Thursday, February 21, 2013

Antarctic Penguin Washes Up in New Zealand; May Have Drifted For A Year

The original "Happy Feet" ready for release aboard The New Zealand research vessel Tangaroa in Aug. 2011.

Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images

The original "Happy Feet" ready for release aboard The New Zealand research vessel Tangaroa in Aug. 2011.

Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images

New Zealand seems to be the destination of choice for wayward Antarctic penguins.

The BBC reports that a Royal penguin was found Sunday washed ashore on a beach in New Zealand, where another penguin, a three-year-old emperor dubbed "Happy Feet," turned up in June 2011. Months later, Happy Feet was released, ostensibly destined for a return to his homeland. Sadly though, he is believed to have been eaten, possibly by a shark, sometime after his release into the Southern Ocean.

Veterinarians say the latest arrival, "Happy Feet, Jr.," is being cared for at a Wellington Zoo. Scientists there believe the "young male" may have departed about a year ago from a breeding colony on Macquarie Island, more than 1,200 miles away, and drifting been around since then.

The BBC quotes Lisa Argilla, a vet at the zoo, as saying the flightless aquatic bird had possibly struggled to find enough food and come ashore to go through his seasonal molting.

"It's very weak, doesn't want to stand. It's making very small progress every day but it's still in critical condition," Ms. Argilla told the TVNZ channel.

Argilla told the French news agency AFP that Happy Feet, Jr. was having some kidney trouble and she said "hopefully we can reverse that, feed him up and bring him back to good health," but she added that it's "touch and go for at the moment."

The penguin was found on Sunday by Jenny Boyne, who was walking along Tora beach on New Zealand's Wairarapa coast, says The New Zealand Herald.

"She saved this bird's life. I don't think he would've survived another night without veterinary attention," Argilla said.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/02/20/172508036/antarctic-penguin-washes-up-in-new-zealand-may-have-drifted-for-a-year?ft=1&f=1007

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Today Weather by Savvy Apps updated with iPad support

Today Weather by Savvy Apps has been updated with support for the iPad, making it a universal app. Everything you love about Today Weather -- the simplistic and minimalist design, the beautiful UI, the hourly, weekly, and 3-day forecasts -- can now be enjoyed on the larger screen of your iPad or iPad mini.

If you're a Today Weather users, go grab the update now. If you're not, take a look at our review of Today and you just may become one!



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/ZdrZXmNZ_34/story01.htm

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NREL and partners demonstrate quantum dots that assemble themselves

NREL and partners demonstrate quantum dots that assemble themselves [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 19-Feb-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: David Glickson
david.glickson@nrel.gov
303-275-4097
DOE/National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Surprising breakthrough could bolster quantum photonics, solar cell efficiency

Scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory and other labs have demonstrated a process whereby quantum dots can self-assemble at optimal locations in nanowires, a breakthrough that could improve solar cells, quantum computing, and lighting devices.

A paper on the new technology, "Self-assembled Quantum Dots in a Nanowire System for Quantum Photonics," appears in the current issue of the scientific journal Nature Materials.

Quantum dots are tiny crystals of semiconductor a few billionths of a meter in diameter. At that size they exhibit beneficial behaviors of quantum physics such as forming electron-hole pairs and harvesting excess energy.

The scientists demonstrated how quantum dots can self-assemble at the apex of the gallium arsenide/aluminum gallium arsenide core/shell nanowire interface. Crucially, the quantum dots, besides being highly stable, can be positioned precisely relative to the nanowire's center. That precision, combined with the materials' ability to provide quantum confinement for both the electrons and the holes, makes the approach a potential game-changer.

Electrons and holes typically locate in the lowest energy position within the confines of high-energy materials in the nanostructures. But in the new demonstration, the electron and hole, overlapping in a near-ideal way, are confined in the quantum dot itself at high energy rather than located at the lowest energy states. In this case, that's the gallium-arsenide core. It's like hitting the bulls-eye rather than the periphery.

The quantum dots, as a result, are very bright, spectrally narrow and highly anti-bunched, displaying excellent optical properties even when they are located just a few nanometers from the surface a feature that even surprised the scientists.

"Some Swiss scientists announced that they had achieved this, but scientists at the conference had a hard time believing it," said NREL senior scientist Jun-Wei Luo, one of the co-authors of the study. Luo got to work constructing a quantum-dot-in-nanowire system using NREL's supercomputer and was able to demonstrate that despite the fact that the overall band edges are formed by the gallium Arsenide core, the thin aluminum-rich barriers provide quantum confinement both for the electrons and the holes inside the aluminum-poor quantum dot. That explains the origin of the highly unusual optical transitions.

Several practical applications are possible. The fact that stable quantum dots can be placed very close to the surface of the nanometers raises a huge potential for their use in detecting local electric and magnetic fields. The quantum dots also could be used to charge converters for better light-harvesting, as in the case of photovoltaic cells.

###

The team of scientists working on the project came from universities and laboratories in Sweden, Switzerland, Spain, and the United States.

NREL is the U.S. Department of Energy's primary national laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research and development. NREL is operated for DOE by the Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC.

Visit NREL online at www.nrel.gov


[ 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.


NREL and partners demonstrate quantum dots that assemble themselves [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 19-Feb-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: David Glickson
david.glickson@nrel.gov
303-275-4097
DOE/National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Surprising breakthrough could bolster quantum photonics, solar cell efficiency

Scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory and other labs have demonstrated a process whereby quantum dots can self-assemble at optimal locations in nanowires, a breakthrough that could improve solar cells, quantum computing, and lighting devices.

A paper on the new technology, "Self-assembled Quantum Dots in a Nanowire System for Quantum Photonics," appears in the current issue of the scientific journal Nature Materials.

Quantum dots are tiny crystals of semiconductor a few billionths of a meter in diameter. At that size they exhibit beneficial behaviors of quantum physics such as forming electron-hole pairs and harvesting excess energy.

The scientists demonstrated how quantum dots can self-assemble at the apex of the gallium arsenide/aluminum gallium arsenide core/shell nanowire interface. Crucially, the quantum dots, besides being highly stable, can be positioned precisely relative to the nanowire's center. That precision, combined with the materials' ability to provide quantum confinement for both the electrons and the holes, makes the approach a potential game-changer.

Electrons and holes typically locate in the lowest energy position within the confines of high-energy materials in the nanostructures. But in the new demonstration, the electron and hole, overlapping in a near-ideal way, are confined in the quantum dot itself at high energy rather than located at the lowest energy states. In this case, that's the gallium-arsenide core. It's like hitting the bulls-eye rather than the periphery.

The quantum dots, as a result, are very bright, spectrally narrow and highly anti-bunched, displaying excellent optical properties even when they are located just a few nanometers from the surface a feature that even surprised the scientists.

"Some Swiss scientists announced that they had achieved this, but scientists at the conference had a hard time believing it," said NREL senior scientist Jun-Wei Luo, one of the co-authors of the study. Luo got to work constructing a quantum-dot-in-nanowire system using NREL's supercomputer and was able to demonstrate that despite the fact that the overall band edges are formed by the gallium Arsenide core, the thin aluminum-rich barriers provide quantum confinement both for the electrons and the holes inside the aluminum-poor quantum dot. That explains the origin of the highly unusual optical transitions.

Several practical applications are possible. The fact that stable quantum dots can be placed very close to the surface of the nanometers raises a huge potential for their use in detecting local electric and magnetic fields. The quantum dots also could be used to charge converters for better light-harvesting, as in the case of photovoltaic cells.

###

The team of scientists working on the project came from universities and laboratories in Sweden, Switzerland, Spain, and the United States.

NREL is the U.S. Department of Energy's primary national laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research and development. NREL is operated for DOE by the Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC.

Visit NREL online at www.nrel.gov


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-02/drel-nap021913.php

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EU lifts bans on loyalists of Zimbabwe's president

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) ? The European Union said Monday it has removed 21 loyalists of Zimbabwe's president from a sanctions list of people facing travel and banking bans.

The EU said another six cabinet ministers from President Robert Mugabe's party are also now allowed to travel to Europe.

It said the decision to remove those restrictions was a result of a "step forward" in finalizing a draft constitution which is set to go voted on in a national referendum on March 16.

The draft constitution "adds further momentum to the reform process and paves way for the holding of peaceful, transparent and credible elections later this year," said the EU statement.

Those freed to travel and do business in Europe include former cabinet ministers, officials and one company linked to Mugabe's party. Another 101 individuals and companies remain on the banned list.

The sanctions were imposed on Mugabe's party to protest human rights violations over the past decade of political turmoil and economic meltdown.

The EU decision was made at a meeting of the bloc's foreign ministers and the announcement was made in a statement released simultaneously in Harare and Brussels and read out in Zimbabwe by EU chief of delegation Aldo Dell'Ariccia.

Among the ministers from Mugabe's party allowed to visit Europe is Webster Shamu, the information minister who controls the state media.

Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, the former opposition leader in a four-year old coalition with Mugabe that was formed regional mediators after violent and disputed elections in 2008, told reporters later Monday that there has been no "political will" to implement much needed reforms to create an "enabling environment" for free and fair elections.

Tsvangirai said media reforms must be put in place immediately because it "would be unfair to go for elections with the kind of media we have."

Virulent criticism of Mugabe's opponents, comparable to hate speech, has continued in state-controlled media run by Shamu, said Tsvangirai.

In an election year, the media should promote all opinions to ensure a free vote, he said.

The EU statement made no mention of reports in the state media on Monday that EU members Britain, the former colonial power, and Belgium made a deal to allow Antwerp diamond dealers to buy diamonds from Zimbabwe's eastern fields long mired in allegations of killing, human rights abuses and corruption by Mugabe loyalists in the police and military.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eu-lifts-bans-loyalists-zimbabwes-president-200548495.html

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YoWindow: previsi?n meteorol?gica online o para Windows, Mac y Chrome

YoWindow: previsi?n meteorol?gica online o para Windows, Mac y Chrome

Si viajas habitualmente, o simplemente quieres conocer el estado del tiempo y la previsi?n meteorol?gica de tu ciudad, seguro que YoWindow te resulta un servicio muy pr?ctico. Esta plataforma nos ofrece informaci?n detallada sobre el tiempo actual, de la ciudad que elijamos, as? como del pron?stico para los pr?ximos d?as.

Se puede acceder directamente desde la web, con nuestro navegador favorito, o instalarla en Chrome, Windows o Mac, gracias a sus aplicaciones gratuitas. Su apariencia es bastante atractiva y est? disponible en varios idiomas, incluyendo el espa?ol.

Si gestionas una p?gina o blog, puedes integrar este servicio en tu sitio por medio de un widget, simplemente copiando y pegando el c?digo HTML que se nos facilita.

Enlace | YoWindow
V?a | Release Geek
Art?culo relacionado | Weather anp, conoce la previsi?n meteorol?gica con esta app para Chrome


2010 - 2013 Soft & Apps | Pol?tica de Privacidad

Soft & Apps recopila aplicaciones y servicios disponibles en internet, bas?ndose en las descripciones y detalles que ofrecen sus desarrolladores o propietarios. Se exime completamente del mal uso o problemas derivados del empleo de cualquiera de los contenidos expuestos en este blog, siendo ?nicamente responsabilidad de los usuarios y/o lectores.

Source: http://www.softandapps.info/2013/02/18/yowindow-prevision-meteorologica-online-o-para-windows-mac-y-chrome/

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iPhone 5: iPhone 5 water damage!

Christoffer Solbrekke, as with any iphone, I strongly recommend that you clean it. Disassemble it by using these guides. Clean it properly using this guide. It was written for a 3G but all the points still apply to your phone as well. Once it is properly cleaned '''replace the battery" reassemble and re-evaluate. With a new battery and properly cleaned, you will have a good starting point should any further trouble shooting be necessary. Hope this helps, good luck.

Source: http://www.ifixit.com/Answers/View/119481/iPhone+5+water+damage!

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Monday, February 18, 2013

Can the GOP be saved from its obsession with the 1950s? (Americablog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/285687017?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.0 priced and set to launch at the end of March

If the iPad Mini isn?t what you?re after in the small tablet space, it would appear that Samsung are gearing up to introduce their new 8-inch slate come the end of next month, which should offer something a little different.

The Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.0, which already broke cover on?FrAndroid last month will slot in above the company?s 7-inch range and bring with it some potent hardware to entertain and impress. Accompanying the pretty photos, a rough ETA and prices have also emerged courtesy of Bulgarian online retailer Tablet.bg, stating that consumers can expect to see the 8-inch device hit the market at the end of March; a launch date which we assume will correspond to other regions of Europe outside of Bulgaria too.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.0

When the Tab 8.0 does hit, it?ll be made available in two models, a WiFi-only and a WiFi/3G variant both of which have been priced locally. The WiFi version should cost around 699 Bulgarian Lev whilst the 3G model will retail for around 869 Lev, with the equivalent WiFi price being around ?310 and the 3G costing approximately ?390, so what do you get for your cash?

Well alongside the 8-inch WXGA (800x1280) Super Clear LCD panel, the Tab 8.0 features S Pen integration for stylus input and Jelly Bean 4.2 complete with Samsung?s own TouchWiz tweaks, which should give that pen a lot of purpose throughout the interface. Cameras on the front and back are clocked at 1.3 and 5-megapixels respectively and the rest of the 8.0?s goodness is then found on the inside. The processor driving this small-scale tablet supposedly a 1.6GHz quad-core chip, paired with 2GB of RAM and the options of 16 or 32GB of internal storage with expandable memory via microSD.

It looks as though the superior screen res and beefier hardware are aiming to draw people away from the iPad Mini which utilises a 1024x768 screen and a dual-core processor.

Source: http://recombu.com/mobile/news/samsung-galaxy-tab-8-expected-arrival-and-price_M18756.html

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The Art of Reappropriating the Ethos of an Era: Sociology of Style on ...

As always, I would like to thank my friends at Sociology of Style (sociologyofstyle.com) for taking their sociocultural perspective to the streets with a point of view on how fashion ultimately becomes a signifier of our cultural conversation.?? This article by Eve Kerrigan Roberts discussion how fashion always comes full circle from one era to another.?? Like everything else in life (and I do mean everything), fashion follows a spiral dynamic ? following an a path that eventually dips back into the past and comes? before moving on to the next level.

I love the role fashion plays in that regard:? remind us of our human cultural milestones, traditions, triumphs and (unfortunately) mistakes.

Enjoy Eve?s article below along with some tips on how to keep the past with you as you sashay down the catwalk of life:

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The charm of history and its enigmatic lesson consist in the fact that, from age to age, nothing changes and yet everything is completely different.

??Aldous Huxley

Mr. Huxley?s quote could easily be changed to replace the word ?history? with the word ?fashion,? and the meaning would be equally apt. Fashion and design love to visit the past and bring something good back. Sometimes they also bring something bad back (polyester comes to mind). The drop waist can be seen here and there in contemporary fashion, mostly as an ironic nod to the 1980?s trend. But then, the 80?s trend was a redux of the 1960?s trend, and that one recalled the 1920?s dropped waistline. It?s not news that?fashion recycles, But, when we look a little deeper we might find that at the source of these collective style choices is a cultural nostalgia. And perhaps this nostalgia is, itself, based on our subconscious relationships to what those styles represent to us.

Branding experts will tell you that consumers have an unconscious psychological association to every item in the marketplace (even items as seemingly mundane as laundry detergent). For example, in America, we relate to our cars not as vehicles, but as icons of freedom and individuality. Of course this extends to the fashions we wear and the styles we respond to. Last year we saw racks of Maxi-dresses and pencil skirts reminiscent of different style caches of the 1960s. Every contemporary furniture store from East to West stocks the clean lines of mid-century modern furniture as well as bold, bright psychedelic patterns. Are these stylistic nods in the direction of free love and hipster aesthetics brought on by a widespread love of Mad Men? Perhaps. But maybe it?s the other way around. Perhaps we can?t stop watching Mad Men and and emulating the styles of its era because subconsciously we relate to the circumstances they represent.

So, hang onto your vintage statement pieces. You never know when a seminal historic event or the cultural mood will inspire you to wear something that may have felt dated before. That something may just be the perfect ?modern? accent down the road.

Here are some tips to help you rock the retro and ditch the dust:

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Source: http://thenarcissisticanthropologist.com/2013/02/18/the-art-of-reappropriating-the-ethos-of-an-era-sociology-of-style-on-how-everything-becomes-new-again/

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Ross beats Evans in dunk contest

Terrence Ross of the Toronto Raptors goes up during the dunk contest at NBA basketball All-Star Saturday Night, Feb. 16, 2013, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Terrence Ross of the Toronto Raptors goes up during the dunk contest at NBA basketball All-Star Saturday Night, Feb. 16, 2013, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Terrence Ross of the Toronto Raptors goes up at the dunk contest during NBA All-Star Saturday Night basketball in Houston on Saturday, Feb. 16, 2013. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Kyrie Irving of the Cleveland Cavaliers holds up the trophy after winning the 3-point contest during NBA basketball All-Star Saturday Night, Feb. 16, 2013, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Kyrie Irving of the Cleveland Cavaliers shoots during the 3-point contest during NBA basketball All-Star Saturday Night, Feb. 16, 2013, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Ryan Anderson of the New Orleans Hornets, left and Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors watch the 3-point contest during NBA basketball All-Star Saturday Night, Feb. 16, 2013, in Houston. (AP Photo/Pat Sullivan)

(AP) ? Toronto rookie Terrence Ross beat defending champion Jeremy Evans to win the slam-dunk contest during All-Star Saturday night.

The 6-foot-6 Ross jumped over a ball boy, whipped the ball between his legs and threw down a one-handed slam to clinch the victory. Earlier, Ross donned a Vince Carter jersey, took a lob from high-school teammate Terrence Jones off the edge of the backboard, spun in the air, and then slammed home another one-hander.

Evans jumped over a painted portrait of himself and hurdled Dallas Mavericks forward Dahntay Jones for a dunk in his final round.

Ross earned 58 percent of the fan vote in the championship round. The first round was judged by former Houston Rockets Hakeem Olajuwon, Clyde Drexler, Dikembe Mutombo, Rudy Tomjanovich and Yao Ming.

Kenneth Faried, James White, 2007 dunk champion Gerald Green and Eric Bledsoe also were in the field, while Kevin Durant, Kobe Bryant, Chris Paul and Dwyane Wade were among the All-Stars taking in the show.

Green started if off by taking a lob from Indiana teammate Lance Stephenson off the side of the backboard and soaring in for a reverse slam. White played off his "Flight White" nickname when he split two columns of cheerleaders dressed as flight attendants for a powerful two-handed dunk.

Hardly outdone, Ross earned a perfect score on his first dunk, whipping the ball around his waist before smacking down a one-hander.

Evans, meanwhile, used former Jazz giant Mark Eaton as a prop on his dazzling first attempt. The 7-foot-4 Eaton held the ball above his head as he sat on a box and Evans swiped the ball and soared over his head.

Hall of Famers Bill Russell and Julius Erving, singer Alicia Keys, rapper Drake, director Spike Lee and comedian Chris Tucker were among those sitting courtside. Keys is performing at halftime of Sunday's All-Star game.

Earlier, Cleveland guard Kyrie Irving beat San Antonio's Matt Bonner to win the 3-point contest. Irving, who will play in his first All-Star game on Sunday, hit his first seven attempts and 20 of 25 overall in the final round to finish with 23 points, two shy of the record held by Craig Hodges and Jason Kapono. Bonner had 20 points in the final round.

Portland rookie Damian Lillard beat Philadelphia's Jrue Holiday to win the Skills Competition. Players navigated through a dribbling circuit, had to make a jumper from the top of the key and hit passing targets. Lillard finished the course in 29.8 seconds. Holiday's time was 35.6 seconds.

Houston point guard Jeremy Lin and defending champion Tony Parker also were in the field, but didn't come close to qualifying for the championship round.

In the first competition of the night, the trio of Miami's Chris Bosh, WNBA star Swin Cash and Hall of Famer Dominique Wilkins won the Shooting Stars competition, beating a team of Oklahoma City guard Russell Westbrook, WNBA star Maya Moore and former Houston Rocket Robert Horry.

Each team had two minutes to make shots from six locations on the floor, including one from half-court. Wilkins sank a half-court shot for a team time of 1 minute, 29 seconds. Westbrook rimmed out several half-court tries and time ran out before he and his teammates could make one.

The NBA tweaked the scoring format for this year's All-Star skills exhibitions, with teams representing the East and West competing for charities. The Western Conference defeated the East 140-125.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-02-16-BKN-All-Star-Saturday/id-0732f28350784d9a9bf859295733bd2b

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????? ????????? Windows - ACTIA USB PassThru2 Driver

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'Stench cruise' fallout: Will it create a stink for Carnival and the industry?

Carnival will take a hit from the 'stench cruise' ordeal, and the industry will scurry to reassure potential customers. But the impact on the growing sector should be short-lived, experts say.

By Mark Trumbull,?Staff writer / February 15, 2013

The 'stench cruise' ship Carnival Triumph is moored at a dock in Mobile, Ala., Friday.

Dave Martin/AP

Enlarge

Five days adrift in the Gulf of Mexico without flushable toilets did little to please some 4,200 people aboard the Carnival Triumph.

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It?s also a blow to the cruise industry and especially to a major player in it, Carnival, even though the passengers are now back on land.

At least in the short run, the event that might go down as the ?stench cruise? hits the company?s earnings. It also puts pressure on the whole industry to mount publicity campaigns to reassure potential customers that maritime vacations are fun and safe.

But as harrowing as the experience was for passengers, and as publicized as it was by the news media, it?s not yet clear whether the incident will change the longer term course of an industry that?s been steadily growing its business volume for years.

?It?s a short-term blip,? predicts Ross Klein, a sociologist who tracks the industry and works at Memorial University of Newfoundland in St. Johns. But ?it'll impact the whole industry,? he says, and ?certainly Carnival more so than the others.?

Judging by one online survey this week, some people look at this news and say, "I'll never do that." But that's a setback, not necessarily a reversal for an industry that has been roughly doubling its business each decade, Mr. Klein says.

He notes that the industry was little fazed, in the end, after the highly publicized Costa Concordia disaster a year ago, in which a similarly sized cruise ship ran aground off the coast of Italy, leaving more than 30 people dead. The operator of that ship, Costa Cruises, is owned by Carnival.

Although the latest cruise ship trouble lacks some of the Concordia?s drama ? no fatalities, no destruction of a costly ship, no focus on allegations of gross negligence by the captain ? it has its own potential for affecting the consuming public.

The Triumph?s loss of power (caused by an engine fire that was successfully put out on Feb. 10) occurred close to home for the American public and news media. And the reports from passengers during and after the ordeal brought home vividly what the loss of everyday amenities like plumbing and air conditioning might mean when several thousand people are wedged into relatively small quarters.

On Friday, the morning after the Triumph was towed into the port of Mobile, Ala., more details were emerging as passengers commented on their experience.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/XpvWGWdUPZ0/Stench-cruise-fallout-Will-it-create-a-stink-for-Carnival-and-the-industry

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Bahrain police, youths clash after funeral

ABU DHABI (Reuters) - Police firing tear gas clashed with hundreds of stone-throwing youths in Bahrain on Saturday in heightened unrest that could complicate new efforts to end political deadlock in the strategically placed Gulf Arab kingdom.

The violence has clouded the atmosphere around talks begun on February 10 between the mostly Shi'ite Muslim opposition and the Sunni Muslim-dominated government to find a way out of the impasse over Shi'ite demands for more democracy.

Witnesses said the confrontation, in which some of the hundreds of opposition demonstrators also threw petrol bombs at police, followed the funeral of a teenager the opposition said was killed in clashes between police and activists on Thursday.

The disturbance in the village of Sanabis west of the capital Manama was the latest in a series of skirmishes between Shi'ite youths and police since Thursday, when opposition activists commemorated the second anniversary of a pro-democracy revolt in the U.S.-allied state.

The kingdom, base for the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet, has been in political turmoil since the protests erupted in 2011, led by majority Shi'ites demanding an end to the monarchy's political domination and full powers for parliament.

Thirty-five people died during the unrest and two months of martial law that followed, the government said, although the opposition puts that number at more than 80. The government has accused opposition groups of being linked to Shi'ite power Iran.

BIRDSHOT

Bahrain remains volatile, and its Shi'ite villages are the scene of almost daily clashes between youths and police.

The next round of talks is meant to happen on Wednesday, February 20, Isa Abdul Rahman, the spokesman for the process, known as the National Dialogue, told Reuters.

The next gathering had been due to take place on Sunday but at a February 13 session of the talks all participants decided to postpone the meeting to February 20, he said.

Earlier on Saturday police found a bomb planted on a busy causeway linking the Gulf island to Saudi Arabia, and four officers were shot and wounded in a village, officials said.

The 2-kg bomb, discovered on Thursday near a mosque on the Bahraini end of the route used by thousands of people a day, was safely defused, according to the Information Authority.

Late on Friday, four officers were hit by birdshot pellets in the Shi'ite village of Karzakan, the authority added, quoting public security chief Major-General Tariq Hassan al-Hassan.

Bahrain denies accusations of discrimination against Shi'ite citizens and accuses Iran of stirring up trouble in the kingdom, something the Islamic Republic denies.

The Interior Ministry said on Thursday a security official had been killed in a "terrorist attack" using what it said was an inflammable projectile, according to a statement on its Twitter account.

(This Clarifies next talks on Feb. 20, not 17; teenager killed on Thursday, not Friday)

(Reporting by Raissa Kasolowsky and William Maclean; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Alison Williams)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bahrain-police-youths-clash-funeral-151349781.html

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Losing hope of a good night's sleep is risk factor for suicide

Friday, February 15, 2013

When people lose hope that they will ever get another good night's sleep, they become at high risk for suicide, researchers report.

Insomnia and nightmares, which are often confused and may go hand-in-hand, are known risk factors for suicide but just how they contribute was unknown, said Dr. W. Vaughn McCall, Chair of the Medical College of Georgia Department of Psychiatry and Health Behavior at Georgia Regents University.

The new study reaffirms that link and adds the element of hopelessness about sleep that is independent of other types of hopelessness, such as those regarding personal relationships and careers, said McCall, corresponding author of the study in Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, the journal of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.

"It turns out insomnia can lead to a very specific type of hopelessness and hopelessness by itself is a powerful predictor of suicide," he said. "It's fascinating because what it tells you is we have discovered a new predictor for suicidal thinking."

If the findings hold true in larger studies, they wave a red flag about suicide risk and point toward prevention that targets the negative thoughts with pharmaceuticals and psychological intervention.

The finding also is a reminder to physicians that depressed patients who report increased sleep problems should be asked if they are having suicidal thoughts, McCall said.

The scientists used psychometric testing to objectively assess the mental state of 50 depressed patients age 20-80 being treated as an inpatient, outpatient or in the Emergency Department. More than half had attempted suicide and most were taking an anti-depressant. Testing enabled the researchers to filter out other suicide risks such as depression itself and hone in on the relationship between insomnia and suicide risk, asking specific questions about dysfunctional beliefs about sleep such as: Do you think you will ever sleep again?

"It was this dysfunctional thinking, all these negative thoughts about sleep that was the mediating factor that explained why insomnia was linked to suicide," said McCall, who specializes in depression and sleep disorders.

He's seen insomnia patients spiral downward with increasingly negative and unrealistic thoughts about not sleeping, thinking, for example, that their immune system is being irrevocably damaged. McCall challenges such negatives from his patients and asks other doctors to consider doing the same: to disagree, strongly stating there is no scientific evidence for the thoughts but there is hope and help. "People have choices," he said.

Once insomnia has been diagnosed, some fairly rigid guidelines can help turn the exhausting and potentially deadly tide, including:

  • Wake up at the same time every day no matter when you go to bed
  • Not going to bed until you are sleepy
  • Eliminating caffeine, known to stay in your system up to 15 hours
  • Eliminating alcoholic beverages or tobacco products
  • Complete cardiovascular exercise at least four hours before bedtime
  • Allowing ample time to digest a meal before heading to bed.

The likelihood of being suicidal at least doubles with insomnia as a symptom, McCall noted.

"If you talk with depressed people, they really feel like they have failed at so many things. It goes something like, 'My marriage is a mess, I hate my job, I can't communicate with my kids, I can't even sleep.' There is a sense of failure and hopelessness that now runs from top to bottom and this is one more thing," McCall said.

###

Georgia Health Sciences University: http://www.georgiahealth.edu

Thanks to Georgia Health Sciences University for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126842/Losing_hope_of_a_good_night_s_sleep_is_risk_factor_for_suicide

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Friday, February 15, 2013

Highly Anticipated Asteroid Upstaged, By A Meteor

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Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/02/15/172130156/highly-anticipated-asteroid-upstaged-by-a-meteor?ft=1&f=1007

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'Melrose' actress gets 3 years for deadly NJ crash

SOMERVILLE, N.J. (AP) ? A former "Melrose Place" actress who was drunk when her SUV plowed into a car and killed a woman was sentenced Thursday to three years in prison, infuriating the victim's relatives, who had hoped for the 10-year maximum.

"What a travesty!" the victim's husband, Fred Seeman, yelled after the sentence was read.

"This is not justice," the victim's 26-year-old son, Ford Seeman, told the judge before he stormed out of the courtroom.

A jury in November convicted Amy Locane-Bovenizer of vehicular homicide in the 2010 death of 60-year-old Helene Seeman in Montgomery Township.

Locane-Bovenizer will be eligible for parole after 2 1/2 years and will be credited the 81 days she has already served. She also had her license suspended for five years and will be on probation for three years after her release. She must pay several thousand dollars in fines.

Locane-Bovenizer, who didn't testify at the trial, appeared in 13 episodes of TV's "Melrose Place" and in movies including "Cry-Baby," ''School Ties" and "Secretary."

Prosecutors say she was driving with a blood-alcohol level nearly three times the legal limit when her SUV slammed into a Mercury Milan driven by Fred Seeman as he was turning into his driveway. Fred Seeman's wife, Helene, was killed, and he was seriously injured.

During the trial, the defense argued that Fred Seeman was making a slow turn, which contributed to the crash. They maintained that it was an accident, not a crime.

The defense also shifted blame to a third motorist who they say distracted the actress by honking at her and chasing her after being rear-ended. They said the chase led Locane-Bovenizer to drive 20 miles over the speed limit on a dark two-lane road.

The judge lowered the maximum sentence citing the hardship on Locane-Bovenizer's two young children. One has a serious medical and mental disability. The defense went into detail about how her sick child was deteriorating physically and psychologically since the actress' incarceration and about how a prolonged sentence would make it worse.

"I'm just glad her little girls will have their mother back soon," Locane-Bovenizer's mother, Helen Locane, said as she walked out of the courtroom.

In an emotionally charged statement, Fred Seeman told the court that the defense contention that his vehicle was turning slowly added "salt on the wound," and he said he was appalled that Locane-Bovenizer took no responsibility for killing his wife.

The actress, in turn, apologized to Seeman's family and said she did take full responsibility.

"I am truly sorry for all of the pain I have caused," she said, struggling to get through her statement, as she looked toward the family that packed one side of the courtroom while her friends and family packed the other. "My own suffering will never go away."

Judge Robert Reed said that he had no sympathy for the actress but that the children should not suffer even more because of her actions.

The Seeman family said after the sentencing that the decision was a "mockery" and only added to the suffering they've endured since the accident.

"What's one more punch in the gut?" Ford Seeman said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/melrose-actress-gets-3-years-deadly-nj-crash-180002957.html

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Analysis: Arabs mired in messy transitions two years after heady uprisings

TUNIS (Reuters) - Two years on, the euphoria has long gone.

The flame of revolt that first flared in Tunisia, previously one of the Arab world's quietest corners, consumed autocrats there, in neighboring Egypt and, more violently, in Libya.

Contained in Bahrain, it flickered on in Yemen where in time a veteran leader was pushed aside. In Syria, it is still being fiercely fought over. All Arab countries have felt the heat.

Gritty political transitions are under way in nations where "revolution" has triumphed, ushering in contests over power, identity and religion, continued economic and social malaise, new opportunities for Islamist radicals, lawlessness and a surge in sexual violence against women that has gained publicity.

Among a host of unintended consequences is an outflow of weapons and fighters from Libya after the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi that has helped to destabilize neighboring Mali.

Another is rising tension between Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims across a region already buffeted by rivalry between Shi'ite Iran and U.S.-aligned Sunni powers led by Saudi Arabia.

In Bahrain, the Saudis helped to crush protests led by the Shi'ite majority, and in Syria, mainly Sunni rebels are battling Iran's principal Arab ally, President Bashar al-Assad, whose rule is built around his Shi'ite-rooted Alawite minority.

Many Arabs are proud of their new freedom to speak out and to take to the streets against real and perceived wrongs, but it has proved trickier than many expected to create prosperity, fill power vacuums left by entrenched rulers and convert police states into stable democracies governed by the rule of law.

"WORK AND DIGNITY"

Unemployment, poverty and rising prices, which helped to fuel the revolts in Tunisia and Egypt, remain grievances in economies hit by unrest that has deterred tourists and foreign investors.

"Our basic demand was work and dignity, but now under the Islamists we don't have either," said Aymen Ben Slimane, an unemployed young man in the Tunisian capital. "We have no confidence in them to achieve the goals of our revolution."

Last week's assassination of opposition politician Chokri Belaid plunged Tunisia into its worst crisis since the uprising and raised fears of violence in a country where an Islamist-led government faces strong liberal and secular opposition.

Zouhour Layouni, a 22-year-old student in a headscarf, said Tunisia had won freedom of expression and could accommodate differences between Islamists like her and their opponents.

"The assassination of Belaid is an exception," she said. "Now we ask secular people to give us time and they will see the results. Our hope is that Tunisia will be united."

Tunisia's troubles and those of other Arab nations in early stages of transition should come as no surprise.

"These revolutions require a long-term perspective. It would have been unrealistic to think that in two years these countries would have transformed themselves into perfectly functioning democracies," said Eric Goldstein of Human Rights Watch.

"It's important not to underestimate how much 25 years of dictatorship and the politics of fear and intimidation have distorted the political landscape," he said, adding that Tunisian political parties lacked experience in negotiating their differences peacefully. "They are learning as they go."

SOARING EXPECTATIONS

Well-organized Islamist groups such as Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood and Tunisia's Ennahda party have won elections after revolts they did not start, but after years of preaching that "Islam is the solution" both have collided with the complexity of managing modern economies and governing unruly societies.

"People are angry because they feel the revolution did not change their lives," Ennahda's leader Rached Ghannouchi told Reuters this week, acknowledging how hard it is to meet popular expectations raised by the overthrow of Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali.

Relatively moderate Islamist parties face pressure from ultra-orthodox Salafis, whose drive to write stricter codes into new constitutions and laws dismays their liberal opponents.

Some Salafis, but by no means all, are ready to pursue their goals through violence. The attacks on U.S. diplomatic missions in Tunis, Cairo and Benghazi in September, following an anti-Islam video that surfaced in America, illustrated the danger.

A smattering of Arab voices reflecting on the ferment of the last two years provides individual insights, even if they cannot encompass the complexity of changes in the Middle East that will take years, if not decades, to shake down.

In Egypt, liberal activist Abdelrahman Mansour, who helped organize protests on January 25, 2011 that snowballed into an uprising against Hosni Mubarak, said Islamists had failed to bring Mubarak-era officials to account or to establish a real democratic transition after an interim period of military rule.

"Instead, Islamists staged a series of power grabs that marginalized other political forces," he said, arguing that the military and their Islamist successors had sidelined youth groups and others who had prepared plans for reform of the interior ministry, judiciary and other state institutions.

"Their aim was to contain the revolution and its youth by convincing the average Egyptian citizen that the youth were the ones destroying the revolution, not the ones who ignited it."

Samir Wisamee, an Islamist activist, said Mubarak's removal and the holding of free and fair elections were major gains, but also lamented "the lack of accountability within the Interior Ministry and the cycle of violence that plagues the country".

SYRIA'S AGONY

While hundreds of people have died in unrest in post-Mubarak Egypt, the violence is dwarfed by that in Syria, where the United Nations says nearly 70,000 have now been killed since a revolt against Assad began with peaceful protests in March 2011.

Syrian opposition campaigner Fawaz Tello, now in exile, said he was saddened by the human cost of freedom extracted by Assad's "savage" ruling system and by international inaction.

But his biggest disappointment was a Syrian opposition that he said lacked leadership, political acumen and administrative skill. "It has not managed to connect effectively with the spirit of the revolution and it is responsible for corrupting the revolt by trying to buy loyalties of the rebels," he said.

"But I'm proud that a defenseless people who have challenged a totalitarian system that has been strengthening itself for the last half a century are on their way to victory," Tello said.

After so much carnage, the outcome of Syria's conflict is far from clear. Nor can anyone be sure what will emerge in other countries where Arabs rose up for freedom and dignity.

Nathan Brown, at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said the uprisings expressed "disgust in the prevailing political order and a hope that if societies could just get their politics right they would solve their pressing problems".

Structures that kept self-serving Arab leaders in power had been toppled, "but there was no systematic thought about what should positively replace these systems, and building good ones has been far harder than anticipated", he said.

"The biggest obstacle to such a process in Egypt and Tunisia - the two most hopeful countries two years ago - has not been the actions or attitudes of any particular actor but the deep polarization among various camps and the inability to bridge differences or even find a common language."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-arabs-mired-messy-transitions-two-years-heady-133402861.html

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Health News - Food, fizzy, and football: unhealthy food and drink ...

Public health researchers from the University of Otago, Wellington (UOW), are concerned that some food and drink companies selling unhealthy food also sponsor popular, televised sports in New Zealand.

?

Associate Professor Louise Signal

The authors reviewed the websites of 308 New Zealand sports organisations covering 58 sports to identify sponsors and conducted 18 interviews with key administrators from national and regional sporting organisations. A quarter of websites had links to sponsors.

Sponsors were classified as healthy or unhealthy using the New Zealand Food and Beverage Classification System nutrient criteria for energy, fat, salt and fibre levels. The study found that a third of food/beverage companies sponsoring sport could be classified as unhealthy.

"Such sponsorship is likely to promote consumption of junk food and dilutes government recommendations promoting healthy eating", says Associate Professor Louise Signal from Otago's Health Promotion and Policy Research Unit.

"McDonalds and Coke are the greatest product sponsors, just like at the London Olympics," Associate Professor Signal noted.

"And one of our most popular sports, rugby, has the unhealthiest sponsorship by far with 23% of brands and logos linked to unhealthy food. In contrast, netball has only 1% linked to unhealthy food.

"Given the recent increase in obesity amongst New Zealand children this is of considerable concern," says Associate Professor Signal.

Currently, 11% of children aged 5-14 are obese, up from 8% in 2006/7, and at least 20% are overweight. The consumption of junk food is a significant contributor to this problem. Obesity is associated with a range of health problems including childhood diabetes, and heart disease, diabetes and cancer in later life.

"Our children deserve to be protected from the pressure to eat junk food while enjoying healthy outdoor activity, and parents need to be supported against pester advertising in their efforts to promote healthy eating to their children," Associate Professor Signal argues.

The study by the Health Promotion and Policy Research Unit at UOW also found that some sponsors continued to target children with additional marketing activities.

This is also developed through access to regional clubs and youth players providing them with product samples, merchandise and vouchers for purchasing more product.

"Counting logos does not capture the extent of marketing in sports and probably underestimates the extent of sponsorship," say the researchers.

"Tactics included the use of 'Player of the Day' certificates for budding All White football players as young as four, and promotion of 'Powerade' by the All Blacks. 'Powerade' is not generally recommended for children," Associate Professor Signal says.

The study found that? healthy food and beverage brands also sponsor sport, with rugby again coming out on top with 21% of logos linked to healthy foods and cricket next highest at 5%.

Increasing such healthy sponsorship is a way to support children eating a healthy diet, say the researchers, and has been shown to have an impact.? High participation rates in sport and increasing recognition of how diet benefits athletic performance suggest sports settings are ideal locations for promoting healthy eating.

All sports administrators identified the main benefit of sponsorship as financial. Although many reported sports organisations felt concerned about associating themselves with unhealthy foods or beverages, others considered sponsorship income more important than what type of food is being promoted.

Recommendations include sports codes requiring members to place a higher priority on health when selecting sponsors, and government regulation and funding to replace unhealthy food sponsorship with healthy sponsorship, just as for tobacco.

The recently created Health Promotion Agency is currently responsible for tobacco sponsorship replacement in sport. It would be a logical step to include replacement of junk food sponsorship in their mandate.

The paper has recently been published in BMC Public Health and is funded by the Health Research Council.

Associate Professor Louise Signal
Health Promotion and Policy Research Unit
Department of Public Health
University of Otago, Wellington
Tel 04 918 6477
Mob 021 0324720

Source: http://www.healthcanal.com/public-health-safety/36207-Food-fizzy-and-football-unhealthy-food-and-drink-promoted-through-sport.html

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Texas homeowners want legislation cleaned up

TCAA

Texas Community Association Advocates Chairwoman Judi Phares

Business owners and homeowners from across Texas rallied this week at the Capitol in support of their community associations.

The Texas Community Association Advocates is supporting legislation that would give condominium associations more flexibility to borrow money and secure a loan to protect property values, and would give condo owners additional tools before facing foreclosure. The legislation would build on comprehensive homeowner association-related legislation passed last session.

?Allowing more flexibility for a condo association to borrow money for items such as major repairs [helps] keep property values high for owners,? TCAA Chairwoman Judi Phares said.

Nearly 5 million people live in up to 30,000 community associations in Texas. These associations employ thousands of workers and have an economic impact of more than $3 billion to the Texas economy, according to the TCAA.

Small businesses such as landscaping companies and law firms dedicated to home ownership rely on homeowner associations for employment and business, said Connie Heyer, a lawyer specializing in homeowner association law with Niemann & Heyer LLP.

More information on homeowner associations and related businesses is available on the Community Associations Institute's website, which has chapters in Austin, Dallas, Houston and San Antonio.

Source: http://feeds.bizjournals.com/~r/bizj_houston/~3/kk1gPHgTUcs/homeowners-want-legislation-cleaned-up.html

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Steve Martin: First-Time Father at 67!

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

The Feminine Mystique at 50

The Feminine Mystique, first edition The Feminine Mystique, first edition

Courtesy of Wikipedia

Confession: I just read The Feminine Mystique, 50 years old this month, for the first time, so I could think about it with you, Noreen. That?s embarrassing for a bunch of reasons?I?m a feminist, I helped start Slate?s DoubleX, I?m supposed to be a generally educated person, and Betty Friedan was my grandmother?s cousin, so I grew up knowing her. She actually gave me a copy of the 20th anniversary of her life-altering bombshell of a book for my bat mitzvah, with a lovely inscription. But it seemed weighty and intimidating when I was a teenager, and in college, I somehow took seminars called ?Women in the Bible? and ?Witches and Saints? rather than a basic women?s history or women?s studies class. When Betty died in 2006, I wrote about shopping for clothes with her and my stylish grandmother, and about the amazing march she led down Fifth Avenue in 1970, in honor of the 50th anniversary of women?s suffrage. But I only skimmed the book that?s at the heart of it all.

OK, I?m a fraud. I think, though, that I didn?t read The Feminine Mystique precisely because it had seeped so deeply into American culture that I figured I had already digested its message. But in her masterful introduction to this 50th-anniversary edition we are reading, Gail Collins says that ?if you want to understand what has happened to American women over the last half-century, their extraordinary journey from Doris Day to Buffy the Vampire Slayer and beyond, you have to start with this book.? She?s exactly right. Here?s one tiny example: In the book, Betty recounts giving up a fellowship she won after graduating from Smith, which would have supported her in getting a Ph.D. in psychology, because a boy she liked said their relationship would have to end since he?d never win a fellowship like hers. She writes, ?I gave up the fellowship, in relief.? What? In relief? This is inconceivable to me. I don?t mean compromising one?s career goal for love, which I?ve done, but giving up a plum opportunity because of a guy?s insecurity?that is not in my universe. And that shift captures much of the power of this book, right? For middle-class American women, it changed the whole deal?the aspirations we felt we could have and the reception we expected for them.

When I actually opened the book and started reading (as opposed to hearing about it for all these years), what hit me was Betty?s howl of frustration. It?s primal, and you feel it?s desperate force on almost every page. God, did she feel trapped among the slipcovers of the suburbs and in the pages of the women?s magazines she wrote for, where big ideas and questions were entirely unwelcome. The only way to escape was to pulverize the image of the Happy Housewife Heroine who is the title of Chapter 2. Betty?s fiercest critique in this book is of the ?mistaken choice? she thinks traditional gender roles forced middle-class women and their husbands to make. ?She ran back home again to live by sex alone, trading in her individuality for security,? she writes of the HHH. ?Her husband was drawn in after her, and the door was shut against the outside world. They began to live the pretty lie of the feminine mystique, but could either of them really believe it?? To Betty the answer was no, a thousand times no, and for many of us, who could never have hacked it in the world she helped blow up, and who made our lives in her remade image, the response from the heart has to be THANK YOU.

Of course, it?s also true that Betty?s battle cry wasn?t universal. She has long been criticized for leaving working-class and black women out of the picture in The Feminine Mystique. Collins defends her by pointing out that the specificity of her distress?her laser focus on how educated and relatively well-off women were being sidelined?made the book ?supremely, specifically personal, that?s what gives it such gut-punching power.? That seems right. Also, Betty was a reporter trying to push her first book out the door?how was she supposed to know she would produce a work of such importance that she?d be held accountable for her omissions? I?m inclined to give her a break, especially because she devoted most of her decades in the women?s movement to economic concerns. In my memories of her around the dinner table, she stressed the battle against inequality first and foremost.

Betty?s conception of the mistaken choice, however, still has bite. Decades after the publication of her book, women still argue about whether feminism means making any choice, including the choice to stay home, nursing your baby into toddlerhood, and baking bread?two activities Betty scorns?or if only certain choices are kosher. (See: round after round of the mommy wars.) Noreen, as the spring chicken to my old hen, do you identify with any of this, or do you just find it quaint? Or alienating? Did second-wave feminism, which Betty helped spark, draw the lines between women too sharply?

I asked Betty?s granddaughter, Nataya Friedan, for her take on the book, and she used that word?sharp?in her answer. ?The Feminine Mystique was a sharp portrait of its time, and in that dated quality there is room for a conversation between generations,? Taya writes. ?One of her main illustrations was that we can undo the meaningfulness of what the last generation fought for, and, for that reason, these conversations across time are absolutely necessary. Reading The Feminine Mystique today, the sections that feel dated act as a warning cry and the sections that feel completely unconquered, a shock to reality and, as always, a call to get out the door and off the armchair.?

So what feels unconquered, from your perch? Before this monumental book turns 75, or 100, what do you want to see change?

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=0c11dda53ec6c6940fc0dc87448e5e06

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3 Nigeria journalists charged over polio killings

KANO, Nigeria (AP) ? Police in northern Nigeria arrested and charged three radio journalists for allegedly being responsible for the killings of at least nine women gunned down while trying to administer polio vaccines, officials said Tuesday. Police claimed on-air comments about a vaccination campaign in the area sparked the attacks.

The allegations against the journalists working for Wazobia FM show the continuing struggle over free speech in Nigeria, a nation that only came out of military rule in 1999 and where simply taking photographs on the street can get a person arrested. Though Nigeria has a rambunctious free press, threats and attacks against journalists remain common and unsolved killings of reporters still haunt the country.

On Friday in Kano, the largest city in Nigeria's predominantly Muslim north, gunmen in three-wheel taxis attacked women preparing to give the oral-drop vaccines to children, killing at least nine in the assault, police said. Witnesses later said they saw at least 12 dead from the attack.

A few days before the attack, Wazobia FM aired a program in which presenters talked about how one of the station's journalists had been attacked by local officials and had his equipment confiscated after coming upon a man who refused to allow his children to be vaccinated. Those on the program apparently discussed the fears people have about the vaccine, which then spread through the city.

Kano state police commissioner Ibrahim Idris ordered the journalists be arrested immediately after Friday's attack. On Tuesday, two journalists remained held by police, while the other had been released on bail, police said.

On Tuesday, Idris said the journalists would face charges of "culpable homicide" over the polio workers' deaths. Those charges can carry the death penalty.

Sanusi Bello Kankarofi, manager of the Wazobia FM station in Kano, could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

There have long been suspicions about the polio vaccine in northern Nigeria, with people believing the drops would sterilize young girls. In 2003, a Kano physician heading the Supreme Council for Shariah in Nigeria said the vaccines were "corrupted and tainted by evildoers from America and their Western allies." That led to hundreds of new infections in children across the north, where beggars on locally made wooden skateboards drag their withered legs back and forth in traffic, begging for alms. The 2003 disease outbreak in Nigeria eventually spread throughout the world, even causing infections in Indonesia.

Today, Nigeria is one of only three countries where polio remains endemic, the others being Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Nigeria came out of a long period of military rule in 1999 and has an unbridled free press, but journalists are often harassed by police and the State Security Service, the nation's secret police. Local journalists also have been attacked and killed in the oil-rich nation over their reporting in the past. Last year alone, two journalists in Nigeria were killed. Eighteen journalists have been killed in Nigeria since 1992, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists

Newspapers and radio stations also often hold off paying journalists their salaries for months at a time. That forces reporters to make money from selling advertising to those they cover or through collecting so-called "brown envelope" bribes slipped into briefing materials at news conferences.

___

Associated Press writer Jon Gambrell in Johannesburg contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/3-nigeria-journalists-charged-over-polio-killings-081355371.html

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