Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Trillium Fitness ? Sweatin' For A Kause | Today's CNY Woman

by TrilliumFitness | April 2, 2013 |

Sister-owned fitness and wellness center teams up with a local organization to cut calories and raise funds.

By?Olivia Bitetti? |??Photography by?Daniel Ware | Article from Today?s CNY Women Magazine

It?s no secret that tireless daily workouts paired with a diet of McDonald?s and Taco Bell is similar to running in place ? if not backwards. Progression toward maintaining a more sound mind, body and spirit incorporates many more facets than hitting the treadmill a few times a week. Trillium Fitness Center co-owners and sisters, Ren?e Teller and Barb St. Pierre, have embraced a holistic and all-encompassing healthy lifestyle, and they?ve been passionately sharing their newest endeavors with their members for more than 13 years.

Teller and St. Pierre?s interest in natural living began in 1997 when their mother was diagnosed with incurable cancer. Teller and her husband, Peter, traveled the country in search of alternatives to degenerative disease. With a newfound knowledge and appreciation for naturopathy ? a method of treating disease with natural remedies to aid in the healing process ? Teller put her findings into action. She quit her job as a CPA in real estate development and recruited her sister, a 12-year corporate wellness director, to begin their quest toward helping people change their lives.

?The center became both a mission and a passion for us,? Teller said. Trillium opened its doors in October 1999. Shortly after, in 2001, the pair?s mother lost her fight with cancer.

In an effort to keep its original vocation alive, Trillium recently partnered with The Kara Fund, a local organization that raises funds for the families of children with life-threatening diseases, to host the group fitness event Get Healthy and Kara for Others, featuring the world-renowned Les Mills classes.

?Trillium?s founding mission took root from dealing with terminal illness and the stress that it brings on family,? said Teller, who is no stranger to these feelings not only through personal experience but also from knowing Trillium members Mark and Kathy MacDougall, founders of The Kara Fund and parents of its namesake, Kara MacDougall. Kara, a former East Syracuse Minoa student, passed away in 2010 at 17 years old, just months after being diagnosed with liver cancer.

The May 1 event held at ESM High School will demonstrate one of the newest Les Mills classes, Grit Series, along with other free sessions taught by celebrity Les Mills trainers. Ten years ago on April 6, Trillium launched its ?Got Body?? campaign (a play on the popular ?Got Milk?? slogan) and shared its first-ever Les Mills class, Bodypump, with its members. The club now offers seven classes (and counting), making it a platinum member.

?There will be a big stage, lights and big music. It?s a blast!? she said with excitement, referring to the fundraiser as ?exertainment.?

The location allows for more than 200 people to participate in an equipment-free class, but event-goers are encouraged to sign up for the weight-lifting and step classes via?Trillium?s website?or the event?s Facebook page. Participants have the option of gaining pledges for price-per-minute of exercise, obtaining one-time donations or simply coming to the event and getting an internationally acclaimed workout for free while supporting a great cause.

What?s in a Name?

Trillium?is a wildflower that only blooms once a year in May. It has three petals, three leaves and a very deep root system. Trillium Fitness Center?s philosophy is that you can?t be healthy unless you?re focusing on three things: mind, body and spirit.

IF YOU GO?

WHAT:?Get Healthy and Kara for Others

WHERE:?East Syracuse Minoa High School, 6400 Fremont Road, East Syracuse

WHEN:?4:30 to 9:30 p.m., May 1

COST:?Free and open to the public

INFO:?Proceeds benefit The Kara Fund. RSVP on Trillium?s Facebook event page or by calling Trillium at 315-463-9355. To register, visit?www.trilliumfit.com/karafund.

Source: http://www.trilliumfit.com/sweatin-for-a-kause-todays-cny-woman/

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?Man of mystery? is behind Michele Bachmann campaign cases (Star Tribune)

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Tuesday, April 2, 2013

How the US oil, gas boom could shake up global order

As energy production in North America climbs, NBC News' Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel explores what it will mean to oil-producing countries in the Middle East.

By Richard Engel and Robert Windrem, NBC News

Without fanfare, China passed the United States in December to become the world's leading importer of oil ? the first time in nearly 40 years that the U.S. didn?t own that dubious distinction. That same month, North Dakota, Ohio and Pennsylvania together produced 1.5 million barrels of oil a day -- more than Iran exported.

As those data points demonstrate, a dramatic shift is occurring in how energy is being produced and consumed around the world ? one that could lead to far-reaching changes in the geopolitical order.

U.S. policy makers, intelligence analysts and other experts are beginning to grapple with the ramifications of such a change, which could bring with it both great benefits for the U.S. and potentially dangerous consequences, including the risk of upheaval in countries and regions heavily dependent on oil exports.?


But many experts say the U.S. would be the big winner, in position to reshape its foreign policy and boost its global influence.?

"People already are looking at the U.S. differently, seeing the U.S. as much more competitive in the world,? said energy analyst and author Dan Yergin, saying that he first noticed the change in the world view of the U.S. at the World Economic Forum in January in Davos, Switzerland.

Jim Seida / NBC News

Watch a drilling crew at work near the small town of Garden City, Texas, as they drill an oil well that eventually will extend more than a mile deep and a mile sideways in the Permian Basin.

As detailed in the first two installments of Power Shift, an NBC News/CNBC special report, the United States is reaping the benefits of an energy boom created by new drilling technologies that have unlocked vast domestic oil and natural gas reserves. Coupled with decreasing demand due to energy efficiency and continued cultivation of alternative energy sources, an increasing number of experts believe the U.S. could achieve energy independence by the end of the decade ? realizing a dream born during the gas crisis of 1973.

But who would be the global winners and losers in such a scenario?

Most U.S. policy makers and experts agree that the U.S. and its allies ? particularly its North American neighbors -- would be the biggest beneficiaries.

Boom helps Iran sanctions stick
In fact, they say, the West already has realized one major benefit: the success of international sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program.

Carlos Pascual, the State Department?s coordinator for international energy affairs, noted last month at the CERAWEEK energy conference in Houston that increased U.S. oil production, coupled with a boost in exports from Iraq and Libya, has kept oil prices stable despite the loss, because of sanctions, of up to 1.5 million barrels a day in Iranian exports.

?What this has taught us, and helped underscore, is that within the world we live in today, hard security issues and energy policy issues have become fundamentally intertwined,? he said.

NBC News

Interactive map: Where the US produces its energy. Click to enlarge.

Yergin, who also is a CNBC energy consultant and author of the energy-focused nonfiction best-sellers "The Quest" and "The Prize," put it this way: "People talk of the future impact. The increase in U.S oil production has already had an impact: Sanctions wouldn't have been effective without U.S. oil production. ?? We've added (within the last year) almost as much as Iran was exporting before sanctions.?

Hossein Moussavian, a former Iranian ambassador to Germany and nuclear negotiator who's now a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton University, said "the radicals" in Tehran failed to foresee the changing energy picture, believing that sanctions wouldn't be imposed and that, if they were, they wouldn't work because oil prices would surge.

"The Iranian mistake was to believe ?? the threats of referring Iran to the United Nations Security Council, imposing sanctions, was just a bluff," he said.

In the longer term, observers say that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and many of its member nations are likely to be the biggest losers if the U.S. continues to cut oil imports, likely decreasing oil prices in the process.

"A dramatic expansion of U.S. production could ? push global spare capacity to exceed 8 million barrels per day, at which point OPEC could lose price control and crude oil prices would drop, possibly sharply," the U.S. intelligence community's internal think tank, the National Intelligence Council, said in its ?Global Trends 2030? report in December. "Such a drop would take a heavy toll on many energy producers who are increasingly dependent on relatively high energy prices to balance their budgets."

With some analysts predicting that oil prices could drop as low as $70 to $90 a barrel ? down from the current price of nearly $110 per barrel of Brent crude oil ? a ?scramble? among OPEC members for market share could ensue, said Edward Morse, an energy analyst with Citigroup and co-author of a recent report on titled ?Energy 2020: Independence Day.?

An International Monetary Fund analysis indicates that many major oil-producing states need more than that lowest price level to meet their budgets and would be forced to increase output or reduce spending, which could trigger unrest. Among them, according to the report: Iran, Libya and Russia, at $117 a barrel; Iraq, $112; Yemen, $237; and the UAE, $84.

Iraq, which has had production from its rich oil fields curtailed by war or sanctions for half of the 53 years of OPEC?s existence, poses another challenge to the organization.

Now that it?s finally free of such interference, its production is increasing by between 500,000 and 900,000 barrels a year, making it the second fastest growing oil-producing country in the world after the U.S.?

?And, by God, no one?s going to impose any quota limitations on them,? said Morse, referring to Iraq?s OPEC partners. ?So part of the challenge to OPEC is internal as well as external.?

Can Saudis maintain market-maker role?
Analysts say OPEC heavyweight Saudi Arabia, which controls vast reserves of oil and needs $71 a barrel to meet its budget, according to the IMF, will do everything it can to remain the market-maker. But in that role, it will face new challenges, they say.

?Over time, it should become increasingly challenging for Saudi Arabia to ?overproduce? and bring down prices to punish wayward OPEC members; without this disciplinary mechanism, it is unclear whether OPEC can remain cohesive,? according to the Citigroup report.

For its part, OPEC professes to be not unduly alarmed by the U.S. oil and natural gas boom. It highlights the "considerable uncertainties" surrounding wells drilled using hydraulic fracturing, or ?fracking,? and associated technologies.

Yergin said he believes that the Saudis will be able to withstand the turbulence, and that they will provide a buffer for the organization?s lesser producers.

?It's too quick to write the obit for OPEC,? he said. ?? The Saudis will figure it out. They are re-orientated to Asian markets, turning left instead of right.?

New technology is creating a boom in energy extraction in the Permian Basin. For most residents, it's a welcome boost to the economy.

But some members of the oil cartel -- particularly Nigeria and Angola -- already are feeling the impact of the U.S. production surge, according to the Citigroup report. U.S. imports from the two countries dropped to 700,000 barrels a day at the end of 2012, down from 1.6 million barrels in 2007. That?s because U.S. production of light, sweet crude -- the kind of oil the West African nations produce -- has burgeoned in recent years. Citigroup forecasts that by the end of 2013, the market for Nigerian oil at Gulf Coast refineries could entirely dry up.

Longer term, say by 2020, cheaper heavy oil from Canada, freed from the so-called oil sands by new recovery technologies, could push similar oil from Venezuela out of the U.S. Gulf Coast market,? (assuming the Obama administration approves construction of the Keystone XL pipeline to carry it), according to forecasts.

Mexico also is expected to increase production, offering the U.S. access to another convenient and friendly provider.

"The Eagle Ford formation in Texas extends into Mexico and if you look at the Gulf, you'll see thousands of black dots marking oil platforms on the U.S. side but nothing on the Mexican side,? said Yergin. ?That's changing. There is a political consensus among the three major parties on energy. You will see less immigration from Mexico. Mexico could become more of a BRIC (the term used for fast-developing economies like Brazil, Russia, India and China) than Brazil."

Besides guaranteeing a stable domestic energy supply, those energy resources add tools to the U.S. diplomatic toolbox, said David L. Phillips, director of the Peace-building and Human Rights Program at Columbia University.

"Why permit ourselves to be held hostage to regimes hostile to our national interests and who give safe harbor to those who would do us harm?" he asked. "? The glaring example is Venezuela. (Hugo) Chavez was so strongly anti-American and he was providing energy to our enemies. They should pay the price for non-cooperation."

Current and former diplomats note that the U.S. also could use its increased natural gas production to weaken rival Russia?s near monopoly on natural gas exports to Europe, via its state-controlled energy giant Gazprom. Already, declining prices fueled by the U.S. boom have benefited the European market.

"What has emerged is a competitive market that allowed the utilities of Western Europe to renegotiate their contract with Gazprom, affecting both prices and financing terms," said the State Department?s Pascual.

Adding to the pressure, the U.S. firm Cheniere Energy last month signed a 20-year deal to export enough liquefied natural gas to the British utility Centrica PLC to heat 1.8 million homes starting in 2018 ? the first pact of its kind.

Growth slowing in China, India
As for China and India, both of which are expected to import increasing amounts of energy for years to come, analysts see indications that economic growth is slowing in both countries.

?In a pattern similar to the abrupt slowdown in demand growth seen in the Asian Tigers in the 1990s, Chinese demand growth has slowed to a more tepid 3 (percent) to 5 percent rate as compared to the double-digit growth seen in the early 2000s,? said a Citigroup report by analyst Seth Kleinman released last week.

That slowdown is in part due to the diminishing competitive edge that China enjoys over the U.S., Yergin said.

?Chinese wages are going up 20 percent a year. U.S. energy efficiency and increased production helps the U.S. in the mix on the global competitive landscape, he said, noting that Dow Chemical recently announced it will invest $4 billion in U.S. petrochemical production. ??That doesn?t happen without the U.S. advantage in energy.?

Citigroup's Morse and other analysts said the slowing Chinese economy and?energy insecurity could prompt China to more militarization in the Far East -- a dangerous development in a region already beset by nationalist disputes and where the U.S. is expected to focus increasing attention. But none suggests that the Chinese are likely to challenge the United States as a global power, saying Beijing has neither the military assets nor the desire. Its strategy remains regional and attuned to "short-range engagements," Morse wrote.

The impact of the rebalancing of global energy production could be more severe in other nations.

Trevor Houser, a former energy analyst?in the Obama administration State Department, worries about the prospect of failed states.

"If you look at the consequences of more U.S. production and reduced sales from OPEC, some would see that as a benefit," said Houser, now a partner with New York-based Rhodium Group, a global market analysis firm. "But starving those economies of oil revenue will surely have disruptive effects. It is definitely not a good development for U.S. foreign policy and geopolitical stability in general."

AP file/Hassan Ammar

A U.S. F-18 fighter jet, left, lands on the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln as a U.S. destroyer sails alongside during exercises in the Persian Gulf in 2012.

Houser also said that U.S. energy independence could lead to isolationist policies, but will not insulate Americans from global price disruptions.

"The price Americans pay at the pump will still be determined by events in the global oil market, yet falling U.S. oil imports (are) going to reduce political support for safeguarding those global markets, and no one is willing or able to step up to the plate to replace us,? he said. ?... The U.S. economy will still be vulnerable if someone blows up a Saudi pipeline."

More from Power Shift, an NBC News/CNBC special report:

Part 1: Energy boom dawning in America

Part 2: ?Oil, gas sector fuels US economy

That issue ? specifically, ?Do we leave the Middle East once our energy needs are secure?? ? came up at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in January, said Yergin, recalling that ?an oil minister came up to me and said, ?Please don?t leave us.??

Pascual, the State Department official, argues that such fears are overblown.

"These changes in no way change the U.S. commitment to global security, to peace and stability in the Middle East and to security in the transit lanes,? he said, referring to oil shipping routes. ?Some people have asked is the United States going to become disinterested. The answer is no. It is absolutely in our self-interest to stay engaged.?

Richard Engel is NBC News' chief foreign correspondent; Robert Windrem is a senior investigative producer.?

Coming next Monday: Digging into the environmental consequences of 'fracking'?

More from Open Channel:

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We should pay college athletes, and stop pretending it?s all just ?for fun? (Americablog)

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US F-22 fighter jets set to join South Korea military exercise

NBC's Jim Maceda reports on U.S. Navy movements of destroyers into the Pacific amid threats from North Korea.

By Jim Miklaszewski, and Courtney Kube, NBC News

The U.S. Navy is shifting a guided-missile destroyer in the Pacific to waters off the Korean peninsula in the wake of ongoing rhetoric from North Korea, U.S. defense officials said.

The USS McCain is capable of intercepting and destroying a missile, should North Korea decide to fire one off, the officials said.

Still, U.S. defense officials insist that there is nothing to indicate that North Korea is on the verge of another launch.?

The White House on Monday said the United States hasn?t seen large-scale movements from North Korean military forces in the aftermath of harsh rhetoric from the reclusive government.

As North Korean state TV shows constant images of the army bombarding South Korea, North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un is saying his missiles are at the ready and has cut off emergency communications. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

"I would note that despite the harsh rhetoric we are hearing from Pyongyang, we are not seeing changes to the North Korean military posture, such as large-scale mobilizations and positioning of forces," Carney said

The McCain in December 2012 was moved to be in position to defend against a impending North Korean rocket launch.

On Sunday, The United States sent F-22 stealth fighter jets to South Korea as part of military exercises in a move aimed at further deterring threats from North Korea against its neighbor.

It was unclear if the McCain was also part of the ongoing military drills.

It was earlier reported that the USS Fitzgerald, another guided missile destroyer, would be moved to the area, though it was only among the ships under consideration for the deployment.

Also Monday, South Korean President?Park Geun-hye appeared to give her country's military permission to strike back at any attack from the North without further word from Seoul, saying she took the North's escalating threats "very seriously," South Korean news agency Yonhap reported.

"As commander-in-chief of the armed forces, I will trust the military's judgment on abrupt and surprise provocations by North Korea," she said, according to Yonhap.

Master Sgt. Kevin J. Gruenwald / U.S. Air Force via Reuters, file

Two U.S. Air Force F-22 Raptor stealth jet fighters fly near Andersen Air Force Base in Guam in this handout photo dated August 4, 2010.

The deployments and Park's remarks came as tensions approached an all-time high between Pyongyang and Washington. ?

Kim Jong Un has?ratcheted?up the rhetoric?against?both South Korea and the United States in recent months, and in February violated U.N. sanctions by ordering a nuclear weapons test.?

On Saturday, North Korea said it had entered a "state of war"?against South Korea, according to a statement reported by the North's official news agency, KCNA.?

In an interview on CNBC Monday, former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said the United States needs to be "very concerned" by North Korea?s recent weapons test and "level of bellicosity" and do everything necessary to defend U.S. allies and interests.

Panetta said while Kim Jung Un?s actions appear aimed at his internal situation the U.S. should ?take nothing for granted? and be prepared. ?The greatest danger right now, he said, appears to be the possibility of a miscalculation.

"The reality is we don?t have as much insight as we should," Panetta said of Kim's motives.

The stealth aircraft ? two F-22 Raptors -- were deployed from Japan to the Osan Air Base in South Korea from Japan where they will remain on ?static display? as part of the military drills, Pentagon spokesman George Little said. The F-22s are not expected to actively participate in any exercises, however.

This is the fifth time F-22s have deployed to South Korea. Exercise Foal Eagle began on March 1 and will continue until the end of April.

Kim has also recently threatened to "settle accounts" with the U.S. and posed near a chart that appeared to detail bombings of American cities.

The F-22 jets' arrival follows other recent displays of air power by the U.S. in South Korea. Last week B-52 bombers and B-2 stealth bombers were sent to the country for the annual?exercise.?

In North Korea, meanwhile, KCNA reported on an Easter service at which it said "the participants renewed the firm resolution to put the warmongers [the US and South Korea] into the red hot iron-pot of hell as early as possible."

North Korea's stance, however, can be notoriously difficult to interpret.

In a later release Monday on KCNA, Pyongyang announced the adoption of a law "consolidating" its position as a nuclear power that would use its weapons only ?to repel invasion or attack from a hostile nuclear weapons state and make retaliatory strikes.?

Among the law's pledges were that North Korea would store its weapons responsibly, that it would not use them against non-nuclear nations, and that it would participate in nonproliferation talks -- though the last clause came with the condition that there was ?improvement of relations with hostile nuclear weapons states.?

NBC News? Andrew Rafferty, John Newland and Jeff Black contributed to this report.

Related:

North Korea: Nukes are our country's 'life'

US official warns North Korea is no 'paper tiger'

Analyst: Threats are predictable, Kim Jong Un is not

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Pope makes Easter pleas for Mideast peace

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Pope Francis delivered a plea for peace in his first Easter Sunday message to the world, decrying eemingly endless conflicts in the Middle East and on the Korean peninsula after celebrating Mass along with more than 250,000 people in flower-bedecked St. Peter's Square.

Francis shared in his flock's exuberance as they celebrated Christianity's core belief that Jesus Christ rose from the dead following crucifixion. After Mass, he stepped aboard an open-topped white popemobile for a cheerful spin through the joyous crowd, kissing babies and patting children on the head.

One admirer of both the pope and of the pope's favorite soccer team, Argentina's Saints of San Lorenzo, insisted that Francis take a team jersey he was waving at the pontiff. A delighted Francis obliged, briefly holding up the shirt, and the crowd roared in approval.

Francis has repeatedly put concern for the poor and suffering at the center of his messages, and he pursued his promotion of the causes of peace and social justice in the Easter speech delivered from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica, the same place from where he was introduced to the world as the first Latin American pope on March 13, shortly after his election.

He said he was joyfully aiming his Easter greetings, at "every house and every family, especially where the suffering is greatest, in hospitals, in prisons." Francis prayed that Jesus would inspire people to "change hatred into love, vengeance into forgiveness, war into peace."

In his softly and slowly pronounced speech, Francis defined Easter as an "exodus, the passage of human beings from slavery to sin and evil to the freedom of love and goodness."

As popes before him have, he urged Israelis and Palestinians, who "struggle to find the road of agreement" to find the courage to resume peace talks and end a conflict that "has lasted all too long." And, in reflecting on the two-year-old Syrian crisis, Francis asked, "How much suffering must there still be before a political solution" can be found?

The pope also expressed desire for a "spirit of reconciliation" on the Korean peninsula, where North Korea says it has entered "a state of war" with South Korea. He also decried violence in Africa, where he singled out for condemnation terrorists' hostage-taking, as well as strife in Mali and warfare in the Democratic Republic of Congo and in the Central African Republican, which has driven people from their homes.

The first pontiff to come from the Jesuits, an order with special concern for the poor, and the first pope to name himself after St. Francis, a medieval figure who renounced wealth to preach to the down-and-out, Francis lamented that the world is "still divided by greed looking for easy gain, wounded by the selfishness which threats human life and the family, selfishness that continues in human trafficking, the most extensive form of slavery in this 21st century."

Earlier, wearing cream-colored vestments, Francis celebrated Mass on the esplanade in front of the basilica at an altar set up under a white canopy. He frequently bowed his head as if in silent reflection.

The sun competed with clouds in the sky Sunday, but the square was a riot of floral color in Rome, where chilly winter has postponed the blossoming of many flowers. Wind sent fluttering yellow forsythia and white lilies shone, along with bursts of lavender and pink, from potted azalea, rhododendron, wisteria and other plants. Francis thanked florists from the Netherlands for donating the flowers.

He also advised people to let love transform their lives, or as he put it, "let those desert places in our hearts bloom."

The Vatican had prepared a list of brief, Easter greetings in 65 languages, but Francis didn't read them. The Vatican didn't say why, but has said that the new pope, at least for now, is growing comfortable in his new role using Italian, the everyday language of the Holy See.

Francis also has stressed his role as a pastor to his flock, and, as bishop of Rome, Italian would be his language.

In another departure from Easter tradition, Francis won't be heading for a few days of post-holiday relaxation at the Vatican's summer palace in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills southeast of Rome. That retreat place is already occupied by his predecessor, Benedict XVI, who took up residence there in the last hours of his papacy on Feb. 28. Benedict became the first pope in 600 years to resign, and eventually is to move back to the Vatican, after a convent there is readied for him.

Francis so far has declined to move into Benedict's former apartment in the Apostlolic Palace, into the rooms whose studio overlooks St. Peter's Square. He is still in the Vatican hotel where he and fellow voting cardinals checked in on March 12, the day before they chose him in a secret conclave in the Sistine Chapel to lead the Roman Catholic church.

While Francis has just begun to make his mark on the church, he quickly made plain he has little desire to embrace much of the pomp customarily associated with the office. When he appeared on the central balcony of the basilica both times, he chose to wear the simple white cassock of pontiffs, declining ornate outfits and only accepting a red stole to be draped on him when it was time to give the crowd his solemn blessing.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-makes-easter-pleas-mideast-peace-101523086.html

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Monday, April 1, 2013

Papers Worldwide Embrace Web Subscriptions

SERRAVAL, France?Newspapers, once reluctant to try to charge readers for access to their Web sites, have begun doing so in droves.

Across many of the developed economies of America, Europe and Asia, so-called pay walls are proliferating as publishers struggle to make up for dwindling revenue on their print products. Online advertising, once seen as the great hope for the future, has begun leveling off, which is accelerating the push for new Internet business models.

''Why now?'' said Douglas McCabe, an analyst at Enders Analysis in London. ''The outlook for digital advertising for all but the very largest sites looks increasingly challenging. Therefore, it is critical that news services experiment with subscription models.''

The trend has taken in some longtime holdouts, like The Washington Post, which said in March that it would start charging online readers this summer. Elsewhere in the United States, The San Francisco Chronicle also recently announced plans to start digital subscriptions, and the total number of American newspapers with pay walls has climbed to more than 300.

In Europe, the recent conversion has been even more striking. Last week, the Telegraph Media Group, publisher of the biggest broadsheet in Britain, said it would start charging British domestic readers for access, having previously introduced a pay wall for its international audience. The biggest tabloid in Britain, The Sun, also confirmed plans to erect a pay wall.

Last month in Switzerland, Tages-Anzeiger, the largest-circulation quality daily in the German-speaking part of the country, announced plans to switch to a paid online model, joining its main rival, Neue Zuercher Zeitung, which did so last year.

In Germany, Schwaebisches Tagblatt became the 35th newspaper to introduce a pay wall. Among the leading national dailies, Die Welt started charging online readers recently, and Bild plans to do so this summer. Other German publishers have said they are weighing the move.

''There's hardly anyone left who is resisting the trend,'' said Tobias Froehlich, a spokesman for Axel Springer, which publishes both papers.

In Asia, too, pay walls are popping up, with publications like the Asahi Shimbun and the Nihon Keizai Shimbun in Japan and The Straits Times of Singapore embracing digital payment plans.

The new round of pay wall adoption could test some long-held assumptions about online fees. In Britain, for example, the conventional wisdom used to be that it would be impossible for newspapers to persuade readers to pay for general news online; while one British newspaper, The Financial Times, was a pay wall pioneer, some analysts attributed its success to its specialized business content and the fact that many of its customers pay for their subscriptions via corporate expense accounts.

Certain particularities of the British market make the transition harder for general newspapers in Britain than elsewhere. One is a high rate of newsstand sales rather than home delivery, which predominates in the United States and Germany. It is easier to market new services, like paid online access, to existing subscribers than to anonymous customers at a newsstand.

British tabloids have also had to confront questions about their credibility since the phone-hacking scandal, which resulted in the shutdown of The News of the World, a sibling to The Sun in News Corporation's stable.

The popularity of the BBC's news Web site, which is required to be free in Britain, is a further hurdle for rival online publishers. Yet after the latest round of pay wall adoption, only two prominent national British dailies, The Guardian and The Daily Mail, will be available free on the Web.

Another notion that is about to be put to the test is the industry belief that tabloid newspapers, specializing in celebrity gossip and other news with a short shelf life and aimed at lower-income readers than broadsheets, might have an especially hard time persuading readers to pay for digital editions. Now the two highest-circulation newspapers in Europe, Bild?a tabloid in content despite its broadsheet format?and The Sun, are about to find out.

Perhaps in an acknowledgment that tabloid news will prove to be a tough sell, both papers plan to supplement their online offerings with a new kind of newspaper content: soccer video clips. Both The Sun and Bild recently acquired online rights to show highlights from the top-flight soccer leagues in their respective countries, the Premier League in Britain and the Bundesliga in Germany.

Bild plans to continue offering general news free; exclusive content, including the soccer clips, will require payment. The Sun says it has not yet decided on a charging mechanism.

Among higher-brow publications, the favored approach to digital payment seems to be the so-called metered model, under which casual visitors to a newspaper Web site are not charged, while those who pass a certain threshold?say, 10 articles a month?are required to pay. This model, pioneered by The Financial Times and later adopted by The New York Times, lets online papers maintain a broad audience, necessary to sell digital advertising, while obtaining new revenue from the most loyal readers.

The New York Times turned on its metered system two years ago, and says it had attracted about 640,000 paying customers to its digital versions by the end of last year. Elsewhere, papers like Die Welt and Neue Zuercher Zeitung have also taken the metered approach, and The Telegraph said it planned to do so, too. In Hong Kong, The South China Morning Post, which for years operated a so-called hard pay wall?requiring payment for all access?switched last fall to the metered approach.

Big numbers have not always followed immediately. The Neue Zuercher Zeitung in Zurich, for example, said it now had 13,000 digital subscribers; but even before it put up its pay wall in October, it had 12,000 customers for its ''e-paper'' edition?a paid-for digital replica of the paper.

''I'm glad we did it,'' said Peter Hogenkamp, head of digital media at the NZZ Media Group, the paper's publisher. ''I have no bad feelings about it. But everyone in the business is overestimating pay wall revenues."

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/100605359

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Texas governor reiterates opposition to Medicaid expansion

By Corrie MacLaggan

AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Texas Governor Rick Perry on Monday firmly reiterated that the state will not expand its Medicaid program, saying that it is a broken system that needs to be reformed by allowing states more flexibility.

"Seems to me April Fool's Day is the perfect day to discuss something as foolish as Medicaid expansion, and to remind everyone that Texas will not be held hostage by the Obama administration's attempt to force us into the fool's errand of adding more than a million Texans to a broken system," Perry told reporters at the state Capitol.

Perry was joined by other Texas Republican officials, including U.S. Senators John Cornyn and Ted Cruz.

In Texas, Medicaid expansion would cover more than 1 million new low-income Texans by 2017, according to the state Health and Human Services Commission.

About two dozen demonstrators stood outside the room where the press conference was held chanting loudly and holding signs with slogans that included "Rick Perry take the money."

Last June, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld President Barack Obama's health care overhaul but allowed states to opt out of a provision expanding the Medicaid program.

Since then, 25 governors have indicated support for Medicaid expansion, 15 say they are not participating and 10 states have not decided, according to the Advisory Board Company, a consulting firm that is tracking the issue. Of those last 10 states, three are leaning toward not participating, it said.

(Reporting by Corrie MacLaggan; Editing by David Bailey and Steve Orlofsky)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/texas-governor-reiterates-opposition-medicaid-expansion-181305563--finance.html

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Wishing Away Bigots (talking-points-memo)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/295809843?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Friday, March 22, 2013

North American Muslim Women, Post-Divorce

This post was written by guest contributor Deonna Kelli Sayed.

Divorce is a growing challenge for North American Muslim communities, as well as in Muslim societies around the world.? Part of that challenge is a lack of understanding regarding Muslim female experiences post-divorce.

Thoughtful, researched dialogue exists concerning legal issues impacting divorce among Muslims in North America, for example, as there are unique legal, social and cultural realities impacting these communities.? Women are often the primary focus of public discourse on such matters, and for good reason ? a 2012 study, ?Understanding Trends in American Muslim Divorce and Marriage,? conducted by the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding ?(ISPU), revealed that the majority of divorce narratives came from women. This is most likely because women ?are required to be more proactive than men in obtaining permission to divorce.? While there is nascent attention focusing on rising divorce rates, there is scant dialogue on the multiple challenges and various realities facing Muslim women after ending a marriage.

Spurred by the 2003-2005 debate on sharia in Ontario, the report aimed to study the how Muslims in North America contextualize marriage and divorce. Qualitative data was gathered primarily by direct interviews with Muslim couples in the United States and Canada.? A total of 212 individuals were interviewed between 2006 and 2010 and reflected an extremely diverse and educated group, on par with demographics of the larger North American Muslim community.

The report suggests that current divorce discussions among Muslims in North America centers on negotiating the civil court system and the implications of sharia-based endeavors in Western societies. The latter component focuses on how to bring imams and other Muslim community organizations into the dialogue. These are important and welcomed developments.

Likewise, the report highlights that most community-based discussions on marriage and divorce rarely end there.? I discussed the report?s findings with other Muslim women, and many suggested that community dialogue on these matters remains antiquated and overly simplistic, often suggesting a ?checklist? mentality when choosing a life partner as well as in approaching the decision to end a marriage.

A checklist for marriage might include items such as being from a certain ethnic group or of a particular professional demographic. Similar requirements are suggested when considering ?permissible? reasons for divorce. Yet, there is no cookie cutter model for Islamic marriage or divorce, particularly in the increasingly global context of Islamic identities. Many Muslims express that the normative discourse on love, marriage, and divorce often excludes the complexities and multiple narratives contributing to a relationship?s happiness or its demise.

Most discussions on divorce within the community focuses on mosqued Muslims. Yet, it is not unusual for unmosqued Muslims to socially identify with Islam and remain observant when following major life rituals related to marriage, divorce, and death. The ISPU report backs this up:? non-observance Muslims may abstain from Ramadan, for example, yet still desire to have a nikkah contract when marrying. This applies to Islamic talaq, or divorce, if such an event occurs. Interestingly, the survey also acknowledged most Muslims in the study sought civil court orders for divorce, yet privately obtained sharia based decrees, as well.

The report emphasized that Muslim women face unique post-divorce challenges wedged between these two legal realities: a civil court law in addition to sharia.? Discrepancies can arise, particularly if imams known to the women are slow to provide a divorce decree. ?A woman may be legally divorced per civil court order long before her local Muslim community accepts it. Or, in some cases, iddah and khula/ talaq may be completed before she obtains a legal divorce, depending on varying State laws.

Another element the report discussed is how non-Muslims may negatively view sharia and divorce discussions due to a prevalent misunderstanding and politicization of ?sharia law? and Islamic culture. Muslim women often bump up against assumptions from the larger non-Muslim society that their husbands must have beaten, mistreated, or somehow victimized them. ?Cultural, religious, and jurisprudence issues become lost in translation with women seeking legal advice, mental health counseling, or even a sympathetic, friendly ear from non-Muslim friends.? Within these contexts, many Muslim women feel isolated and without a language to articulate their struggles.

There are resources, however scant, for women attempting to leave abusive relationships. ?More assistance is needed, and there is increasing awareness among Muslims worldwide to proactively address domestic violence. However, abuse characterized only one in three divorces discussed in the ISPU study, suggesting that most Muslim marriages in North America end for reasons other than spousal mistreatment. ?There are few resources for women who opt to leave emotionally or spiritually barren marriages, and even less social and spiritual support from the Muslim community.

Islam places a great deal of importance on marriage.? This translates into complicated everyday challenges for divorcees.? Both the ISPU report and the divorced Muslim women I consulted for this article, including a twice-married Indian woman active in her mosque, suggested that women in the community sometimes perceive a divorced woman as a threat or on the prowl for a new husband. ?Along these same lines, divorced women active in Muslim communities feel vulnerable to inappropriate comments or inaccurate assumptions from men about their sexual availability.? There is also the notion that, upon divorce, Muslim women have a diminished pool of men available for remarriage. ??This implies that women have to ?take what is offered? if they want to marry again, thus creating a potential cycle of unhealthy and unsatisfying relationships.

These variables may contribute to a growing number of Muslim women opting to remarry outside of the faith. Going outside of the Muslim community may be overwhelming. Non-Muslim dating often provides different relationship models and requires new discussions on sexuality.? Many Muslim women are accustomed to the ?checklist? mentality where other Muslims provide character reports on potential partners. Thus, entering a relationship with a non-Muslim is akin to exploring foreign land in a blindfold. This is uniquely problematic for women raised in non-Western societies or whose first marriages were arranged; there is no compass for embarking on new romantic territory.

Marriages between Muslim women and non-Muslim men remain contested, yet such relationships are on the rise and demand acknowledgment. These unions provide unique intersections when forming new Muslim identities in North America, and are an increasing part of the Islamic female experience.

The presence of children and child custody arrangements potentially complicates issues, as well.? There is virtually no narrative addressing the various challenges facing single Muslim mothers and the integration of blended families upon remarriage.

The report did not go into too much detail regarding the interpersonal aspects of divorce.? Some Muslim women find there is little spiritual support for women during the divorce process.? Many may internalize guilt or shame when deciding to end their marriages. ?A divorced volunteer at an Islamic Center indicated that normative Islamic discourse often exacerbates these feelings rather than encouraging nonjudgmental guidance during a confusing and often overwhelming rebuilding period.

The Muslim community is embracing increased public discussion concerning the quality of marriage, reconciliation, and amicable divorce. However, lacking is dialogue and a support network for divorced Muslim women. ?Very few social and community-based resources exist helping Muslim women negotiate life experiences post-divorce, regardless of her level of religiosity and community participation

There is public interest in hearing such stories, however. The phenomenal success of Love, Insha?Allah: The Secret Love Lives of America Muslim Women points to increasing awareness regarding the multiple ways Muslim women love, marry, and divorce.? This also suggests that American-Muslim women hold a great deal of power in forming new narratives of being and belonging in society, married or not.

The report indicated how nuanced relationships are within the Muslim community. Building on that report, the next step are community based support systems, including female only support groups for Muslim women, a database of culturally and Islamically sensitive therapists (modern technology such as Skype can make remote therapy possible), job and skill training, and even local babysitting clubs for divorced Muslim mothers.

Finally, there is a need for stories ? real stories of the struggles and triumphs experienced by divorced Muslim women, regardless of religiosity, at a time when many feel spiritually depleted and ignored. From that point, perhaps Muslim communities can shift from a discourse of chastisement to one of care, reflection, and support.

Source: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/mmw/2013/03/north-american-muslim-women-post-divorce/

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Saving places: Not easy with a scorched Earth budget | Strange ...

The trail to popular Wallace Falls above Gold Bar, beach walks on Whidbey Island?s Keystone Spit, and boat trips to Long Island in Willapa Bay ? with the magic experience of watching elk emerge from mists and an ancient cedar forest ? have been made possible by a below-the-radar federal program.

The Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF), which has pumped $462 million into saving places in Washington, will live or die depending on which or two rival budget proposals before Congress is adopted.

A plan offered by the Senate Budget Committee, chaired by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., would fund the LWCF to the tune of $900 million over the next 10 years.? The Fund gets money by taking a chunk of oil and gas revenues flowing into the federal treasury from leasing on public lands owned by American taxpayers.

But a budget offered by Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, chairman of the House Budget Committee, decimates conservation spending:? The LWCF has already taken an 80 percent cut that ?left barely any funding at all to do important conservation work,? said Alan Rowsome, director of conservation funding for The Wilderness Society.

Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Wash., who retired in January, defended the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund, and used money for such projects as the Mountains-to-Sound Greenway.

The LWCF helped put together the Mountains-to-Sound Greenway, creating multiple recreation opportunities along the I-90 corridor.? It paid to protect Protection Island, a famed bird rookery near Port Townsend that was targeted for real estate development.? Keystone Spit and Crockett Lake, just south of Coupeville ferry terminal, were similarly preserved.

Over the last three decades, the Fund had a key defender in Congress ? Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Wash., a power on the House Appropriations Committee almost from the day he hit Congress in 1977.? But Dicks retired from Congress in January.

In 1981, President Reagan?s ultraconservative Interior Secretary James Watt tried to abolish the LWCF.? Dicks and Oregon Rep. Les AuCoin persuaded the Appropriations Committee to save the Fund.? An angry Watt called Dicks and threatened to fly to Tacoma and campaign against him.? Dicks, initially nervous, basked in adulation.

Watt was asked at a hearing, by Oregon Rep. Jim Weaver, whether we should preserve places for future generations.? The deeply evangelical Interior Secretary delivered a famous answer:??? ?I do not know how many future generations we can count on before the Lord returns.?

The newly elected, Republican-run ?Tea Party Congress? in 2011 tried to zero-out the Land and Water Conservation Fund.? Dicks rallied support and the LWCF survived on a 216-213 vote.? One state Republican, Rep. Dave Reichert, voted to preserve the fund.? Three other GOP House members from this state voted to axe it.

The anti-LWCF vote by Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler was surprising, given her Southwest Washington district.? Money from the Fund ransomed (from Weyerhaeuser) 800 acres of ancient cedar forest on Long Island.? The LWCF made possible the Julia Butler Hansen National Wildlife Refuge, which preserved habitat for the endangered white tail deer along the Columbia River in Wahkaikum County.

Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, R-Wash., voted against the Land and Water Conservation Fund despite places preserved in her Southwest Washington district.

Dicks was honored Wednesday by Futurewise, the statewide conservation group that has sought to preserve farms, forests and beaches.

?We?ve had at least five or six major projects that the Fund made possible by the Fund,? said Dicks, speaking with particular pride of the Mountains to Sound Greenway.? He has been working with Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colorado, in an effort to get LWCF money to help protect national parks from the impacts of budget sequestration.

?The parks have lost $136 million due to sequestration,? said Dicks.? (Olympic and Mt. Rainier National Parks have each lost more than $600,000 in already-stretched budgets.)

The Land and Water Conservation Fund will get little mention in news stories out of Washington, D.C.? It is, however, a big deal in this Washington.

Source: http://blog.seattlepi.com/seattlepolitics/2013/03/20/saving-places-not-easy-with-a-scorched-earth-budget/

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Steam Early Access Invites Gamers to Buy and Beta ... - Maximum PC

Steam Early AccessValve found a way to include gamers in the development process of new titles.

Sure, any old Joe with enough funds can go out and purchase a finished game to play at his leisure, but you typically need to have a foot in the door with a developer to test upcoming titles before they're made available to the general public. Valve is doing its part to change that with a new "Early Access" initiative that allows Steam gamers to purchase, play, and provide feedback for select games that are still in development.

Yes, you read that right, you still have to pay to play games that aren't fully fleshed out and potentially buggy. You're essentially investing in a backstage pass, only your feedback is both welcomed and encouraged by the developers who might end up implementing your suggestions.

"A lot of games are already operating as ongoing services that grow and evolve with the involvement of customers and the community," said Sean Pollman of Badland Studio. "Greenlight helped us raise awareness for Kinetic Void, and now Steam Early Access will let us continue the development of our game while gathering crucial feedback, input and support from the steam Community."

Early Access players will receive automatic game updates. They'll also be able to interact with other players to share and swap screenshots, tips, and in-depth guides, Valve says.

There are currently a dozen Early Access titles ranging in price from $8 to $33, including a title called "Drunken Robot Pornography," which is nothing like it sounds.

Thoughts on Steam's new initiative? Post them below!

Follow Paul on Google+, Twitter, and Facebook

Source: http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/steam_early_access_invites_gamers_buy_and_beta_test_pre-release_titles2013

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Friday, March 15, 2013

Hashtags Will Be Great for Facebook

In an attempt to continue its quest to become everyone's hyper-organized "personal newspaper,"?Facebook is planning to adopt a modern organizing tool that's as easy for its native Twitter users to make fun of as it may prove useful to the often cluttered No. 1 social network. "It is unclear how far along Facebook's work on the hashtag is and the feature isn't being introduced imminently,"?sources tell?The Wall Street Journal's Evelyn M. Rusli and Shira Ovide.

RELATED: Your Instagram Feed Is Ready for Real Computers Now

So that's one reason for the Twitterati to calm down, and here's another: This could actually be a good thing for Facebook, especially it's new ? and still confusing ? third pillar, Graph Search. Hashtags may be ever-present enough to be lame, but that simple # sign is still a ubiquitous way for curious people to search for a conversation, and this particular form of communication has rightfully passed the boundaries of the place where it was it invented. Think about it: Wouldn't it be cool to filter a Facebook Graph Search with a query like "people near Washington, D.C. talking about #CPAC"? And isn't that kind of what Mark Zuckerberg was getting at when he launched Graph Search? He said that part of Facebook's mission was to "give people tools" to "make the world more open" ? that the purpose of the personalized search engine wasn't to "let people search the web" so much as "help people search the social graph," and that "that graph is huge." Consider the hashtag a way to strip away clutter from the hugeness of the information online. Consider the hashtag again.

RELATED: Facebook Shrugs Off Instagram's New Class Action Lawsuit

Plus, Facebook hashtags will help with news discovery in and around the other two main parts of Facebook's user experience: upgraded versions of?News Feed?and now Timeline. Right now, much to the chagrin of news makers like The New York Times's Nick Bilton, Facebook's EdgeRank algorithm decides what we get to see, and how we see it, unless we do a lot of digging. But incorporating the hashtag ? a simple organizer that pretty much everyone knows how to use by now, and kind of gets annoying when it's double posted to Facebook but doesn't do anything ? will help the whole news discovery process. If an algorithm doesn't surface talk about a topic, a hashtag certainly might.

RELATED: Instagram Was Mark Zuckerberg's Last Hurrah as Facebook's Hacker King

Of course, people have already started hating on the idea, pointing to the annoying inside-joke usage of the term. (We are talking about the overused word of the year from last?year, after all.)?But as much as the abuse of hashtags may turn off Twitter users, especially the nearly 10,000 people in the "This is not Twitter. Hashtags don't work here." Facebook group, there's no turning back now: Hashtags are all over Instagram, and now that its parent company is jumping in the pool, well, may be we should have seen this coming.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hashtags-great-facebook-204900269.html

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Caravan Holidays Has Options Of Private Caravans For Hire And ...

When considering a vacation with Caravan Holiday Lets, there are a lot of things that need to be figured out before booking it. There are a lot of private caravans that can be rented. Using these, may not be the best option for some families though.
There are a lot of different locations to visit. Not all locations are friendly for everyone. A handicap person may have to pick certain ones so that they will be comfortable while vacationing.

The accommodations that are chosen will need to be large enough for everyone who is vacationing together. A larger group may have to consider splitting into groups and staying in more than one residence. It may be possible to book the reservations together so that they are close by.

When someone is able to stay in a beautiful location and be comfortable, they are likely to remember that vacation for a lifetime. It is likely that they will want to come back also. There are a lot of places that are perfect for vacations.
Vacations can be very expensive, but with Caravan Holiday Lets, they are able to make them more affordable while making sure that it is an enjoyable vacation. Privacy is available for everyone. Some people choose to go to certain locations because they want to see all of the tourist attractions in that place.

There are a lot of places to go to and many things to visit and see. Whatever location is chosen, the vacation will be amazing. Some of them will be longer than others but it is important to have fun and do joyous things on vacations.
Some travelers will choose to take much of their vacation in the wild outdoors while others will choose to stay inside most of their trip. Medical conditions and climate can be big factors in these decisions. Rainy climates are not fun to be outside in usually.

If groups are not renting from Caravan Holiday Lets, they may have chosen private caravans for hire. The people who own them do not use them all of the time so they choose to rent them out to help with the expense of purchasing and maintaining them. There are many choices for accommodations.

There are a lot of different caravans to rent in every location but during peak seasons, it may be harder to find one that is not already rented out. Making reservations ahead of time can ensure that the

vacationers will have a place to lay their head at night. This allows them to make good memories instead of memories that are embarrassing or caused by inconvenience.
Finding the right match for your accommodations on holiday is important. Today Caravan Holiday Lets offers you a way you can connect with owners who are looking for people to rent their homes or cabins for a vacation.

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Visit them online today at www.caravanholidaylets.co.uk to learn how you can save money by connecting directly with the owners for beautiful vacation accommodations.

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Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Caravan-Holidays-Has-Options-Of-Private-Caravans-For-Hire-And-Caravans-For-Rent/4484156

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Good Reads: Saving the Amazon, Kenya's 'Iron Lady,' drones, Depardieu the Russian

This week's round-up of Good Reads includes climate-change diplomacy in the Amazon, a profile of a Kenyan politician to watch beyond the elections, the future of drones, and a look at G?rard Depardieu's new Russian citizenship.

By Allison Terry,?Correspondent / March 11, 2013

Environmental police inspect logs during a raid against illegal logging in Brazil.

Nelson Feitosa/IBAMA/Reuters/File

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In efforts to reduce deforestation levels in the Amazon region, Brazil is at the forefront of an experimental climate-change prevention strategy known as ?reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation,? or REDD.

Skip to next paragraph Allison Terry

Correspondent

Allison Terry is national news intern for the Christian Science Monitor. She previously worked on the cover page desk and contributed to the culture section of the Monitor.

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In Foreign Affairs, Jeff Tollefson describes the REDD system, which places monetary value on the amount of carbon dioxide that can be stored in trees. Wealthy nations or corporations pay countries to protect their rain forests, and thus offset carbon emissions.

Through its Amazon Fund, Brazil received funding from Norway starting in 2010. Spending almost $152 million, Brazil executed projects that paid landowners to preserve forests and educated farmers and ranchers on sustainable practices. The result: Brazil has seen a plunging rate of deforestation, registering record lows from 2009 to 2012.

Despite the remaining challenges for implementing a universal plan, Mr. Tollefson writes, ?at a time when expectations for progress on climate change are falling, Brazil has given the world a glimmer of hope. In many ways, the hard work is just beginning, but the results so far more than justify continuing the experiment.?

Kenya's 'Iron Lady'

During the run-up to Kenya?s March 4 presidential election, the media focused on the two front-runners, Raila Odinga and Uhuru Kenyatta. But among the six other candidates, there is one to keep watching: Martha Karua, Kenya?s own ?Iron Lady.?

A profile by Al Jazeera details Ms. Karua?s rise in national politics, from a magistrate to a member of parliament and minister for justice under President Mwai Kibaki. She was the only woman to run in this year?s election, during which she pledged to create a universal health-care system and increase Internet access to 50 percent of Kenyans within five years.

?Her manifesto, perhaps reflecting her legal background, emphasises ?a new spirit of constitutionalism?, prioritising the fight against corruption and respect for national diversity,? Al Jazeera writes.

Her outspoken condemnation of her fellow candidates, particularly those implicated in stoking the postelection violence in 2007, best explains her Iron Lady nickname. She accuses Mr. Odinga of ethnic cleansing, and Mr. Kenyatta is facing charges of crimes against humanity from the International Criminal Court.

She said he should be cleared of those charges before he can be elected president.

?How do you seek votes, yet grave accusations of causing death, arson and mass displacements are on your head?? she told reporters. ?If your cow?s leg is broken, do you strap a plough on it and head to the farm ? or do you first get it treated and allow it time to heal??

Future of drones

Drones have drastically changed the strategy of modern warfare, playing an effective, albeit controversial, role in the US fight against Al Qaeda. The government and private companies are now looking homeward for the next development in drone technology. Potential uses include crop dusting, traffic control, border patrol, and weather forecasting, reports John Horgan in National Geographic. But even with these benefits, people are worried about potential breaches in privacy ? and the possibility for errors.

As new, more sophisticated drones take to the skies in the United States, and in other countries where drones are manufactured (such as China, Israel, and Iran), Mr. Horgan says that limiting risk is crucial.

?The invention that escapes our control, proliferating whether or not it benefits humanity, has been a persistent fear of the industrial age ? with good reason,? Horgan writes. ?Nuclear weapons are too easy an example; consider what cars have done to our landscape over the past century, and it?s fair to wonder who?s in the driver?s seat, them or us."

Depardieu and income inequality

As G?rard Depardieu takes up residency in his newly adopted countries (Belgium and Russia), Lauren Collins in The New Yorker explains why the French have dismissed the once beloved actor.

Mr. Depardieu famously renounced his French citizenship after the government promised to impose a new supertax on the wealthy ? 75 percent on incomes greater than 1 million euros. French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault called Depardieu?s move ?pathetic.?

This was the ultimate insult for a man who came from a poor background and built his wealth through acting and entrepreneurial ventures. He?s leaving France, he said in a letter to Mr. Ayrault, ?because you believe success, creation, talent, anything different, to be grounds for sanction.?

But 60 percent of his former countrymen support the supertax, drawing ?on the republican ideal of taxation as an institution that would foster social cohesion,?writes Ms. Collins. Taxes on the rich are seen as a way to prevent income disparities.

?There?s a very egalitarian idea of what society should be, whatever hypocrisy it entails,? Christine Ockrent, a veteran journalist, told Collins. ?It dates back to the French Revolution, which, by the way, was a very bourgeois revolution. The myth of equality is something which strangles any discussion about income.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/rMFonsfp47c/Good-Reads-Saving-the-Amazon-Kenya-s-Iron-Lady-drones-Depardieu-the-Russian

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Biodegradable diapers from recycled cardboard

Mar. 13, 2013 ? VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland has developed a process that enables recycled paper and cardboard to be used as a raw material for nonwovens. Hygiene and home care products, such as diapers, sanitary napkins and cleaning cloths, are among the many items that can be manufactured from the biodegradable nonwovens. The manufacturing costs of cardboard-based nonwovens are around 20% lower than for nonwovens produced from wood raw materials. The forest industry will be among those likely to benefit from new business opportunities opened up by nonwovens based on recycled paper and cardboard.

Nonwovens are essentially consumer goods that once used will end up in a landfill site along with other community waste. In the metropolitan area alone, an estimated 10,000 tonnes of diapers and sanitary napkins are disposed of each year. The principle raw material in nonwovens manufacture is biologically non-degradable polyester. Up to now, market entry for bio-based nonwovens derived from wood has stalled because of prohibitive production costs.

"Now for the first time we can make use of recycled paper and cardboard as a nonwovens raw material," says Ali Harlin, Research Professor at VTT. "The new process means that bio-based nonwovens are now more competitive on price in comparison with plastic-based products. The manufacturing costs of cardboard-based nonwovens are around 20% lower than for nonwovens produced from wood raw materials. New business opportunities should open up fairly rapidly, since the technology required for manufacturing nonwovens from recycled materials is already in place."

Every year Europe generates around 60 million tonnes of recycled paper, of which cardboard makes up around 40%. The demand exists for new applications and technology for exploiting recycled paper due to the EU's objective of raising the proportion of recycled paper to 70 per cent. The method developed by VTT could extend future possibilities for re-use, particularly in the case of cardboard, which is more cost-effective as a raw material than fine paper.

Cleansing the cardboard of filler material, lignin and hemicellulose is a key part of nonwovens manufacture. VTT has matched several fibre-processing methods in the preparation of dissolving pulp to assist in obtaining pure cellulose from the recycled cardboard. The dissolving pulp produced in the research project was regenerated using VTT's patented carbamate technology, which is safer and more environmentally friendly than the traditional viscose process. The nonwovens were manufactured with foam forming technology that uses little water.

Around 1.9 million tonnes of various types of nonwovens were manufactured in Europe in 2011. Strong growth in the global market for nonwovens is forecast to continue for the foreseeable future. Apart from hygiene, health and cleaning products, the nonwovens have further applications in, among others, the construction industry.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Technical Research Centre of Finland (VTT).

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/wPPgXA2bKhk/130313095424.htm

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

GovTech Innovators: Greg Griffiths, Government Video Conferencing ...

Our latest GovTech Innovator is Greg Griffiths, marketing manager for the Americas for NetOp, a company that helps public- and private-sector clients use video chat for internal and external communications.

During our Google+ Hangout, Griffiths discussed the growing prevalence of videoconferencing functionality as the world?s population becomes more accustomed to video content.

And if the average consumer starts to expect more video and communication online personally, will that expectation transfer to the workplace? If so, how will government employees leverage the technology to connect with citizens and co-workers?

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Source: http://www.govtech.com/e-government/GovTech-Innovators-Greg-Griffiths-Government-Video-Conferencing-Expert-NetOpp.html

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Lady Gaga Pimps Her Recovery With 24-Karat Gold Wheelchair

'It was a huge undertaking,' jewelry designer Ken Borochov says of the glittery custom chair Gaga's using after hip surgery.
By Gil Kaufman


Lady Gaga's 24-gold plated wheelchair
Photo: Ken Borochov/ Splash News

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1703544/lady-gaga-24-karat-gold-wheelchair.jhtml

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