tweaking lemon or blood orange-olive oil cake by substituting grapefruit. She fills her hamantaschen with rhubarb instead of the more traditional prune or apricot purees.? Her pi?ce de r?sistance is a savory twist on strawberry shortcakes: scallion shortcakes topped with a tomato salad and whipped goat cheese, which in my test came out exactly as pictured on the book jacket, though twice as delicious.

Not all efforts add up. Buttered popcorn cookies follow what she calls "basic snack math, which is that two forms of junk food together always exceed the greatness of them separately, especially when you mix the salty and the sweet." To my taste, this is one where the parts are better than the whole.

Among Perelman's most useful offerings are what I think of as b&b recipes, the sort of prepare-ahead breakfast dishes often served at charming inns. Her delectable winners include Cinnamon Toast French Toast and New York Breakfast Casserole, which features bagels, eggs, onions, tomatoes, and cream cheese baked together.?

One can only imagine the agony of selection that went into this book. I would have opted for a few more recipes like the Rosemary Gruyere and Sea Salt Crisps ("Cheez-Its for grown-ups") in place of such boilerplate tips for stress-free entertaining as prepare ahead, keep it simple, and enlist friends' help. Another misstep involves the book design: While beautiful, it frequently fails to list ingredients and instructions on facing pages, requiring too much awkward page-turning to follow a recipe.

But these are small quibbles about a book filled with practical, crowd-pleasing keepers like her mother's apple cake, featured on her website back in 2008. This is one of many recipes that stays fresh for days ? assuming it lasts that long.

Heller McAlpin writes the Reading in Common column for The Barnes & Noble Review and reviews books for NPR.org and The Washington Post, among other publications.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/0CLG-XM6RjM/The-Smitten-Kitchen-Cookbook

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Syria: Clashes erupt in Palestinian refugee camp

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

YouTube Is Testing Out A New Design For Pages With More Navigation Options

4481461680_4273d06822_zMost companies tend to test new features and product designs in the wild with a small subset of people. The great thing about that is on the Internet, the world is a tiny place. A few tipsters have sent in some screenshots and a video of a new design that YouTube is testing out, and we've confirmed that it's legitimate.

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

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South Suburban Pastor Tells of Phone Conversation with Jesse Jackson Jr.

Jesse Jackson Jr

In this March 20, 2012 file photo, Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-Ill., and his wife Chicago Alderman Sandi Jackson, thank family members at the foot of the stage at his election night party. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File)

Chicago Heights, IL Patch:

Jesse Jackson Jr. wants his constituents to know that he loves them to death, according to a Matteson pastor.

In his Sunday sermon at Victory Apostolic Church in Matteson, the Rev. Andrew Singleton Jr. spoke of a two-hour phone conversation he says he had with Jackson, who recently returned to the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota.

Audio of the sermon was sent to Patch, but church officials said they did not make the recording. Officials at the church, however, confirmed Singleton's mention of his conversation with Jackson during the sermon.

Read the whole story at Chicago Heights, IL Patch

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/30/south-suburban-pastor-tel_n_2045625.html

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Terminally ill retired magistrate, 74, 'starved herself to death' after ...

Monica Cooke starved herself to death after being inspired by right-to-die campaigner Tony Nicklinson, an inquest heard

Monica Cooke starved herself to death after being inspired by right-to-die campaigner Tony Nicklinson, an inquest heard

A terminally ill retired magistrate starved herself to death after being inspired by right-to-die campaigner Tony Nicklinson, an inquest heard.

Multiple sclerosis sufferer Monica Cooke, 74, took the decision to end her own life after locked-in patient Mr Nicklinson?s landmark legal case on assisted dying collapsed.

She died after telling husband David she was going to stop eating ? ending 20 years of suffering from the debilitating degenerative condition.

Monica had no sense of smell, touch, taste and had lost control of her bodily functions and became completely reliant on others to keep her alive.

The condition forced her to gradually withdraw from public life and she began to ?closely? follow the case of Mr Nicklinson and fellow right-to-die campaigner Debby Purdy.

Eight days after Tony died mum-of-one Monica told her husband she was going to starve herself to death.

And after eight days denying herself food Monica, of Cheddar, Somerset, was dead, an inquest in Taunton heard.

Speaking via a statement at the inquest her husband said Mr Nicklinson?s final struggle gave his wife the strength to put her long-declared plan into action.

He said: ?Needless to say she paid close attention to the various cases in the national press and High Court that addressed the individual?s right to seek assistance in the ending of life under extreme circumstances.

?Naturally she followed the case of Debby Purdy, a fellow MS sufferer who at that time had not reached the same degree of disability that Monica experienced, and was disappointed at the outcome which excluded patients who were not terminally ill.

Tony Nicklinson with his daughter Lauren  and his wife Jane at their home in Melksham, Wiltshire, before he died

Tony Nicklinson with his daughter Lauren and his wife Jane at their home in Melksham, Wiltshire, before he died

?The Nicklinson case raised similar emotions and led us jointly to the conclusion that the courts could not act unilaterally without a change to the law, and the politicians would not act because of the lack of political kudos in addressing such a controversial topic involving small numbers.

?We both felt that the lobbies against any change were loud and influential whilst the pleas of those most involved were sporadic, quiet and desperate, more involved in continuing the battle to cope.

?Having embarked on her intended course of action Monica let it be known within the family that her perception and intent should be used in any way to extend and inform the debate on the ?assisted right to die?.

?She had addressed the subject with a detached, logical and informed way resulting in her strongly held belief in the right to self-determination and identifying the fallacy of those who believed that palliative care necessarily restored a tolerable quality of life.

?Monica?s eventual decision to end her life by starvation was taken in a controlled, and to her, rational way, balancing the ordeal she knew she would suffer, the pain she knew it would cause her family against her future prospects of minimal independence and negligible dignity.?

Speaking after the hearing he said: ?The time and manner of Mr Nicklinson?s last few days gave her the courage to put her long-declared intention into action. She wished to intervene and end her life when she chose.?

Mr Cooke told the inquest his wife was an active and outgoing woman, who was slowly crippled by the degenerative disease.

She was a marriage guidance councillor for 30 years, enjoyed playing tennis and singing in choirs, and was also a Justice of the Peace in Shepton Mallet and Mendip, Somerset.

But the disease had left the once-sprightly magistrate unable to move, taste and smell.

Monica was confined to a wheelchair in 2002, which was swapped for an electric one in 2004.

The disease had destroyed her body to such an extent that she had to retire as a magistrate because she could not lift the book of sentencing guidelines.

He husband says by 2011 Monica was a virtual ?shut-in?, who restricted the number of people who came to see her because she did not want to lose her dignity.

He said: ?Nevertheless she remained relatively cheerful as can be witnessed by the various care staff, and nurses who attended her for various reasons and her handful of close friends.

?She engaged them in lively conversation, sharing her wide knowledge of this country, politics, world events, literature and culture.

?After another short infection in April 2012 she started to express to all these people her wish not to continue her life.

?The reasons given were the total loss of any sensations that could give pleasure, a total loss of dignity, and a prospect of further loss of the minimal remaining physical capacity.

?It was done in a matter-of-fact way ? nevertheless, all were saddened by the down turn in her attitude.

?This attitude remained unchanged from then until August 2012 when it turned from attitude to resolve.?

Her family say she closely followed the High Court cases of Debby Purdy and Tony Nicklinson, who both battled and lost for the legal right to be allowed to die.

On August 30 this year ? eight days after Mr Nicklinson died ? she told her husband of her intention to stop eating.

Despite intervention by her GP, Weston Hospice, daughter Miranda, 37, and friends she remained resolute and died a week later on September 7.

Monica went through psychiatric assessments in her final days, but was deemed mentally sound.

Her GP, Dr Thomas Davies, said: ?It was clear that the decision was considered and entirely her own, without any suggestion of outside influence.

?She judged the decision to end her life to be a rational response to a growing loss of dignity, something she described as a basic human right.?

West Somerset coroner Michael Rose recorded a narrative verdict at the inquest in Taunton, Somerset.

He said he did not ?support or condone her decision? as ?it was a matter for Parliament to make legislation?.

But he added: ?No-one who heard her story could fail to be moved.?

He said: ?There is no dispute in my mind that her death was brought about somewhat prematurely by refusing food.

?I in no way either support or condone the action. Anyone who has been here today cannot help but be moved by what happened.

?Clearly Mrs Cooke was of sound mind and therefore any further action by GP Dr Davies was extremely limited, he could not intervene unless she was mentally unstable ? but she clearly wasn?t.?

Monica followed the right-to-die campaigns of fellow MS sufferer Debby Purdy, as well as locked-in sufferer Tony Nicklinson.

MS sufferer Debby, 49, lost her High Court assisted suicide legal battle, and plans to travel abroad to a ?suicide clinic? to die when she feels ready to die.

Tragic father-of-two Tony, 58, who was left paralysed by a stroke in 2005, lost a High Court bid on August 16 to allow a doctor to help him end his life at home.

He died at home in Melksham, Wilts., on August 22 after refusing food and contracting pneumonia ? tweeting posthumously ?Goodbye world the time has come. I had some fun?.

Category: News

Source: http://swns.com/news/terminally-ill-retired-magistrate-74-starved-death-inspired-locked-in-sufferer-tony-nicklinson-26785/

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Vonne Monai's Beauty, Health & Fitness Guide: Hurricane Sandy ...

I am an American Mulatto.
My Mother is Cherokee & Seminole (tall, yellow, black kinky hair, (Bette Davis) brown eyes, pretty.
My Father is Italian American (tall, rock star skinny, curly blond hair, gorgeous blue eyes, incredibly handsome.

I am 5'7", 100 lbs., Size Zero, Brown Eyes, Curly Black Hair
Professional Actress, Model,?Composer, Artist & Poetess

My name is pronounced vonnie monay

I have created hundreds of original musical compositions, but due to the excessiveness of the Organized Criminal Gang Stalking I have to endured on a constant basis; I have only 60 songs?and only 60 poems?copywritten.

I also have not had the time to even present my work in a professional manner.

I figured I would present it raw since these creatures think they can erase me and my life. ?They are lowlives who think they can make their outrageous "frame ups" stick.

I have been a vegetarian all of my life.

I know it is not for everyone and have never and will never try to force anyone to eat the way I do. I was forced by my mother to eat meat because of my blood disorder, Thalassemia Minor. She tried to frighten me into eating it by telling me that I would die if I didn't. I am still alive!

?

I am a True Gemini a Syzygy and a Grand Cross!

Syzygy?in?Astronomy? is an alignment of three celestial objects, as the sun, the earth, and either the moon or a planet.

In a Grand Cross, there is one planet in each astrological element (fire, earth, air and water) but all the planets are in signs of the same modality or quality.

I am a victim of child pornographers, sadistic, homosexual, pedophile, rapists, kidnapping, forced breeding & sex slavery. I am still stalked by these slanderers. I will tell anyone who will listen until I have justice. I am so fed up with them that I have begun to names names.

These brute beasts twice dead (A New Teatament description of these creatures) ought to thank me for sharing their actual "Accomplishments" Crimes.

I think it is all about the land that was stolen from my family.

Tropicana Orange Juice is on it in Bradenton, Florida, USA.

These posts are designed to disrupt the MuslimTerrorist, Zionists/Jewish, Papist/Catholic Inquisitors/Mafia & Willie Lynch Slaves/Blacks , Third World/Illegal Aliens attempts to commit The Genocide of True Americans!

Source: http://vonnemonai.blogspot.com/2012/10/hurricane-sandy-manufactured-crisis-to.html

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Ghosts scare off gore for Halloween movies

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - After almost a decade in which torture films dominated the box office, horror movies are returning to ghostly thrills with a new slew of low-budget productions making big money for studios.

The success of 2009's "Paranormal Activity" - which was made for $15,000 and grossed more than $107 million at U.S. box offices - has fueled a thirst in audiences and movie studios for things that go bump in the night.

Halloween audiences previously gripped by the gory "Saw" franchise about a sadistic serial killer are flocking this season to see supernatural horrors, with "Sinister" and "Paranormal Activity 4" providing otherworldly scares for the spooky festivities.

The supernatural trend, with very little blood, started this year with "The Woman in Black" and "The Apparition", and will spill into 2013 with upcoming horror films including "Mama", "Evil Dead", "Carrie", and ghostly spoof "Scary Movie 5", which will parody "Paranormal Activity".

"It's a return to a more classic style of suspense," Henry Joost, who co-directed the third and fourth "Paranormal Activity" films with Ariel Schulman, told Reuters.

"When you've just been obliterated with gore, having it slammed in your face for a decade, you respond by seeking the opposite."

"Sinister", currently playing in U.S. movie theaters for Halloween-loving audiences, features an author (Ethan Hawke) who discovers home videos of mysterious murders and soon finds himself pursued by an otherworldly presence.

Director Scott Derrickson said audiences were drawn to bloodless supernatural horrors as a means to escape from news about wars and violent killings.

"There's something about the real-world pain and violence that has enveloped the American reality, that makes films like ("Saw") not necessarily the catharsis that people are looking for," Derrickson told Reuters in an interview.

INEXPENSIVE GHOSTS REAP BOX-OFFICE BENEFITS

"Saw", made for $1.2 million, grossed more than $55 million at the U.S. box office in 2004 and spawned a franchise, leading a slew of films dubbed "torture porn" for the excessive use of gratuitous violence.

The trend produced the "Hostel" trilogy, 2006's "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning" and 2008's "The Strangers".

But while the "Saw" franchise initially brought in big money for movie studios - the second and third films each grossed more than $80 million at the domestic box office - the profits slowed by 2009, when the franchise's seventh and final film "Saw 3D: The Final Chapter" was made for $20 million and grossed only $45 million.

"The torture porn stuff really played itself out, 'Saw' and 'Hostel', they were just too much. People want to be engaged with the story and not just grossed beyond imagination," Bradley Jacobs, film editor at Us Weekly, told Reuters.

In comparison, the "Paranormal Activity" franchise, which relies on suspense and strange phenomena, has revamped the genre with a more cost-effective model since most of the scares are off-screen and on deliberately grainy footage, minimizing the need for costly special effects and action shots.

The second "Paranormal" film was shot for an estimated $3 million and made $84 million, while the third film, made for $5 million, has grossed more than $104 million in North America.

"The profitability of making a film for less than $5 million and hedging the bet of the financiers and the studios with a possible giant upside becomes extremely attractive," Derrickson said.

"Sinister", made for $3 million, has grossed $39 million after three weeks in U.S. theaters. "Paranormal Activity 4", which cost $5 million, has made more than $42 million since it opened on October 19.

"Audiences realized that the feeling of suspense and the anticipation of horror is actually more emotionally impacting than graphic horror itself in these low-budget movies," Derrickson said.

The "Paranormal Activity" franchise was released by Paramount Pictures, a unit of Viacom Inc, while Lions Gate Entertainment's Summit studio distributed "Sinister" as well as the "Saw" and "Hostel" films.

(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy, editing by Jill Serjeant and Dale Hudson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ghosts-scare-off-gore-halloween-movies-202203448--finance.html

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'Island of the Blue Dolphins' woman's cave believed found

The yellowing government survey map of San Nicolas Island dated from 1879, but it was quite clear: There was a big black dot on the southwest coast and, next to it, the words "Indian Cave."

For more than 20 years, Navy archaeologist Steve Schwartz searched for that cave. It was believed to be home to the island's most famous inhabitant, a Native American woman who survived on the island for 18 years, abandoned and alone, and became the inspiration for "Island of the Blue Dolphins," one of the 20th century's most popular novels for young readers.

The problem for Schwartz was that San Nicolas, a wind-raked, 22-square-mile chunk of sandstone and scrub, has few caves, all of them dank, wet hollows where the tides surge in and nobody could live for long.

Year after year, he scoured the beaches and cliffs, drilled exploratory holes, checked the old map, pored over contemporary accounts and conferred with other experts, all in vain. If he could find the cave, he could find artifacts ? clues that would flesh out the real-life story that inspired Scott O'Dell to pen the 1960 novel that won the Newbery Medal and became required reading in many California schools. More than 6.5 million copies are in print and teachers frequently assign it between the fourth and seventh grades.

If he found the cave, he might solve mysteries about the "Lone Woman of San Nicolas" and her Nicole?o tribe, which was left devastated by a massacre in 1814 by sea otter hunters from Alaska.

With the help of recently unearthed notes written in a fine script by a 19th century government surveyor, Schwartz now believes he's found it.

"We're 90% sure this is the Lone Woman's cave," Schwartz told several hundred fellow researchers last week at the California Islands Symposium in Ventura. Further excavation is necessary, he said, adding that a crew of students has painstakingly removed about 40,000 buckets, or a million pounds, of sand from a cavern at least 75 feet long and 10 feet high.

In a separate discovery that also could shed light on the Lone Woman and her people, researchers stumbled across two redwood boxes poking through a steep, eroding cliff. The containers, probably made from recycled canoe planks and held together with the tar that washes onto island beaches, hold more than 200 stone blades, harpoon points, bone fishhooks and other implements.

"We find amazing stuff every time we go to the Channel Islands, and this may be the most amazing find of all," said Jon M. Erlandson, a University of Oregon archaeologist who has explored the islands for more than 30 years.

It may never be known just who left the cache of tools, he said, but "it's at least a reasonable hypothesis" that it was the Lone Woman, who is known to have stashed useful items at a number of places around the island.

About 60 miles off the coast, San Nicolas is a lonely Navy base dotted with installations designed to track missiles. It also has more than 540 known archaeological sites, some with evidence that people have lived on the island for more than 8,000 years.

For many Nicole?os, life ended in the early 1800s. Russian fur traders brought groups of Alaskan sea otter hunters to San Nicolas, where they engaged in repeated fights with native men over women and furs. The Nicole?o population dwindled from perhaps 300 to a few dozen, dropping most sharply after a particularly savage battle in 1814.

By 1835, the few Nicole?os left were struggling. Whether motivated by compassion or a need to increase the ranks of mission laborers, Franciscan fathers from the mainland sent a ship for them. All but one made the trip to the mainland aboard the Peor es Nada, loosely translated as "Better than nothing."

The holdout came to be known as the Lone Woman. According to legend, she jumped overboard and swam for shore when she frantically realized that her baby had been left behind. Less romanticized theories hold that she told the captain she'd show up with her child but a sudden storm forced him to shove off without her.

What's known is that a solitary woman lived in the sand and fog of San Nicolas for the next 18 years. On the mainland, her legend grew. A time or two, fishermen reported seeing a fleeting figure on the deserted island. In 1850, a padre at the Santa Barbara Mission commissioned a sea captain to find her.

The captain sailed to the island but found nothing to indicate the woman was still alive. However, his account of the plentiful seals and sea otters piqued the interest of George Nidever, a Santa Barbara rancher and fur trader. In 1852, Nidever found footprints on the beach. The next year, he found the Lone Woman.

"The old woman was of medium height but rather thick," he later reported. "She must have been about 50 years old but she was still strong and active. Her face was pleasing, as she was continuously smiling. Her teeth were entire but worn to the gums."

The woman, who was skinning a seal when she was found, shared some roasted roots with Nidever and his men. She was staying above rolling dunes, in a hut she'd built from whale bones and brush.

According to Schwartz, her people probably lived in more substantial houses, but tribal taboos would have kept females from learning to build them. The hut was no more than a windbreak, he said, and Nidever's accounts said she lived in a cave nearby.

Just where was an open question until UC Berkeley archaeologist Scott Byram showed Schwartz the field notes written by a U.S. Coast Survey mapmaker who was sent to San Nicolas. One of his survey stations, he noted, was "100 yards eastward of the large cave formerly inhabited by a wild Indian woman who lived there alone for 18 years." The surveyor helpfully provides compass bearings that led Schwartz to a spot he had previously rejected, a shallow depression beneath a rock overhang.

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/u0YZyhGv58o/la-me-lone-woman-cave-20121027,0,4857759.story

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Future of Technology in Education ? G M Owais from Narayana ...

Name of Applicant:?G M Owais Ahmed
Grade:?XII
School:?Narayana Junior College
City:?Kurnool
State:?Andhra Pradesh
Country: India

No generation is more at ease with online, collaborative technologies than today?s young people??digital natives?, who have grown up in an immersive computing environment. Where a notebook and pen may have formed the tool kit of prior generations, today?s students come to class armed with smart phones, laptops and iPods. This era of pervasive technology has significant implications for higher education. Nearly two-thirds (63%) of survey respondents from the public and private sectors say that technological innovation will have a major impact on teaching methodologies over the next five years. ?Technology allows students to become much more engaged in constructing their own knowledge, and cognitive studies show that ability is key to learning success,? says New York City-based Queens College vice-president of institutional advancement, Susan Henderson. Online degree programmes and distance learning have gained a firm foothold in universities around the world. What was once considered a niche channel for the delivery of educational content has rapidly become mainstream, creating wider access to education, new markets for content and expanded revenue opportunities for academic institutions. Sixty percent of those polled say that the technological change occurring in our midst will alter the perception of the college campus from a one-dimensional (physical) concept to a multi-dimensional (physical and online) one. ?Law school students enrolled in hybrid programmes that integrate distance and in-class education outperform those who study exclusively in one environment,? says Tom Delaney, associate dean and CIO of the New York University (NYU) School of Law, of the results of a recent limited trial at his school. New technologies are also affecting other areas of campus administration. Social-networking tools are helping to build connections with alumni and support career service activities. E-marketing campaigns expand the reach and success of recruiting and fundraising efforts, and drive down the cost of direct-mail campaigns. And automated, self-service programmes reduce administrative requirements, streamline course registration and enhance academic life. Although university participants view these changes as having a largely positive impact, many institutions struggle with the twin challenges of rising information technology (IT) costs and the need to avoid technological obsolescence. In addition, insufficient resources, a lack of adequate instructional design staff and other technological support issues can also impede the adoption of new technologies. Despite these challenges, most believe that technology will become ever more interwoven into the fabric of academic life. HOW TECHNOLOGY IS CHANGING IN TODAY`S CLASSROOMS: Technology is enabling multi-modal teaching, changing curricula and spawning rich forms of online research and collaboration. Nearly 60% of survey respondents say that professors will soon teach in more than one medium. At NYU?s top-ranked tax law programme, for instance, classroom courses are filmed with three cameras and a sound mixer. ?The course goes online within 30 minutes,? says Mr Delaney. ?Within 24 hours, students interested in reviewing a certain case or topic can click an online index that charts the content of the entire class and [can] view the portion that interests them.? When asked to compare different communications technologies, 52% of survey respondents state that online collaboration tools would make the greatest contribution in terms of improving educational quality over the next five years?the top response?while 48% point to the dynamic delivery of content and software that supports individually paced learning. Sophisticated learning-management systems and enhanced video and presentation tools are among other innovations that respondents say are likely to have a profound effect on the academic experience. It is interesting to note that despite the growing array of technology-enabled teaching tools available, nearly three-quarters of participants say that the greatest potential benefit of technology is something far more straightforward?namely, the expanded access to educational and reference resources that it provides. According to the survey results, online-collaboration tools, software that supports individually paced learning, and learning-management systems are among the communications technologies most expected to improve academics over the next five years. Web 2.0 technologies such as wikis, instant messaging and social networking?which have been influential in improving connectivity in many settings and are in use now at a large number of institutions?are expected to decline in use over that period. By contrast, online gaming and simulation software are cited by 54% of higher-education respondents and 59% of corporate respondents as an innovation likely to be adopted among universities over the next five years. Faculty members, administrators and CIOs are also exploring how web applications and freeware such as Google docs can improve efficiency and reduce costs. Collectively, such advances may lead to profound changes in the way courses are taught. ?Teaching will become more outcome-based and student-centred,? says Polley Ann McClure, CIO of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. ?To be truly transformative,? she adds, ?instructional paradigms will have to shift.? Instead of focusing on memorisation of material by their students, instructors will focus on the application of knowledge to particular problems. Says Ms McClure: ?Students need to feel that they can plot their own academic path. If a student wants to, they should be allowed to take the final exam on the first day of school, and get credit for the portion of the course they?ve passed. If they answer 80% of the test correctly, for example, testing software would identify the issues behind the 20% of wrong answers and focus student attention on those areas instead.? It?s a view that others across the higher-education spectrum share. ?The professor?s role is evolving from instructor to mentor,? says Sam Scalise, CIO of Sonoma State University, in California?s wine country. ?Homework, quizzes and projects will have to be designed in such a way as to require genuine thoughtfulness on the part of the student. That paradigm shift offers enormous potential for advancing educational quality.? Finally, respondents foresee an interesting range of possibilities regarding how technology is most likely to affect future academic offerings, spurred by innovative faculty research, student engagement and the pursuit of academic collaboration. Over the next five years, 56% of respondents expect to see a greater number of interdisciplinary majors, combining chemical engineering and environmental studies for instance, and 43% foresee broader inter-university collaboration among students from multiple institutions. Looking beyond the five-year horizon, more than two-thirds of all respondents say that students will be able to craft individualised degree programmes, either within their own university or by bundling coursework from different institutions. And more than one-half see the publishing world evolving as a result of all these developments, with textbooks and printed documents eventually being replaced by online materials. ?The rise of online peer review may mean that some texts exist exclusively in virtual form, where they can be updated and refined in real time,? says Linda O?Brien, CIO of the University of Melbourne in Australia. THE EXPANDING ROLE OF ONLINE LEARNING: More than two-thirds of those surveyed from academic settings say their institutions offer online courses today. The specialisation, customisation and convenience that distance education affords has found an eager audience among students, working professionals and employers. Many academic institutions, and especially those with a public-service mandate, consider online learning key to advancing their mission, placing post-graduate education within reach of people who might otherwise not be able to access it. Recently named the top wired university in the US by PC Magazine, the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign offers a case in point. As Scott D Johnson, CIO and associate dean for online learning in the College of Education, observes, ?As a public, land-grant university, our mission is grounded on the premise of education for all.? In January 2008 the university marked a significant leap forward in what had already been a long history in distance education, by launching the University of Illinois Global Campus?an integrated online programme created in collaboration with the colleges and academic departments at the university?s residential campuses. ?The ability to offer greater access to educational opportunities was the primary catalyst,? Dr Johnson acknowledges. ?There are many people who desire certification or degree programmes who simply cannot attend a residential programme, be they single mothers, working professionals or non-traditional students. It?s part of our public mission to reach those people, and we see e-learning as a vital tool in making that possible.? While distance-education programmes continue to grow in number and to improve in quality, most survey participants see online courses as a supplement to face-to-face classes, and nearly two-thirds of respondents maintain that traditional degrees carry greater credibility than those earned online. Corporate participants hold this view most staunchly. Few participants (11%) say that online and in-class students are likely to take the same classes together and compete for top grades. Perceptions may be shifting, however. A number of elite institutions, such as Johns Hopkins in Maryland and Stanford University in California, offer highly regarded online courses, and students who complete coursework through Stanford?s Educational Program for Gifted Youth (EPGY) and matriculate as undergraduates may use these credits towards their bachelor?s degrees. CONCLUSION: IN THE TRENDING YEARS WORLD WILL DO THE WHOLE WORK ALL THROUGH COMPUTERS AND LATEST TABS ARE AVAILABLE.

Source: http://eindia.eletsonline.com/2012/future-of-technology-in-education-g-m-owais-from-narayana-junior-college-kurnool/

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German Finance Minister Says No Way To A New Greek Debt ...

">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfgang_Sch%C3%A4uble

Wolfgang Schaeuble

BERLIN (AP) ? Germany's finance minister has dismissed the idea of governments and other public creditors taking a hit on their Greek debt holdings, arguing that it wouldn't be legally feasible.

However, Wolfgang Schaeuble said in an interview with Deutschlandfunk radio broadcast Sunday that a debt buyback program ? under which Greece would get loans that would allow it to pay off debts ? might be possible. That, he said, "is not a trick; it is a consideration that can seriously be engaged in."

Greece is pushing for a two-year extension of the 2014 deadline to meet the terms of its bailout program, a move expected to incur substantial extra costs.

Private creditors agreed earlier this year to take a so-called haircut, or restructuring, on their Greek debt holdings ? accepting a 53.5 percent loss on the face value of bonds.

Public-sector creditors were spared; however, German weekly Der Spiegel, without citing sources, reported Sunday that Greece's international debt inspectors are now proposing a new restructuring that would include them.

Schaeuble said guarantees were given at the time of the private-sector restructuring that "that will be all ? so it's a bit unrealistic now to talk about further haircuts." He also argued that a new haircut would raise questions over whether other governments in the 17-nation eurozone could continue helping Greece.

"You don't give a debtor who doesn't service your debt claims new money," he said. "We would be prevented by law from doing any more."

The European Central Bank already has said it can't help Greece by rolling over government bonds it holds or accepting lower interest rates, noting that it isn't allowed to finance governments directly.

Germany, Europe's biggest economy and a lead lender in eurozone bailouts, has made clear that it wants Greece to stay solvent and stay in the 17-nation euro. However, it has kept pressure on Athens to implement reforms and get its finances in order while debt inspectors consider whether Greece has made enough progress to secure the next ?31.5 billion ($40.7 billion) tranche of rescue loans.

On Wednesday, Greek Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras told the Greek Parliament his country had won an extension of the deadline to meet the terms of the bailout program ? an assertion Schaeuble promptly shot down as "speculation."

In Sunday's interview, Schaeuble said he had called his Greek colleague and Stournaras told him "he did not say the negotiations had been concluded. He was misunderstood, or perhaps he expressed himself ambiguously."

Schaeuble stressed the need to bolster the credibility of Greece's rescue program, mentioning as one possibility automatic spending cuts if targets are missed.

On another thorny issue for the eurozone, the creation of a single supervisor for banks, Schaeuble emphasized Germany's position that it must not be rushed. He noted that European leaders this month committed to try and get a plan for it in place by Jan. 1, "but they did say 'if possible.'"

The supervisor needs to be up and running before Europe can work on giving its bailout fund the power to rescue banks directly ? something that many governments would like to see soon.

However, the president of the ECB, which is slated to host the new supervisor, joined Germany in saying quality should trump speed.

"What is more important is that the (supervisor) works well, not when it starts," Mario Draghi told Germany's Der Spiegel. "Otherwise, the reputation and independence of the ECB are at risk."

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/german-finance-minister-says-no-way-to-a-new-greek-debt-haircut-2012-10

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Economic Evaluation of Internet-Based Interventions for Harmful

Original Paper

Economic Evaluation of Internet-Based Interventions for Harmful Alcohol Use Alongside a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial

Matthijs Blankers1,2, PhD; Udo Nabitz1, PhD; Filip Smit3,4, PhD; Maarten WJ Koeter2, PhD; Gerard M Schippers2, PhD

1Department Jellinek, Arkin Mental Health Care, Amsterdam, Netherlands
2Amsterdam Institute for Addiction Research, Department of Psychiatry, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
3Trimbos Institute, Netherlands Institute of Mental Health and Addiction, Utrecht, Netherlands
4EMGO Institute, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, VU University Medical Centre, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Corresponding Author:
Matthijs Blankers, PhD

Department Jellinek
Arkin Mental Health Care
PO Box 75848
Amsterdam, 1070 AV
Netherlands
Phone: 31 611785270
Fax: 31 205905692
Email:


ABSTRACT

Background: Internet interventions with and without therapist support have been found to be effective treatment options for harmful alcohol users. Internet-based therapy (IT) leads to larger and longer-lasting positive effects than Internet-based self-help (IS), but it is also more costly to provide.
Objective: To evaluate the cost effectiveness and cost utility of Internet-based interventions for harmful use of alcohol through the assessment of the incremental cost effectiveness of IT compared with IS.
Methods: This study was performed in a substance abuse treatment center in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. We collected data over the years 2008?2009. A total of 136 participants were included, 70 (51%) were female, and mean age was 41.5 (SD 9.83) years. Reported alcohol consumption and Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) scores indicated harmful drinking behavior at baseline. We collected self-reported outcome data prospectively at baseline and 6 months after randomization. Cost data were extracted from the treatment center?s cost records, and sex- and age-specific mean productivity cost data for the Netherlands.
Results: The median incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was estimated at ?3683 per additional treatment responder and ?14,710 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained. At a willingness to pay ?20,000 for 1 additional QALY, IT had a 60% likelihood of being more cost effective than IS. Sensitivity analyses attested to the robustness of the findings.
Conclusions: IT offers better value for money than IS and might therefore be considered as a treatment option, either as first-line treatment in a matched-care approach or as a second-line treatment in the context of a stepped-care approach.
Trial Registration: Netherlands Trial Register NTR-TC1155; http://www.trialregister.nl/trialreg/admin/rctview.asp?TC=1155 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6AqnV4eTU)

(J Med Internet Res 2012;14(5):e134)
doi:10.2196/jmir.2052

KEYWORDS

Cost-benefit analysis; randomized controlled trial; alcohol-induced disorders; self-help; computer-assisted therapy

Harmful alcohol use is the number-3 leading contributor to global burden of disease [1] and causes 3.8% of global mortality [2], as well as losses in gross domestic product [3]. The majority of people with alcohol use disorders are not receiving any form of treatment, leading to a treatment gap [4]. Among the possible means of bridging this treatment gap is the use of accessible and efficient treatment, delivered over the Internet. Internet interventions with and without therapist support [5-8] have been found to be effective treatment options for harmful alcohol users and could perhaps be used sequentially in a stepped-care format. Internet-based therapy (IT) leads to larger and longer-lasting positive effects than Internet-based self-help (IS) in the treatment of depression [9,10], anxiety [10,11], and problem drinking [8]. However, IT is more costly to provide and more demanding for both participants and therapists. Thus, the research question is, ?Does the additional positive result of therapist support outweigh its additional cost?? We present an economic evaluation assessing the cost effectiveness and cost utility of IT compared with IS for harmful alcohol use. Recently, studies have been published on the cost effectiveness of Internet-based (self-help) interventions for depression [12], weight management [13], and harmful alcohol use [14]. The cost effectiveness of therapist support in Internet-based alcohol interventions has not yet been supported, however.


Study Design and Participants

We collected data for the cost effectiveness analysis alongside a pragmatic randomized controlled trial on the effectiveness of IT relative to IS and a waiting list, conducted in the Netherlands in 2008?2009. Because in economic evaluation the preferred comparison is between the intervention of interest (IT) and its best alternative, in this case IS, we do not present waiting list data in this paper.

We recruited applicants through jellinek.nl, a substance abuse treatment center website with 650,000 visitors annually [8]. For inclusion, applicants had to (1) be between 18 and 65 years old, (2) live in the Netherlands with health care insurance coverage, (3) have Internet access at home, (4) score above 8 on the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) [15], (5) report a weekly consumption of more than 14 standard (10 g ethanol) drinking units, and (6) provide informed consent. Exclusion criteria were (1) prior substance abuse treatment, (2) a history of alcohol delirium or drug overdose, (3) a history of severe cardiovascular or gastrointestinal diseases, (4) a history of schizophrenia, epilepsy, or suicidal tendencies, (5) extensive substance use in the last month, and (6) unavailability of more than 2 weeks during the study. Of the 1720 who were assessed, 832 applicants were eligible for inclusion; 205 participants were included. Compared with all 832 eligible applicants, the 205 included participants reported somewhat higher baseline AUDIT scores, but this difference was not significant (mean 18.9, SD 4.98 vs mean 19.5, SD 5.13, t204 = 1.617, P = .11). In the IT group, 48 received the allocated intervention, that is, they participated in treatment exercises and chat therapy. In IS, 57 received the intervention, which consisted of exercises only. Outcome data were collected at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months after randomization (Figure 1). The study design [16] and outcomes of the randomized controlled trial [8] were published elsewhere.

Interventions

Both IT and IS were based on a cognitive behavioral therapy and motivational interviewing treatment protocol [17]. In IS, participants were introduced to various treatment exercises. Without a therapist?s support, participants acquired skills and knowledge about coping with craving, drinking lapses, and peer pressure. IT was driven by 7 synchronous text-based chat-therapy sessions with a personal (Internet) cognitive behavioral therapy-trained therapist, lasting 40 minutes each, and accompanied by homework assignments. Each of the chat-therapy sessions had its own theme: monitoring and goal setting, self-control, and relapse prevention, for example.

Cost Measures

In this economic evaluation, we used the societal perspective. All costs related to IT and IS interventions, health care uptake, opportunity costs of the participant?s time, and productivity losses were included. All costs (Table 1) are expressed in euros and were indexed to the reference year 2010 using an inflation correction based on the Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) [18].

Source: http://www.jmir.org/2012/5/e134/

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Hurricane Sandy shuts down Wall Street trading, markets | Investing ...

Wall Street?s plans for Hurricane Sandy

Wall Street firms are running on skeleton staff today, as stock markets remain closed ahead of Hurricane Sandy?s approach and many traders in other markets as well as other financial professionals worked from home.
Here is a breakdown of what the major financial institutions said about carrying out business on Monday. Read more

Given all the emphasis on stability and investor confidence, operating the market that way didn?t seem to serve the public interest. Why do this? To prove we can? That didn?t seem to make a lot of sense

NEW YORK ? U.S. stock and options markets will be closed on Monday, and possibly Tuesday, as regulators, exchanges and brokers worry about the integrity of markets and the safety of employees in the face of Hurricane Sandy.

Market participants and regulators decided late on Sunday to shut the market, reversing a plan to keep electronic trading going on Monday. Bond markets will remain open, but will close at noon, a trade group said.

Pfizer Inc : rescheduled third quarter results and conference call to Nov. 1, before the bell, from Oct. 30.
Thomson Reuters Corp : rescheduled earnings announcement to Nov. 2 from Oct. 30.
Acorda Therapeutics Inc: rescheduled thirdquarter financial results and conference call to Oct. 31 from Oct. 30.
Systemax Inc: rescheduled third quarter earnings announcement to Nov. 1, after the market. The Company will host an earnings teleconference at 5 p.m. Eastern Time on that day.
MSC Industrial Direct Co Inc: rescheduled its fiscal fourthquarter results to Oct. 31 from Oct. 30.
Kaman Corp : Rescheduled third quarter results to Oct. 31, after the bell. A webcast and conference call will be held at 8:30 am Eastern Time on Nov. 1.
Entergy Corp : rescheduled third quarter earnings conference call to Nov. 5 from Oct. 30.
NRG Energy Inc : rescheduled third quarter earnings conference call to Nov. 2 from Oct. 31.

The decision to close stock and options markets came after regulators, exchanges, and dealers discussed the unknowns that would have been tested if the markets opened on Monday, three sources familiar with the situation said.

For example, NYSE Euronext?s New York Stock Exchange had initially planned to shut its physical trading floor, which would have meant operating as an all-electronic exchange for the first time.

?It was a judgment decision based on the safety of a lot of market participants, especially as the storm seems to be getting more severe,? said Larry Leibowitz, chief operating officer of NYSE Euronext, in a phone interview. ?Given all the emphasis on stability and investor confidence, operating the market that way didn?t seem to serve the public interest. Why do this? To prove we can? That didn?t seem to make a lot of sense.?

The decision to shut down the stock markets came after Wall Street had prepared to open for business on Monday with limited staffing after a mass transit shut-down in New York, booking hotel rooms for key employees and leaning on offices in other cities.

Wall Street banks, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Citigroup Inc, activated their emergency plans, which many firms put in place after the September 11, 2001, attacks. It was not immediately clear if those plans had also changed.

Some bank offices in lower Manhattan?s Financial District are in evacuation zones and most non-critical staff and employees who don?t rely on high-speed systems, including some investment bankers, were asked to work from home.

The last time the NYSE cut trading hours for weather was Jan. 8, 1996, when a blizzard dropped more than 20 inches on New York City. It last closed for a full day for weather when Hurricane Gloria hit on Sept. 27, 1985. Markets have not closed for four days in a row since the start of 2007 when, following a weekend and the New Year?s Day holiday on a Monday, they shut on Jan. 2 to observe a day of mourning for President Gerald Ford?s death the previous week.

?Everybody wants to get the markets open,? the NYSE?s Leibowitz said. ?We all know how important this is and we take the decision seriously. People expect the markets will be resilient and able to operate. The tenet is that the markets should be open if at all possible.?

?SUPER STORM?

The storm is expected to slam into the U.S. East Coast on Monday night, bringing torrential rain, high wind, severe flooding and power outages. The rare ?super storm? ? created by an Arctic jet stream wrapping itself around a tropical storm ? could be the biggest to hit the U.S. mainland, forecasters said.

The scramble started early as the threat of the storm forced the New York mass transit system to shut down on Sunday evening, leaving tens of thousands of employees stuck at home.

About 8.5 million commuters use the Metropolitan Transit Authority?s transit lines daily, meaning most Wall Street employees would be unable to get to work. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg also closed public schools and ordered an evacuation of 375,000 people in coastal areas, including downtown offices of banks such as Citigroup.

The major exchanges and most big trading firms have alternate trading facilities if downtown Manhattan is inaccessible, but the storm?s wide path may affect a number of sites in the New York metropolitan area. Authorities have warned of possible widespread power outages that could last for days.

Wall Street was spared the worst of Hurricane Irene in August last year. Officials had feared Hurricane Irene would flood lower Manhattan and cripple business in the world?s financial capital, but the flooding was minor and there were no major disruptions at the exchanges.

All of the U.S. exchanges, as well as major broker-dealers, and regulators were involved in the decision to close the markets, according to several executives at exchanges and financial firms.

The U.S. markets have seen three high-profile snafus this year, beginning with the failed IPO of BATS Global Markets, the No. 3 U.S. equities exchange, on its own exchange; Facebook Inc?s botched markets debut on Nasdaq?s exchange; and a software glitch that cost trading firm Knight Capital well over US$400 million, nearly forcing it into bankruptcy.

BOND MARKETS

The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association said earlier on Sunday it is recommending an early close of noon EDT on Monday for the trading of U.S. dollar-denominated, fixed-income securities. It said its member firms should decide for themselves whether their fixed-income departments remain open for trading.

The foreign exchange market?s activity generally follows the fixed income markets.

The New York Federal Reserve has calls scheduled for early Monday morning with dealers to see what each dealer is doing to cope with the storm, and will modify its market activities accordingly.

In Washington, the Commerce Department said it would post its report on personal income and spending for September on its website at 8:30 a.m. as scheduled, even though the federal government was closed.

The Federal Reserve said it would postpone its regularly scheduled releases, including its weekly report on selected interest rates and daily commercial paper data. The Fed said it would release the data when federal offices in the Washington area reopened.

CME Group Inc said it will be closing its U.S. equity index futures and equity index options on futures markets on the trading floor and on CME Globex at 8:15 a.m., Central Time, on Monday. All other CME Group futures and options on futures markets will remain open.

IntercontinentalExchange Inc said trading in the ICE Futures Russell equity index futures and options will close early, at 9:15 a.m. Eastern Time on Monday. It said ICE Clear Credit will close at noon Eastern Time on Monday, with the U.S. fixed income markets. It said all other ICE markets and clearing houses will remain open and follow regular market hours.

WORK FROM HOME

Goldman, whose office in lower Manhattan is in one of the areas to be evacuated, told employees earlier on Sunday that it would open for business, with some staff working from offices in Greenwich, Connecticut, and in Princeton, New Jersey. It also plans to use teams in London and other locations around the world for support.

Citigroup, which has three buildings in the evacuation zone, said ?non-critical personnel should invoke their work-from-home strategies.?

JPMorgan Chase & Co said its buildings were still open Monday and the bank was planning to be fully operational, using resources in the United States, Europe and Asia.

For many investment bankers and private equity executives, working from home will make the most sense. Blackstone Group planned to close its office on Monday.

Hurricane Sandy also led to some events being canceled or postponed. Citigroup Prime Brokerage postponed a hedge fund event that had been scheduled for Tuesday.

With files from Bloomberg

? Thomson Reuters 2012

Source: http://business.financialpost.com/2012/10/29/wall-street-shuts-down-as-hurricane-sandy-hobbles-new-york/

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Minnesota State Flair: If it's Good Enough for Paul Bunyan, It's Good ...


If you pay any attention to the food and drink scene in Minnesota, you are by now well aware that the craft beer scene has exploded in recent year. Sure, Minnesotans have always liked their beer, but today you can't swing an uprooted hops vine without hitting a home brewer or encountering a restaurant or bar with a line of local craft beers on tap. No surprise, then, that this renewed interest in beer made good showing at the Minnesota State Fair. And, really, where better to pay homage to this state's brewing culture? Whether rural farmer, urban homebrewing hipster, professional brewer, hops grower, or barrel maker (or, for that matter, just enthusiastic Minnesota beer drinker), this state -- and our State Fair -- had something for you.?The Minnesota Craft Brewer's Guild's "Land of 10,000 Beers" proved wildly successful, and introduced thousands (hundreds of thousands?) of visitors to Minnesota beer and history through its exhibit and extensive public programming.

Here's raising a glass to Minnesota's thriving brewing scene, and to the Minnesota State Fair. And for you home brewers out there: it's never too early to get started perfecting your own secret blend. Last year's Home Brew competition received 680 entries! Congratulations to the winners, and happy brewing!

Source: http://mnstateflair.blogspot.com/2012/10/if-its-good-enough-for-paul-bunyan-its.html

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

Meredith Miller turns focus to breast cancer awareness as she ...

  • By Jessica Broderick
  • Published 1 day ago
Meredith Miller, recovering from a hand injury sustained at day 2 of the Providence Cyclocross Festival (shown here on day 1), has turned her focus to breast cancer awareness. Photo: Wil Matthews | www. wilmatthewsphoto.com

On October 7, with two laps to go at day 2 of the Providence Cyclocross Festival in Providence, Rhode Island, Meredith Miller felt strong and in control. With five top-six performances in her 2012 ?cross season, she felt confident and ready to execute her race plan.

Instead, a crash and two broken metacarpal bones in one hand ended her day. It did not, however, end her season.

The California Giant Berry Farms-Specialized rider may be sidelined now, but her ?cross season is far from over. She told VeloNews Friday afternoon that she still has her sights on securing one of five spots for February?s world championships in Louisville, Kentucky.

After consulting with several doctors and visiting the Boulder Center for Sports Medicine in Colorado, Miller decided to undergo surgery for the spiral fractures in her right hand. Her checkup on November 18 will, she hopes, confirm her return to competition.

In the meantime, she stays fit by riding indoors, while at the same time raising money for National Breast Cancer Awareness Month through her team?s ?Pretty in Pink? campaign. Miller began wearing pink while racing cyclocross? in 2010, but has since developed the campaign even further.

?Wearing pink is great, but I felt like I was taking the easy way out,? Miller said. ?I wanted to do more.?

To date, Miller has raised $15,000 over the past two years for Hope Lives, a breast cancer awareness center in Fort Collins, Colorado. She aims to raise $10,000 this year alone. By selling socks, T-shirts, and bike jerseys emblazoned with the slogan, ?Pink is the new fast,? Miller is already approaching that goal.

She has also drawn attention and support for the campaign through an online raffle featuring her new ?cross bike, a SRAM-equipped Specialized S-Works Crux with Zipp wheels.

The entire Cal Giant cyclocross team ? whose men?s squad includes junior racer Yannick Eckmann; under-23 rider Cody Kaiser; Tobin Ortenbald, second this year at the national junior cross-country championships; and masters rider Justin Robinson ? is racing in pink this season to raise breast cancer awareness.

Miller aims to rejoin her teammates at races in California and Oregon in early December, race in World Cups in Europe over Christmas weekend, and contest the national championships in January. Racing during the holidays was not what Miller had envisioned for her season, but she said that, once healthy, she will do what?s needed to qualify for her fourth worlds team.

?It is a big deal having worlds in the States this year,? Miller said.

FILED UNDER: Analysis TAGS: Cal Giant Berry Farms-Specialized / Meredith Miller

Source: http://velonews.competitor.com/2012/10/analysis/meredith-miller-turns-focus-to-breast-cancer-awareness-as-she-recovers-from-hand-injury_262727

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Top 10 Pinterest Pins This Week

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