Wednesday, 31 October 2012

Horse racing-Melbourne Cup: the race that intoxicates a city

MELBOURNE, Nov 1 (Reuters) - A report released on Thursday came to a conclusion that will come as no surprise to anyone who has been in Australia's second most populous city on the first Tuesday in November - the Melbourne Cup is the "booziest" sporting event of the year.

The richest two-mile handicap in the world, the latest version of which will be contested for a purse of A$6.2 million ($6.43 million) next week, is traditionally known as "the race that stops a nation" and the people of the state of Victoria get a public holiday to enjoy it.

It has also become the state's "most notorious event associated with acute alcohol intoxication, assaults and accidents", according to VicHealth and Eastern Health Turning Point's report "Drinking Cultures and Sporting Occasions".

The report recorded ambulance call-outs, the number of people turning up at hospital emergency departments and police data on assaults and traffic incidents in Melbourne from 2000 to 2009.

VicHealth chief executive Jerril Rechter said the advertising of alcohol was at least in part to blame for the amount of drunkenness and knock-on social and health problems.

"Alcohol is promoted heavily in the lead up to sporting events because, unfortunately, it's engrained in Aussie culture to binge drink on these occasions," she said in a news release.

"It's crazy that a loophole in the law allows alcohol advertising on TV during the day if it's part of live sports broadcast.

"This means that kids watching the Cup and other major sporting events see countless ads for alcohol. Is it any surprise this is the lead sporting event in the Victorian sports calendar for youth binge drinking?"

Local health experts and emergency services are urging the people of the city to drink responsibly in the lead up to the race. ($1 = 0.9644 Australian dollars) (Reporting by Nick Mulvenney in Sydney, editing by Greg Stutchbury)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/horse-racing-melbourne-cup-race-intoxicates-city-232933534--sector.html

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Monday, 29 October 2012

Readers Write: How to fight voter-ID disenfranchisement; What US must do about Iran

Letters to the Editor for the weekly print issue of October 29, 2012: In response to voter ID laws (blatant attempts at disenfranchisement) communities should?band together and pull off the greatest voter registration drive in history. The US and its allies should step up support for legitimate democracy movements in Iran with the goal of destabilizing and replacing the regime.

October 29, 2012

How to fight voter-ID disenfranchisement

Regarding the One Minute Debate "Should states require voter ID?" in the Oct. 8 commentary section: Since real voter fraud is actually somewhere between very rare and nonexistent, there's no doubt that the new voter ID laws are intended to reduce minority voting. However, with nuisance factors being the common thread among the various state laws (i.e., making the registration process more difficult), it could actually be an opportunity in disguise.

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Hopefully, the affected communities will use these blatant attempts at disenfranchisement as the impetus to band together and pull off the greatest voter registration drive in US history ? and they'll probably even get a little help from their friends along the way. The best defense is still a good old-fashioned "I'm not going to take this anymore!"-style offense.

Fletcher C. Downey

Magalia, Calif.

What US should do about Iran

Regarding the One Minute Debate "What to do about Iran's nuclear program?" in the Oct. 1 commentary section: Sanctions didn't work in the case of North Korea, and sanctions will not work against Iran. Like North Korea before, Tehran uses diplomacy to stall and obfuscate. The United States and its allies should step up support for legitimate democracy movements in Iran with the goal of destabilizing and hopefully replacing the Iranian regime.

Deterrence worked during the cold war because communism is an atheistic philosophy. Communists do not believe in a glorious afterlife; therefore, they were not inclined to throw away their lives in a "holy war" against capitalism. The ruling mullahs of Iran are religious fanatics who believe in a glorious afterlife. They are far more inclined to attack the "Little Satan," even if it means Iran's total destruction.

In the meantime, the US should make sure all of our friends and allies are equipped with more-than-adequate missile defense systems.

Albert Pararesta

Brookfield, Conn.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/9foZOg8f_18/Readers-Write-How-to-fight-voter-ID-disenfranchisement-What-US-must-do-about-Iran

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Thursday, 25 October 2012

FantomWorks | Classic and Antique Car Restoration, Norfolk ...

The?Ford Model A?of 1928?1931 (Also colloquially called the?A-Model Ford, the?A, or A-Bone among?rodders?and?customizers)?was the second huge success for the?Ford Motor Company, after its predecessor, the?Model T. ?First produced on October 20, 1927, but not sold until December 2, it replaced the venerable Model T, which had been produced for 18 years. ?This new Model A (A previous model?had used the name in 1903?1904) was designated as a 1928 model and was available in four standard colors, but not black.

By 4 February 1929, one million Model A?s had been sold, and by 24 July, two million. ?The range of body styles ran from the Tudor at US$500 (in grey, green, or black)?to the Town Car with a dual cowl at US$1200. ?In March 1930, Model A sales hit three million, and there were nine body styles available.

The Model A was produced through 1931. ?When production ended in March, 1932, there were 4,849,340?Model A?s made in all styles. ?Its successor was the?Model B, which featured an updated?4-cylinder engine, followed by the?Model 18?which introduced Ford?s new?flathead (sidevalve) V8 engine.

Arrival

1931 Ford Model A - Arrival1931 Ford Model A - Arrival1931 Ford Model A - Arrival1931 Ford Model A - Arrival1931 Ford Model A - Arrival

Want to see the entire process so far?

For every photograph we?ve taken of the restoration, click on the photo below.
Click on the link ?View with PicLens? to view the process with an interactive slideshow.

Source: http://www.fantomworks.com/fw/currentprojects/1931-ford-model-a/

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Review: Mighty iPad Mini looks like a holiday hit | wishtv.com

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) ? Apple's iPad Mini will bring a lot more excitement and a little more confusion to the holiday shopping season.

It only takes a few minutes playing with the iPad Mini to realize the scaled-down tablet computer will be a sure-fire hit with longtime Apple disciples and potential converts who've been looking for a more affordable entree into the mobile computing market.

With a 7.9-inch screen, the iPad Mini is perfectly sized to be stuffed in Christmas stockings. Recipients who will discover the pleasure and convenience of being able to take pictures, surf the Web, watch video, read books and listen to music on an exquisitely designed device that's pancake thin.

As enticing as that all sounds, the iPad Mini also causes a dilemma, albeit a pleasant one.

The new option will make it even more difficult for holiday shoppers to figure out which mobile device to buy for their loved ones ?or for themselves.

I felt the pangs of indecision within a few minutes of picking up the iPad Mini for the first time.

As the company usually does at its product unveilings, Apple Inc. only provided reporters with limited, strictly supervised access to the iPad Mini on Tuesday. That meant I could only experiment with it for about 15 minutes, but as an experienced user of the iPad 2, I could quickly see that the smaller tablet does just about everything its bigger brethren does.

Even though the Mini's screen is 1.8 inches smaller than the standard iPad, the movie "The Avengers" looked lush, even in a side-by-side comparison with the larger tablet. When I pulled up the latest issue of the New Yorker, I didn't have to strain to see the text or pictures on the smaller screen. A quick check of other websites verified that the Mini's screen isn't so tiny that it's going to cause a lot of squinting. After I took a very crisp picture of another reporter testing out a Mini, I decided to email it to her to test how easy it was to use the keyboard on the smaller screen. No problem there. Best of all, the iPad Mini can be held in one hand and is about half the weight of the larger iPad.

The Mini worked so much like my standard iPad that it immediately caused me to have second thoughts about a decision I thought I had already made. I like my iPad 2 a lot, but it's just too big to carry with me wherever I am. But there have been times I really wish I had it with me, like when I spot something that would make a great picture or when I've needed to check something on the Web. For various reasons, I didn't want a smartphone that would require a data plan, so I had my mind set on buying the latest iPod Touch, which has an iPhone-size screen and superb camera.

Now, the iPad Mini has me vacillating. Apple isn't making it easier with its pricing strategy. The latest iPod Touch with 32 gigabytes sells for $299. An iPad Mini with 16 gigabytes of storage sells for $329. I'm tempted.

Like others who will no doubt be weighing the same decision, I'll have to make up my mind. Do I want something that can fit in my one of pant pockets like the Touch? For starters, it comes in more colors than the black-or-white Mini and offers more storage capacity for a cheaper price.

Or do I want to pay a little more for another tablet computer that can slip into a coat pocket and offer a richer experience with a screen nearly two times larger than the new Touch?

The iPad Mini is so mighty that I can't believe the iPad 2 will be on the market too much longer. The iPad 2's $399 price now looks like too much, given that the iPad Mini can do just about everything it does on a slightly smaller screen. The iPad 2 still may have some appeal for people who want a larger tablet at a lower price the newest iPads, but I can't see too many consumers buying Apple's second-generation tablet now that the Mini is available.

Consumers who aren't set on buying one of Apple's devices will have even more choices to make. The iPad Mini is clearly aimed at siphoning sales away from the Nexus 7 tablet that Google Inc. began selling four months ago and the longer-established Kindle Fire from Amazon.com Inc. Figuring out which one is best-suited for you (or that special someone on your shopping list) will likely come down to weighing price against performance.

Amazon is sells a Kindle Fire HD with 16 gigabytes of storage and 7-inch screen for $199 and a similarly sized Nexus 7 goes for $249. That means an iPad Mini will cost $80 to $130 more, a price that Apple believes is justified because it boasts more features, such as front and back cameras. The Mini's reliance on aluminum instead of plastic for its exterior also makes it look more stylish and more enjoyable to hold.

If the speculation on technology blogs pans out, Google might make things even more interesting ? and dizzying for holiday shoppers ? by introducing a $99 version of the Nexus 7 in the coming weeks.

Source: http://www.wishtv.com/dpp/entertainment/consumer_tech/Review-Mighty-iPad-Mini-looks-like-a-holiday-hit_77203240

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Vladimir Putin: The New Global Shah of Oil

Exxon Mobil is no longer the world's number-one oil producer. As of yesterday, that title belongs to Putin Oil Corp - oh, whoops. I mean the title belongs to Rosneft, Russia's state-controlled oil company.

Rosneft is buying TNK-BP, which is a vertically integrated oil company co-owned by British oil firm BP and a group of Russian billionaires known as AAR. One of the top-ten privately owned oil producers in the world, in 2010 TNK-BP churned out 1.74 million barrels of oil equivalent per day from its assets in Russia and Ukraine and processed almost half that amount through its refineries.

With TNK-BP in its hands, Rosneft will be in charge of more than 4 million barrels of oil production a day. And who is in charge of Rosneft? None other than Vladimir Putin, Russia's resource-full president.

TNK-BP has been an economic dream, producing many billions in dividend payments for its owners - but it has been a relations nightmare. The partners have fought repeatedly. In 2008 Russian authorities arrested two British TNK-BP managers amid a dispute over strategy that forced then-CEO Bob Dudley (who now heads BP) to flee Russia - and that is just one of many partnership scandals.

The writing has been on the wall for TNK-BP since this time last year, when one of the AAR billionaires quit his role as CEO of the venture and declared that the relationship with BP had run its course. Since then speculation has raged over who might buy into the highly profitable venture.

Now we know: Rosneft is buying the whole thing, in a two-part deal. In the first part, Rosneft is acquiring BP's 50% stake of the joint venture in exchange for cash and Rosneft stock worth $27 billion. The deal will give BP a 19.75% stake in Rosneft. In stage two, AAR would get $28 billion in cash for its half, though this deal is not yet finalized.

Finalized it will be, however, because the billionaires of AAR are now eager to sell, rather than remain in a joint venture with the powerful Russian oil company. Rosneft gained much of its current heft at the expense of another Russian oligarch whom Putin threw under the bus, and the billionaires of AAR know they could easily meet the same fate if they try to partner with Rosneft as equals.

If it all comes to pass, Rosneft's daily production will jump to some 4.5 million barrels per day - enough to put the Russian firm neck and neck with Exxon in the race to be the world's top oil producer. And the deal that seals it will be worth something like $56 billion - for comparison, Nike is worth $34 billion and Kraft only $27 billion. If the TNK-BP deal goes through, it will be the largest in the industry since Exxon bought Mobil in 1999. See What's In It for BP.

Numbers like that deserve a little contemplation. Russia is spending a heck of a lot to buy its own oil production - smells like nationalization to me. And with Vlad Putin - the most resource-driven leader in the world today - behind the controls, I dare say we're witnessing the "Saudi Aramco-ing" of Russian oil.

Putting Putin in a position of even greater resource power can only lead one place: to high oil prices and a new Cold War in energy.

Putin's Plan Is Working

Rosneft has grown dramatically in the last ten years - not by chance, but because Rosneft is Vladimir Putin's vehicle to reassert state ownership over a fair chunk of Russia's oil fields. The most famous example happened in 2003, when Putin charged privately held producer Yukos Oil with a $27-billion tax bill that bankrupted the company. The Russian president then handed Yukos' oil fields over to Rosneft, immediately boosting Rosneft's daily production from 400,000 barrels to 1.7 million barrels.

It was blatant nationalization. Yukos' chairman and founder, Russian billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky, was convicted of fraud and sent to prison. Overnight, Rosneft ballooned from a small producer to Russia's biggest oil company.

With a snap of his fingers, Putin had created a national oil giant, a vehicle through which he could pursue his plan to reassert Russian influence in the world by controlling other countries' energy needs. The pending TNK-BP deal is simply the next step in this plan. If Rosneft does buy TNK-BP, the state oil giant will pump almost half of the barrels of oil produced in Russia.

That is a massive amount of oil. Remember, only Saudi Arabia produces more oil than Russia; and no country in the world exports more oil than Russia. The country is an energy superpower - and by gradually nationalizing Russia's energy resources, Putin is tightening his grip on Europe's energy needs.

However, Putin knows he can't quite do it alone - his country doesn't have enough oil and gas expertise. Without the right expertise, production will tank, and Putin's whole plan will be derailed.

History proves that point. When Saudi Arabia nationalized its oil industry in 1980, the country was producing more than 10 million barrels of oil per day. Within five years, production had fallen by more than 60%.

For Putin, that's not an option. That's why he is encouraging BP to stick around - Rosneft needs BP's technical expertise in order to tap into Russia's huge reserves of unconventional tight oil and shale gas. Having BP as a significant shareholder also lets Putin continue the pretense that Rosneft is not simply an arm of the government.

But an arm of Putin's government it is, and as Rosneft gradually takes control of more and more of Russia's oil wealth, Putin's leverage on the international stage will increase. Saudi Arabia may have struggled in its early years as an oil-producing giant, but today the country hosts incredible clout on the world stage because of its ability to open or close oil spigots and thereby influence global oil prices.

Europe is reliant on Russia for oil and gas. To be in control of other nations' necessary energy resources is to be in a very powerful position - one that Putin has been working toward for more than a decade.

He has built pipelines that bypass troublesome countries and feed into needy markets. He is cornering the uranium market by owning a large amount of primary production and controlling 40% of global uranium-enrichment capacity, while leaving the United States in need of a new nuclear-fuel supplier. He has increased Russia's oil and gas production and encouraged unconventional exploration.

Gazprom, the Russian state gas company, already has Europe wrapped around its little finger. Russia supplies 34% of Europe's gas needs, and when the under-construction South Stream pipeline starts operating, that percentage will increase. As if those developments weren't enough, yesterday Gazprom offered the highest bid to obtain a stake in the massive Leviathan gas field off Israel's coast.

Gazprom in control of Europe's gas, Rosneft in control of its oil. A red hand stretching out from Russia to strangle the supremacy of the West and pave the way for a new world order- one with Russia at the helm.

It is not as far-fetched as it might seem - or as you might want it to be. If Rosneft does buy both halves of TNK-BP, it will become a true goliath within the global oil sector. All the little Davids who rely on its oil will be at Putin's mercy. Same goes for Gazprom as a Goliath in the continent's gas scene.

In this scenario, Russia could choke off supply to raise prices. Putin could play oil- and gas-needy nations off one another, forcing European nations to commit to long-term, high-priced contracts if they want secure supplies.

Or imagine this: Russia could join OPEC. Suddenly the oil cartel would control more than half of global oil production and most of its spare capacity. With that kind of clout, the nations of OPEC could essentially name their price for oil - and the rest of the world would simply have to pay.

Additional Links and Reads

Rosneft to Replace Gazprom as Energy Driver on TNK Deal (Bloomberg)

Rosneft's deal to buy TNK-BP will accelerate the company's eclipse of Gazprom as the dominant force in Russia's energy industry. Over the past decade Russian President Vladimir Putin used Gazprom, the world's biggest natural gas producer, to assert Russia's power. Today, the lead role in Russia's energy machine is shifting to Rosneft.

Investors, Analysts Weigh Fallout from Canada's Rejection of Petronas-Progress Deal (Platts)

Late on Friday night the Canadian government issued its decision on the proposed takeover of Canadian natural gas firm Progress by Malaysian energy giant Petronas: the government said no. Investors and analysts were left scratching their heads - the deal seemed to fit the government's requirement of being in Canada's net interest. But with CNOOC's proposed deal to buy Nexen also awaiting government approval, all the prime minister's office would say is that its new framework clarifying the Investment Canada Act is pending. For now, that just means that no one is really sure whether Canada is open for business.

Obama Faces Tough Call on Iran Oil Sanctions (Reuters)

Mere weeks after the election, President Obama will be faced with a pivotal decision regarding the US's sanctions against Iranian oil: whether China, India, South Korea, and other nations have done enough to wean themselves from Iranian oil. The decision requires a careful balance between the need to stay tough on Iran and the worry that too much pressure will punish the world with high oil prices.

US Natural-Gas Boom Claims First Nuclear Plant (Reuters)

Dominion Resources is shutting its Kewaunee nuclear plant in Wisconsin next year. It's the first US nuclear plant to fall victim to growing competition from natural gas, but it likely won't be the last. After claiming hundreds of coal-fired plants, the surge in US shale-gas output is now starting to grind down the nuclear industry, and smaller, older plants like Kewaunee are the first to feel the pressure.

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Source: Casey's Daily Dispatch

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/fso/~3/PCfi6XvbDEE/vladimir-putin-new-global-shah-oil

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3rd debate: More military spending is wrong course for U.S.: letter to the editor

I was surprised that, in Monday night's presidential debate, Mitt Romney agreed with President Barack Obama on the rightness of many of his foreign policy endeavors. Romney took issue with Obama's handling of the Syrian situation, but what he offered as an alternative is more like a fairy tale than a plan.

A real disagreement was Romney's insistence on spending more on the military. Military expenditures are already by far the biggest item in the budget. The Pentagon has arranged for almost every state to have some kind of military establishment. Members of Congress naturally want to keep receiving funds for their districts no matter how wasteful. They do stimulate the economy. But is it acceptable that we should stimulate the economy by spending on personnel and weapons that have no purpose but to kill, rather than spending on health care, education and repairing our infrastructure?

When George W. Bush took us into two wars and lowered taxes, the surplus we enjoyed during the Clinton administration turned into a deficit almost overnight. We continue to build on this deficit, which is caused more than anything else by our military spending. It isn't making us any safer. It is rotting us from within.

Helen Brinich Lakewood

Source: http://blog.cleveland.com/letters/2012/10/3rd_debate_more_military_spend.html

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Are You Even Listening to Me? ? AARP

Home & Family | Relationships Print

Q: Why is it that when a couple is trying to communicate, the conversation can get lost when one spouse gets upset before the problem is resolved? The conversation then becomes about arguing and isn?t productive. How does one fix this?

Dr. Pepper Schwartz: It?s a great question. Not everyone says what they mean or means what they say ?and it costs a lot of extra heartache.? There is a style of communicating that you may want to look to for help. Perfected by the psychologist Harville Hendrix, it requires that, essentially, you slow down communication. One person holds a scarf or something that indicates he or she has ?the floor? and it is his or her time to talk. While that person is holding the object, the other person cannot voice an opinion.

Here?s what a typical conversation might sound like:

The person with ?the floor:? ?I am unhappy about the way the house looks when I can?t keep up with the mess, and it upsets me that you don?t help me clean.?

The other person then interprets what the first person said and repeats it back to the person in his or her own words: ?So, I heard you say the house is dirty and you want me to help pick up after you.?

That might not be what Person 1 wanted to get across. So he or she might say:

?No, what I said is that the house is messy, and I can?t keep it clean all by myself, so I need your help.?

Then, Person 1 passes ?the floor? over to the other person.

Person 2 says: ? OK, now I get it. The house is getting away from you and you want me to help you clean it.?

Then, if Person 1 agrees with the response, he or she gets back ?the floor? and says:

?Yes, that?s right. And I?d particularly like it if you made the beds in the morning while I make breakfast.?

You can see how it goes. You go back and forth ?making sure you are understood until that point is handled. However, the other person may want to chime in occasionally. Repeat your point, but try to come to a compromise, such as designating a day where you both clean.

In any case, it?s a beginning. Slow down, make sure you understand each other, and offer concrete suggestions about how to move forward. It should help!

Dr. Schwartz?answers questions?every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.?Submit your question here.?Read more of Pepper?s?columns here.?And be sure to follow Pepper on Twitter?@pepperschwartz.

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Source: http://blog.aarp.org/2012/10/24/pepper-schwartz-communicating-effectively/

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Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Japan justice minister quits after "mob ties" scandal

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's justice minister quit on Tuesday because of ill health, a cabinet official said, after calls for his resignation over past ties to an organised crime syndicate, dealing another blow to unpopular Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda.

Keishu Tanaka, 74, only became justice minister in a cabinet reshuffle on October 1, and his resignation is the second by a minister since Noda took office in September 2011.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura told a news conference that Tanaka stepped down for health reasons.

The resignation came a day after Tanaka left a Tokyo hospital where he had checked in on Friday with chest pains, irregular heartbeat and high blood pressure.

The health problems followed days of calls for his resignation after a magazine report linked him to the Yakuza organised crime syndicate.

Tanaka said he acted as a matchmaker at a mobster's wedding and attended a party thrown by the head of a crime group about 30 years ago, explaining that he was not aware of the groom's mob connections or the nature of the event at the time.

Tanaka has also admitted shortly after his appointment that his party branch accepted 420,000 yen ($5,300) in donations from a company run by a foreigner between 2006 and 2009. Accepting funds from foreign nationals is illegal if done so knowingly.

Tanaka's office said he had returned all of the money, according to media.

"The resignation is likely to further weaken Noda's support within his party. Obviously, it will become more difficult for him to exert leadership," said Mikitaka Masuyama, professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies.

"But it is uncertain whether this could be a trigger for an early election ... Given falling public support for the government, there is no benefit in him dissolving parliament and calling snap election at the moment."

Noda promised in August to hold an election "soon" as part of negotiations with the opposition on a plan to raise sales tax.

The Tanaka scandal is the latest in a string of setbacks for Noda, the ruling Democrats' third prime minister in as many years, who is expected to lose the next election.

In September last year, days after Noda formed his government, then Trade Minister Yoshio Hachiro quit over comments about radiation following a visit to the Fukushima region, scene of a nuclear plant accident following an earthquake and tsunami in March that year.

Government policy-making has stalled since the parliament session ended last month, with the opposition blocking legislation in a split parliament to try and force an early election.

Noda's ruling party has decided to convene an extra session of parliament from October 29 to try to pass a bill needed to cover nearly half the government's budget spending, setting the stage for another showdown with the opposition.

(Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto and Kaori Kaneko; Editing by Michael Perry and Robert Birsel)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/japan-justice-minister-resigns-blow-pm-noda-022136765--business.html

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Siehl Prize for Excellence in Agriculture seeks nominations ...

Nominations are open for the Siehl Prize for Excellence in Agriculture 2013 awards. The prize recognizes outstanding contributions to agriculture and the alleviation of world hunger.

The University of Minnesota?s College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences administers the awards. Recipients are chosen in three categories: knowledge (teaching, research and outreach), production agriculture and agribusiness. Each laureate receives a $50,000 award as well as a sculpture and lapel pin designed by Minnesota artist Thomas Rose specifically for the Siehl Prize.

The Siehl Prize was created in the early 1990s thanks to a gift from New Ulm-area livestock breeder and businessman Eldon Siehl, a dedicated philanthropist who had a lifelong interest in agricultural systems. Siehl was concerned that people were losing touch with their agrarian roots and wanted his gift to ensure that achievements in agriculture would be recognized and celebrated. Past winners include former Minnesota agriculture commissioner Gene Hugoson and Don Helgeson, Gold?n Plump chairman.

Nominees must reside or have resided in Minnesota for at least five years or hold a degree from the University of Minnesota. Individuals and teams of people are eligible. Self-nominations and nominations by relatives are not allowed. Nominations submitted last year must be updated and resubmitted.

Nomination instructions are available online at www.cfans.umn.edu/siehlprize. The deadline for nominations is Jan. 15, with award winners expected to be announced on National Ag Day, March 19, 2013.

Source: Matt Hodson, University of Minnesota News Service

Source: http://www.hutchinsonleader.com/news/business_and_agriculture/siehl-prize-for-excellence-in-agriculture-seeks-nominations/article_8c4edf4e-1c8d-11e2-b498-0019bb30f31a.html

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Strategist: Romney?s Florida Latino outreach may be all he needs [VIDEO]

Video package by Gillian Roberts

Mitt Romney?s campaign says it expects to receive 38 percent of the Latino vote ? a number that past Republican records indicate the Republican nominee is unlikely to meet. But some strategists are saying that the former Massachusetts governor may not need that level of support nationally if he can win a majority of votes from Hispanic Floridians.

?I don?t think he?s going to get that, and I don?t know that he?s going to need to,? Republican strategist Ana Navarro said. ?He can win with much less than the 38 percent.?

In Florida, Romney leads President Barack Obama 49 percent to 46 percent among Latino voters. The state?s Hispanic community is diverse, with Navarro listing Colombians, Venezuelans and Puerto Ricans among the subgroups that have joined the reliably Republican Cuban Hispanic demographic as influential in this election.

?Candidates today have to do a lot more micro-targeting with Hispanic groups,? Navarro said. ?With what we see today, I would say that President Obama is just off enough with enough groups where the lead he enjoyed with John McCain has gone away.?

Navarro was speaking at a briefing hosted by the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials at the National Press Club Tuesday morning. The briefing focused on both Latino politicians and the Latino vote in the 2012 presidential race.

Obama leads Romney 70 percent to 25 percent among Latino likely voters nationally, according to an NBC/WSJ/Telemundo poll released before Monday night?s presidential debate. This is an improvement for Obama over his 67 percent to 31 percent lead among Latinos in the 2008 election against Sen. John McCain.

Romney, however, seems to have flipped the script in Florida. Obama led McCain 57 percent to 42 percent among Hispanics in the Sunshine State in 2008. It was the first time a majority of Latino voters in Florida voted for a Democratic presidential nominee since at least 1988, when exit polls were first conducted in the state.

Democratic strategist Maria Cardona thinks Obama could regain an edge among Latino voters in Florida because of the increasing youthfulness of the Hispanic population there.

?A lot of the Cubans there are a lot younger, so the [Cuban dictator] Fidel [Catro] issue is not the only issue,? Cardona said. ?The race today is absolutely incredibly tight. In Florida, specifically, if President Obama can focus on the Hispanic vote successfully, I think he can take Florida.?

Outside of Florida, Cardona said the Latino vote would deliver electoral results for Obama, particularly in southwest states such as Nevada and New Mexico.

?President Obama today enjoys a lead in the battleground states due to the Latino vote,? Cardona said.

In the eight battleground states where Obama leads according to the Real Clear Politics polling average, only one of them, Nevada, has a more than 6 percent Latino population.

Real Clear Politics has Romney leading Obama among all voters nationally by less than one percentage point.

With the electoral implications of the Latino vote unclear, Navarro had a suggestion for how Latino voters could make their voices heard: ?Some of those are going to have to bite the bullet and move to Ohio and New Hampshire,? she said to laughter.

Navarro also blamed Romney?s deficit among Latinos on Republican outreach efforts not peaking until after the Republican National Convention.

?The lesson learned here is that Hispanic outreach and efforts have to be long term, continuous and strenuous,? Navarro said.

National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Executive Director Arturo Vargas articulated the No. 1 reason both Republicans and Democrats need to stay focused on Latino outreach, saying, ?Every 30 seconds, a Latino turns 18.?

Follow David and follow Gillian on Twitter

Source: http://dailycaller.com/2012/10/23/strategist-romneys-florida-latino-outreach-may-be-all-he-needs/

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Rheumatoid Arthritis - Natural Help

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Rheumatoid arthritis is a potentially debilitating autoimmune condition, generally affecting the hands, feet and wrists causing pain, stiffness and swelling in the joints. It is caused when the immune system attacks the synovium (cell lining inside the joint) and can cause permanent damage to the joint, cartilage and bone. Flare ups can happen without warning leaving the sufferer feeling fatigued and generally unwell.

Rheumatoid arthritis generally first occurs between the ages of 40-70 and is three times more common in women than men. There is evidence to suggest that oestrogen may be involved in the development and progression of the diet although this has not been conclusively proven.

Although there is no known cure orthodox medicine can relieve symptoms or slow the progress of the disease through medication. Joint surgery is sometimes offered to correct joint deformities where appropriate. However there are many natural methods you can try. A supplementation programme using herbs that help stem inflammation and aid the body to detox, along with a natural anti-inflammatory diet, should see some relief in this condition. It is a good idea to keep a journal to record the foods you eat to monitor the severity of your symptoms.

Below are some initial recommendations you can try but by no means an exhaustive list. Please feel free to email me if you would like further advice.

Natural Nutrition
An anti-inflammatory diet is recommended comprising of healthy and wholesome foods. Salmon, sardines, herring, anchovies, flaxseed, hempseed and walnuts are a great source of anti-inflammatory Omega 3s. In addition, other anti-inflammatory fats include extra-virgin olive oil, avocado oil, flaxseed oil, hempseed oil and walnut oil.
Fruits and vegetables high in antioxidants are important. Onions, garlic, peppers and dark leafy greens, blueberries and strawberries contain inflammation-fighting carotenoids, vitamin K and vitamin E.

Refined carbohydrates are pro-inflammatory. Refined flour, sugar and foods high on the glycaemic index exacerbate inflammatory conditions. Omega-6 fats are inflammatory because they are metabolised into hormone-like compounds that actually promote inflammation and are found in corn, safflower, sunflower, peanut and soybean oils. Keep foods as natural and unprocessed as possible.

Add ginger, turmeric, cayenne pepper, garlic and onions to everyday meals to fight inflammation. Pineapple contains bromelain a chemical which prohibits swelling. Celery contains over 25 anti-inflammatory compounds, as well as providing massive amounts of potassium. Try celery seeds either raw or cooked.

Reduce Stress
The mind/body are interlinked and any prolonged negative emotional state can cause physical symptoms and aggravate existing conditions. Eating well will help balance blood sugar and hormone levels which in turn will help to keep your moods stable. Daily meditation can halt any negative mental chatter, lift mood, calm the pain experiencing areas of the brain and boost the coping areas.

Super Supplements
Turmeric ? A great natural pain reliever as well as being anti-inflammatory. Turmeric contains Curcumin and Curcuminoids which act in the same way as prescribed NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs). Turmeric needs to be supplemented to reap the full benefits but can also be used topically and added to food.
Nettles ? I use Nettles A LOT, both personally and in clinic. Nettles amazingly contain boron, magnesium, calcium iron, phosphorus, beta-carotene, vitamins A, B, C and D, protein and silicon. Nature really knew what she was doing when she created this humble plant.
Omega 3s ? Vitally important for a strong immune system and fighting inflammation. There are vegan options available (such as flax) especially important if you are sensitive to animal fats.
Burdock Root ? Burdock contains anti-inflammatory fatty oils and is great as a natural pain reliever.
Aloe Vera ? Aloe Vera boosts the immune system and energy levels, providing the body with the right agents to restore and repair itself.
Omit food intolerances
There are foods that are known to trigger inflammation such as animal fats, dairy, wheat, red meat, alcohol and fried foods. However before embarking on an elimination diet, I recommend having a food sensitivity test, either through a qualified Kinesiologist or a saliva test can be carried out via post.

Fancy a Cuppa?
Many teas contain bioflavonoids and polyphenols that reduce inflammation and limit free radical production and are a natural pain relieving sedative. Try Fennel, Hop, Ginger, Rosemary, Alfalfa and Green Tea.

Exercise
Gentle stretching within your limits (try a Yoga class with a qualified instructor who can guide you) opens the joints and aids the distribution of synovial fluid which lubricates the joints.

Complementary Therapies
Holistic healthcare cannot cure arthritis. It can, however, in certain cases, relieve the symptoms and promote overall health and wellbeing. Always check any therapist is fully qualified and insured and ask whether they have experience in your condition. Most credible therapists will be happy to answer any questions you may have and refer you on if they feel you would be better trying a different modality.

The above is not intended to replace medical advice.

Source: http://www.selfgrowth.com/articles/rheumatoid-arthritis-natural-help

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Tuesday, 23 October 2012

California gasoline prices declining

Published: Oct. 23, 2012 at 7:56 AM

SACRAMENTO, Oct. 23 (UPI) -- Analysis from a U.S. motor group says retail gasoline prices in California are declining but are still more than the national average for regular unleaded.

Refinery and pipeline issues in California prompted some retail centers to shut pumps in mid-October. California Gov. Jerry Brown called for an early switch to a winter blend of gasoline to add more gasoline to the market.

Motorists in major metropolitan areas in California paid more than $4.70 per gallon of regular unleaded gasoline. Motor group AAA reports that a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline in California, on average, cost $4.39 Tuesday, compared to a national average of $3.64. That's down about 3 cents compared to Monday's prices and 20 cents cheaper than last week.

The Los Angeles Times reports that prices are still at historic highs, however.

California lawmakers called on federal regulators to investigate gasoline prices. Most of the refinery issues in the state were expected to be short-lived, however.

Source: http://www.upi.com/Business_News/Energy-Resources/2012/10/23/California-gasoline-prices-declining/UPI-43761350993390/

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Sunday, 21 October 2012

Boy's 'miracle' cure makes 1st Native American saint

Jake Finkbonner was so close to death after flesh-eating bacteria infected him through a cut on his lip that his parents had last rites performed and were discussing donating the 5-year-old's tiny organs.

Jake's 2006 cure from the infection was deemed medically inexplicable by the Vatican, the "miracle" needed to propel a 17th century Native American, Kateri Tekakwitha, on to sainthood. Kateri will be canonized on Sunday along with six other people, the first Native American to receive the honor.

Jake is fully convinced, as is the church, that the prayers his family and community offered to Kateri, including the placement of a relic of the soon-to-be saint on Jake's leg, were responsible for his survival.

Jake, now 12 and an avid basketball player and cross-country runner, will be present at the canonization, along with hundreds of members of his own Lummi tribe from northwest Washington state and reservations across the U.S. and Canada who have converged on Rome to honor one of their own. It's a ceremony the Catholic Church hopes will encourage Native Americans to keep to their Christian faith amid continued resentment among some that Catholicism was imposed on them by colonial-era missionaries centuries ago.

"I believe everybody has a purpose on this earth," Jake's mother Elsa Finkbonner said this week soon after the family arrived in Rome for the ceremony. "I think this Sunday Jake will define his purpose, and that's to make Kateri a saint."

Jake, a poised, lanky kid who just got his braces off, seems perfectly at ease with his role in the whole thing, gracious and grateful to the doctors who performed 29 surgeries to save his life and reconstruct his face.

"It's a really special thing," Jake told The Associated Press, flanked by his parents on a hotel terrace sofa. "We've never been to Rome, and especially meeting the pope? It'll be an experience of a lifetime."

Pope inaugurates 'Year of Faith' amid concerns over rising secularism

Besides Kateri, Pope Benedict XVI will declare another American a saint Sunday, Mother Marianne Cope, a 19th century Franciscan nun from Utica, New York ? near where Kateri lived two centuries earlier ? who cared for lepers exiled to Hawaii's Kalaupapa Peninsula. Another new saint is Pedro Calungsod, a Filipino teenager who was killed in 1672 along with his Jesuit missionary priest by natives resisting their conversion efforts.

'Lily of the Mohawks'
The Catholic Church creates saints to hold up models for the faithful, convinced that their lives ? even lived hundreds of years ago ? are still relevant to today's Catholics. The complicated saint-making procedure requires that the Vatican certify a "miracle" was performed through the intercession of the candidate ? a medically inexplicable cure that can be directly linked to the prayers offered by the faithful. One miracle is needed for beatification, a second for canonization.

In Jake's case, Kateri was already an important figure for Catholics in the Lummi tribe, of which his father Donny is a member. A carved wooden statue sits in the church on the Lummi reservation near Bellingham, Washington, 25 miles south of the Canadian border, where Jake's grandparents worshipped and where Donny remembers being told of Kateri's story as a child.

Known as the "Lily of the Mohawks," Kateri was born in 1656 to a pagan Iroquois father and an Algonquin Christian mother in what is today upstate New York. Her parents and only brother died when she was 4 during a smallpox epidemic that left her badly scarred and with impaired eyesight. She went to live with her uncle, a Mohawk, and was baptized Catholic by Jesuit missionaries. But she was ostracized and persecuted by other natives for her faith, and she died in Canada when she was 24.

Pope tells Christians in Beirut: 'Be peacemakers'

The Rev. Tim Sauer was the Finkbonner's parish priest in Ferndale, Washington ? as well as the visiting pastor on the Lummi reservation ? when Jake cut his lip while playing basketball on Saturday, Feb. 11, 2006. The necrotizing fasciitis bacteria that entered Jake's body through the cut immediately began spreading, and by the time Sauer arrived at Seattle Children's Hospital where Jake was airlifted two days later, Donny and Elsa Finkbonner were preparing to bury their son.

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"At that point, we were desperate, and we were looking for anyone's help that would help our son," Donny said, recalling how doctors had said there wasn't much else for them to do but pray, and that they had come to terms with the possibility that their oldest of three children might not survive the week.

"We wanted Jake back with us desperately," he recalled. "But we were willing to give him up" to God.

Sauer, who performed the last rites ritual on Jake that Wednesday ? four days after he cut his lip ? said he immediately urged the Finkbonners and the congregation back on the reservation to pray to Kateri, thinking their shared Native American heritage and scarring diseases were relevant.

He said he did so first and foremost to save Jake, but also because he thought that Native Americans could use a "boost of faith" if one of their own were held up as a saint. Indigenous Catholics, he said, increasingly find themselves ostracized and criticized on their reservations for embracing and retaining the Christian faith spread by imperial colonizers.

"There's been a growing sense of a return to Native American spirituality on reservations, which are good things, but at the same time along with that has been some criticism that native people should let go of Christianity because that was brought by the 'white man' and should go back to their own native culture entirely," he said.

Pope holds Easter candle at Vatican vigil

He said Kateri represents a perfect model for indigenous Catholics today, someone who resisted the ostracization of fellow natives and kept the faith.

Prayer was all they had left
For the devoutly Catholic Finkbonners, prayer was all they had left after Jake's doctors tried unsuccessfully for two weeks to stop the bacteria's spread. Jake was in a drug-induced coma for most of that time and says he doesn't remember much, a few memories "here and there, not all of it."

"Every day it would seem the news would get worse," Donny recalled. "I remember the last day that we met with the whole group of doctors, Elsa didn't even want to hear. She just got behind me and was holding on."

But rather than bad news, the doctors said the infection had stopped. "It was like a volcano that was erupting, and they opened him up and it was gone. It had stopped. It was a pretty amazing day," Donny said.

Are nuns getting ready to spurn the Vatican?

It took the Finkbonners several years to realize that the turning point had come a day after a friend of the family ? a nun named after Kateri ? had visited them in the hospital, prayed with them and placed a relic of the soon-to-be saint on Jake's leg.

"It took years for us to look at the calendar and recall that this is the day she came, this is the day she put the relic on, this is the day the infection stopped," Elsa said. "As the years of the investigation have gone on, little bits and pieces of puzzle seem to fall into place, and that's where it all makes sense now as to why Jake's story turned out so big."

Jake, who bears the scars of his ordeal, seems all too happy to be the center of attention this weekend. But he seems keen to move on from his celebrity. He has basketball tryouts when he gets back home and his studies ? he wants to be a plastic surgeon when he grows up. "Kateri was placed on this earth, and she has interceded on many people's behalf, she has defined her purpose," Elsa said. "I think Jake has bigger, larger plans in store for him."

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49485707/ns/world_news-europe/

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Saturday, 20 October 2012

Rep. Joe Walsh's Science Fiction on Abortion

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Locked in tight race, Obama and Romney trade jokes at dinner

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Locked in a tense race with time running out, President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney took time off to exchange light-hearted jabs and make fun of each other on Thursday in a joint appearance at a high-profile charity dinner.

Two days after a brutal debate in which they exchanged verbal blows and stalked each other on stage, Obama and Romney greeted each other warmly, dressed formally in white tie and tails.

But the combativeness of the campaign trail was ever-present as the two foes gave back-to-back speeches at the 67th annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner.

Romney, speaking first, said Obama, who wants to increase taxes on the wealthy to help fund government programs, must have had some thoughts as he looked out at the crowd of wealthy people at the dinner.

"You have to wonder what he's thinking: So little time, so much to redistribute," he said.

Obama, when it was his turn, made fun of Romney's vast wealth.

"Earlier I went shopping at some stores in Midtown. I understand Governor Romney went shopping for some stores in Midtown," he said.

The Al Smith dinner is a glittering affair at the Waldcrf-Astoria hotel where New York's high society dined on poached lobster and rack of lamb and contributed $5 million for various children's charities.

Obama and Romney, facing a third and final debate Monday in Florida, sat close to each other at the dinner, separated only by Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York who spoke at both the Republican and Democratic conventions in late August and early September.

The event is an annual speaking opportunity for presidents or president aspirants to test their comic skills with self-deprecating jokes usually written up by clever speechwriters.

Obama made light of his much-panned performance at his first debate with Romney on October 3. He said at the second debate, where he was judged the winner, he had been well-rested because of the "nice long nap I had at the first debate."

BIDEN A TARGET OF BOTH

Romney also was self-deprecating, noting that the way he prepared for the debate was to "refrain from alcohol for 65 years." As a practicing Mormon, the former Massachusetts governor abstains from alcohol.

Obama, who frequently credits himself with ordering the mission that led to the death of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in 2011, noted that the last debate is about foreign policy.

"Spoiler alert: We got bin Laden!" he said.

Romney tweaked Obama on the high jobless rate, saying its recent small decline meant only one thing: "You're better off now than you were four weeks ago."

Obama said he and Romney have some things in common, like their unusual middle names. Romney's is Mitt. "I wish I could use my middle name," said Obama, whose middle name is Hussein.

If there was one thing they had in common, it was their ability to make fun of Vice President Joe Biden, Obama's gaffe-prone No. 2.

Obama said he sometimes hears that he is getting old and has lost a step and when he does, he says, "Settle down, Joe, I'm trying to run a Cabinet meeting."

Romney said when Biden speaks, it usually is to Romney's benefit, so much so that whenever his remarks are on TV it should be accompanied by a recorded message like those used in campaign ads: "I'm Mitt Romney, and I approve this message."

Obama got in a jab at the Republicans' use of Hollywood legend Clint Eastwood at Romney's convention. Eastwood was panned for talking to an empty chair on stage as if Obama was sitting in it.

"Please take your seats," Obama told the crowd, "or else Clint Eastwood will yell at them."

The tone of the evening was set with introductory remarks by Al Smith IV, who could not resist teasing Romney for saying at the debate that he sorted through "binders full of women" in trying to put together a diverse cabinet as governor of Massachusetts.

"I want to say a special welcome to all of the accomplished women here tonight. It's good to see you made it out of those binders," Smith said to laughter.

The dinner started in 1945 in tribute to a former Democratic New York governor Smith, who lost the 1928 presidential election to Republican Herbert Hoover in a landslide.

Among the 1,600 guests were representatives from two of New York's major industries - media and Wall Street money. Spotted in the crowd were ABC television talk show host Katie Couric and Fox News executive Roger Ailes, as well as Steve Schwartzman, chief executive of private equity firm Blackstone Group, and Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan.

(Editing by Bill Trott)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/locked-tight-race-obama-romney-trade-jokes-dinner-030738770--sector.html

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Friday, 19 October 2012

Meeting reviews safety measures in Ha Long Bay | Vktour travel blog

Meeting reviews safety measures in Ha Long Bay


Oct 19

Ha Long Bay rescue agencies met with the People?s Committee of Quang Ninh Province on October 15 to review safety and injury prevention measures, following a spate of waterway accidents.

The two agencies currently in charge of bay rescues ? the Ha Long Bay Management Board Rescue Centre and the local Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism?s Centre of Diving and Rescue for Underwater Sports ? have both been labelled ineffective due to lack of staff and equipment.
The Quang Ninh Province?s Port Department said the provincial People?s Committee needs to provide more resources for the agencies in charge and must step up cooperation between local authorities and concerned provinces to ensure safety on the bay.

The Waterway Traffic Police of Quang Ninh Province suggested increased inspections of waterway vehicles in ports and increased management over fishing villages, beaches and areas where boats stay, to ensure they are meeting required safety standards.

Other agencies also asked the People?s Committee to approve the plan to step up rescue work and fire prevention for Ha Long Bay to 2015, with a vision until 2020.

Vu Thi Thu Thuy, Deputy Chairwoman of the provincial People?s Committee said the committee had asked relevant local agencies to develop on-site rescue plans as an urgent solution.

She added that the committee was developing long-term plans to organise training courses to raise the awareness and capacity of those in the tourism sector, especially boat operators.
Source: VNA

Source: http://www.vktour.com/blog/meeting-reviews-safety-measures-in-ha-long-bay/

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Thursday?s Political Ledes (TIME)

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Elevated indoor carbon dioxide impairs decision-making performance

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Overturning decades of conventional wisdom, researchers at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have found that moderately high indoor concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) can significantly impair people's decision-making performance. The results were unexpected and may have particular implications for schools and other spaces with high occupant density.

"In our field we have always had a dogma that CO2 itself, at the levels we find in buildings, is just not important and doesn't have any direct impacts on people," said Berkeley Lab scientist William Fisk, a co-author of the study, which was published in Environmental Health Perspectives online last month. "So these results, which were quite unambiguous, were surprising." The study was conducted with researchers from State University of New York (SUNY) Upstate Medical University.

On nine scales of decision-making performance, test subjects showed significant reductions on six of the scales at CO2 levels of 1,000 parts per million (ppm) and large reductions on seven of the scales at 2,500 ppm. The most dramatic declines in performance, in which subjects were rated as "dysfunctional," were for taking initiative and thinking strategically. "Previous studies have looked at 10,000 ppm, 20,000 ppm; that's the level at which scientists thought effects started," said Berkeley Lab scientist Mark Mendell, also a co-author of the study. "That's why these findings are so startling."

While the results need to be replicated in a larger study, they point to possible economic consequences of pursuing energy efficient buildings without regard to occupants. "As there's a drive for increasing energy efficiency, there's a push for making buildings tighter and less expensive to run," said Mendell. "There's some risk that, in that process, adverse effects on occupants will be ignored. One way to make sure occupants get the attention they deserve is to point out adverse economic impacts of poor indoor air quality. If people can't think or perform as well, that could obviously have adverse economic impacts."

The primary source of indoor CO2 is humans. While typical outdoor concentrations are around 380 ppm, indoor concentrations can go up to several thousand ppm. Higher indoor CO2 concentrations relative to outdoors are due to low rates of ventilation, which are often driven by the need to reduce energy consumption. In the real world, CO2 concentrations in office buildings normally don't exceed 1,000 ppm, except in meeting rooms, when groups of people gather for extended periods of time.

In classrooms, concentrations frequently exceed 1,000 ppm and occasionally exceed 3,000 ppm. CO2 at these levels has been assumed to indicate poor ventilation, with increased exposure to other indoor pollutants of potential concern, but the CO2 itself at these levels has not been a source of concern. Federal guidelines set a maximum occupational exposure limit at 5,000 ppm as a time-weighted average for an eight-hour workday.

Fisk decided to test the conventional wisdom on indoor CO2 after coming across two small Hungarian studies reporting that exposures between 2,000 and 5,000 ppm may have adverse impacts on some human activities.

Fisk, Mendell, and their colleagues, including Usha Satish at SUNY Upstate Medical University, assessed CO2 exposure at three concentrations: 600, 1,000 and 2,500 ppm. They recruited 24 participants, mostly college students, who were studied in groups of four in a small office-like chamber for 2.5 hours for each of the three conditions. Ultrapure CO2 was injected into the air supply and mixing was ensured, while all other factors, such as temperature, humidity, and ventilation rate, were kept constant. The sessions for each person took place on a single day, with one-hour breaks between sessions.

Although the sample size was small, the results were unmistakable. "The stronger the effect you have, the fewer subjects you need to see it," Fisk said. "Our effect was so big, even with a small number of people, it was a very clear effect."

Another novel aspect of this study was the test used to assess decision-making performance, the Strategic Management Simulation (SMS) test, developed by SUNY. In most studies of how indoor air quality affects people, test subjects are given simple tasks to perform, such as adding a column of numbers or proofreading text. "It's hard to know how those indicators translate in the real world," said Fisk. "The SMS measures a higher level of cognitive performance, so I wanted to get that into our field of research."

The SMS has been used most commonly to assess effects on cognitive function, such as by drugs, pharmaceuticals or brain injury, and as a training tool for executives. The test gives scenarios?for example, you're the manager of an organization when a crisis hits, what do you do??and scores participants in nine areas. "It looks at a number of dimensions, such as how proactive you are, how focused you are, or how you search for and use information," said Fisk. "The test has been validated through other means, and they've shown that for executives it is predictive of future income and job level."

Data from elementary school classrooms has found CO2 concentrations frequently near or above the levels in the Berkeley Lab study. Although their study tested only decision making and not learning, Fisk and Mendell say it is possible that students could be disadvantaged in poorly ventilated classrooms, or in rooms in which a large number of people are gathered to take a test. "We cannot rule out impacts on learning," their report says.

The next step for the Berkeley Lab researchers is to reproduce and expand upon their findings. "Our first goal is to replicate this study because it's so important and would have such large implications," said Fisk. "We need a larger sample and additional tests of human work performance. We also want to include an expert who can assess what's going on physiologically."

Until then, they say it's too early to make any recommendations for office workers or building managers. "Assuming it's replicated, it has implications for the standards we set for minimum ventilation rates for buildings," Fisk said. "People who are employers who want to get the most of their workforce would want to pay attention to this."

###

DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory: http://www.lbl.gov

Thanks to DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 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/124604/Elevated_indoor_carbon_dioxide_impairs_decision_making_performance

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Get your checkbook out - you've come last, S.League says

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - As if a rock-bottom finish in Singapore's S.League was not bad enough, the city-state's soccer bosses are now planning to punish the weakest team further with fines, according to a local newspaper.

Under a new "carrot-and-stick" approach, while the reward for winning the Singaporean title was being boosted, five-figure penalties were to be introduced for make-weights, TODAY newspaper reported on Wednesday.

The team that finishes last in the 13-team league next season will face a 50,000 Singapore dollar (25,428 pounds) penalty, while the 12th-placed side will be S$30,000 worse off.

"We hope these - stiff penalties, not just a slap on the wrist - will inspire clubs to do well," S.League boss Lim Chin told the paper.

"'Competitive' and 'interesting' were the two key words for us in deciding on the initiatives for the league next year and, while the S.League is not ready for a promotion-relegation system, we want every team to give their best," he added, explaining the unusual tough-love approach.

The Singapore Football Association was unavailable for comment when contacted by Reuters.

Fans' reaction in Singapore has ranged from incredulity to outrage, with a number saying the fines would be counter-productive and tantamount to kicking a man while he is down.

But Lim said the change would be "better for the league than just sticking to what we've had before.

"We think the quantum of the penalties is painful enough to force teams to make an effort to do well, while not big enough to force clubs to sit out the league," he added.

"Having said that, we will allow clubs to make phased payments out of their subsidies in the following year."

(Reporting by Ossian Shine; Editing by John O'Brien)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/checkbook-youve-come-last-league-says-074320674--sow.html

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