Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Trading Volatility Breakouts In The SPDR S&P 500 ETF | Etfs ...

In my firm's last article on the volatility breakout trading strategy, we focused on explaining this trading method in easy to understand terms with clear examples. ?At the end of the article, it was suggested that simply knowing the general ?volatility breakout? approach is not enough to create a very profitable trading strategy. ?In fact, in certain markets and under certain conditions, taking volatility breakouts can be a very counterproductive trading strategy.

What is the key to making this strategy profitable? ?I want to share with you a few of the things that I have found to be highly effective when trading this approach in the S&P 500 (INDEXSP:.INX) stock index futures contract as well as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA:SPY).

1.? Volatile market conditions: This strategy works best when the market is frothy with the emotions of speculation and? fear. ?Many would guess that buying upside volatility breakouts would be a great strategy to use during bull markets. ?In fact, this is often not the case. ?Bull markets frequently see volatility compress and trading ranges contract, which takes away the core market conditions where this strategy thrives. ??In fact, 2008 (a year in which the S&P 500 was down around 40%) was perhaps the best year ever to be trading volatility breakout strategies in stock index ETFs or stock index futures.

2. Opening Gaps: For those new to this concept, a price gap is simply when there is a different in price between yesterday?s close and today?s open.? Many traders believe that because markets trade almost 24 hours a day, gaps (as measured by day-session hours) are no longer useful as technical indicators.? ?I have found this to be false. ?Gaps have been and continue to be highly significant events for a number of different strategies, and this is particularly true for volatility breakouts.

3. The swing position of the market. ?By this I mean, ?Where is the current price relative to the recent trading range over ?X? number of days?" ? I used this concept in this article and applied it to just one day. ?However, it can also be applied to a longer period of time. ?I have found that on average, volatility breakouts work best when the direction of the breakout contradicts the swing-position of the market. ?For example:? Upside volatility breakouts work better when the prior day closed at the low end of the recent trading range.

By combining these three factors, you can come up with some very good trading strategies.

Note: None of these ideas involve an ultra-complex pattern or any type of advanced calculations. ?I have known some traders who use very complex, ?if, then?-type logical statements that use a huge number of inputs in effort to find the best trading patterns. ?While this might work for some, I have found that by distilling ideas into the most simple, conceptual form possible, they tend to work better in real time.

Good Trading.
?
Nat Stewart runs the trading-strategy website www.nastrading.com. The site?s mission:? ?Help traders capture explosive moves in the forex, futures, and stock markets.?

Twitter: https://twitter.com/NASTrading

No positions in stocks mentioned.

Source: http://www.minyanville.com/trading-and-investing/etfs/articles/etf-news-spy-255EGSPC-trading-tips/10/30/2012/id/45420

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Common food preservative may slow, even stop tumor growth

ScienceDaily (Oct. 30, 2012) ? Nisin, a common food preservative, may slow or stop squamous cell head and neck cancers, a University of Michigan study found.

What makes this particularly good news is that the Food and Drug Administration and the World Health Organization approved nisin as safe for human consumption decades ago, says Yvonne Kapila, the study's principal investigator and professor at the University of Michigan School of Dentistry.

This means that obtaining FDA approval to test nisin's suggested cancer-fighting properties on patients in a clinical setting won't take as long as a new therapy that hasn't been tried yet on people, she says.

Antibacterial agents like nisin alter cell properties in bacteria to render it harmless. However, it's only recently that scientists began looking to antibacterial agents like nisin to see if they altered properties in other types of cells, such as cancer cells or cells in tumors.

Oral cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide, and oral squamous cell carcinoma accounts for more than 90 percent of oral cancers. However, survival rates for oral cancer haven't improved in decades, according to the study.

"The poor five-year survival rates for oral cancer underscore the need to find new therapies for oral cancer," Kapila said. "The use of small antibacterial agents, like nisin, to treat cancer is a new approach that holds great promise. Nisin is a perfect example of this potential because it has been used safely in humans for many years, and now the laboratory studies support its anti-tumor potential."

The U-M study, which looked at the use of antimicrobials to fight cancerous tumors, suggests nisin, in part, slows cell proliferation or causes cell death through the activation of a protein called CHAC1 in cancer cells, a protein known to influence cell death.

The study is the first to show CHAC1's new role in promoting cancer cell death under nisin treatment. The findings also suggest that nisin may work by creating pores in the cancer cell membranes that allow an influx of calcium. It's unclear what role calcium plays in nisin-triggered cell death, but it's well known that calcium is a key regulator in cell death and survival.

Additionally, the findings suggest that nisin slows or stops tumor growth by interrupting the cell cycle in "bad" cells but not the good cells; thus nisin stops cancer cell proliferation but doesn't hurt good cells.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Michigan.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Nam E. Joo, Kathryn Ritchie, Pachiyappan Kamarajan, Di Miao, Yvonne L. Kapila. Nisin, an apoptogenic bacteriocin and food preservative, attenuates HNSCC tumorigenesis via CHAC1. Cancer Medicine, 2012; DOI: 10.1002/cam4.35

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

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/top_news/top_health/~3/tW4u4D5dkgQ/121030161232.htm

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Mich. police seek suspect in 22 roadway shootings

This image released by Michigan State Police shows drawing of a man suspected in a series of shootings over the past week over a three-county area of southeastern Michigan. Wixom police say in a release that the sketch was obtained from a witness to a shooting Thursday, Oct. 18, 2012, in Ingham County. That witness also described the suspect?s vehicle as resembling a dark 1998 Oldsmobile Alero or a 1998 Toyota Camry. (AP Photo/Michigan State Police)

This image released by Michigan State Police shows drawing of a man suspected in a series of shootings over the past week over a three-county area of southeastern Michigan. Wixom police say in a release that the sketch was obtained from a witness to a shooting Thursday, Oct. 18, 2012, in Ingham County. That witness also described the suspect?s vehicle as resembling a dark 1998 Oldsmobile Alero or a 1998 Toyota Camry. (AP Photo/Michigan State Police)

(AP) ? Officers have begun pulling over and questioning drivers in four Michigan counties in the hopes of catching a man suspected of shooting at other motorists nearly two dozen times over the past two weeks, including one driver who was wounded over the weekend.

Officers are searching for anything out of the norm during their traffic stops in Oakland, Livingston, Ingham and Shiawassee counties, where the suspect is believed to have fired on 22 other vehicles since Oct. 16, said Lt. Mike Shaw, of the state police post in Brighton.

Witnesses have described the suspect's vehicle as resembling a dark 1998 Oldsmobile Alero or a 1998 Toyota Camry. Police on Monday stopped the driver of a dark-colored Chevy Cavalier after a woman reported that something hit her car on U.S. 23 near Brighton.

Those initial descriptions may not be correct, Shaw told The Associated Press Tuesday.

"We've had 22 victims that have tried to identify a vehicle traveling at 60 to 70 mph," he said. "We're looking for more suspicious activities that go with four-door vehicles and those darker in color ? somebody that's pulled over on the side of a road or coming out of a wood line on the side of a freeway. Or if you see the same car driving around with no sense of purpose.

"We'd rather check that out and err on the side of caution."

Shaw didn't have any totals on the number of cars stopped, but said drivers "have been more than cooperative."

More than 100 local police, sheriff's deputies, state troopers and federal agents are involved in the investigation, which began with reported shootings in Wixom, about 25 miles northwest of Detroit.

A western Michigan man was shot in the buttocks Saturday while driving to Detroit along Interstate 96 in Livingston County. He is the only person wounded so far, but the suspect is believed to be shooting at people ? not just their vehicles, Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard said Tuesday.

"It's been more of the grace of God than the guy intentionally missing people," Bouchard said. "We've had people who have been missed (by) inches. One bullet was lodged in a driver's seat."

The suspect is believed to be shooting at vehicles approaching from the opposite direction, Shaw said.

Some motorists didn't realize their vehicles had been hit until a quarter-mile or more later.

A task force put together to investigate the shootings has received more than 800 tips, including 200 that came in after the reward money for information that leads to an arrest was increased Monday from $12,000 to $102,000, Bouchard said.

Authorities say it's imperative that they catch the suspect not only to protect lives, but to stop the spread of fear affecting everyday life.

"For Halloween, we are going to do special patrols in each of our subdivisions so kids can have a normal Halloween," said Clarence Goodlein, Wixon's public safety director. "We're not going to be in the business of letting a thug and hoodlum bully us and change the course of our lives."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-31-Michigan%20Shooting%20Spree/id-6c69324438d6490fa4c0e23a04b8e4ba

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

You Don't Have to Be Crazy To Work Here | According To Hoyt

So, how does one become a writer?? The long-delayed post today ? because I had a routine doctor?s checkup ? gave me time to come back and look at your comments, and we can all agree that a degree in creative writing is about as useful as a meringue hammer.? At least I hope we all agree, because I?m sure of this.

In fact, what little I took in terms of creative writing in school probably hindered my writing commercial fiction.? It?s sort of looking at things the wrong way.? Your Creative Writing professor might have been ecstatic at the bit of symbolism in which you dress a character all in white to symbolize purity, but the reader is probably not even going to register it consciously, and if your character all-in-white proceeds to do nothing much that?s interesting, then well? The reader won?t be happy.

Mostly what the reader wants is to experience emotions.? If along with it you can backload some stuff to make the reader think, and if your reader is a thinking sort of person, bonus.? But mostly the reader wants to experience something and ?emotions? is the common denominator, atop of which you add the peculiar ?cookies? of each genre.? So, say, for romance, you have to have ? romantic stuff and tension between the couple; for SF (depending on subgenre) cool stuff like robots and space exploration; for fantasy everything from LOTR plus some; for urban fantasy shifters and vamps and hot chics (or cute guys) fighting them.? However if all those things don?t contribute to the emotional experience, you got nothing.

While from the critics end? well? they?re looking for symbolism and meaning and wondrous stuff like allusions to other books? yeah.? And most college courses teach you to be critics not writers.

So ? you can?t learn it in college.? What makes a writer a writer?

Well, you don?t have to be crazy to work here, but it helps.

Most of us started out telling ourselves stories.? Or we told younger siblings stories.? (I only had cats younger than I, and they were notoriously averse to standing still while I told them stories.)? Or, when we were older, we told our peers stories (guilty!)

I wrote my first ?novel? at six.? It was ten handwritten pages and Enid Blyton Famous Five Fanfic.? (Hey, one does what one can.)

By highschool I was writing 20k word ?novels? of very, very bad Clifford Simak pastiche.

And that?s part of what makes you a writer.? Like the artists of old who copied the works of the masters, almost all of us started out by writing things in imitation of those authors whose work had moved us the most.

At some point we realize it?s not quite ours, and we start experimenting.? For me that was my twenties, which generated a never end of REALLY BAD experiments, including some that can never be buried DEEP enough.? In fact, my kids are under notice if they find and publish any of them, I?ll come back and haunt them into the next century.

But in the middle of the experiments, my taste, formed by an awful lot of reading, picked this and that that worked, and that other thing that sparkled, and?? And I started to get a clue.

In my early thirties I had the revelation that I was writing for a reader.? Yeah, I know.? I?m slow that way.? Now, I had no idea who ?my reader? was or how he functioned, but I had an idea that I would write for the reader I?d like to attract.

And then it became sort of like playing chess on both sides, and things started to work.? That mind set is absolutely necessary to know when you?re too slow, when you?re too fast, when you?ve skipped something essential?

So ? it?s hard to acquire, though at this point it?s second nature.? (Posting at austen.com and getting comments as I wrote really helped that sense of what the readers were getting or not.)

And there it is.? You become a writer by:

1-????? Copying the masters.

2-????? Learning to go beyond copy

3-????? Reading an awful lot

4-????? Learning to write for readers.

Sounds easy, right?? Right.? And you?re wondering where the part comes where you suffer for your art, aren?t you?

Trust me, there?s suffering enough in there.? Like most simple plans, the difficulty is in the execution.

Now ? go work.

Source: http://accordingtohoyt.com/2012/10/29/you-dont-have-to-be-crazy-to-work-here/

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93% The Sessions

All Critics (88) | Top Critics (32) | Fresh (82) | Rotten (6)

Most often with The Sessions the blunt comedy outweighs the drift toward sanctimony.

It sends viewers out of the theater with a heightened sense of the physical and a real feeling for all the things that sex means in human life.

The achievement of this simply told, exceptionally fine film is the clarity with which it portrays the drama of a good soul in an inert body.

Hawkes' performance is the must-see hook of The Sessions, but Hunt gives this funny, touching movie its soul.

Character actor John Hawkes is often cast as a frightening rustic (Winter's Bone, Martha Marcy May Marlene), but he gives a tender and witty performance here as Mark O'Brien.

The joy of The Sessions goes beyond sexual healing. It makes physical intimacy far more a matter of the heart, and you won't be alone wiping an occasional tear.

"The Sessions" introduces us to some harsh truths we may not want to consider, but the outcome is one we cannot fail to understand.

"The Sessions" is a film that reminds us of the fragility of life, and how human beings are capable of a deep emotional bond when it is least expected.

... a story of triumph over disability that takes the form of an uplifting sex comedy rather than a depressing saga of a dying man.

That exceedingly rare combination of sexy, clever and sweet, a winning tale of one charming disabled man's quest to get some stank on his hangdown.

The film greatly benefits from Hawkes' tremendous performance. (Full Content Review for Parents also available)

For the entire endeavor to emotionally register, you must buy into the romance that purportedly blossoms between Hawkes and Hunt. I didn't, not for a second.

Hawkes' work here is that good that it carries one away on a wave of emotion that dismisses critical thought. The film around him could have been better but you're unlikely to realize that while you're watching it.

...a perfectly watchable showcase for two undeniably above-average performances.

Uneven and perhaps a little too tidy as it aims to promote one man's extraordinary spirit. It is John Hawkes and Helen Hunt, however, who are most worth seeing.

Practically ignores everything about O'Brien's life except as it relates to his sexual odyssey, turning the life of the man into little more than a curio.

A powerful expression of our common needs, fears, and consolations.

For better and for worse, The Sessions has 'crowd-pleaser' written all over it.

More Critic Reviews

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_sessions/

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Stock markets to close on Monday, possibly Tuesday

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Tracking Hurricane Sandy: Handy Maps And Apps

Hurricane Sandy is bearing down on the East Coast of the U.S., bringing sustained wind, heavy rain, and flooding that's forcing roads, bridges and mass transit systems to close from New York City to Washington. We're following the storm's progress and its impacts here on The Two-Way .

The National Weather Service is providing updated forecasts and maps regularly on its website. And there's a close-up, color-coded status of the weather conditions along the East Coast.

We've dug up a few more resources: a selection of storm-tracking maps, graphics and animations from across the web. You can leave links for other web resources in the comments section below.

Storm Tracking Maps

Google.org's Crisis Response Map

The Weather Channel's Hurricane Tracker

Flooding Maps

WNYC's Storm Surge Map

National Weather Service's Flood Gauges

Photos And Animations

NASA's Earth Observatory is posting some pretty stunning satellite photographs of the storm.

The satellite loop below shows a series of full-resolution images taken one minute apart as Sandy approaches the East coast. Click here for the full-screen version.

On Twitter

NPR News is compiling a Twitter list of public media folks covering the storm.

There's also a list of utility companies' twitter feeds here.

And in case your power goes out and you lose internet access, The Washington Post has a handy how-to guide for forwarding tweets via text message.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2012/10/29/163868633/tracking-hurricane-sandy-handy-maps-and-apps?ft=1&f=1007

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Artist will stare 'fitness for work' fears in the face with 'bed life ...

An award-winning disabled artist is to spend three days in bed in front of an audience, in an attempt to portray the contradictions of her impairment, and the government?s ?miserable, terrifying, punishing? fitness for work assessment regime.

The writer-director-activist Liz Crow is forced to spend much of her life in bed because of her impairment, but has always managed to keep that part of herself hidden from view.

?I have developed this incredibly stark way of living,? she says, ?and what other people see of me in public spaces is not how I am for most of my life. Even the people close to me don?t really know me at the most extreme.?

In?Bedding In?, she will make her ?twilight existence visible?, exposing the part of her life she spends in bed to public scrutiny, and for the first time ?parading? this private self in public.

The piece, part of this year?s SPILL Festival of Performance, in Ipswich, is Crow?s response to the government?s harsh benefits reassessment programme.

But rather than lying low for fear of being penalised by the Department for Work and Pensions, she has decided to ?stare that fear in the face?.

She is one of the hundreds of thousands of long-time incapacity benefit claimants who have been tested through the government?s reassessment programme, and subjected to the infamous work capability assessment, carried out by the government?s contractor Atos Healthcare.

Even though Crow has used a wheelchair for 26 years, Atos decided that she had no difficulty walking. She was placed in the work-related activity group (WRAG), for those thought able to move towards paid work.

But she knows she cannot make herself available for work, and so ? unless she wins her appeal ? she has resigned herself to having her benefits taken away because of the inevitable failure to co-operate with the regime.

?The consequences are that I may have no income coming in and don?t know how as a single parent I will care for my child, let alone my home, etc.?

Less than two weeks after her performance ends, she will need to parade her private self again, when she appeals to a tribunal against the decision to place her in the WRAG.

Crow is clear that she wants Bedding In to be about the complexity of her impairment, and not its ?tragedy?.

?I live a pretty good life with the complicated set of circumstances that I have got,? she says, ?but if I step out of my bed then it is not seen as complexity or contradiction, and in the current benefits system it means you fall through the gaps.?

Each day during the performance at Ipswich Art School Gallery, members of the public will gather around her bed to discuss the work, and its politics. The hope is that Crow will take the ?data? from these conversations and use them to further develop the piece.

?It is a political statement,? she says of the performance, ?but it is also trying to make visible this kind of internal wrestling that goes on for a lot of us with the benefits stuff.

?Since I got personal assistants 15 years ago I have managed to find a kind of fragile security in my life. I have rarely earned but I have, I hope, contributed.

?Now the benefits thing has kicked in it has all gone. Suddenly I don?t feel I have any security left whatsoever.?

Even if she wins her appeal, she faces the likely prospect of being reassessed again in another year or so, and then again, and again.

?The idea that this is life now: that is just dire. There are hundreds of thousands of us going through this assessment. There is some small comfort that there are a lot of us in it together but it is not much comfort because of the toll it takes.

?I have this tiny amount of time when I am well enough to do stuff and I am looking at that time being taken away.

?It has been really hard to create the life I have got, a reasonable life, and this big system comes along with these politicians who are so extraordinarily removed from a life like mine and they demolish what I have built up.?

The whole process feels, she says, like ?punishment?, not assessment, ?an endless round of justifying myself and fighting for a grain of security?.

?There are layers and layers of why it is so hard. One of the things is that if you fall through the gaps, for the press it is evidence that you are a scrounger and a fraudster.?

She is among the many disabled activists who believe that this cruel assessment process ? and the callous and incompetent way it is carried out by Atos ? are responsible for the premature deaths of hundreds, if not thousands, of disabled people.

Even if these deaths are not caused by the process, she says, ?actually they died among all this shit, their last few months were so miserable and so frightening, and I think that?s unforgivable. To condemn people to a really miserable last few months is diabolical.?

Crow feels there is an affinity between her performance and the direct action protest carried out by members of Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) at Marble Arch in central London last weekend.

One of the reasons she is so impressed with DPAC?s campaigning work, she says, is that ?they have created an incredible visible presence but have found ways for all sorts of people to contribute?, particularly through social media.

She also sees links with her most recent piece of work, Resistance, an award-winning video installation about the Aktion-T4 programme, which led to the targeted killing of as many as 200,000 disabled people, and possibly many more, in Nazi Germany.

She began working on Resistance in 2008, and started thinking about its themes several years earlier, and felt even then that there were contemporary ?connections?.

?Those contemporary connections have just got stronger and stronger,? she says. ?I am appalled to feel that we are under greater threat now than we have been in all the years I have been involved in activism.?

She points to newspaper reports of alleged disability benefit fraud and the use of language like ?shirkers?, ?scroungers? and ?fakers? to describe disabled people. This kind of propaganda, she says, is ?eerily familiar? from descriptions of pre-Holocaust Germany.

The ?specifics? of what is happening now are not the same as in Nazi Germany, she adds, but ?the values beneath it are, this idea that we are somehow dispensable, more dispensable than others?.

She also points to the Paralympics, which she says ?makes the scrounger-fraudster rhetoric stronger, and leads to a backlash?.

There are even similarities between the Paralympic classification system, and the benefits assessment system. Both suit those who have a ?bio-mechanical, quantifiable impairment?, rather than less clear and easily-determined impairments.

Would-be Paralympians with ?nebulous impairments? fall through the gaps, she says, just as she and many tens of thousands of other disabled people have fallen through the yawning gaps in the benefits system.

Bedding In is part of?Disability Arts Online?s??Diverse Perspectives project, which is funded by Arts Council England, and is commissioning eight disabled artists to make new artwork that ?sparks conversations and debate about the creative case for diversity?.

Bedding In?takes place at the Ipswich Art School Gallery from 1-3 November, from 11am to 6pm, as part of the SPILL Festival of Performance in Ipswich.

Disability News Service

?

Source: http://blacktrianglecampaign.org/2012/10/28/artist-will-stare-fitness-for-work-fears-in-the-face-with-bed-life-performance/

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Top 5 Tips To Keep Pets Safe During Hurricane Sandy | Care2 ...

As Hurricane Sandy threatens land along the East Coast, it is important to plan for your pets when preparing for the storm. Our friends at the?ASPCA and the Humane Society of the United States have provided us with top?pet preparation tips to ensure pet safety if Hurricane Sandy and other looming storms reach your region.

1) Prepare To Take Your Pets ? Don?t leave your pets at home. If you?re planning to head to a Red Cross Shelter or hotel, remember that not all will take animals. Here?s a list of directories for finding a pet-friendly hotel from the ASPCA. Other options include a veterinary clinic, animal control shelter, or pet shelter.

2) Photos & IDs Please! ? Keep a current photograph of your pet in case something happens to them during the storm. Identification in the form of a collar is also essential and will make it easier to locate them if they get lost.

3) Leash And Pet Carriers ? Think about how exactly you will keep track of your pet during the storm, and how you will transport them should you decide to evacuate. A leash and/or pet carrier will ensure your animal doesn?t go astray.

4) Bring Your Pet Inside ? The last thing you want is to have to hunt for your pet on the brink of a hurricane. The National Hurricane Center suggests that owners calm and comfort pets inside well in advance of the actual storm.

5) What To Pack ? The ASPCA recommends you pack five to seven days of pet food and water along with litter trays, litter and trash bags. Pet first aid kits might be a good idea, and remember their medications. If you are taking them to an animal shelter, you?ll need to bring all of the above and ensure your pet has its rabies tags, up to date immunization records and labelled supplies.

For more information, the American Red Cross has more about disaster preparedness and safety for pets.

?

More from Care2:
Disaster Preparation for Pets
How to Prepare for a Hurricane
Amazing Dog Rescue During Hurricane Isaac (Video)

?

More from Animal Planet:
Hurricane Ready: 6 Tips to Keep Pets Storm Safe
Pets During Hurricanes ? What To Do
Avoid Cat-astrophy With The Cat Evacuation Jacket ? [PHOTOS]

Source: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/top-5-tips-to-keep-pets-safe-during-hurricane-sandy.html

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Report: Pop star arrested in UK abuse case

British police arrested convicted sex offender and former pop star Gary Glitter on Sunday as part of an investigation into allegations of child sex abuse by the late BBC presenter Jimmy Savile, media said.

Glitter was released on bail some 10 hours later. But the arrest - the first to be reported in the case - widened a scandal that has already damaged the reputation of the publicly-funded BBC and the legacy of Savile, a former DJ who was one of the broadcaster's top show hosts and a prolific charity fundraiser.

The head of the BBC's governing body said on Sunday the broadcaster's reputation was on the line, and promised to get to the bottom of the scandal.

'A steep fall' for BBC as child sex abuse scandal rocks UK

A police statement said a man in his 60s had been picked up just after 7 am (0700 GMT) on suspicion of sexual offenses in the investigation termed "Savile and others." The statement did not name the man and a spokesman declined further comment.

The BBC and Sky News identified the man picked up from his London home as Glitter, a 68-year-old who was popular as a glam-rock singer in the 1970s.

Footage on both broadcasters showed Glitter, who was wearing a hat and sunglasses and was not handcuffed, leaving an apartment in central London and being driven away. Hours later, television showed investigators carrying large black bags as they left the house.

Glitter was held by police for about 10 hours. He was seen leaving a police station in central London and, minutes later, return to his apartment, where he dodged questions by scores of waiting reporters and cameramen.

Police later said the man was "bailed to return to the police station in mid-December 2012, pending further inquiries."

Jimmy Savile abuse scandal stuns Britain: a who's who primer

Glitter, born Paul Gadd, shot to fame in the early 1970s with the hit "Rock and Roll," trademark figure-hugging shiny silver all-in-one suits, platform shoes and large black hair.

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Glitter served two months was jail in Britain in 1999 for possession of child pornography. He then moved to Cambodia, but was deported in 2002 due to suspected sex offences.

In 2006, a Vietnamese court convicted him of committing obscene acts with two girls aged 10 and 11 and sentenced him to four years in jail. On his release he returned to Britain.

Allegations that Savile sexually abused young girls for decades first emerged in an expose on the British TV channel ITV. Since then, police say some 300 victims had come forward.

Victims' allegations broadcast by ITV include claims from one woman that she had seen Glitter having sex with an underage girl in Savile's BBC dressing room while Savile abused another girl. Glitter has denied the claim, according to the BBC.

With the scandal widening, public outrage has increased. A cottage in the Scottish Highlands that belonged to Savile was vandalized overnight, with abusive slogans painted on its walls, local police said.

Blind eye?
The scandal has raised troubling questions about the BBC's management and its past workplace culture. Revelations that an investigation by Newsnight, the BBC's flagship TV news show, was shelved last December led to claims bosses at the broadcaster knew about the allegations but kept quiet.

"Can it really be the case that no one knew what he was doing? Did some turn a blind eye to criminality?" asked Chris Patten, chairman of the BBC Trust which oversees the broadcaster, writing in the Mail on Sunday.

Video: Savile BBC scandal shocks UK (on this page)

The Sunday Times said the office of former BBC director Mark Thompson was alerted about the allegations twice, in May and September. Thompson is poised to take over as chief executive of the New York Times, and the Sunday Times quoted his spokesman as saying Thompson had not been told about the allegations on either occasion.

Thompson has told Reuters that he did not know about the nature of the investigation by the Newsnight program into Savile, and had no involvement in the decision to axe the report.

The BBC said on its website on Sunday that "Thompson has said the first time he had been made aware of claims that Savile had committed serious crimes and that some had taken place while the entertainer was working at the BBC was after he stepped down as director general."

The broadcaster has announced two investigations as a result of the scandal, and Patten promised full cooperation.

"The BBC's reputation is on the line," he wrote. "The BBC must tell the truth and face up to the truth about itself, however terrible."

When Savile died in October last year aged 84, his gold coffin went on public display and he was lauded as a "national treasure" who had raised millions of pounds for good causes.

A year later, police describe him as "undoubtedly" one of Britain's most prolific sex offenders, and the Vatican said a papal knighthood given to Savile decades ago for his charity work "should not have been bestowed".

Savile's family said it was in despair over the allegations and offered its "deepest sympathy" to abuse victims. It also said it had decided to remove the headstone on Savile's grave and destroy it to avoid it becoming a target for vandals.

Justice Secretary Chris Grayling on Sunday rejected a call by the deputy leader of the opposition Labour party for an independent, over-arching inquiry, arguing that such a process risked taking much longer to get to the truth.

Grayling told the BBC that efforts should focus on finding anyone involved in abuse alongside Savile and bringing them to justice.

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

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49585855/ns/world_news-europe/

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Friday, October 26, 2012

In the Midst of Climate Change, Can We - Environmental Leader

Can we all just get along?

This plea, famously uttered by the late Rodney King in a TV appearance during the eponymous riots in Los Angeles 20 years ago, is as relevant to the climate change debate as it then was to the social inequity debate.

The Fall 2012 issue of the Stanford Social Innovation Review is dedicated to the notion that climate science has in fact become a cultural war. The article notes that the public debate around climate change is no longer a scientific exploration ? but rather a struggle over values, culture and ideology.

The science is clear. And, just in case we needed further evidence, with the recent publication of the results of the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature (BEST) Project Professor Richard Muller, a physicist and climate-change skeptic, has declared himself converted. Interestingly, this project was funded in large part by the Charles G Koch Foundation, established by the billionaire US coal magnate who is the key backer of the climate-change skeptic Heartland Institute think tank. Indeed, in the spirit of the newly converted, this report not only finds that climate change is real, but concludes that it is likely all attributable to the human emission of greenhouse gases.

So why are we still not doing anything about it? Why are there still so many people who choose to deny, contradict and scoff at the evidence? Why are we not seeing society changing behaviors and instructing its governments and marketplaces to make different choices to avoid undesirable consequences?

Because we?re human. And humans, notoriously, are not rational creatures.

We need look no further than the advertising industry ? experts in the manipulation of all that triggers behavior change in humans. They don?t deal in facts, in threats, in dire warnings. They deal in aspiration, desire, self-interest, ego and nostalgia. And it works.

So, as uncomfortable as it may be to we practical types who plan, design, build, and measure, our drive for rationality may be the greatest barrier to communicating with audiences who think emotionally. As creators of the built environment we have a tendency to believe that audience members who do not take our design sensibilities seriously, who do not appear to care about environmental concerns, are either ill-informed, ill-intended or both. Regardless of the audience?s education, level of interest or stake in the issue, it is not their responsibility to understand us. It is our responsibility to make ourselves understood.

It is long overdue that we start paying more attention to our humanities colleagues who analyze, sympathize and empathize.

The most successful developments that catch my eye today are the ones that emerge from a collaborative process that engages the entire community in the solution. This is true whether we are looking at infrastructure investment in East London or a new water well in rural Ethiopia. The very best projects begin by listening to community needs and desires and taking the time to understand what must to change if their project is to have the best chance of success.

In this scenario, projects fulfill a private (personal) need at the same time as they fulfill a public (societal) need. This is evidenced by the testimony of happy residents who enjoy the health benefits and social interaction afforded by a walkable, green neighborhood where their children can safely play. Or by the proud mother, now a skilled water technician, who watches her daughter walk to school every day instead of walking five miles to the nearest (dirty) water source.

Our duty then, is not to preach climate change from the rooftops, but to work with communities, to try and help them figure out what to do today to get the future they want tomorrow. There are always barriers. But these barriers are emotional, not physical. We must begin with the understanding that everyone is acting rationally from his or her perspective. From there we must find the right way to communicate understanding, demonstrate responsiveness to concerns and needs, and offer a vision of a future that will meet not only their needs, but the needs of generations to come.

We cannot wait for consensus (and I speak as one who bears the deep scar tissue from my days as the former Planning Director of Seattle) but we can achieve informed consent.

Gary Lawrence is chief sustainability officer and vice president of AECOM Technology Corp. You can follow Gary on Twitter @CSO_AECOM.

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Source: http://www.environmentalleader.com/2012/10/25/in-the-midst-of-climate-change-can-we-all-just-get-along/

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Chemotherapy Value Overestimated By Many Cancer Patients ...

NEW YORK -- Most patients getting chemotherapy for incurable lung or colon cancers mistakenly believe that the treatment can cure them rather than just buy them some more time or ease their symptoms, a major study suggests. Researchers say doctors either are not being honest enough with patients or people are in denial that they have a terminal disease.

The study highlights the problem of overtreatment at the end of life ? futile care that simply prolongs dying. It's one reason that one quarter of all Medicare spending occurs in the last year of life.

For cancers that have spread beyond the lung or colon, chemo can add weeks or months and may ease a patient's symptoms, but usually is not a cure. This doesn't mean that patients shouldn't have it, only that they should understand what it can and cannot do, cancer experts say.

Often, they do not. Dr. Jane C. Weeks at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and researchers at several other Boston-area universities and hospitals led a study of nearly 1,200 such patients around the country. All had been diagnosed four months earlier with widely spread cancers and had received chemo.

Surveys revealed that 69 percent of those with lung cancer and 81 percent of those with colorectal cancer felt their treatment was likely to cure them. Education level and the patient's role in care decisions made no difference in the likelihood of mistaken beliefs about chemo's potential. Hispanics and blacks were three times more likely than whites to hold inaccurate beliefs.

Federal grants paid for most of the research.

In an editorial that appears with the study in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, two doctors question whether patients are being told clearly when their disease is incurable.

Patients also may have a different understanding of "cure" than completely ridding them of a disease ? they may think it's an end to pain or less disability, note Dr. Thomas J. Smith of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and Dr. Dan L. Longo, a deputy editor at the medical journal.

"If patients actually have unrealistic expectations of a cure from a therapy that is administered with palliative intent, we have a serious problem of miscommunication," they write. "We have the tools to help patients make these difficult decisions. We just need the gumption and incentives to use them."

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/25/many-cancer-patients-may-_n_2017049.html

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The Black Sheep of Nutrition: Exercise May Delay Early Aging of ...

Fitness training improves their cardiovascular health, preliminary study finds

FRIDAY, Oct. 19 (HealthDay News) -- Regular exercise may slow the premature aging of the cardiovascular system that occurs in people with type 2 diabetes, according to new research.

A healthy adult loses about 10 percent of fitness with each decade of life after age 40 or 50, but research shows that fitness levels in people with type 2 diabetes are about 20 percent lower than in healthy adults.

This accelerated loss of fitness increases the risk of early disability and death, said Amy Huebschmann, of the University of Colorado School of Medicine, and colleagues.

"Not only do these patients have more trouble with exercise ... but also with activities of daily living, such as a simple stroll to the corner store," the researchers said in an American Physiological Society news release.

The investigators confirmed other research, however, that has found that regular exercise can slow premature cardiovascular aging in diabetes patients. The findings suggest that their fitness levels can improve by as much as 40 percent after 12 to 20 weeks of exercise training.

"In other words, these defects are not necessarily permanent," Huebschmann said. "They can be improved, which is great news."

Regular exercise, however, does not restore diabetes patients' fitness levels to those of healthy adults, according to the findings. The research was presented last week at an exercise conference in Colorado sponsored by the American Physiological Society, the American College of Sports Medicine and the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology. Data and conclusions presented at medical meetings should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal

Although exercise can benefit diabetes patients, it may be difficult for them to achieve the recommended 150 minutes per week of moderate exercise. Huebschmann and her colleagues are working on ways to help diabetes patients reach their exercise goals.

"Type 2 diabetes has a significant negative impact on health, but that impact can be improved with as simple an intervention as regular brisk walking or other physical activity that most people with diabetes can do," Huebschmann said.

More than 8 percent of the U.S. population has diabetes, mostly type 2, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. With type 2 diabetes, the body can't properly process glucose, the main type of sugar in the blood.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention explains how to stay healthy with diabetes.

Source: http://rameynutrition.blogspot.com/2012/10/exercise-may-delay-early-aging-of.html

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Friday, October 12, 2012

Kamenetz Opens 25th Annual Senior/Baby Boomer Expo - Hunt ...

The Baltimore County Baby Boomer/Senior Expo is underway and Baltimore County's aging population is out in full force.?

By noon, parking was at a premium at the Maryland State Fairgrounds where thousands perused the latest resources for senior citizens and caregivers at the 25th annual event.

?It?s really really grown into one of the largest events of its kind, not only addressing outreach to seniors but also to caregivers and those entering close to retirement age,? County Executive Kevin Kamenetz said.?

Kamenetz led the opening ceremonies at little before 1 p.m. Wednesday. The expo continues on to 6 p.m. on Wednesday and from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Thursday.

?We?re trying to get outreach to the senior community, let them know what services Baltimore County provides, but also to start working closely with caregivers and family members," Kamenetz said.?

"We need to help them deal with their parents as they age in place," he continued. "Our goal in Baltimore County?since we have one of the largest senior populations per capita?is to offer assistance to our seniors to exercise, to be active and to age in place at home. The more active our senior are the healthier they are.?

Kamenetz, who wore a silver tie to commemorate the expo's silver anniversary, joked that he too was nearing the age where he would soon need to take advantage of the expo's resources.?

?I remember going to see [The Fabulous Hubcaps and Jr. Cline the Recliners] when I was in college, thinking what a hot band they were. And now they?re playing at the senior expo. Don?t know how to explain that one,? he said.?

More than 250 vendors are on hand at the expo, located in the Cow Palace on the fairgrounds property. Click here for the full list of exhibitors.

Stay with Patch for more coverage of the expo.

Source: http://huntvalley.patch.com/articles/kamenetz-opens-25th-annual-senior-baby-boomer-expo

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Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Asia stocks gain on US manufacturing upswing

BANGKOK (AP) ? Asian stock markets were boosted Tuesday by an upbeat report showing U.S. manufacturing grew in September for the first time in four months.

Hopes that the U.S. economy might be picking up helped push Japan's Nikkei 225 index 0.1 percent higher to 8,807.40.

South Korea's Kospi rose nearly 0.2 percent to 1,999.42 and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 gained 0.8 percent to 4,424.70.

Benchmarks in Singapore, Taiwan and Malaysia also rose. Markets in Hong Kong, mainland China, and India were closed for public holidays.

Investors were emboldened to weigh into stocks after the Institute for Supply Management said Monday its index of U.S. factory activity rose sharply to above 50, a reading that signals growth. The index had been below 50 from June through August.

The increase is a hopeful sign that the economy may be improving after a weak stretch. Economists welcomed the increase, though most still forecast slow economic growth below 2 percent for the rest of this year.

"The rise in the ISM manufacturing index in September, to a four-month high of 51.5 from 49.6 in August, will boost hopes that some of the recent slowdown in economic growth was just a summer phenomenon," Paul Dales of Capital Economics said in a research note.

The better news on manufacturing helped investors set aside concerns of a possible downgrade by credit rating agency Moody's of Spain's debt rating to junk status. The agency has the debt on review and is due to release its findings this week. Any cut in the rating would make Spain's debt non-investment grade.

That would hurt Spanish markets because many pension funds and banks would have to sell them from their portfolios and desist from buying them at auction. That, in turn, would force Spain to pay higher rates to borrow money, further hurting its government finances.

In corporate news, Qantas Airways rose 2.3 percent after selling its 50 percent stake in road freight operator StarTrack to Australia Post and moving to take full ownership of air freight business Australian Air Express.

Japanese exporters rose after the yen slipped against the dollar and the euro. Nintendo Co. rose 3.7 percent, Mazda Motor Corp. added 3.4 percent and Ricoh Co. jumped 4.4 percent.

Wall Street stocks closed mostly higher Monday. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.6 percent to close at 13,515.11. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 0.3 percent to 1,444.49. The Nasdaq composite fell 0.1 percent to 3,113.53.

Benchmark oil for November delivery was down 17 cents to $92.31 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract closed up 29 cents at $92.48 in New York on Monday.

In currencies, the euro rose to $1.2898 from $1.2886 in New York late Monday. The dollar rose to 78.09 yen from 78.02 yen.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asia-stocks-gain-us-manufacturing-upswing-025016537--finance.html

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