Friday 31 May 2013

Soccer training improves heart health of men with type 2 diabetes

May 30, 2013 ? A new study from the Copenhagen Centre for Team Sport and Health at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, demonstrates that soccer training improves heart function, reduces blood pressure and elevates exercise capacity in patients with type 2 diabetes. Soccer training also reduces the need for medication.

The study, recently published in Medicine & Science in Sports and Exercise, investigated the effects of soccer training, consisting of small-sided games (5v5), on 21 men with type 2 diabetes, aged 37-60 years.

Soccer training makes the heart ten years younger

"We discovered that soccer training significantly improved the flexibility of the heart and furthermore, that the cardiac muscle tissue was able to work 29% faster. This means that after three months of training, the heart had become 10 years 'younger'," explains Medical Doctor, PhD Student, Jakob Friis Schmidt, who co-authored the study alongside with PhD student, Thomas Rostgaard Andersen. He adds:

"Many type 2 diabetes patients have less flexible heart muscles which is often one of the first signs of diabetes' effect on cardiac function, increasing the risk of heart failure."

Advanced ultrasound scanning of the heart also demonstrated that the heart's contraction phase was improved and that the capacity of the heart to shorten was improved by 23% -- a research result that had not been reported with other types of physical activity.

Blood pressure greatly reduced

At the start of the study, 60 percent of the participants had too high blood pressure and had been prescribed one or more pressure reducing medications. Soccer training reduced the systolic and diastolic blood pressure by 8 mmHg, which is greater than the achievements of prior training studies. These effects are as pronounced as those achieved by taking high blood pressure pills and the need for medication was significant reduced.

Great functional improvements

The study also showed that the participants' maximal oxygen uptake was increased by 12% and that their intermittent exercise capacity was elevated by 42%. "An improved physical condition reduces the risk for other illnesses associated with type 2 diabetes and makes it easier to get along with daily tasks and maintain a physically active life" says Thomas Rostgaard.

Professor Jens Bangsbo, head of the Copenhagen Centre for Team Sport and Health at University of Copenhagen, adds that, "The results of the study, coupled with participants' interest in continuing to play after the study, show that soccer has a great potential to help diabetic patients. This does not only gain the patients, but also contribute socio-economically."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/7XkBNXWbwFw/130530111311.htm

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Terror fears keep toxic plants hidden from public

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Until the local fertilizer company in West, Texas, blew up last month and demolished scores of homes, many in that town of 2,800 didn't know what chemicals were stored alongside the railroad tracks or how dangerous they were. Even rescue workers didn't know what they were up against.

"We never thought of an explosive potential," said Dr. George Smith, the EMS director who responded to the factory fire by running to a nearby nursing home to prepare for a possible chemical spill.

Firefighters feared that tanks of liquid ammonia would rupture. But while they hosed down those tanks to keep them cool, a different chemical ? a few tons of ammonium nitrate ? exploded with the force of a small earthquake.

Smith and his colleagues should have known that ammonium nitrate was also a significant hazard. Neighbors should have known, too.

Around the country, hundreds of buildings like the one in West store some type of ammonium nitrate. They sit in quiet fields and by riverside docks, in business districts and around the corner from schools, hospitals and day care centers.

By law, this shouldn't be a mystery. Yet fears of terrorism have made it harder than ever for homeowners to find out what dangerous chemicals are hidden nearby. Poor communication can also keep rescue workers in the dark about the risks they face.

And some records are so shoddy that rescuers could not rely on them to help save lives.

That reality is reflected in a monthlong effort by The Associated Press to compile public records on hazardous chemicals stored across America. Drawing upon data from 28 states, the AP found more than 120 facilities within a potentially devastating blast zone of schoolchildren, the elderly and the infirm.

At least 60 facilities reported to state regulators as having about as much or more ammonium nitrate than the 540,000 pounds West Fertilizer Co. said it had at some point last year. The AP contacted 20 of the facilities individually to confirm the information, and three companies disputed the records. Some of the facilities stored the chemical in solid form, which is among the most dangerous.

Exactly how many other facilities exist nationwide is a mystery.

Ammonium nitrate is an important industrial fertilizer and mining explosive that, stored correctly, is stable and safe. But industrial history is dotted with dozens of deadly accidents involving the chemical.

Before Texas, the most recent incident occurred at a fertilizer factory in Toulouse, France, in 2001. An explosion killed 31, prompting France to pass a law requiring tougher regulations on the chemical.

Texas investigators still don't know what caused the fire that triggered the West explosion, but the devastation was a reminder of the chemical's power. Anti-government terrorist Timothy McVeigh used a truckload of ammonium nitrate to destroy the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995.

Because of that explosive potential, if a fire were to break out at an ammonium nitrate company, everyone within a quarter- to a half-mile radius could be at risk, according to scientific papers. Debris from the Texas explosion landed more than two miles away.

In the states that provided verifiable data, the AP's analysis found more than 600,000 people who live within a quarter-mile of a facility, a potential blast zone if as little as 190 tons of ammonium nitrate is detonated. More send their children to school or have family in hospitals in those blast zones.

More often than not, census data show, the danger zones are middle-class or poor neighborhoods.

In the western Michigan farming town of Shelby, the Rev. Ruth D. Fitzgerald said she walks by the local branch of the Helena Chemical Co. every day. Her church is just around the corner.

The building doesn't look like a factory, she said, so she never thought about what was there. State records show that the company, which sells fertilizer to large farms, orchards and golf courses, reported storing as much as 1 million pounds of ammonium nitrate on any given day last year.

"I don't have any understanding of this at all," Fitzgerald said.

Recently, an abandoned house caught fire a half a block away from the chemical company, said Tim Horton, a real estate agent who sits on the local hospital board and the Shelby Area Chamber of Commerce.

Horton also didn't know how much ammonium nitrate was there: "I would say people don't know and don't care."

"Ignorance is bliss," he said.

And that's in a state where officials make the information available.

More than a half-dozen others, including Ohio, Connecticut, Hawaii, Idaho and South Carolina, refused to provide such information to the AP, citing the risk of terrorist attacks and their interpretations of federal law. Others, such as West Virginia, said the AP had to review paper records in person or request records one by one.

The result is a peculiarity of the post-9/11 age: Statistically, Americans are more likely to be hurt from chemical or industrial accidents like the one in Texas than from terrorist attacks like the one in Boston. Yet information intended to keep people safe is concealed in the name of keeping people safe.

Since the 1980s, states have been required under the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act to tell people where dangerous chemicals are stored and how much is nearby.

That law followed a chemical leak in Bhopal, India, that killed more than 1,700 people and another in West Virginia that led to an evacuation. Ammonium nitrate has been responsible for some of the largest industrial disasters in history. In fact, what remains the worst industrial accident in the nation's history was an ammonium nitrate-triggered explosion in 1947 that killed more than 570 people in Texas City, Texas, and injured about 5,000.

But times have changed. Fears of chemical spills have given way to fears of terrorism.

In Hawaii, for example, officials said people must prove a "need to know" before they can obtain information. Though the state did not respond to a request for an explanation, the policy echoed others that cited a 2007 federal law intended to protect chemical plants from terrorist attacks. But the need-to-know requirement does not apply to the data submitted for Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know, said Bob Stephan, a former Homeland Security Department assistant secretary who was in charge of the U.S. government's chemical facility anti-terrorism program from 2007-09.

"They are giving you incorrect information or incorrect rationale for not providing the data," Stephan said.

Under Hawaii's interpretation of the law, people who want information about specific chemical facilities near their homes are qualified to see it. But that presupposes they already know enough to ask. Clarence Martin of the state's Hazard Evaluation and Emergency Response Office said people deserve to know what's in their neighborhoods.

But, he added, "I'm not going to let you tell them."

Even when the information is available, though, it's not always accurate. Years of lax oversight and scant enforcement have resulted in shoddy records. Hundreds of companies listed approximate or inaccurate amounts of dangerous chemicals, not just ammonium nitrate.

For instance, data from Louisiana said a Jimmy Sanders Inc. facility stored nearly 50 million pounds of ammonium nitrate. But the company said it never had any at all.

Others misidentified their locations. One plant in Tucson, Ariz., listed an ambiguous address ("end of cement plant road") and a geographic coordinate so off base that the Environmental Protection Agency's reporting software flagged the facility as being in a different county.

Arkansas reported that the Polk County Farmers Association stored 50,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate in the rural town of Mena. But the store's manager, Paul Stanley, said it had been moved to a facility about three miles outside of town years ago.

"I'm happy that it's not in town," he said, "because people don't understand it and they jump to conclusions."

Wisconsin documents showed that the C. Reiss Coal Co.'s facility had stored tons of ammonium nitrate in a facility in Sheboygan last year. But people would be hard pressed to use that information when deciding where to buy a home or send their kids to school. That's because state officials say the facility is inactive and should not have been on the list.

The fertilizer building that exploded in West had been there since 1962. As the years passed, a nursing home, school and apartment buildings sprung up nearby. Townspeople thought little of the facility; it was as common a sight in the farming community as a tractor driving down the road.

The company filed the required reports listing the hazardous chemicals on site. There's no indication that the documents were incorrect. But the county's emergency planners had not read them.

The Monroe County Co-Op in Aberdeen, Miss., stored as much as 1 million pounds last year, according to state records. But David Hodges, the store manager, said he had about half that on site and has sold it for about 50 years without a problem.

"I've been here, oh, 34, 35 years, and it's always been there," said Larry Middleton, a retired English teacher who lives up the street and visits to buy weed remover and snake repellent.

Horton said the same about the building in Shelby. Many townspeople have lived there all their lives, he said, and the fertilizer has been there, too. Though he didn't think most people knew the explosive potential, he said he feared that public knowledge of the building's contents would attract terrorists.

"I can't predict when an accident is going to happen. It just happens," he said. "Terrorists are actively seeking ways to harm us."

Behavioral scientists call this "probability neglect": People are far more likely to overreact to emotional, extremely unlikely events such as terrorism than to address potential problems that are far more likely to occur.

What's more, people are more afraid of risks brought on by outsiders, like terrorists, than threats closer to home. In experiments, people were more outraged by the thought of being exposed to radiation from nuclear waste than from radon in their own basements ? even when they were told the danger was the same and the likelihood of radon exposure was much higher.

"It's been here all this time," Middleton said, "and nothing has happened."

___

Gillum, Cappiello and Associated Press writers Matt Apuzzo and Stephen Braun reported from Washington; Plushnick-Masti reported from Houston.

___

Contact the Washington investigative team at DCinvestigations(at)ap.org. Follow Gillum on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jackgillum . Follow Plushnick-Masti on Twitter at https://twitter.com/RamitMastiAP .

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/terror-fears-keep-toxic-plants-hidden-public-071058872.html

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Internet sensation Grumpy Cat to star in upcoming film

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Grumpy Cat, who won fame on the Internet for her permanent scowl, will be getting Hollywood treatment in an upcoming film, the feline's manager Ben Lashes said in an email.

Grumpy Cat, whose real name is Tarder Sauce, went viral last year after the brother of owner Tabatha Bundesen posted a photo of the cat on the user-submitted social news site Reddit.

The film will be produced by Broken Road Productions, which has been behind such films as the Kevin James' 2009 comedy "Paul Blart: Mall Cop," and Adam Sandler's 2011 comedy "Jack and Jill."

Photos of Grumpy Cat, whose scowl Bundesen said was caused by feline dwarfism, gained a following with ironic user-generated captions, like "I had fun once ... it was awful" and "Of all the nine lives I've lived ... this is the worst."

Grumpy Cat is no stranger to cameras, having already appeared on U.S. morning show "Good Morning America" and CNN's Anderson Cooper's daytime talk show, "Anderson Live."

Grumpy Cat will join the ranks of Hollywood's other four-legged furry A-listers such as Uggie the dog from Oscar-winning film "The Artist" and Buddy the basketball-playing Golden Retriever from 1997's "Air Bud."

(Reporting by Eric Kelsey; editing by Piya Sinha-Roy and Andrew Hay)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/internet-sensation-grumpy-cat-star-upcoming-film-224734755.html

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Germany's uncomfortable role as Europe's 'economic police'

Since World War II, Germany has preferred to stay out of international leadership roles. But the eurocrisis has put the country at Europe's head ? with all the criticism that entails.

By Sara Miller Llana,?Staff writer / May 16, 2013

German Chancellor Angela Merkel attends a discussion panel on 'making Europe strong' during the Europe forum conference in Berlin Thursday. Germany has consciously avoided a leadership role in Europe since the end of World War II, but the eurocrisis has put it in the limelight ? with all the criticism that brings.

Gero Breloer/AP

Enlarge

Americans took a leading role in the world in the post-World War II era. And today they are used to being unpopular, yet called upon when needed.

Skip to next paragraph Sara Miller Llana

Europe Bureau Chief

Sara Miller Llana?moved to Paris in April 2013 to become the Monitor's Europe Bureau?Chief. Previously she was the?paper's?Latin America Bureau Chief, based in Mexico City, from 2006 to 2013.

Recent posts

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Germans in the postwar era, on the other hand, have preferred to blend into the background.

But amid Europe's sovereign debt crisis, as Germany's healthy economy has put it at the head of the 27-member European Union, that's been proving impossible. And now Germans are dealing with the criticism that accompanies being a regional ? if unwilling ? hegemon.

While a recent Pew poll shows Germany to be considered by many countries to be the most trustworthy nation in Europe, it has also accrued new enemies far and wide, with Greeks burning German flags or picketing with signs of German Chancellor Angela Merkel dressed in Nazi uniform. There have even been?claims from France that Germans are out to rule the Continent.

?We have made a lot of commitment to help those people,? says Markus, a musical theater stage producer, in Berlin?s Alexanderplatz, a public square and major transportation hub in Germany?s capital Berlin. ?It?s really unfair.?

It?s also untrue ? at least the part about Germany wanting continental dominion, say German and European observers. Instead, the avoidance of tough positions in foreign policy, so Germany is not led into a moral dilemma, is ingrained in the postwar mentality, they say.

?There is no appetite for domination. Germany has been pushed into this position by default,? says Jan Techau, director of Carnegie Europe in Brussels for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. ?There is no ambition to shape the continent in the image of Germany.?

?Germans want to be liked by the rest of the world,? says Michael Wohlgemuth, director of Open Europe Berlin. ?Germany feels uneasy in its new powerful role. We don?t want to be leaders of Europe.?

Outside the US embassy in Berlin, Erkan Arikan says that Germany is being unfairly maligned in Europe. But he says he can also laugh it off, as a German of Turkish descent in a multicultural Germany that has nothing to do with the 1930s.

He says that he can see some parallels between the hegemonic positions of Germany and the US today, but there is a limit. ?The US is still the world police for everyone; Germany doesn?t want to be the focus,? he says. ?But maybe it?s becoming the economic police of Europe.?

It?s a role that many Germans might feel uncomfortable playing, especially with the bad will that can breed.

If Americans don?t like the term ?ugly American,? Germans like it even less.

Ulrike Gu?rot of the European Council of Foreign Relations says when she travels around the country and talks to everyday Germans, they are starting to ask, ?Are we responsible for this youth unemployment in Spain? There is an uneasiness they they are just starting to feel,? she says. ?They don?t want to be the ?ugly German.??

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/bQa_gfaDmsk/Germany-s-uncomfortable-role-as-Europe-s-economic-police

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Thursday 30 May 2013

Failed Long-Shot Presidential Candidates Like Michele Bachmann Tend to Disappear

Do you remember Jim Gilmore? Probably not. Failed dark-horse presidential candidates don?t usually make much of an imprint on the nation?s memory. But that doesn?t mean they ceased to exist the day they leave a race. So, what exactly happens to someone?like Rep. Michele Bachmann?once they leave the back corner of the national stage? A lot of the time, their whole political career unfurls, or they seek more-lucrative careers in the private sector. See below for recent examples:

?

Former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore answers questions on his blog after formally announcing his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination in 2007 in Des Moines, Iowa.?(AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Jim Gilmore

Who? Former governor of Virginia who ran in the 2008 Republican primaries.

Highlight of his campaign: Announcing his candidacy via webcast. "This is going to be something unique in American politics and something I think is the wave of the future, which is the chance to talk directly to the people as we develop the campaign through the Internet," Gilmore told The Washington Post at the time. While he was right about the power of Internet outreach, he was vastly wrong about his prospects for the executive.

Lowlight: Coining the term "Rudy McRomney" to describe Rudy Giuliani, John McCain, and Mitt Romney, the Republican front-runners.

What happened to him: After backing out of the presidential race, Gilmore decided to run for the Senate in Virginia. He lost to Mark Warner, 65 percent to 34 percent.


(AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Chris Dodd

Who??Senior senator from Connecticut who ran in the 2008 Democratic primaries.

Highlight of his campaign:?Appearing on the Daily Show, and comparing the presidential race to then-relevant TV show American Idol.

Lowlight: Receiving 0 percent of the vote in the Iowa Caucus.

What happened to him: He?s not doing all that bad, actually. In 2011 he left the Senate to become the chief lobbyist at the Motion Picture Association of America, effectively increasing his salary eightfold.


Republican presidential hopeful Bob Dornan?announces it is 12:01 p.m. and time to announce his presidential bid at the birthplace of the Republican Party in Exeter, N.H., in 1995.?(AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Bob Dornan

Who??Actor-turned-congressman from California who ran in the 1996 Republican primary. (He once punched a fellow congressman on the House floor.)

Highlight of his campaign: Insisting on showing a photo of a grandchild during a television debate.

Lowlight: This didn?t happen during his run for presidency, but in 1986, as a House member, he did call a Soviet television commentator a ?disloyal, betraying little Jew who sits there on television claiming that he is somehow or other a newsman.'' He apologized, saying it was inelegant phrasing, but that type of talk tends to stick with a person.

What happened to him: After failing in the presidential bid, he lost his congressional seat to a Democrat, Loretta Sanchez. He said she won because of votes from undocumented residents. He tried again for Congress in 1998 and 2004.


Republican presidential hopeful Alan Keyes, a conservative commentator, gestures during the Des Moines Register Republican presidential debate in Johnston, Iowa, in 2007. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)?

Alan Keyes

Who??A Reagan-era ambassador to the United Nations who ran for president in 1996, 2000, and 2008. We?ll focus on the 2008 run here.

Highlight of his campaign: Interrupting a debate moderator for not calling on him enough to answer questions, saying, ?Excuse me, do I have to raise my hand to get a question??

Lowlight: Winning four delegates for the nominating convention. (Hey, it?s better than zero.)

What happened to him: He parted with the Republican Party in April 2008, after losing the nomination. He later joined the ?birther? movement, filing a lawsuit challenging Barack Obama's citizenship.


Former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson starts his New Hampshire campaign for president at a house party in Manchester, N.H., in April 2007. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)?

Tommy Thompson

Who??The 42nd governor from Wisconsin serving from 1987 to 2001, and Republican presidential candidate in 2008.

Highlight of his campaign: In a campaign marked by gaffes and low expectations, he had few?highlights. He did win a little-known straw poll at the Kirkwood Community College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. But, he came in sixth at the Ames Straw Poll, and shortly thereafter dropped out.

Lowlight: In a 2007 presidential debate, moderator Chris Matthews asked Thompson whether a private employer should have the right to fire a worker for being gay. Thompson responded saying that it should be ?left up to the individual business.? He called back to CNN a day later to say that he hadn?t heard the question correctly and that no, there should not be discrimination in the workplace.

What happened to him: Thompson was the Republican nominee in 2012 for the Wisconsin Senate seat, but he lost to Tammy Baldwin.


Republican president candidate Arlen Specter, R-Pa., signs autographs during a campaign visit in Exeter, N.H., in 1995.?(AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Arlen Specter

Who??Senator from Pennsylvania for 30 years, mostly as a Republican, but finished as a Democrat.

Highlight of his campaign: Though not expected to win, Specter made a splash with his presidential announcement speech, in which he criticized the far right of his party. Example: ?When Ralph Reed says a pro-choice Republican isn't qualified to be our president--I say the Republican Party will not be blackmailed. I and millions of other pro-choice Republicans--will not be disenfranchised.?

Lowlight: By attacking the Far Right, Specter foreshadowed the type of dissatisfaction that would cause him to become a Democrat in 2009 after 44 years as an elected Republican.

What happened to him: Specter?s political career lasted for a long time after his presidential run, winning Senate elections in 2006 and 2010. Due to complications from non-Hodgkins lymphoma, he died in October 2012.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/failed-long-shot-presidential-candidates-michele-bachmann-tend-130937801.html

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Woman working at Costco killed by police

Woman working as demonstrator at a Costco store in Virginia was killed Wednesday. Police say the woman threatened Costco employees, then was shot and killed when she came at deputies with a knife and scissors.

By Associated Press / May 30, 2013

A customer enters a Costco store in Shoreline, Wash., in 2011. A woman working at a Costco in northern Virginia was killed Wednesday when she came at deputies with a knife and scissors.

Anthony Bolante/Reuters/File

Enlarge

A female worker at a northern Virginia?Costco?store who authorities say went at two sheriff's deputies with a knife and scissors has been fatally shot.

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The shooting occurred about 3 p.m. Wednesday. Two Loudoun County deputies had been called to respond to a disorderly conduct complaint at the Sterling-area?Costco. Police said the woman was threatening store employees.

Officials say the deputies ordered the woman to drop the weapons, but she advanced on them. Authorities say one deputy used a stun gun on the woman, but it was ineffective.

Police say the second deputy fired several shots, killing the woman. She was identified as 38-year-old Mhai Scott of Sterling.

Authorities say Scott worked for Club Demonstration Services, which provides services to?Costco. The Washington Post reports Scott had been serving pizza.

One deputy was injured. He was treated and released at a local hospital.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/5VLWo_n3MoM/Woman-working-at-Costco-killed-by-police

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Wednesday 29 May 2013

Weightlessness of space used to design better materials for Earth

May 29, 2013 ? Researchers from Northeastern University are among the many scientists helping NASA use the weightlessness of space to design stronger materials here on Earth.

Structural alloys might not sound familiar, but they are an integral part of everyday materials, such as aircraft wings, car bodies, engine blocks, or gas pipelines. These materials are produced through solidification? -- a process similar to the making of ice cubes. "Solidification happens all around us, either naturally, as during the crystallization of familiar snow-flakes in the atmosphere, or in technological processes used to fabricate a host of materials, from the large silicon crystals used for solar panels to the making of almost any human-made object or structure that needs to withstand large forces, like a turbine blade," said Northeastern University Prof. Alain Karma, who was a collaborator in this study.

The transition of a structural alloy from liquid to solid is morphologically unstable, meaning that the interface between solid and liquid evolves from a planar morphology to a non-planar cellular structure during solidification -- essentially, the same instability is responsible for the branched star shape of snow flakes.

But what if you could take gravity out of the mix? Researchers say by observing the solidification process in a microgravity environment -- in this case, the International Space Station -- they were able to study how this morphological instability develops in three dimensions to shape the structure of materials on a micron scale. "Without gravity, there is no buoyancy force to mix the atomic constituents in the melt by fluid flow," said Prof. Karma. "As a result, solidification creates unique, more organized, structures that cannot be observed on earth. Understanding how those structures form in space gives insight for designing lighter and stronger materials that can be made on earth."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/PbmEoHNZO8E/130529133505.htm

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Libraries at the Ready: Helping patrons find the right financial tools ...

Libraries have always been a place for the community to gain information about personal finance. ?However, since 2008, the rules have changed. ?What resources are up-to-date and which ones are still useful? ?Join us for an informative session with Karen Chan, a financial educator and Certified Financial Planner, to learn how to best work with patrons on financial issues and connect them to the resources they need.

Topics covered will include:

  • Handy tools you can share with clients including how to compare loans to identifying assets
  • Financial tips that will benefit you and your patrons
  • Opportunities for libraries to become more involved in providing financial education opportunities to their communities
  • Activities you can use with job clubs

All reference librarians and front line reference desk workers can benefit from this informative session!

REGISTER HERE

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Source: http://rlace.info/2013/05/28/libraries-at-the-ready-helping-patrons-find-the-right-financial-tools-and-resources/

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First passengers back in US after cruise ship fire

Passengers from the Royal Caribbean's Grandeur of the Seas cruise ship, which caught fire during its voyage from Baltimore to the Bahamas, leave a security checkpoint after arriving on a charter flight at Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, Tuesday, May 28, 2013, in Linthicum, Md. Royal Caribbean said the fire occurred early Monday and was extinguished after about two hours with no injuries reported. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Passengers from the Royal Caribbean's Grandeur of the Seas cruise ship, which caught fire during its voyage from Baltimore to the Bahamas, leave a security checkpoint after arriving on a charter flight at Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, Tuesday, May 28, 2013, in Linthicum, Md. Royal Caribbean said the fire occurred early Monday and was extinguished after about two hours with no injuries reported. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

A woman directs passengers from the Royal Caribbean's Grandeur of the Seas cruise ship, which caught fire during its voyage from Baltimore to the Bahamas, to an assistance desk after they arrived on a charter flight at Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, Tuesday, May 28, 2013, in Linthicum, Md. Royal Caribbean said the fire occurred early Monday and was extinguished after about two hours with no injuries reported. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

The fire-damaged exterior of Royal Caribbean's Grandeur of the Seas cruise ship is seen while docked in Freeport, Grand Bahama island, Monday, May 27, 2013. Royal Caribbean said the fire occurred early Monday while on route from Baltimore to the Bahamas on the mooring area of deck 3 and was quickly extinguished. All 2,224 guests and 796 crew were safe and accounted for. (AP Photo/The Freeport News, Jenneva Russell)

In this Monday, May 27, 2013 photo provided by passenger Marc Bell, passengers aboard the Royal Caribbean's Grandeur of the Seas cruise ship muster after a fire broke out during the ship's voyage from Baltimore to the Bahamas. Royal Caribbean said the fire occurred early Monday and was extinguished after about two hours with no injuries reported. (AP Photo/Marc Bell)

In this May 27, 2013 photo provided by passenger Marc Bell, passengers aboard the Royal Caribbean's Grandeur of the Seas cruise ship muster at sunrise after a fire broke out during the ship's voyage from Baltimore to the Bahamas. Royal Caribbean said the fire occurred early Monday and was extinguished after about two hours with no injuries reported. (AP Photo/Marc Bell)

BALTIMORE (AP) ? The first passengers from a Royal Caribbean cruise that was cut short by a fire have arrived back in Baltimore on a charter flight.

Many are praising the crew's handling of the emergency and say they'd be eager to take another Royal Caribbean cruise.

Rebecca Killinger of Carlisle, Pa., says she had no idea how extensive the fire was until the ship got into dock. She says the captain and crew were calm and forthcoming throughout the ordeal, even cracking jokes to lighten the mood. The cruise was her first and she says she'd be happy to take to the seas again.

The 2,200 passengers are being flown into Baltimore on charter planes. The first, carrying more than 100 people, arrived shortly before 1 p.m. Tuesday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-05-28-Cruise%20Ship%20Fire/id-ad7fd1597dfc492fb1c33cd3e9b08b8d

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Tuesday 28 May 2013

Facial Recognition Technology And Drones - Business Insider

60 Minutes, CBS

Lesley Stahl on 60 Minutes

PITTSBURGH (AP) ? The Tsarnaev brothers, like anyone in a crowd of strangers, might have expected to be anonymous.

But when the FBI released blurry, off-angle images of the two suspects in the Boston Marathon bombings, researchers with Carnegie Mellon University's CyLab Biometrics Center began trying to bring them into focus.

In a real-time experiment, the scientists digitally mapped the face of "Suspect 2," turned it toward the camera and enhanced it so it could be matched against a database. The researchers did not know how well they had done until authorities identified the suspect as Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the younger, surviving brother and a student at University of Massachusetts Dartmouth.

"I was like, 'Holy shish kabobs!' " Marios Savvides, director of the CMU Cylab, told the Tribune-Review. "It's not exactly him, but it's also not a random face. It does fit him."

The technology, to be sure, remains in its infancy. Yet cyber experts believe it's only a matter of years ? and research dollars ? until computers can identify almost anyone instantly. Computers then could use electronic data to immediately construct an intimate dossier about the person, much of it from available information online that many people put out there themselves.

From seeing just the image of a face, computers will find its match in a database of millions of driver's license portraits and photos on social media sites. From there, the computer will link to the person's name and details such as their Social Security number, preferences, hobbies, family and friends.

Adding that capability to drones that can fly into spaces where planes cannot ? machines that can track a person moving about and can stay aloft for days ? means that people will give up privacy as well as the concept of anonymity.

"We are accustomed to living in a society where our movements are not tracked from place to place, and it's a big shift to have that happen," said Jennifer Lynch, staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based nonprofit that works to protect digital rights and privacy.

"There's so much data about us in different places that it's absolutely impossible to keep track of it or to delete it. ... Adding facial recognition capabilities to that will destroy anonymity and will create a pretty big chilling effect on how we feel about moving about in society and the choices we make in our lives."

'DECODING THE FACE'

Inside the CyLab at Carnegie Mellon, an off-the-shelf drone with four rotors spins about the room. As it does, a camera looks into each face and sends images to a computer that dissects them into distinct markers that can be matched against a database.

Students working with Savvides are figuring out how to break up appearance into landmarks as unique as a fingerprint and to build a 3-D image from a single picture so it can be matched from different angles.

"The things we can do are endless," said Savvides. "We're basically decoding the face."

For now, the database holds only the images of lab workers and visitors who agree to participate. Savvides said he can envision a day when images collected by tiny cameras embedded in police cruisers and attached to officers' uniforms are matched against a database of wanted criminals. As soon as a driver looks into a rear-view mirror to see an officer pulling up, the person's face could be matched.

That technology does not exist, but the students have built a camera that collects facial identifiers from as far as 60 feet away.

Funded by the Department of Defense's Biometrics Identity Management Agency, the camera could be mounted to the entry point of a military base or embassy to identify visitors before they're close enough to attack.

"We want to push the distance of biometric capture," said Travis McCartney, a project manager with the federal agency in Fairmont, W.Va. "How can we identify folks from longer ranges for purposes of security and to keep our personnel out of harm's way?"

Taken steps further using tiny drones that can fly over public areas and link to databases from social media sites, the technology might sweep down any American street and identify almost anyone instantly. Facebook users upload 2.5 billion images a month, but the company limits public access.

A separate research team at CMU has conducted experiments that matched photos of students on campus with their Facebook profiles ? and then predicted their interests and Social Security numbers.

But when the researchers tried matching surveillance photos of Tsarnaev with the known photos of him released later, the computer had a hard time detecting similarities. Alessandro Acquisti, a professor of information technology at CMU's Heinz College, worked on the experiment and faulted the distance and poor quality of the surveillance equipment.

Technological hurdles such as that are falling away, he said. Every year, camera phones offer better lenses and higher resolutions.

DATABASES GROWING

The databases of identified images grow with the help of social media and retail sites in which users upload their images to try on virtual glasses or hairstyles. Rather than seeking a match among department of motor vehicles portraits, searchers might access dozens of photos from varied angles and settings.

Computational power is growing, too. Scanning through millions of photos with commercial computers takes hours, but government agencies have access to more powerful systems.

"It could happen in the not-so-distant future, and from a behavior perspective, it does raise important/creepy/exciting kinds of questions," Acquisti said.

Not to worry, said Nita Farahany, a Duke University law professor who specializes in digital privacy. The U.S. Constitution will keep the government from peering into homes, and state laws block Peeping Toms.

Market forces, she added, should limit corporations.

"Who will safeguard us against the ubiquitous collection of data by corporations?" Farahany asked. "If the goal of those companies is really to gather information to more precisely target advertisements and product offers to would-be consumers, maybe we have a lot less to worry about than people fear."

___

Online:

http://bit.ly/11WaTqX

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/facial-recognition-technology-and-drones-2013-5

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Ferry capsizes in Malaysian river, some missing

(AP) ? An overloaded ferry capsized Tuesday when it hit rocks in a remote river in Malaysia's Borneo, leaving an unknown number of people missing, Malaysian police said. Some survivors swam ashore.

The vessel was believed to be carrying much more than its recommended limit of 74 passengers, said Bakar Sibau, a district police chief in Malaysia's Sarawak state.

Bakar said there appeared to be dozens of survivors, including many who swam ashore, but he could not give precise figures.

The boat was packed because many are heading to their home villages for a harvest festival holiday that Borneo indigenous tribes will celebrate later this week, Bakar said.

Borneo island is divided among three countries: Indonesian territory in the south, two Malaysian states in the north and tiny Brunei on the north coast.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-05-28-AS-Malaysia-Ferry-Capsizes/id-252cbbc1290a451abef0f582eedfbd78

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Dyslexia In Children: Mom And Daughter Share Their Story Of A Learning Disability Diagnosis

In the fourth installment on our series on families whose children have mental health and learning disabilities, Vanessa, 26, and her mom, Liz, talk about the challenges they faced getting a diagnosis for Vanessa's dyslexia, and her journey to embrace it openly. "We just didn't know what was wrong with me," the aspiring special education teacher says.

The Early Signs
Liz: We have three children, Vanessa is the middle child. Our oldest boy quickly caught on to his ABCs as a preschooler and when Vanessa was the same age, I tried teaching her the alphabet, but she just wouldn't get it. I'd say, "A ? apple, B ? for bat," and she'd just look at me and shake her head. Then she'd look off.

I'd get so frustrated, thinking, What's wrong? Don't you know what these letters are? Then I'd think, She's just not ready to learn yet. She'll be fine; she's free spirited.

What I didn't realize was that she was so frustrated. She was looking at a "B" backwards, or a "C" upside down.

Vanessa: One of the first memories I have is from kindergarten and all the kids would go to the front of the class and read a book in front of our parents, or to each other. All I wanted to do was get up there and read, but I was nowhere near able.

Liz: Her problems continued into first grade, second grade -- she just wasn't getting it. The first "diagnosis" was always, "She's being lazy" or "She just isn't ready yet." It was never, "Maybe there's something wrong; maybe she has a learning disability."

A Real Diagnosis
Liz: Finally, in the third grade one of her teachers [raised the possibility of a learning disability]. And my husband and I were like, "No. Not our child. She's fine!" She was very strong willed and independent, so I thought, She just doesn't want to do this. But they had her tested and, lo and behold, she had dyslexia. I cried, because I felt so guilty for always being so frustrated with her.

Vanessa: I do remember being tested. They brought me into a room and asked me all these weird questions. But what I remember more is being held back -- I went to the same school from preschool through first grade. In second grade I was put in a private school; in third grade I was home schooled; then when I was going back into the public school system, that's when I was held back and when they diagnosed me.

Early Help
Liz: After the diagnosis, everything changed. They decided to put her in "resource" [a class that provides additional, special instruction]. I'm in my 50s and when I was in grammar school, that was the "slow" class, so of course, I thought there would be a stigma. But there was none of that.

Vanessa: I'll never forget my teachers, they sat down with me one-on-one and started from the beginning, going over the alphabet, going over my math, teaching me techniques to know things like tell my "Bs" and my "Ds" apart, because those were the hardest for me. You put your fists together and put your thumbs up and press: you have a "D" on your left hand, and a "B" on your right.

Liz: Vanessa was determined to be in the mainstream class -- she always wanted to be right up there with her peers. All her friends were getting little stars, or medals and she never got one. She would get so frustrated. As she proceeded into 4th and 5th grade, they had honor roll and that was horrible because she wanted to be on it, but she couldn't.

A Mistake?
Vanessa:By the 6th grade, I had caught up to my reading level so they gave me a choice -- You can stay in resource or not. I didn't want to be different so I chose not to. [The schedule] was also structured so that if you went to resource, you lost an elective. For me, that meant losing choir, which was something I was really good at. As a 12-year-old, I was like, I want to go sing and be good at something, not go for this extra help. But I still needed it. I feel like you shouldn't give a 12-year-old that decision.

I think that was one of the biggest mistakes, not being in resource through middle school, high school and my college years. Academically, I wasn't very good. I did make honor roll, but I think it was one time. I was in junior college for four years, then I transferred to a university and I never told anyone about my dyslexia until then.

Coming Out
Vanessa: We were at a school fair at orientation and my mom said, "Vanessa, you really should get involved with the disability center for extra help." She had heard me crying and being upset all those years because my grades weren't really where I wanted them to be. She has always [pushed] me to get the extra help I deserve, but I never wanted to until I transferred to U.C. Santa Cruz. I was 23 years old.

Liz: Again, strong willed.

Vanessa: I joined Eye to Eye (a national organization with local chapters that aims to improve the lives of people with ADHD and learning disabilities). They encouraged me to be open about my learning disability, and to really talk about it.

The lightbulb finally went on. I didn't know all of the accommodations or extra help that was available, because I had never used it. I started using audio tapes and I had a special editor who helped read over long papers. I got my degree in history, and there's a lot of writing, so that was a big help.

Liz: You know, there is a stigma, people who think, She doesn't see things backwards, that's just malarky. I had someone tell me once, "Oh, she's doing it for attention." No. It's not for attention. It's very real.

What's Up Next
Vanessa: I'm working right now -- at Target and I was a nanny -- and I'm applying to get my master's degree to teach special education. That's my passion, that's what I want to do; help other kids who are struggling in school.

I have to pass four tests to be able to teach kids in California and I'm having a hard time finding tutors or extra help [while] not being in school. I took the first one two times and did not pass and just took it for the third time, I studied a little different, and I passed.

Liz: She has to study a lot more than an average person. It has to be totally quet, and she has to be focused, and she has to be on. But she did it! And we're very proud of her.

Vanessa: The hardest thing day-to-day is spelling, especially now when I'm updating my resume and applying to grad school. Texting is hard. Writing things that not even the autocorrect can fix is really frustrating. I'll type it into an [internet browser], then I'll copy the spelling into my phone. It depends on how determined I am to use that word.

I read all the time to try and stay on top of things, but my vocabulary isn't very broad, I'll admit that. I don't know what some things mean, but at this point, I'm not afraid to ask someone "Hey, what does this mean?" It took a long time to be able to do that.

The stigma has to change. It's not a bad thing to have a learning disability, it just means you learn differently. I don't want kids to wait until they're 23 years old to accept their learning disability.

vanessa and liz
A recent photo of Vanessa and Liz.

This conversation has been edited and condensed.

Read more from our "Speak Up for Kids" series:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/27/dyslexia-in-children_n_3327941.html

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Monday 27 May 2013

Spin Zone: Physicists Get 1st Look at Strange Quantum Magnetism

Using super-chilled atoms, physicists have for the first time observed a weird phenomenon called quantum magnetism, which describes the behavior of single atoms as they act like tiny bar magnets.

Quantum magnetism is a bit different from classical magnetism, the kind you see when you stick a magnet to a fridge, because individual atoms have a quality called spin, which is quantized, or in discrete states (usually called up or down). Seeing the behavior of individual atoms has been hard to do, though, because it required cooling atoms to extremely cold temperatures and finding a way to "trap" them.

The new finding, detailed in the May 24 issue of the journal Science, also opens the door to better understanding physical phenomena, such as superconductivity, which seems to be connected to the collective quantum properties of some materials. [Twisted Physics: 7 Mind-Blowing Findings]

Spin science

The research team at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich focused on atoms' spin, because that's what makes magnets magnetic ? all the spins of the atoms in a bar magnet are pointed the same way.

To get a clear view of atoms' spin behaviors, the researchers had to cool potassium atoms to near absolute zero. That way, the random thermal "noise" ? basically background radiation and heat ? didn't spoil the view by jostling the potassium atoms around.

The scientists then created an "optical lattice" ? a crisscrossing set of laser beams. The beams interfere with each other and create regions of high and low potential energy. Neutral atoms with no charge will tend to sit in the lattice's "wells," which are regions of low energy.

Once the lattice is built, the atoms will sometimes randomly "tunnel" through the sides of the wells, because the quantum nature of particles allows them to be in multiple places at the same time, or to have varying amounts of energy. [Quantum Physics: The Coolest Little Particles in Nature]

Another factor that determines where the atoms lie in the optical lattice is their up or down spin. Two atoms can't be in the same well if their spins are the same. That means atoms will have a tendency to tunnel into wells with others that have opposite spins. After a while, a line of atoms should spontaneously organize itself, with the spins in a non-random pattern. This kind of behavior is different from materials in the macroscopic world, whose orientations can have a wide range of in-between values; this behavior is also why most things aren't magnets ? the spins of the electrons in the atoms are oriented randomly and cancel each other out.

And that's exactly what the researchers found. The spins of atoms do organize, at least on the scale the experiment examined.

"The question is, what are the magnetic properties of these one-dimensional chains?" said Tilman Esslinger, a professor of physics at ETH whose lab did the experiments. "Do I have materials with these properties? How can these properties be useful?"

Quantum magnetism

This experiment opens up possibilities for increasing the number of atoms in a lattice, and even creating two-dimensional, gridlike arrangements of atoms, and possibly triangular lattices as well.

One debate among experts is whether at larger scales the spontaneous ordering of atoms would happen in the same way. A random pattern would mean that in a block of iron atoms, for instance, one is just as likely to see a spin up or down atom in any direction. The spin states are in what is called a "spin liquid" ? a mishmash of states. But it could be that atoms spontaneously arrange themselves at larger scales.

"They've put the foundation on various theoretical matters," said Jong Han, a professor of condensed matter physics theory at the State University of New York at Buffalo, who was not involved in the research. "They don't really establish the long-range order, rather they wanted to establish that they have observed a local magnetic order."

Whether the order the scientists found extends to larger scales is an important question, because magnetism itself arises from the spins of atoms when they all line up. Usually those spins are randomly aligned. But at very low temperatures and small scales, that changes, and such quantum magnets behave differently.

Han noted that such lattices, especially configurations where the potential wells connect to three others, rather than two or four, would be especially interesting. Esslinger's lab showed that atoms tend to jump to potential wells where the spins are opposite; but if the wells are arranged so that the atom can jump to two other atoms, it can't "choose" which well to go to because one of the two atoms will always be in the same spin state.

Esslinger said his lab wants to try building two-dimensional lattices and explore that very question. "What happens to magnetism if I change the geometry? It's no longer clear if spins should be up or down."

?Follow us @livescience, Facebook?& Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/spin-zone-physicists-1st-look-strange-quantum-magnetism-131203960.html

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How Republicans could win back the Senate in 2014 (Washington Post)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/308478037?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Obama calls Oklahoma tornado's toll 'hard to comprehend'

By Jeff Mason

MOORE, Oklahoma (Reuters) - Standing by a pile of debris that once was an elementary school, President Barack Obama on Sunday called the destruction last week's tornado wrought in Moore, Oklahoma, "hard to comprehend" and vowed to provide long-term federal help in rebuilding.

The tornado, rated at the top of a five-step scale used to measure the destructive power of twisters, killed 24 people - including seven children at the school site Obama visited. It ripped a 17-mile-long (27-km-long) corridor of destruction through the suburb of Oklahoma City, flattening entire blocks of homes, two schools and a hospital.

"Obviously the damage here is pretty hard to comprehend," Obama said, standing on a block where piles of boards, bricks and cinder blocks that used to be buildings and houses lined the side of the street. Rare items that survived the disaster - a television set, a pink baby carriage - stood in contrast to the wreckage.

The visit to the disaster-shaken town was one in a series of responses Obama has made in recent months to tragedies including the Boston Marathon bombings last month; a December mass school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut; and the destruction that Superstorm Sandy caused along the Jersey Shore in October.

"Whenever I come to an area that has been devastated by some natural disaster like this, I want to make sure that everyone understands that I am speaking on behalf of the entire country," said Obama, flanked by officials including Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin. "Everywhere, fellow Americans are praying with you, they're thinking about you and they want to help. And I'm just a messenger here letting you know that you are not alone."

Cars with their bodies dented and windows smashed lay under debris or twisted on their sides. Rising above the wasteland were at least three American flags that had been attached to the rubble, waving in the wind.

Caleb Sloan, 24, who lost his home in the storm, said Obama's words gave him hope that help would be forthcoming.

"He has no choice but to live by his word," Sloan said. "I hope and pray and think he will keep his promises."

SPATE OF STORMS

The May 20 Moore tornado was the most powerful of a spate of 76 twisters that touched down in 10 states from May 18 through 20, causing an estimated $2 billion to $5 billion in insured losses, according to disaster modeling company Eqecat.

The Moore tornado, the deadliest such windstorm to hit the United States in two years, also injured 377 people.

One volunteer who had been working on the response raised the commonly voiced complaint that the tight security surrounding a presidential visit can interfere with efforts to return to normal.

"It is fantastic he came, but his visit shut down everything," said Carol Hull, who has been working to feed and counsel victims. "We have no place to send people for food and aid while he is here because the roads and centers are shut down."

While assuring that residents of the 1,200 homes that the storm destroyed would receive extended federal help, Obama also urged lawmakers to maintain funding for the training and equipment that emergency responders rely on in the aftermath of disasters.

"I know everybody in Congress cares deeply about what's happening and know that resources will be forthcoming when it comes to rebuilding," Obama said. "But remember that it's also the ongoing training and equipment, making sure those things are in place. We can't shortchange that kind of ongoing disaster response, we can't just wait until the disaster happens. That's how, in part, we're able to save a lot of lives."

(Additional reporting by Heide Brandes; Writing by Scott Malone; Editing by Sandra Maler and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-visit-tornado-oklahoma-town-sunday-143110804.html

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Report blames Pakistan politicians, security for anti-Christian riots

Nearly four years after deadly anti-Christian riots left nine dead, authorities released?a 318 page report indicating Pakistan's security establishment could have prevented them.

By Umar Farooq,?Contributor / May 26, 2013

Children of Pakistani Christians play in front of tents provided for Christian families whose homes were set on fire by a mob in Lahore, in March.

Mohsin Raza/Reuters

Enlarge

A series of violent riots against Pakistani Christians in the past decade has concerned human rights watchers and religious minorities in Pakistan.

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The latest deadly incident, which took place just two months ago, raised questions about what, if anything, can be done to prevent such violence. ??

The March incident when a Muslim mob burned down a Christian neighborhood in Lahore, echoed a similar incident in the rural town of Gojra four years earlier. Nine people were killed when rioters torched two Christian neighborhoods over rumors the Christians had celebrated a wedding by showering the groom with pages torn from the Quran. Despite hundreds of arrests, no one was tried for the riots, and relatives of those killed have now fled Pakistan.

In 2009, the Punjab government asked a senior judge to investigate how to prevent incidents like the one in Gojra. The judge interviewed nearly 600 witnesses, including senior politicians and intelligence officials, producing a 318-page report detailing who was responsible for the violence. But the full report was not released until recently ? nearly four years after the riots.?

It implicates members of Pakistan Muslim League-N, at the time just recently elected to power, and recommends Pakistan's blasphemy laws be reformed to prevent future violence. According to the report, the Interservices Intelligence (ISI) and local intelligence agencies knew banned extremist groups like Sipah-e-Sahaba were organizing the mobs, yet authorities did not take preventative action.

?Everything could have been avoided, if the local administration did what they were supposed to do,? says Mehboob Khan, who headed fact-finding trips to Gojra for the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan.

Like the riot in Lahore this year, Mr. Khan says police had several days to curtail growing threats from Muslim extremists in Gojra.

On July 30, 2009, members of Sipah-e-Sahaba led a mob that burned down the entire village of Korian over the blasphemy accusation. The next day, preachers at three local mosques used their Friday sermons to demand that Gojra's Christian community ? some 40,000 people ? be expelled. They announced rallies the next day.

The next day, busloads of seminary students from the nearby town of Jhang ? a radical Sunni stronghold ? joined the rallies, which were addressed by local PML-N leaders and preachers from Sipah-e-Sahaba.

Bishop John Samuel, who heads an Anglican community in Gojra, says local police should have stopped the meetings and arrested those calling for more violence. ?There had already been one fire, why did the police allow these meetings?? he asks.

By that evening, crowds from the rallies made their way to the Christian neighborhood near the center of Gojra.

Despite the efforts of some religious leaders to disperse the crowd, the mob began throwing stones at the homes, and some began shooting at Christians.

Hameed Maseeh, a Christian, climbed on top of his roof and began firing back, but he was shot and killed. The crowd of Muslims swelled to more than 7,000, and some began setting fire to the Christian homes.

According to the report, police that were supposed to protect the Christians told them to flee, before leaving the scene themselves. ?At the height of the riot, they [the police] were nowhere to be seen,? recalls Bishop Samuel.

Hameed Masih's family ? unwilling to leave his body behind ? locked themselves inside their home. Seven of them, including two children and three women, died when the mob set fire to their home.

Maseeh's son accused 17 people ? including the regional PML-N head and several Sipah-e-Sahaba leaders ? of the murders. Though 113 suspects were arrested, all were released within months because witnesses refused to testify against them.

Peter Jacob, head of the minority rights group National Council for Justice and Peace, says the witnesses were systematically threatened into silence. In 2010, Hameed Masih's surviving family left Pakistan, fearing for their lives. In their absence, Pakistani courts dropped the murder case.

Two police commanders that left the scene as mobs torched Christian homes were suspended for a few months, but cleared by a subsequent departmental investigation. They have since been promoted.

The PML-N leader that had helped lead the Muslim mobs was elected to the provincial assembly in elections earlier this month.

'No problems'

In the years since the riots, the Punjab government has rebuilt the hundreds of homes that had been torched in Gojra. Christians in the area claim everything has gone back to normal.

?We have no problems with the Muslims, everything is fine,? said a Christian shopkeeper in Korian whose home was burned down, refusing to be named.

But Bishop Samuel says more than 50 families have chosen to leave Pakistan since the riots.

While it does not call for repealing the blasphemy laws completely, the Gojra report recommends removing specific protections for Muslims, and enacting measures to discourage fabricated cases. Rights groups say blasphemy accusations are often rooted in disputes over money or property.

?Reform is the first step,? Bishop Samuel says, ?If we can't finish the laws completely in Pakistan, at least charge the person making false claims.?

Jacob points out police have prevented violence in cases where they have seriously investigated blasphemy accusations.

?People didn't believe the law was being misused [before],? says Khan, ?but slowly ... they are starting to see examples of it.?

When a teenaged Christian girl was accused of blasphemy last year, the case was heard by the same judge who conducted the Gojra inquiry. Citing a lack of evidence, the judge dismissed the case, ordering the accuser's arrest instead.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/5JhMYVBnnfw/Report-blames-Pakistan-politicians-security-for-anti-Christian-riots

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Sunday 26 May 2013

The Difference Between Incidental and Intentional Website Traffic

There are a lot of tips and tricks out there for bloggers and website creators to garner or and capture traffic. This is mostly done through SEO tactics, social media and other methods you can use to just put a link in front of people.

But what if all that is misplaced effort? Certainly it?s not all a waste of time, as technical mediums are perfectly acceptable ways of getting the word out.

Yet we?re focusing so much on these mediums to generate traffic that a lot of the organic website marketing methods are lost on us. We don?t really know anymore why a user actually visits a website, while at the same time we know that it takes more than just a link being thrown in front of them.

This isn?t even an issue of content, since Google has made it quite clear in recent years that if you want to rank, you?ve got to have something substantial to say; otherwise, you?re wasting your own time and the time of anyone who happens upon your site.

So let?s just assume that your site does have great content. We?ll also assume that it?s young and that you?re trying to figure out how to ?encourage? some traffic in your direction.

You?ll probably read a lot about SEO and social media (you might even pay someone for help in this area) and your results will be marginal at best. Why? Because those aren?t the true reasons that a website gets traffic.

Two Different Kinds of Traffic

Different Kinds of Traffic

To be sure, you?ll get some form of traffic to your page with increased regularity, and when you do, it?s a good idea to try and break that traffic up into two different categories:

  • 1. Incidental
  • 2. Intentional

When you employ a lot of bizarre SEO tactics and submit all kinds of stuff to your Twitter feed and StumbleUpon, you?ll end up with a lot of incidental traffic, or basically, people who just happen to come across your site.?Most of the time this kind of traffic would have to be considered low quality.

The reason being is that these people might have at best, a passing curiosity about your subject matter. Most of the time, they?ve gotten to your website by accident, while looking for something else.

Now in Google analytics that still shows up as a page view and a unique visitor; yet it might as well not even be counted, because these people had no real interest in your site and no real intention of sticking around to see what you?re all about.

Now intentional traffic on the other hand refers to people who are looking intently for what your site has to offer and they seek your site out based on those merits.

They might do so accidentally, but this most often occurs when people know what your site offers ahead of time. You might say, ?But isn?t the only way for them to know about it by way of social media and SEO?? Well, it?s one way, but it?s definitely not the only way.

We want to get intentional traffic because those users will stick around, engage with our content and establish a familiarity and relationship with our site.

How do we get that kind of traffic? To figure that out, we need to look at what motivates an intentional visitor.

Motivation Factors of an Intentional Website Visitor

So we?re trying to attract people who are intentionally looking for either our site, or the type of information that our site offers. Why might this type of person visit our site?

Here are a few of the primary reasons and they have nothing to do with our social media strategy.

1. They?re looking for something genuine

People can smell garbage a mile away online and it?s no secret that the internet is filled with content that has been quickly put together and is worth little or nothing to the reader.

Internet users want something different than that and they want it in the form of someone who is genuinely being themselves and producing something worthwhile.

If you can be that person, you?ve got the most powerful traffic-driving tool that there is.

2. They?ve heard about the credibility of a site via word of mouth

Word of mouth is still the best marketing tool out there. For years before the internet ever existed, people and organizations gained popularity by word of mouth, simply because of their notoriety.

If your product or content is good and genuine, you won?t need to do a lot of marketing to get the ball rolling. Just a nudge is going to be enough.

Once you?ve given that nudge, let other people do the work for you, because nothing gets someone to your site like a recommendation from a friend in the form of, ?Hey, you should really check this website out. It?s great!?

3. They perceive that a website is offering better information or information with greater depth and reliability

We all know that there is a lot of material online, but a lot of it doesn?t meet a high standard of quality. For some reason, the internet seems to be a place that invites cutting corners and half-hearted contribution.

When people see that a website is offering something better and more in-depth than that, they?ll jump at the chance to engage with that website and to tell their friends about it.

It?s the only real reason anybody goes to any website; because they need something. Whether it is information, entertainment or help of some sorts, people will gravitate to a site that delivers those things in a more full and complete way, especially since there are so many websites that don?t.

How do we get this kind of traffic?

How-ToThe more of this kind of traffic you get, the less you need to worry about traffic generating tactics. But how do we get there?

It should be noted up front, that even with great content, this process does take time; a lot of time. While there?s nothing wrong with using social media and SEO to push things in the right direction, you still need to have a tremendous amount of patience before you see a lot of real and intentional traffic to your website.

For that to happen, your reputation needs to proceed you, and while you?re being patient and putting in the time, here are a few things you can do to make sure that time will work in your favor.

1. Create and present a collection of valuable information

Envisioning this as a blogger is easier than if you run a different type of website, but it should still be your goal no matter what kind of website you run. The more information you can collect into one place and make easily accessible, the more your website will be trusted to deliver answers on a given topic.

2. Gain credibility with those in your niche

The more you?re able to cultivate relationships and build alliances with others in your niche, the better off you?ll be in terms of notoriety and credibility. When your material starts to gain notice, you?ll want people who will be willing to vouch for you and your hard work. Make sure that the people in your same field of expertise are willing to do so.

3. Talk to people about the goals of your website and why you?re excited about it

The more you talk up your own site, the more those around you will be willing to spread the word and refer other people to it. You don?t want to be annoying, but when you do talk about it, be confident and excited about what you?re doing. Most good friends and family will take interest in it from the outset, and if your content delivers, news will definitely spread on its own.

The Reward of Real Traffic

This kind of traffic is far more valuable than what you?ll get from spamming your Twitter account with links or hoping that someone will click on your link from some other social media site. Real traffic will find its way through these mediums on its own and will be far more valuable than trying to get things to happen the other way around.

Make sure you?re doing everything you can to generate intentional traffic first. If you can do that, everything else will fall into place in due time.

About author: Jason Bayless is a professional blogger that gives small business and entrepreneurs SEO advice. He writes for BestSEOCompanies.com, a nationally recognized comparison website of the best SEO companies in the United States.

Source: http://www.intenseblog.com/internet-marketing/difference-between-incidental-intentional-website-traffic.html

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