Thursday, January 31, 2013

After Super Bowl, many fans will suffer football withdrawal symptoms

Jan. 30, 2013 ? On Sunday night, after the final play of the Super Bowl, many fans will start experiencing withdrawal symptoms from not being able to watch football.

Loyola University Medical Center Dr. Angelos Halaris describes the effects this has on the brain, and offers tips on how fans can cope.

Halaris explains that when a person engages in a pleasurable activity, such as watching a football game, a neurotransmitter (brain chemical) called dopamine is released in a part of the brain called the nucleus accumbens.

When the pleasurable activity ends, the person is left with a feeling of depravation. It's similar to what a smoker feels when deprived of a cigarette -- except there's no quick fix like a cigarette for the football fan.

"When the football season is over and there's no other game on the schedule for months, you're stuck, so you go through withdrawal," Halaris said.

For hardcore fans, the feeling can be similar to post-holiday blues, Halaris said.

Halaris offers these tips for fans who suddenly have to face months without football:

-- Don't go cold turkey. Watch football on YouTube, or on recordings, in gradually diminishing amounts.

-- Share your feelings of withdrawal and letdown with a friend or spouse.

-- While it can be unpleasant, football withdrawal is not serious enough to require antidepressants or other medications. And do not self medicate with drugs or alcohol.

-- Most important, buck up. "You're just going to have to basically tough it out until football starts up again," Halaris said.

Halaris is a professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and medical director of Adult Psychiatry at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Loyola University Health System, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/Ofi-7J9QyMU/130130184033.htm

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Industries of Past and Present: The Offices of Ubiqiutous

Industries of Past and Present: The Offices of UbiquitousUK creative agency Ubiquitous stripped their offices bare and rebuilt them from the ground up. The result? A combination the industries of the past with the technology of today in a merging of wood and metal that's incredibly beautiful.

To see more photos of the small but wonderful office, check out their blog for a series of photos and a time-lapse video showing the construction.

If you have a workspace of your own to show off, add it to the Lifehacker Workspace Showcase. Be sure to include some details about your setup and why it works for you, and you just might see it featured on the front page of Lifehacker.

Our Office | Ubiquitous via Geek & Hype via Apartment Therapy Tech

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/gqLv5VpedIA/industries-of-past-and-present-the-offices-of-ubiqiutous

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Senate approves $50.5 billion in long-delayed Superstorm Sandy aid

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A long-delayed $50.5 billion aid package for victims of Superstorm Sandy cleared the Senate on Monday, three months after the storm destroyed or damaged hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses in coastal New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.

The package, approved 62-36 in the Democratic-controlled Senate, now goes to President Barack Obama to be signed into law. Added to flood insurance legislation passed by Congress earlier this month, it brings Sandy aid appropriations to $60.2 billion.

All the opposing lawmakers were Republicans. But nine Republicans joined Democrats in voting yes to narrowly cross the 60-vote threshold required for passage.

The Senate also defeated a Republican amendment that sought to offset the Sandy aid with cuts to discretionary spending spread over the next nine years.

The vote was delayed last week as Senate leaders wrangled over new rules aimed at limiting procedural roadblocks known as filibusters.

Sandy's victims "have been waiting for three months for their federal government to step up and help them rebuild their lives and rebuild their livelihoods," said Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Barbara Mikulski of Maryland. "They have been waiting and waiting."

The package will provide $10 billion to repair public transport infrastructure, $5.3 billion to replenish the Federal Emergency Management Agency's disaster relief fund and $16 billion in Community Development Block Grant funding - money to be used by municipalities largely to rebuild homes and businesses.

"This bill meets the current needs of the recovery efforts," Mikulski said.

CAUGHT IN BUDGET DEBATE

The Sandy aid package became ensnared in a bitter partisan battle over deficit reduction. Many Republicans saw it as an opportunity to take a stand against a big spending increase after being forced to swallow tax hikes on the wealthy as part of the New Year's deal to avert the "fiscal cliff."

Republican Senator Mike Lee of Utah tried to rein in the Sandy package by seeking to offset the costs with a 0.5-percentage-point reduction in annual discretionary spending.

He said senators owed it to Americans to consider how the disaster spending might impair U.S. ability to fund other programs such as defense or healthcare.

"We have to stop and consider the fact that we are more than $16 trillion in debt and we're adding to that debt at a rate of more than $1 trillion every single year," Lee said.

His amendment was defeated 62-35 in another party-line split.

Conservative groups, including the Club for Growth and the Heritage Foundation, had urged senators to vote against the package without any offsets, saying it was filled with "pork."

The Republican-controlled House of Representatives passed the $50.5 billion package on January 15 - largely with Democratic votes - after shaving off about $160 million and preventing any funds from being diverted to disasters in other states.

House Speaker John Boehner enraged East Coast politicians on January 1 by canceling a previously scheduled vote on Sandy emergency funds. The storm wiped out many New Jersey and New York shore communities and flooded lower Manhattan transit tunnels on October 29.

Since then, Congress has approved $9.7 billion to shore up the National Flood Insurance program to allow it to continue paying the Sandy-related claims of homeowners who bought flood insurance.

The $60.2 billion in aid is short of the $82 billion initially requested by New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.

The legislative delays marked a stark contrast with the congressional response to Hurricane Katrina, which devastated Gulf Coast communities and flooded New Orleans in 2005.

Within 10 days of that storm, Congress had approved $62.3 billion in aid. Subsequent measures brought total taxpayer funds to rebuild the region to more than $100 billion.

(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Xavier Briand)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/senate-approves-50-5-billion-long-delayed-superstorm-012023860--business.html

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New production of Rossini's Cinderella a delight

VIENNA (AP) ? There is no pumpkin-turned-coach on the stage, no glass slipper, no fairy godmother, and the action takes place in an imaginary Italian duchy in the 1950s. But Gioachino Rossini's take on Cinderella remains utterly magical in the new version being put on by the Vienna State Opera.

While all operas stand or fall on the quality of their singers, La Cenerentola presents a particular challenge, with solos replete with florid vocalization, full-out crescendos and sustained, flowing melodic lines.

But all soloists passed the test with full honors ? and then some ? in the production that premiered Saturday.

As Angelina ? Rossini's Cenerentola, or Cinderella ? mezzo Tara Erraught unleashed an array of coloratura fireworks in a role that affords opportunities for vocal pyrotechnics like few others.

"Non piu mesta" ? where Angelina, the prince by her side, announces that she forgives her cruel step-sisters and step-father ? is considered one of opera's most difficult arias. No problem for Erraught. Her rendition perfectly mirrored Angelina's transition from a servant singing a simple ditty at the fireside to a princess in full embellished voice.

While he was describing the opera in general terms two centuries ago, feared Vienna critic Eduard Hanslick could have been referring to Erraught's performance when he wrote: "This ... Cinderella is in fact a Cinderella in clothing only; her singing brims over with pearls, velvet and silk."

A hard act to match ? and as Don Ramiro, Angelina's prince, Dmitry Korchak was almost equal to the task.

"Almost," only because his light tenor initially threatened to get lost in the orchestra. But Korchak gained in confidence ? and his voice in power ? effortlessly pinpointing his high C's in "Si ritrovarla io giuro," as he declared that he will find the girl who so enchanted him at the ball, no matter what it takes.

But to do so, he must get past Angelina's step-father, who keeps her in ashes while he plots the prince's marriage to one of his two daughters. As the bumbling Don Magnifico, Alessandro Corbelli was indeed Mr. Magnificent Saturday, bringing the mean and scheming persona to life in a humorously endearing way.

Apropos of mean and scheming: Valentina Nafornita and Margarita Gritskova are beauties visually and vocally but convincingly rotten to the core in their roles as Clorinda and Tisbe, Don Magnificio's preening daughters

Also good ? Vito Priante as Dandini, the prince's servant, and Ildebrando D'Arcengelo as Alidoro, the prince's philosopher. As this Cinderella's de-facto fairy godfather, he pulls the strings behind the scenes to bring the story to a happy ending.

But there is no happy ending in any opera unless the orchestra is up to scratch. With Rossini specialist Jesus Lopez-Cobos conducting, musicians of the Vienna State Opera delivered a sparking rendition of a vibrant and complex score. Good singing by members of the Vienna State Orchestra Choir rounded out the evening, in a production as pleasing visually as it was musically.

After the first performance flopped in 1817, Rossini was optimistic proclaiming: "People will love this opera."

They did Saturday.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/production-rossinis-cinderella-delight-171333845.html

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Lose your job to technology? Share your story

According to an Associated Press series published last week, the United States lost 7.5 million jobs during the recession, but in the three and a half years since it ended, the country has recovered just 47 percent of those jobs.

What?s worse: Half the jobs lost from December 2007 to June 2009 were middle-class employment, and of the 47 percent of work reclaimed, just 2 percent of those gigs pay middle-class wages, says the AP.

Among the causes, the often-fingered culprit is technology.

Even in a healthy economy, computers have increasingly assumed once-human-held work. In a wrecked economy, they?re capitalizing on it: Employers who weathered tough times over 18 months of the Great Recession learned to do more (or at least as much) with fewer humans and more automation. Now that the recovery is underway, they?re not looking back.

To put a human face to technology-caused unemployment, Yahoo! News is inviting readers who have recently lost a job (whether it?s to computer software, a factory robot or something similar) to share their stories. If technological innovation in the workplace has replaced your position, we?re interested in publishing your first-person account and possibly using it in a project.

There are two ways you can participate. Please choose one and submit your story by Friday, Feb. 1, at 11 a.m. ET.

1) Write your story at Yahoo! Contributor Network.

Stories that meet our criteria may be published on Yahoo! News under your byline. Learn more about what we?re looking for.

Or:

2) Email your story to contributor-news@yahoo-inc.com.

In 300 to 400 words, share your first-person story of losing your job to advancements in technology and workplace innovation. Please be very detailed and include: Where you worked (company and city), for how long, what you did (be brief but detailed) and when you lost your job. What technological advancement caused you to lose your job? Please be specific. Was it new computer software? A robot? Machines? How did your company use it? Did other people lose their jobs, too? What, specifically, did the new technology do that replaced your duties?

While sharing that information, please also touch on these questions: Are you employed now? If so, what are you doing? Are you making the same wage? How long did it take you to find a job? How do you feel about technological advancements in the workplace? Do you blame your former employer? Did losing your job prompt you to get different or increased training? If so, what, specifically? Also, please include your age and where you live.

Thank you for considering participating. We look forward to receiving your first-person account.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/jobs-lost-technology-share-story-205555859--finance.html

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Brazil to carry out Amazon survey

The Brazilian government has announced that it plans to undertake the huge task of recording an inventory of the trees in the Amazon rainforest.

The Forestry Ministry said the census would take four years to complete, and would provide detailed data on tree species, soils and biodiversity in the world's largest rainforest.

The last exhaustive survey was carried out more than 30 years ago.

In that time the rainforest has become increasingly threatened by logging.

The Brazilian government made a commitment in 2009 to reduce deforestation in the Amazon by 80% by the year 2020.

'Inside knowledge'

According to the government, in 2012 the destruction of the Amazon rainforest reached its lowest level since monitoring began more than two decades ago.

But ministers said they would be able to act more effectively if they had more accurate data.

"We are going to come to know the rainforest from within," Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel said announcing the inventory.

Environment Minister Izabella Teixeira said it would help the government to formulate environmental policies.

"In international debates about climate change, for example, we will know how much forest we have and what state it is in (...), we'll discover species, and gain knowledge about species becoming extinct, as well as information about the distribution of the forest and its potential economic use", Ms Teixeira said.

Brazil's national development bank said it would contribute $33m to the project.

The last detailed survey of the Brazilian Amazon was carried out in the 1970s, and its results published in 1983.

Forestry Minister Hummel said partial results would be published yearly, as it progressed.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-21208541#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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FTM2012 Synchronization Frequently Take in Excess of Two Hours

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://boards.ancestry.co.uk/topics.software.famtreemaker/9408.1.1/mb.ashx

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Bear Vs. Shark: Catamaran

I discovered Bear vs. Shark by accident. A college roommate had insisted I listen to Minus the Bear, and I wasn't paying attention, so only the "Bear" part stuck. It proved to be a serendipitous little mistake though, because Bear vs. Shark is as awesome as the battle portrayed in their name would be. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/JdFI6-eDbRM/bear-vs-shark-catamaran

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UN group OKs new video format to save bandwidth

(AP) ? The U.N. telecommunications agency says its members have agreed upon a new compression format that could dramatically cut the amount of Internet bandwidth currently used by video files.

The International Telecommunication Union says the format, or codec, known as H.265 would require just half the amount of data needed by its predecessor, H.264.

The Geneva-based agency says videos encoded using the H.264 format ? which is favored by devices such as Apple's iPad ? currently account for two-fifths of web traffic.

ITU said in a statement late Friday the new H.265 codec could pave the way for "the next wave of innovation," such as faster movie downloads and higher-quality video streaming.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-01-26-UN-Video%20Compression/id-92db567a12da4b0fbdf9a9ad34fecb8c

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

CEOs head to Davos more pessimistic about 2013

An areal view of the Congress Center in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2013, the day before the start of the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

An areal view of the Congress Center in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2013, the day before the start of the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

People gather at the 'Davos lounge' inside the Congress Center and follow the latest tweets of participants on the eve of the opening of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2013. As corporate leaders gather for the World Economic Forum in Davos amid a slow and shaky recovery, a new study looks at business leaders' moods and what they hope to do this year. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Dennis Nally, Chairman of PricewaterhouseCoopers, PwC, arrives for an interview with the Associated Press on the eve of the opening of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Dennis Nally, Chairman of PricewaterhouseCoopers, PwC, reacts during an interview with the Associated Press on the eve of the opening of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) ? As high-powered CEOs flock to the snowy Swiss resort of Davos, they are loaded down with baggage ? not just skis and iPads but concerns about the global economy, public mistrust, disappearing jobs and a heap of other challenges.

New survey results Tuesday showed a steady drop in the number of CEOs worldwide who are "very confident" that their companies will grow this year. The number fell from 48 percent in 2011 to 36 percent this year.

Amid this pessimism, most of them are carefully sticking to a few investments in tried-and-true markets, according to the survey by accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers.

"Most are saying that the global economy will stay about the same for the next 12 months. So, not encouraging, maybe not discouraging, but clearly that's affecting their outlook for their own companies' growth prospects," PwC chairman Dennis Nally told The Associated Press in an interview.

"The degree of confidence across the board is really down, regardless of whether you're in a developing market or a developed market," he said.

It is down even in high-flying economies like China and Brazil. The most upbeat country was Russia, where 66 percent of CEOs are "very confident" of revenue growth in 2013, Nally said.

He called the survey results a strong message to governments that they must fix economic problems, including disputed regulations, government deficits and tax issues.

"All of those are impacting CEOs' levels of confidence to really deal with their businesses on a go-forward basis," he said in the PwC Lounge, an ultra-chic Davos party room with white sofas and chairs and orange and red flowers.

Uncertainty about tax and spending policies is at the root of the gloom, said John Viehmeyer, CEO of accounting firm KPMG's U.S. operations. He called it frustrating that U.S. government solutions "seem to be within our control" but still out of reach.

"I think we have an opportunity for the U.S. to lead the world onto a path of stronger economic footing and very robust economic recovery over the next five years," Viehmeyer told AP. "It's not going to be easy. There's going to be pain and sacrifice."

Nearly a quarter of the CEOs surveyed plan further job cuts ? yet more than half of them say they have trouble finding people with the right job skills.

The U.N. labor agency said this week the jobs crisis has worsened; there were 197 million people who couldn't find a job in 2012 and another 39 million who have given up on looking for one.

Neely worries about a "lost generation" of job seekers and encourages young people to focus on gaining skills that are in demand ? skills in areas such as the sciences, math, engineering and other technical areas.

Heading Tuesday into the glitzy World Economic Forum, where over 2,500 corporate elite will debate the world's top economic issues this week, many participants said their top worries are prospects for social unrest, a U.S. recession, cyber-attacks, natural disasters and a breakup of the 17-nation eurozone.

But they also recognize that public trust in corporations ? including CEOs ? is waning. The survey questioned 1,330 corporate leaders in 68 nations between September and December, and more than half said they plan to do more to build an "ethical culture" at their firms this year.

"We've got to start to rebuild that trust," Nally said.

CEOs may be turning more introspective now that the world has escaped, at least for the time being, another financial meltdown. A U.S. economic recovery seems to be expanding. Central banks ? especially the European Central Bank ? have helped ease Europe's three-year financial crisis, and governments in countries such as Spain and Ireland have stepped in to rescue their banks from the risk of collapse from bad property investments.

Yet the survey found that only 18 percent of the CEOs predict an economic improvement in 2013, and more than a third of them worry that a lack of trust in their industries puts their company's growth at risk.

The solution, Neely said, is to dig deeper and build a more fundamental ethical culture.

"I think it starts with your own organization, quite frankly, and I think it starts with the CEO, the tone at the top. What does an organization stand for? What is its purpose?" he said.

"Is it just to deliver short-term profitable results to the shareholder group?" he asked. "Or is there a greater purpose in terms of the role of business in society today?"

___

Angela Charlton in Davos, Switzerland, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-01-22-Davos%20Forum-CEO%20Mood/id-66b2bde575664f77b5a1bf4876225352

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Oregon promotes OC Helfrich to coach

Mark Helfrich is Oregon's next man in.

As usual, the Ducks wasted little time finding a replacement for Chip Kelly, promoting their affable offensive coordinator to head coach Sunday. Kelly left to become coach of the Philadelphia Eagles on Wednesday.

Helfrich is the third straight offensive coordinator at Oregon to be promoted to the top job, following Kelly and his predecessor, Mike Bellotti.

The 39-year-old Oregon native signed a five-year deal with the Ducks for a reported $9 million. His promotion does not come as a surprise: Even before Oregon defeated Kanas State in the Fiesta Bowl, the Ducks' quarterbacks guru was considered the front-runner as Kelly's successor.

"Going forward we will attack in all phases. We'll embrace innovation and we'll strive to do our best to win each and every day," Helfrich said at a news conference Sunday afternoon where he was supported by players including quarterback Marcus Mariota and running back De'Anthony Thomas.

Helfrich, who embodies Oregon's "Next Man In" philosophy of substitution without skipping a beat, became offensive coordinator of the Ducks when Kelly took over four seasons ago. The Ducks have appeared in BCS bowls each of those four years, including an appearance in the national championship game against Auburn in 2011.

The Ducks, ranked No. 2 in the final AP Top 25, finished 12-1 this season.

"Win The Day and all that ? that doesn't change for us," Mariota said.

Kelly, credited with creating Oregon's innovative hurry-up spread offense, went 46-7 as head coach at Oregon. It had been widely expected that he would jump to the NFL, leaving many surprised when he announced he was staying at Oregon after interviewing with Philadelphia, Cleveland and Buffalo following the Fiesta Bowl. Nine days later, however, he changed his mind and decided to go to the Eagles.

Just hours after Kelly's departure was announced, Oregon posted a job for a new head coach on its website. Under state law, Oregon was required to interview at least one qualified minority candidate for the job.

Former Stanford offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton acknowledged Saturday that he interviewed with Oregon before he was hired by the Indianapolis Colts' to be their offensive coordinator.

Oregon athletic director Rob Mullens said Oregon had already started the process of finding a replacement for Kelly following the Fiesta Bowl. He said it was important to name a successor quickly, because letter of intent signing day for high school recruits is on Feb. 6.

Mullens said interest from an "impressive list of coaches for the job." In the end, he interviewed five candidates in person.

"We went through the process because we felt it was important to do our due diligence and we kept coming back to Mark," Mullens said on Sunday.

Before joining the Ducks, Helfrich was quarterbacks coach at Colorado from 2006-08. As Oregon's offensive coordinator, he also has been in charge of Oregon's quarterbacks, guiding both Darron Thomas and Mariota, a redshirt freshman.

This season Mariota set the team's single-season record with 38 touchdowns (32 passing, 5 rushing, 1 receiving), surpassing the previous mark of 36 held by Thomas (2011) and Akili Smith (1998).

The first freshman named to the Pac-12's all-conference first team in 23 years, Mariota passed for 2,739 yards, completing a school-record 68.5 percent of his passes. He had 3,429 yards of total offense, second only to Smith's 3,947 in 1998.

Thomas, his predecessor, passed for 2,761 yards and a school-record 33 passing touchdowns his junior season last season despite missing a game because of an injury. He left school with a year of eligibility remaining in hopes of playing in the NFL but went undrafted.

There are not expected to be any major changes under Helfrich. But he hinted he may allow reporters and boosters greater access to practice ? something that Kelly had shut down this season ? and he joked about a few other tweaks.

"I won't wear a visor, I'll eat more vegetables," he said.

Helfrich will also face possible fallout from an NCAA investigation into the school's use of recruiting services.

The inquiry is the result of reports that surfaced in 2011 concerning payments Oregon made to two such services, including a $25,000 check sent to Willie Lyles and Houston-based Complete Scouting Services in 2010. Lyles had a connection with a player who committed to Oregon.

Oregon had requested a summary disposition in the case and presented a report to the NCAA infractions committee outlining violations the school believed occurred and appropriate sanctions. But last month Yahoo Sports reported that Oregon is headed toward a hearing with the committee because the two sides couldn't reach an agreement.

The NCAA does not comment on ongoing investigations. The hearing could come as early as this spring.

Sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the it had not been announced said Sunday that Oregon promoted wide receivers coach Scott Frost, the former Nebraska quarterback, to replace Helfrich as offensive coordinator.

Frost, 38, came to Oregon in 2009 after serving as an assistant at Northern Iowa. He played seven seasons in the NFL after leading the Huskers to the national title over Tennessee in the 1997 Orange Bowl.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oregon-promotes-oc-helfrich-coach-205405767--spt.html

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Bob Lutz Unveils Hybrid-Electric Pick-Up Truck ? Environmental ...

Former GM exec, Bob Lutz is heading up Via, a car company that revealed hybrid-electric pick-up trucks at the 2012 Detroit Auto Show. Via CNN Money.

Stay Up-to-Date On Environmental Management, Energy & Sustainability News with EL's Free Daily Newsletter

Source: http://www.environmentalleader.com/2013/01/22/bob-lutz-unveils-hybrid-electric-pick-up-truck/

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Monday, January 21, 2013

Foreclosure Buying By Wall Street Providing Hot Air For New ...

Hot air rises, and so are housing prices. It appears that Bernanke?s efforts to fund the housing market are beginning to gain some traction. An army of ?ex-Wall Street executives? has had more than two years now to re-trench themselves, and move in, to essentially take over the foreclosure and investment property market in the US.

? David Gn - Fotolia.com

? David Gn ? Fotolia.com

The Fed is providing 45 billion dollars per month in ?hot air? liquidity for the housing market. Billions of these dollars are being loaned out to newly formed capital / investment entities whose goal is to buy up as many foreclosures as possible, along with any other desirable properties that may be available.

A number of industry professionals are telling me that prices are beginning to rise significantly and the inventory of available foreclosures is dwindling. This is creating a demand for housing that is resulting in a tighter supply and driving selling prices upward like a balloon. But when the hot air runs out, the balloon falls back to the ground.

These buyers are not end users. A housing market driven by investment activity could prove to be much more volatile than a housing market driven by more traditional owner occupant activity.

Some of these businesses, formed as ?early? as 2011, have already gone from start-up investing operations to publicly held companies. There is no mistaking what is happening here. Wall Street sees an unprecedented opportunity to profit from the housing market once again.

The Fed wants to keep interest rates low and ?create jobs? by liquefying the housing market just as they did in the early 2000?s. The banks hope that all of this activity will result in improved balance sheets via profitable loans and improving housing prices. And those who made money during the housing boom see another opportunity to profit from the housing bust and the resulting foreclosures.

Indeed one of the interesting aspects of real estate is it?s ability to generate cash flows in a variety of ways. Shelter is a high demand item, desired by virtually everyone in the world. It?s high dollar value, perhaps $9 TRILLION at this point, makes the US housing market one of the wealthiest sectors on earth, even after the housing bust.

Stock market savvy investment companies are using ?Bernanke Bucks? to buy tens of thousands of foreclosures which they plan to rent or sell, while turning this cash flow into a profit bonanza via a stock IPO. There are a handful of these companies which are already public or nearly public, making much more off of the stock sale than they would as ordinary real estate investors.

Could this be the beginning of a new investment bubble? I think the answer is ?yes?. Fundamentally we are talking about the power of none other than the Federal Reserve, the Wall Street banks, and investment companies created by guys with Wall Street connections. They have the ability to monetize the cash flows into the stock market. This promises to be the biggest real estate investment innovation since derivatives were invented.

This is the same methodology that gave us the original housing bubble. Wall Street has learned a lot about manipulating the housing market. And with the development of stock market oriented real estate investment companies, they are developing the ability to ?manufacture? a housing recovery.

I expect you?ll hear lots of news in 2013 about how the housing market is improving, and prices are rising. As long as the Fed remains willing to keep the bucks flowing, we?re going to see more and more foreclosed properties flowing to large scale investing operations. This is a fundamental transformation in the housing market that is unprecedented.

It?s going to take a few more years for this entire scenario to unfold, but at some point, it?s safe to say that prices and ownership costs may reach unsupportable levels once again, leading to another bust. Only time will tell how big this bubble will become and how much hot air will be necessary to inflate it.
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Donna S. Robinson is a real estate investor, author and investing coach located in Atlanta, GA. Follow her on twitter at donnaconsults, Facebook.com/RealtyBizConsulting and watch her videos on youtube. Her latest book, Basics of Real Estate Investing, is now available for Kindle on Amazon.com

Source: http://realtybiznews.com/foreclosure-buying-by-wall-street-providing-hot-air-for-new-housing-bubble/98718538/

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French troops take central Mali towns, rebels slip away

DIABALY, Mali (Reuters) - French and Malian armored columns rolled into the towns of Diabaly and Douentza in central Mali on Monday after the al Qaeda-linked rebels who had seized them fled into the bush to avoid air strikes.

France said the advance was a significant step in its campaign to break Islamist fighters' grip over Mali's vast desert north, a presence raising fears of the region becoming a an African launchpad for international militant attacks.

The stakes in Mali rose dramatically last week when Islamist gunmen cited France's intervention as the reason for attacking a gas plant in neighboring Algeria, seizing hundreds of hostages and sowing fears the conflict would spill across borders.

"This advance by Mali's army into towns held by their enemies is a clear military success for the government in Bamako and for French forces supporting the operation," French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said.

France, which has made 140 bombing sorties since January 11, plans eventually to hand over the military operation to a U.N.-sanctioned African mission - although that deployment has been hampered by a lack of supplies, funds and training.

Diabaly, 350 km (220 miles) north of Mali's dusty riverside capital Bamako, had harbored the main cluster of insurgents south of the frontline towns of Mopti and Sevare.

Douentza, some 800 km from Bamako along the eastern road to the rebel stronghold of Gao, was a staging post in the rebels' southward advance two weeks ago that prompted France to intervene for fear they would capture the Malian capital.

In Diabaly, the dusty streets were now littered with the charred wreckage of eight rebel pick-up trucks. Residents said 200 Islamist fighters had held them captive for three days as human shields against French air strikes.

"There were 12 of us in the house, with no food or water," said 18-year-old Seydou Diarra. "They stopped us from leaving the village. They told us we'll die together and those who insisted on leaving were unbelievers."

Malian soldiers proudly displayed some 80 boxes of machine gun ammunition left behind by the fleeing rebels. Life gradually returned to the town's main street as shops reopened and children played on the parade ground where French and Malian troops parked their armored personnel carriers.

France has sent 2,150 ground troops to Mali and deployed jet fighters and attack helicopters that hammered rebel bases for an 11th day on Monday, as it awaited troops from nearby African nations, pouring into Bamako, to deploy to the front line.

Some 1,000 African troops from the West African regional bloc ECOWAS and the central African nation of Chad have arrived, and that number is expected to top 5,000 in the coming weeks.

Military experts say the swift and effective deployment of African forces is crucial to sustain the momentum of France's air campaign and prevent Islamists from melting away into the empty desert or the rugged mountains near the Algerian border.

FOREST CAMPS

The Islamist alliance in Mali groups al Qaeda's North African wing AQIM and the Malian militant groups Ansar Dine and MUJWA. It has imposed harsh sharia, meting out amputations and destroying ancient shrines sacred to moderate Sufi Muslims.

France aims to sweep the Islamists from northern Mali, an area the size of Texas, to prevent them using it as a base to mount attacks on the West or coordinate with other Islamist militants such as Nigeria's Boko Haram and Somalia's al Shabaab.

Paris aims to hand over the military operation to the U.N.-mandated African-led International Support Mission to Mali (AFISMA) "as quickly as possible. Until that happens, we shall do our duty," President Francois Hollande said on Monday.

"We know that's going to take time."

The Algerian hostage-taking, claimed by veteran jihadist Mokhtar Belmokhtar in the name of al Qaeda, has placed Mali conflict firmly on the agenda of Western capitals.

Belmokhtar's Mulathameen Brigade warned of further attacks on foreign interests unless France halted its intervention.

Algeria said 37 foreigners - including seven Japanese, four Britons, a Frenchman and an American - were killed during the hostage taking, ended with an assault by its security forces.

Britain, whose nationals were among those caught up in the hostage crisis, said on Monday it would increase counter-terrorism and intelligence aid to Algeria and consider giving more help to France to fight the Mali rebels. But it ruled out any direct British military intervention in Africa.

Addressing parliament, British Prime Minister David Cameron said a "patient, intelligent, but tough" approach was the best way to defeat terrorism. He stressed the "long-standing and deep" root causes of terrorism and pledged to help foster democracy and the rule of law in places at risk of Islamist militancy.

Egypt, however, warned that military intervention in Mali would aggravate strife in Africa and risk alienating the rest of the continent from its Arab north.

"The intervention must be peaceful and developmental and funds must be spent on development," Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, a freely elected Islamist, told an Arab development conference in Saudi Arabia.

The United States sent its first flight bringing logistical support on Sunday but has no plans to send combat troops.

France has appealed for international donors to help fund the African mission at a conference on January 29. The European Union also said it would host a meeting on Mali on February 5, with the support of the United Nations and the African Union.

REBELS DRIFT AWAY

In recent days, Islamists have melted into the scrubland of central Mali, preferring not to engage directly with Malian and French troops. Residents of Diabaly said some rebels had doffed their flowing robes to blend in with the population, raising fears of ambushes and booby traps left behind in captured towns.

A resident of Timbuktu told Reuters by satellite telephone on Monday that scores of pick-up trucks carrying Islamist fighters had arrived there since Saturday, as the rebels apparently pulled their forces back to their desert strongholds.

The push northward by the Malian army has raised the specter of ethnic reprisals by security forces and militia groups. Human Rights Watch said it had received reports of serious abuses being committed by the Malian army against civilians in Niono.

There have also been reports of killings by Malian soldiers of lighter-skinned Arabs and Tuaregs, who are widely blamed for the rebellion that swept northern Mali.

In Diabaly, angry residents said the rebels had been led there by former army soldiers led by a local Tuareg captain who had deserted to join the Islamists.

"Only a person who knows Diabaly very well would have been able to bring them here," said Diabaly Mayor Oumar Diakite.

(Additional reporting by Adama Diarra and Tiemoko Diallo in Bamako, Vicky Buffery, John Irish and Elizabeth Pineau in Paris, Mohammed Abbas in London; Writing by Richard Valdmanis; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/french-troops-advance-mali-islamists-melt-away-095602962.html

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Flood And Earthquake Insurance: Can You Afford Without It? | Eric ...

Flood And Earthquake Insurance: Can You Afford Without It? Even in areas where purchasing flood and earthquake insurance is not mandated by the state, mortgage brokers and lenders can demand it of homeowners in order to protect their investment. The reason for this is simple. Both floods and earthquakes can inflict horrendous amounts of damage, meaning that those lending institutions can lose hope of recouping their loans in little more than an instant if the homes are not covered.

Of course, having flood and earthquake insurance is also a good thing for individual homeowners. For them, the main benefit of having said insurance lies in understanding that their finances are not going to be ruined should those disasters come to pass. Being insured means getting financial assistance with repairing damages and rebuilding lives. In contrast, receiving the bill for fixing damages caused by floods and earthquakes can seem like salt being smeared into open wounds.

Furthermore, the need for flood and earthquake insurance is rising because although the number of earthquakes have remained constant, there is real and disturbing evidence that incidences of flooding are on the rise in recent times.

How to Figure Out If Your Home Needs Flood And Earthquake Insurance

Each homeowner should consider his or her need for flood and earthquake insurance based on local conditions. There is no point in getting insurance for disasters if those disasters are either impossible or too improbable. After all, a man living deep inland is not going to need hurricane insurance because he is never going to see a hurricane.

Here are some tips for people to figure out if they need flood and earthquake insurance:

- First, homeowners should figure out if their area experiences the disaster in question. In general, doing so is as simple as going to the Internet and consulting a search engine, but consulting local offices of the National Weather Service or even local insurance companies can also prove helpful.

- After estimating the chance that their area will experience the disaster in question, homeowners should then attempt to estimate the damage that it could do, and how much it would cost them to fix said damage. Speaking to local contractors can prove helpful in figuring out repair costs, as can totaling up the value of the personal possessions that might be lost.

- Speak to local insurance companies to find out the homeowners insurance rates needed to cover such contingencies. Similarly, use a shopping comparison engine to shop around for the best prices. Once that is done, compare the cost of insurance to the expected damages of not being insured. For example, an estimate of a 10% chance of flooding each year multiplied by $20,000 in damages produces an expected outcome of $2,000 in damages. If it costs $500 per year to purchase full coverage for the flood, then it makes sense not to go uninsured.

- Consider alternatives to purchasing insurance. Renovating the home in order to reinforce it against disasters can reduce the expected damages to a point where it is preferable to purchasing insurance. It does this by reducing the damages in case the disaster strikes.

In the end, purchasing flood and earthquake insurance is the most convenient option for homeowners living in flood and earthquake-prone areas because it costs less than renovation. Ignoring the problem is simply not a sensible solution because the consequences of disaster striking are so severe.

Jeff Mathis is an insurance consultant. He likes sharing his knowledge online by writing for a variety of insurance blogs. Click the link for more homeowners insurance rates and quotes.

Source: http://www.ericfinance.com/flood-earthquake-insurance/

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learning how to learn how to learn. phew. ? are for use

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I?m two weeks in. my thursday nights feel like an episode of community.

in between learning (faking) grant writing skills, i?m cramming my sidebag with books on the digital divide and learning in public libraries. i?m trying to figure out how many people have already answered my questions: how are libraries supporting informal and self-directed learning? how is adult education addressing the digital divide?

here is what i know: i know that public libraries play a huge role in informal learning for adults on the wrong side of the digital divide. if you don?t have a computer and can?t afford the internet, there is a good likelihood that you also not gainfully employed, not a university graduate, and/or english is not your first language (and judging by how i just mis-spelled ?enghishl? for a moment there, i?m thinking it might not be my first language today either).

i can?t say for certain where else folks are learning basic digital literacies. i know some adults are going to college and continuing education, but many can?t afford this route. i know a lot of adults are coming to the library to seek impromptu one-to-one tutoring, and this can be a little infuriating for everyone.

at my library i meet a lot of people who already have a really low tolerance for frustration around computers, and who aren?t terribly willing to understand that library staff have limited availability (yes, the library is actually a really busy place. we might not be sweating from the physical strain of it, but we are expected to do a lot with relatively little staffing and with very high expectations all around). often the help we can offer is a free course that starts in two months and is already full. admittedly not super helpful. we?ve got instructional dvds, visual and plain-language how-to books, and other methods for self-study. sometimes, when there?s no queue at the reference desk, we?ve got the time to come over and help an individual for five or twenty minutes ? but even this is not enough.

i think part of the problem is that self-directed learning does not come easy or naturally to many adults. many of us are just not exploratory people. after all, it?s frustrating to be alone with your own failures? er, learning process.

so now i?m wondering, is this part of the public library?s mandate? should we be teaching folks how to teach themselves? we are all about non-coercive learning, and teaching how-to-learn sounds suspiciously like school. i work at a public library and not a school because i want to avoid this sort of thing. i have pretty high hopes for humanity?s innate ability to learn, and i find traditional schooling to be oppressive to the learner. people want to learn. some people take longer than others to want to, and not everyone wants to learn the same things. we definitely don?t all learn with the same methods.

because we are each individual learners, classrooms don?t work. it doesn?t matter if someone teaches you, you have to do the learning. i heard all through high school how school was about ?teaching you how to learn?, but all it ever taught me was how to skip class, smoke cigarettes and lie. and i know some folks have really positive school experiences, and that the model somehow works for them. i am going to go out on an unsupported-by-science limb and speculate that the folks coming into the library having never used a mouse before were not taught you to learn.

so how can we support individual learners? yes, we provide the tools for study (books, media, and internet access). staff also provide a little bit of help. but how accessible are we really making these tools if learners don?t know how use them?

time to go read.

>> composed to a soundtrack of sonic youth, neutral milk hotel, and snoop doggy dogg and the fuel of delicious jj bean coffee.

Source: http://tamahoc.wordpress.com/2013/01/20/learning/

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Gun control 101: Why is Obama pushing for new gun research?

A key part of President Obama's plan to rein in gun violence is his push to kick-start fresh gun-control-related research by federal agencies. Republicans have blocked such research in the past.

By Peter Grier,?Staff writer / January 19, 2013

President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden, talks at the White House in Washington Wednesday about proposals to reduce gun violence.

Carolyn Kaster/AP

Enlarge

This week President Obama outlined a sweeping package of proposed changes to America?s gun laws, including a federal ban on the manufacture and sale of new assault weapons and an expansion of background checks on firearm purchasers. But proponents of gun control say one of the most important pieces of the plan may be a smaller, less-noticed move: Mr. Obama?s attempt to end a 15-year ban on federal research into guns and violence.

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For years, some members of Congress have effectively blocked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other federal agencies from conducting such research due to concerns about pro-gun control bias. On Wednesday, Obama said he?d use the powers of the presidency to change that situation.

?While year after year those who oppose even modest gun safety measures have threatened to defund scientific or medical research into the causes of gun violence, I will direct the Centers for Disease Control to go ahead and study the best ways to reduce it.... We don?t benefit from ignorance,? said Obama.

Here are some basic questions and answers about the research issue:

What's stopping the government from studying guns and violence?

In 1996 some conservative members of Congress mounted an effort to eliminate the CDC?s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control because they believed some researchers were cheerleaders for the anti-gun movement. In the end, they took the $2.6 million this center had spent on gun research the previous year, and earmarked it for brain-injury research. In addition, Congress added language to the CDC appropriation saying ?none of the funds made available for injury prevention and control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may be used to advocate or promote gun control.?

It?s unclear exactly what sorts of things this phrase prohibits. But no federal employee was willing to risk their career to find out, according to a December Journal of the American Medical Association article. Several years later, Congress made the language applicable to the Department of Health and Human Services, as well.

?Even today, 17 years after this legislative action, the CDC?s website lacks specific links to information about preventing firearm-related violence,? says the article by Arthur Kellermann and Frederick Rivara.

Generally speaking, gun-rights organizations oppose treating firearms as a public-health issue, as opposed to a constitutional right.

What don't we know?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/EE0EIDk2kwA/Gun-control-101-Why-is-Obama-pushing-for-new-gun-research

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Obama's campaign looks to legislative fights

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama's campaign racked up 332 electoral votes and helped the president win a second term. Now it hopes to score legislative victories and build the president's legacy.

Throngs of campaign volunteers and staff members gathered Sunday at a Washington hotel on the eve of Obama's Inauguration for a conference that served as both reunion and planning session for the next four years.

Recounting the success of the 2012 campaign, campaign officials vowed to use a new nonprofit called Organizing for Action to marshal support behind Obama's legislative agenda. The arrangement is unprecedented for a sitting president ? essentially transforming his re-election campaign into a nonprofit organization to back up his efforts in Congress.

"We know it is time to reform our broken immigration system, and we will get it done this year," said Jon Carson, a former White House official who will serve as OFA's executive director. "We are going to take it to them on reducing gun violence, on climate change. And we are going to take this network and finish some jobs that we started," he said, pointing to the sweeping health care law signed by Obama.

The conference, which took place as Obama was sworn into another term in a private ceremony at the White House, was the first gathering of activists who will form the backbone of the nonprofit group. The organization will be funded by grassroots donors and corporate money and function separately from the Democratic National Committee, the party's political arm.

For many volunteers and staffers, the conference and inaugural festivities also offered a chance to trade war stories and bask in the glow of Obama's re-election. Campaign manager Jim Messina walked onstage to a standing ovation, declaring to the faithful, "I see winners!"

Volunteers were asked to form local chapters of the group and take the organizing skills and technological know-how they learned from the campaign to support Obama's second term. Carson said the organization planned to make its mark quickly, previewing the upcoming fight over gun control in the aftermath of last month's deadly school shooting in Connecticut.

"There are dozens of districts in this country where Republicans have no business being proud of the fact that they're endorsed by the (National Rifle Association). And we will go to those districts, and we will run ads, and we will be on their Facebook pages," he said.

"We will go to those people in their districts who might not be too excited to hear that their member of Congress doesn't think we should pass an assault weapons ban or have background checks for everyone who wants to purchase a gun," Carson said. "We will take every lesson learned and create some new ones."

Campaign officials ticked off a series of numbers to emphasize their accomplishments ? 332 electoral votes, the registering of 1.8 million voters and more than 150 million door knocks and phone calls from volunteers. But speaker after speaker said it was more than numbers that re-elected a president.

"We are the most powerful room in America," said Sara El-Amine, the campaign's national training director. "Our legacy is not an email list. It's not a tech tool. It's not an analytics model. Our legacy is you."

___

Follow Ken Thomas on Twitter: http://twitter.com/AP_Ken_Thomas

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-01-20-Obama-Campaign/id-449ccbd536474c5faddbe6146b15ba03

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Jordan Islamists shun election, demand political reform

AMMAN (Reuters) - Jordanian Islamists, who will boycott next week's parliamentary election, called on Friday for a fairer electoral law and for political reforms that would end King Abdullah's power to choose governments.

About 2,000 Islamists and some tribesmen and leftists protested in Amman against Wednesday's vote for a new 150-seat assembly, which they said was meaningless given electoral rules that ensure Jordan's cities will be under-represented.

"Our people have no say. For the last two years, our masses have demanded change so that people will have real power to choose their rulers," Sheikh Hammam Said, the head of Jordan's Muslim Brotherhood, told the crowd.

"Don't impose your failed governments on people," he said, referring to King Abdullah. "These governments that have committed corruption should be held accountable. There is no legitimacy for any government not chosen by the people."

Activists at the protest in the capital waved banners reading "No to cosmetic elections that circumvent our reform demands" and "We are boycotting for the sake of change".

The boycott by Jordan's main opposition Islamic Action Front, the Muslim Brotherhood's political arm, threatens to undermine the legitimacy of the next parliament.

The Front announced last year it would shun the polls after the tribal-dominated parliament passed a electoral law that magnifies the voting clout of native Jordanian constituencies at the expense of cities, which are home to many citizens of Palestinian origin and which tend to be Islamist strongholds..

More than two thirds of Jordan's seven people live in cities but are allocated less than a third of assembly seats.

REFORM PLEDGES

The Islamist boycott has reduced the election to a contest between tribal leaders, establishment figures and independent businessmen, with just a few of the 1,500 candidates running for recognized parties. Allegations of vote-buying are rife.

King Abdullah said this week he wanted to move faster on promises of democratic reforms and supported the idea of governments whose prime minister would emerge from a majority bloc in parliament, rather than being handpicked by him.

"Our constitutional monarchy has changed," the king said.

However, the previous parliament had resisted attempts to increase the number of seats set aside for political party lists, seeing this as a threat to tribal interests.

Jordanians will go to the polls amid economic gloom only two months after steep fuel price rises ignited widespread civil unrest, mainly in tribal areas that traditionally support the monarchy and rely heavily on state employment and welfare.

Unlike some Arab countries, Jordan has avoided any full-scale uprising in the past two years, but demonstrators voiced unprecedented calls to end King Abdullah's rule during the price protests in November, which have since subsided.

Protests led by the Brotherhood and dissident tribesmen have mostly demanded free elections and a crackdown on corruption.

Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour said the "self-defeating" election boycott would cost the opposition a chance to win up to a quarter of assembly seats and to press their case from within.

"It's a pity they are boycotting. We tried to dissuade them but they chose this path," Ensour said in remarks published on Friday, adding that fair polls were crucial to restore credibility dented by vote-rigging in previous elections. (Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jordan-islamists-shun-election-demand-political-reform-162542204.html

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Attacks prompt Nepal wildlife cap

Officials in Nepal have said they will now have to put a cap in the growth of wildlife including endangered species like tigers and rhinos.

They say it is a result of significant increase in loss of human lives from attacks by wild animals.

The problem is especially acute in buffer zones between human settlements and national parks.

In recent years, Nepal has developed a successful protection programme for many endangered species.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

The time has now come for us to determine how many such wildlife species we can have in our protected areas?

End Quote Krishna Acharya Forestry Ministry of Nepal

The Chitwan National Park in southern Nepal has more than 500 rhinos, up from half that figure few years ago, and more than 125 tigers.

The Bardiya National Park in the west now has more than 80 elephants, almost 10 times as many as there were in the 1990s.

In the Himalayas, the numbers of endangered species like snow leopards and red pandas have been growing as well.

And the country has nearly 24% of its land area as protected areas, including national parks, conservation areas and wildlife reserves.

With all these achievements in nature conservation, however, Nepal has also witnessed a rising number of human deaths and property losses because of wildlife.

In the last five years, more than 80 people have been killed by wild elephants while 17 of the animals died in retaliatory killings, according to forest ministry officials.

Elephant protest

Last month, local people in Chitwan, southern Nepal, staged a strike and demanded that a rogue elephant be killed after it had taken the lives of three people.

A few months ago, a leopard in western Nepal caused terror as it killed more than a dozen people within a matter of weeks.

In eastern Nepal, herds of wild elephants continue to rampage, demolishing human settlements and raiding crops.

Meanwhile, common leopards are increasingly attacking children and livestock in the hilly region.

Further north, in the trans-Himalayan region, locals continue to complain about snow leopards preying on their livestock.

Although forest ministry officials are yet to compile the latest data on these losses, they do admit that such incidents have gone up remarkably.

"Before, we used to record about 30 human deaths because of wildlife attacks annually but in the past few years the figure appears to have risen significantly," said Forest Ministry spokesman Krishna Acharya who, until recently, headed Nepal's Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation.

He added: "The time has now come for us to determine how many such wildlife species we can have in our protected areas."

WWF's Nepal country director, Anil Manandhar, said the problem had become quite serious.

"This is now something that could become the biggest threat and setback for Nepal's success in wildlife conservation," he explained.

Buffer zones

Wildlife experts say human settlements known as buffer zones around national parks have become flashpoints for human-wildlife encounters.

"The numbers of rhinos and tigers are increasing in the national park and they are moving out in search of food and space. Meanwhile, the increasing human population needs more of the natural resources available, and that competition creates conflict," said Mr Acharya.

Most of Nepal's national parks and protected areas are either in the Himalayan region or in the Tarai area, the southern plain land that border India.

Yet, wildlife-related loss of lives and properties are also increasingly being seen in the mid-hill region, geographically located between the Himalayas and Tarai plain land.

Conservationists point at the growing number of attacks on children and livestock by common leopards because this region has seen huge success in community forestry.

"We have been hearing complaints from farmers that community forests have more wildlife than in some national parks and therefore they are suffering losses of lives and properties," said Yam Bahadur Malla, country director for the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in Nepal.

He also suggested it was necessary to scientifically demarcate the boundaries of national parks, as some species involved in the attacks were sometimes found outside the existing boundaries.

Forest ministry officials, however, said the chances of expanding existing protected areas were very slim because Nepal had already made huge swathes of land available for nature conservation.

Mr Acharya said the details of plans to limit wildlife growth were yet to be worked out but he added that one of the ideas would be to relocate some of the wildlife species.

"We have listed nine such species that can be trans-located from where there are quite many of them to where there are very few and such species include animals involved in conflicts with humans," he said.

Mr Acharya also hinted that Nepal will now not commit to protect more wildlife than the amount its protected areas could sustain.

"For instance, we have said we will double the number of tigers to 250. But as we cannot expand our protected areas, we will not be able to commit more than that," he said.

"Nor can we add new conservation areas."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21069750#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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