Monday, October 29, 2012

Home Improvement Show ? CBS St. Louis

Scott Mosby was live at One Memorial Drive for the last time, he talked about the ghost of the old studios, took your phone calls on a number of topics including: Attic Ventilation, new furnace standards, driveway caulking, and getting your fireplace ready for the winter.

Hour 1:

Home Improvement Show

Hour 2:

Home Improvement Show

Hour 3:

Home Improvement Show

Source: http://stlouis.cbslocal.com/2012/10/27/home-improvement-show-30/

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

MintLife Blog | Personal Finance News & Advice | Lawsuit Financing ...

gavel

Imagine you have been injured in some way and the responsible party is a large company or wealthy individual. You think you can sue and win in court and your attorneys agree, but between legal costs and living expenses, you can?t afford to fight for years to get the payout.

Now, imagine that someone offers to give you cash now and be repaid when and if you win your case.

Litigation Financing

Stop imagining. Litigation financing, also called lawsuit financing or legal financing, is an emerging industry that provides money to help plaintiffs cover legal bills and living expenses while waiting to resolve their cases.

While new and somewhat controversial in the United States, it?s long been used in other countries and has been growing in popularity in America since appearing in the late 1990s.

The basic idea is straightforward: if someone has a legal claim for injury, such as one resulting from a car wreck, a legal financing company puts up money to pay for the injured party?s legal, living or other costs while the lawsuit is being pursued.

The money is treated as a non-recourse loan to be paid back if there is an eventual settlement.

Does It Level the Playing Field?

Litigation financing can help level the legal playing field for ordinary plaintiffs and well-funded defendants.

It can provide someone who lacks deep pockets the wherewithal to pursue a claim, or it can provide a plaintiff who prefers to have money now the option of collecting sooner rather than later.

What Litigation Financing Pays For

Legal financing isn?t just for attorney?s fees and court costs. The American Legal Financing Association, a group formed in 2004, says its members provide money to pay for plaintiffs? medical care, cover children?s college expenses and make up overdue child support payments.

The group says one of its members claims over 62 percent of funds it hands out go to stop foreclosures or evictions.

For impoverished plaintiffs, the service can sometimes fill a need better than other financial institutions can. Banks, for instance, don?t consider potential lawsuit awards as good collateral for loans, so they won?t lend money to plaintiffs who lack good credit.

That is often the situation for people who are injured and can?t work or have large medical bills. Plaintiff?s attorneys, meanwhile, are barred by ethics rules from giving their clients money.

Does It Encourage Frivolous Lawsuits?

One criticism of legal financing is that it might encourage frivolous lawsuits. Arguments against this note that if a lawsuit fails, legal financing firms lose their investment ? plaintiffs don?t have to repay money if cases are unsuccessful ? so they are unlikely to back meritless causes.

Another issue is the cost to plaintiffs. Legal financing firms charge higher interest rates than banks, around 2 percent to 3 percent a month. If it takes a long time to settle or win a case, the plaintiff may receive little of the eventual proceeds.

And legal financing isn?t likely to be a gold mine for people who have been injured. One study reported cash advances average between $1,750 and $4,500 and rarely exceed $20,000. Advances were also typically less than 10 percent of the total estimated value of the claim.

A Side Benefit

A side benefit of legal financing is that it can provide an attractive investment alternative. Legal judgments aren?t tied to the stock market, unemployment rate or any of the other factors that affect most investments.

For people seeking returns insulated from the economy, investing in legal financing is a promising ? although not risk-free ? option.

The Bottom Line

The basic concept of legal financing isn?t completely new. Personal injury attorneys routinely take cases on contingency, paying legal expenses out of their pockets and foregoing their own fees until the case is settled.

Many cash-strapped plaintiffs have also financed legal fees and living expenses with bank loans (if their credit is good enough) or credit cards while waiting for their claims to be resolved.

But the idea of treating a potential lawsuit payout as an investment opportunity is relatively new, and, for better or for worse, it promises to change the way we use the courts to seek financial remedies.

?Lawsuit Financing Could Change the Way We Sue? was written by Mark Henricks.?

Source: http://www.mint.com/blog/trends/lawsuit-financing-could-change-the-way-we-sue-1012/

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School bus, truck crash in Pa. _ without drivers

BEAVER FALLS, Pa. (AP) ? Police don't plan to cite the drivers of a truck and school bus which crashed in western Pennsylvania.

But only because neither vehicle had a driver when they wrecked.

Police in Patterson Township tell the Beaver County Times (http://bit.ly/UBPOwQ ) the incident happened just before 10 a.m. Tuesday when the parked bus began to roll down a hill. Police aren't sure why that happened, because the driver had engaged the parking brake.

The bus rear-ended a parked truck, which also began rolling down the hill alongside the bus, until the truck flipped onto its side. The bus continued on, shearing off one utility pole and hitting another before rolling to a stop a few feet from the porch of a home.

Nobody was hurt.

Patterson Township is about 30 miles northwest of Pittsburgh.

___

Information from: Beaver County Times, http://www.timesonline.com/

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/school-bus-truck-crash-pa-without-drivers-142913966.html

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The diet-proof holiday meal: Seven ways to stay on track this season

ScienceDaily (Oct. 24, 2012) ? Holiday dinners are filled with heaping dishes of comfort foods, fattening favorites and savory treats. It is no wonder these meals often leave us feeling stuffed with guilt and holiday remorse.

Patricia Nicholas, a registered dietitian at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, says you can avoid this psychological turmoil by adding "new favorites" to the traditional dishes. "Healthy meals can be festive as well and hopefully, you have been making healthy changes to your diet all year."

Michelle Morgan, a registered dietitian at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, says, "Stay in tune with your hunger during holiday meals. If you feel satiated and comfortable -- stop eating!"

The following is the holiday feast survival guide -- a road map of sorts to keep you and your diet from straying too far this year.

? Re-think your appetizers. Incorporate healthier pre-meal snack options. Swap the bread bowl for whole-wheat pita with a low-fat bean dip!

? Add some color to your holiday dinner spread with a bowl of fruit or a vegetable salad.

? Choose smaller portions. You can still taste all the foods in your holiday spread without overeating. Remember, an occasional indulgence will not destroy your weight-loss attempts, and if you don't love something don't eat it.

? The only thing that should be stuffed during the holidays is the turkey! Just because there is more food sitting around, does not mean you need to eat more. A forkful of pie will do less damage than a whole piece.

? No need for second helpings; have a calorie-free chat instead. The holidays are a great time to engage in conversation with your loved ones -- and this will not add inches to your waistline. Just be sure to move the conversation away from the food!

? Don't skip meals prior to a holiday party or dinner. You are less likely to overeat if you have eaten well throughout the day.

? Don't allow holiday activity to slow down your exercise program. Bundle up and take a walk after your holiday meal -- this not only can prevent you from overeating and picking at leftovers, but is also a great way to burn off some of the extra calories you may have consumed.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, via Newswise.

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


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/living_well/~3/7WItr4UR0wc/121024175242.htm

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Nikon 1 V2 unveiled: 14.2 megapixel ILC shoots 15fps stills for $899.95 in November

Nikon 1 V2 unveiled 142 megapixel ILC shoots 1080p video for $89995 in November

It was just over a year ago when Nikon first dipped its toe into mirrorless waters with its first two 1 System cameras, the V1 and J1. Now, the company has released the V1's successor, the aptly named V2. Like its elders, the V2 has a 1200fps slo-mo capture mode, a 3-inch LCD display on the back, a high-res (1.4 million dot) electronic viewfinder, and does 1080/30p and 1080/60i video capture (Alas, 4K recording capability didn't make the cut). Unlike the V1, the V2 comes in only black or white and uses an upgraded 14.2-megapixel CMOS sensor with an ISO range of 160-6,400. It also packs a new Expeed 3A image processor in tandem with Nikon's Advance Hybrid AF to deliver higher speed shooting. That autofocus system is comprised of 73 phase detect sensors and 135 contract detect sensors, which enables the V2 to capture stills at up to 15fps for 45 continuous frames -- and it can shoot 60 frames continuously using fixed focus.

The camera itself looks quite a bit different from its brethren, with a magnesium chassis, a bulked up grip and a built-in flash, plus command and shooting mode dials up top. It's a layout not unlike Sony's NEX-7, with one dial enabling easy switching between auto and manual exposure modes and a second providing access to secondary shooting controls like exposure compensation. The camera also has a stereo mic on board along with an external mic jack for recording audio. Would-be V2 owners can grab one with a 10-30mm kit lens for $899.95, and Nikon will add 30-110mm glass to that package for $250 more when it goes on sale in late November. Want to know more? Check out our hands-on with the V2 to see the new shooter in action, and Nikon's full PR awaits after the break.

Continue reading Nikon 1 V2 unveiled: 14.2 megapixel ILC shoots 15fps stills for $899.95 in November

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Fresco's Pasta Bar, The Lynn on Bryant, New Bohemia, and more ...

Readers: Win Heavy Table pint glasses

The Tap loves restaurant tips from readers, so we?re awarding a Heavy Table pint glass to the best tipster each month. The Tap is the metro area?s comprehensive restaurant buzz roundup, so if you see a new or newly shuttered restaurant, or anything that?s ?coming soon,? email Tap editor Jason Walker at

September?s winner: Paul Schadewald of St. Paul

Fresco?s Pasta Bar (opens Nov. 2)

920 E Lake St, Minneapolis (Midtown Global Market) | 952.239.0860

Veteran caterer Danielle Gooderum had dreamed of opening a restaurant but felt overwhelmed by the start-up costs.

So she wisely contacted the Midtown Global Market, and the folks there helped Gooderum navigate the rigmarole of opening her own place. Now, her Fresco?s Pasta Bar is set to open as yet another eatery in the chugging-along MGM.

?I started thinking of concepts and noticed there was not a lot of Italian in the Global Market, and that happens to be one of my specialties,? Gooderum said. ?Then, to take the Italian concept further, I wanted to do something that has not been done before, and in the restaurant world there is not much that hasn?t been done.?

Her idea: Build-your-own pastas and salads. Diners choose a noodle, sauce, vegetables, and meat; for salads, ingredient choices are tossed with dressing and chopped on a cutting board.

Meal options are too numerous to list but include seven pasta styles, about 15 sauces, and an array of vegetables and meats. So a diner could create, say, linguini with shrimp, capers, and fennel in tarragon mustard sauce, or spicy red pepper penne with olives and Italian sausage.

Gooderum also plans to offer take-home recipe meal kits in a deli case as well as catering; she said Fresco?s Pasta Bar would open Nov. 2.

The Lynn on Bryant (now open)

5003 Bryant Ave S, Minneapolis | 612-767-7797

Symbolic of the restaurant rejuvenation of 50th and Bryant, The Lynn on Bryant opened last week with all-day service, from coffee and breakfast straight through to dinner, beer, and wine, and prepared meals to go. Chef Peter Ireland and manager Jay Peterson have developed a farm-focused menu that they feel will best serve the area: eggs and pancakes at breakfast, sandwiches and salads at lunch, and dinner options that run from a more casual sandwich or baked gnocchi to bouillabaisse and a nightly beef special.

?A chef curates an experience for a consumer,? Ireland said. ?It?s hard to source everything from small farms, and that?s the role of the chef. The chef curates, finds the best ingredients, puts them together, and presents them in the best light.?

With the usually packed and well-received George and the Dragon pub around the corner, The Lynn on Bryant gives the corner its 1-2 punch back after a fire famously devastated the corner and its high-profile restaurants, Blackbird and Heidi?s, in 2010.

New Bohemia (now open)

233 E Hennepin Ave, Minneapolis | 612.275.3972

With 30 taps, a bevy of bottled beers, and a menu of sausage and Belgian fries, the just-opened New Bohemia is delivering its twist on a traditional European beer hall.

The tap list is a tried-and-true mix of local and national crafts, with the Euro beers mostly relegated to bottles. The sausage, though, is where New Bohemia is attempting to stand out, with traditionals like bratwurst and hot links joined on the menu with chicken brats, a Filipino take, and the ?adventurous? sausages: pheasant, boar, bison, alligator, and a ?smooth and delicious? rattlesnake rabbit jalapeno.

New Bohemia has admirably included beer flights on its menu ? could we get a brat flight?

NOW OPEN

  • The Lynn on Bryant, 5003 Bryant Ave S, Minneapolis | 612.767.7797
  • New Bohemia, 233 E Hennepin Ave, Minneapolis | 612.275.3972
  • Avenue Eatery, 1101 W Broadway Ave, Minneapolis. Re-opened under new management. | 612.767.6278
  • The Belmore, 25 4th St N, Minneapolis
  • Sole Mio, 1750 Weir Dr, Woodbury | 651.789.3220
  • Panini Grill, 15092 Claret Ave W, Rosemount | 651.423.2355
  • Betty?s Cafe and Pies, 1981 Silver Bell Rd, Eagan | 612.227.6999
  • Nightingale, 2551 Lyndale Ave S, Minneapolis | 612.354.7060
  • Butter Bakery Cafe, 3700 Nicollet Ave S, Minneapolis. Moved from old location. | 612.521.7401
  • Summit Brewing Taproom, 910 Montreal Cir, St. Paul | 651.265.7800
  • Bread, Coffee & Cake, 750 Minnesota 110, Mendota Heights | 651.688.0798
  • Maya Cuisine, 1840 Central Ave NE, Minneapolis | 612.789.0775
  • Cakewalk, 303 Division St S, Northfield | 507.786.9255
  • Cool Cups Yogurt, 120 S 6th St, Minneapolis | 612.338.5044
  • Sports Restaurant and Coffee, 1501 S 6th St, Minneapolis | 612.367.4186
  • Daalo Grill, 2647 Nicollet Ave S, Minneapolis | 612.353.5911
  • The Gray House, 610 W Lake St, Minneapolis | 612.823.4338

Becca Dilley / Heavy Table

  • Northbound Smokehouse and Brewpub, 2724 E 38th St, Minneapolis | 612.328.1450
  • Figlio, 5331 W 16th St (Shops at West End), St. Louis Park | 952.345.2400
  • Ike?s, 17805 Hwy 7, Minnetonka | 952.681.7099
  • Cow Bella Gelato, 1700 Grand Ave, St. Paul | 651.340.0585
  • Bar Louie, 1348 Lagoon Ave, Minneapolis | 612.824.1529
  • Camden Tavern & Grill, 4601 Lyndale Ave N, Minneapolis | 612.529.4490
  • Tawakal Restaurant, 12609 Nicollet Ave, Burnsville | 952.500.8954
  • Fat Nat?s, 2700 39th Ave, St. Anthony Village
  • The Rack Bar & Grill, 13050 Aldrich Ave, Burnsville | 952.736.7730
  • Moe?s Southwest Grill, 2137 W 80 1 / 2th St, Bloomington | 952.513.7182
  • The Kenwood, 2115 W 21st St, Minneapolis | 612.377.3695
  • Cafe Maude at Loring, 1612 Harmon Pl, Minneapolis | 612.767.9080

CLOSED / CLOSING:

Lars Swanson / Heavy Table

  • Thom Pham?s Wondrous Azian Kitchen, 533 Hennepin Ave S, Minneapolis
  • Pierre?s Bistro, 2221 W 50th St, Minneapolis
  • The Public House, 700 Washington Ave N, Minneapolis
  • El Meson, 3450 Lyndale Ave S, Minneapolis
  • Pierre?s Bistro, 2221 West 50th St, Minneapolis
  • Chez Jude, 411 W Hwy 61, Grand Marais, Minnesota (last day Oct. 27)
  • Cowboy Slims, 1320 W Lake St, Minneapolis
  • Roly Poly, 7733 Flying Cloud Dr, Eden Prairie
  • Quba, 1501 S 6th St, Minneapolis
  • Nora?s Seafood Market, 628 Central Ave SE, Minneapolis
  • Avenue Eatery, 1101 W Broadway Ave, Minneapolis
  • Papa?s Pizza, 4159 Thomas Ave N, Minneapolis
  • Aura, 3001 Hennepin Ave, Minneapolis
  • Kurry Kabab, 2018 Jefferson Rd, Northfield

COMING UP:
Minneapolis

  • Insert Coins, 315 1st Ave N, Minneapolis. Opens Oct. 26. | 612.564.4016
  • Fresco?s Pasta Bar, 920 E Lake St, Minneapolis (Midtown Global Market). Opens Nov. 2. | 952.239.0860
  • Azia Market Bar & Restaurant, 2550 Nicollet Ave S, Minneapolis. Opens Nov. 7. | 612.813.1200
  • Northgate Brewing, 3134 California St NE, Minneapolis. Opens for growler sales in late October/early November. | 612.234.1056
  • Sabbai Cuisine, 920 E Lake St, Minneapolis (Midtown Global Market) | 952.233.5662
  • Solomon?s Bakery, 2827 Hennepin Ave S, Minneapolis
  • Well Seasoned, 920 E Lake St, Minneapolis (Midtown Global Market) | 612.886.2489
  • Smack Shack, Washington Ave N and 6th Ave N, Minneapolis.
  • Parka, 4023 E Lake St, Minneapolis.
  • Blue Door Pub, 3448 42nd Ave S, Minneapolis. Opens this fall.
  • Republic, 3001 Hennepin Ave, Minneapolis. Opens in November.
  • Tangiers Eatery and Lounge, 116 1st Ave N, Minneapolis.
  • Dangerous Man Brewing, 1300 2nd St NE, Minneapolis | 612.209.2626
  • The Original Just Turkey Restaurant, 3758 Nicollet Ave S, Minneapolis
  • Yogurt Lab, 5007 France Ave S, Minneapolis; 309 SE Oak St, Minneapolis
  • Rincon 38, 3801 Grand Ave S, Minneapolis | 612.408.7063
  • Fitger?s Brewhouse, 107 3rd Ave N, Minneapolis. Opens late 2012.
  • Burch, 1942 Hennepin Ave, Minneapolis. Isaac Becker?s planned steakhouse in old Burch Pharmacy; opens in late 2012/early 2013.
  • World Street Kitchen, 2743 Lyndale Ave S, Minneapolis. Opens late 2012.
  • 612 Brew taproom, 945 Broadway St NE, Minneapolis. Opens late 2012.
  • Union, 733 Hennepin Ave, Minneapolis. Opens in November.
  • Origami, 1352 Lagoon Ave, Minneapolis. Moving from Minnetonka location; opens Dec. 1.
  • Seward Cafe, 2129 E Franklin Ave, Minneapolis. Opening for dinner service. | 612.332.1011
  • Beacon Public House, 615 Washington Ave SE (in the Commons Hotel), Minneapolis. Opens early 2013. | 612.379.8888
  • Rocky and Shem?s Ice Cream Shoppe, 56th and Chicago, Minneapolis. Opens late 2012/early 2013.
  • Sandcastle, Lake Nokomis, Minneapolis. Doug Flicker?s concessionaire restaurant at the lake. Opens spring 2013.
  • Unnamed Kim Bartmann restaurant, 1014 E 38th St, Minneapolis
  • Town Hall Tap, 5019 34th Ave S, Minneapolis

St. Paul

  • Louis, 211 7th St W, St. Paul. Cossetta?s new rooftop restaurant. Opens Nov. 12. | 651.222.3476
  • French Hen, 518 Selby Ave, St. Paul. Opens this fall. | 651.208.2708
  • Bullpen Saloon, 395 Robert St N, St. Paul. Opens this fall. | 651.335.7503
  • Sakana Sushi & Asian Bistro, 740 Cleveland Ave S, St. Paul

Greater Twin Cities Area

  • People?s Organic, 12934 Minnetonka Blvd, Minnetonka | 952.938.4140
  • Steak America, 2400 Cliff Rd, Burnsville. Opens early November. | 763.258.6881
  • Raku Modern Japanese Cuisine, 5371 W 16th St (Shops at West End), St. Louis Park
  • Redstone American Grill, 12109 Main St, Maple Grove
  • Sweet Ducky Cupcakery, 117 W Churchill St #2, Stillwater. Opens this fall. | 651.472.1150
  • Steel Toe Brewing Taproom, 4848 W 35th St, St. Louis Park. Opens late 2012. | 952.955.9965
  • Hammerheart Brewing, 7785 Lake Dr, Lino Lakes. Opens late 2012. | 651.964.2160
  • Sushi Fix, 862 E Lake St, Wayzata. Opens early 2013. | 612.532.0305
  • Osaka Seafood and Steakhouse, Woodbury Lakes, Woodbury. Opens early 2013.

The Tap is the Heavy Table?s guide to area restaurant openings, closings, and other major events. The Tap is compiled and published biweekly by Heavy Table writer Jason Walker. If you have tips for The Tap, please email Jason at .

Source: http://heavytable.com/frescos-pasta-bar-the-lynn-on-bryant-new-bohemia-and-more/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=frescos-pasta-bar-the-lynn-on-bryant-new-bohemia-and-more

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Lung mucus gel scaffold prevents nanoparticles from getting through

ScienceDaily (Oct. 23, 2012) ? Scientists at the Saarland University and the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research (HZI) unraveled lung mucus's physical properties: They discovered that a rigid gel scaffold in lung mucus separates large, fluid-filled pores and prevents nanoparticle movement beyond individual pore boundaries. Their findings deepen our understanding of diseases of the respiratory system, notably infections, and support the development of new inhaled medications.

The researchers published their findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (PNAS).

Mucus coats our airways' internal surfaces. The viscous gel humidifies the lungs and prevents viruses and other small particles like diesel soot from entering the body unchecked. Previously unclear was the extent to which such nanoparticles are able to move through the lungs' mucus. Here, the research evidence was contradictory. Scientists could not explain why, in inhaled medication development, drug nanoparticles often simply got stuck in the mucus never making it to their target destination inside the lung cells.

Now, as part of a German Research Foundation (DFG)-funded study, pharmacists and physicists were finally able to shed light on this dilemma. Scientists from the Helmholtz Institute for Pharmaceutical Research Saarland (HIPS), a branch of the HZI, together with researchers from the Saarland University, the Universit? Paris-Diderot, and Fresenius Medical Care Germany collaborated on the study. "The mucus inside the lungs is a very special kind of gel. Its structure is very different from other gels," explains Claus-Michael Lehr, Professor for Biopharmacy and Pharmaceutical Technology at the Saarland University and head of the "Drug Delivery" Department at HIPS. "Normal" gels have a microstructure that resembles a delicate spiderweb made from thin, very fine threads that enclose small pores. When viewed under the microscope, lung mucus, by comparison, looks more like a sponge, with rigid, thick gel rods separating large pores filled with liquid gel. "These scaffold proteins are called mucins," explains Professor Lehr. The researchers have now shown that nanoparticles become stuck at these structures as though they were bars of a cage. The explanation for why many investigations found nanoparticles in the mucus to be highly mobile is because the research was done on a nanometer scale. Inside the pores, the particles can move around completely unobstructed and only when they try to move past individual pores are they prevented from doing so by the "bars."

"Our results are helping us to better understand the etiology of infectious diseases of the airways and how to treat them more effectively. In particular, they represent an important basis for the continued development of new inhaled medications," explains Professor Lehr. The newly gained insights show that it is important to consider how drugs overcome the mucus gel scaffold. Mucolytic techniques can be used where, essentially, the rods are melted such that they dissolve before the nanoparticle and, once the particle has passed, they fuse again.

One of the research tools Professor Christian Wagner and his team of experimental physicists at the Saarland University use to support their assumptions are optical tweezers: Bundled laser beams are used to grab and move the smallest particles just like you would use a regular pair of tweezers. "We can use the optical tweezers' laser beams to measure the force that is required to move a particle within the gel. This allows us to make conclusions about the medium that the bead is moved through," explains Professor Wagner. "We were able to pull the bead through the liquid inside the pore at a constant force -- just as we would if we were dealing with a normal gel. However, whenever the bead hits the pore's wall, in other words the mucus's gel rods, the laser beam is unable to move it any further," explains Wagner. Experiments using an atomic force microscope as well as other tests are further supporting their hypothesis: As such, iron nanoparticles were able to penetrate the "normal" reference gel but not the lung mucus without any difficulties under the influence of a magnetic field. Structural analyses of the mucus were performed by scientists at Fresenius Medical Care Germany using a cryo-electron microscope.

The researchers expect that insights into the special structure of lung mucus will help guiding the development of a new generation of drugs to treat diseases of the airways.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Saarland University, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. J. Kirch, A. Schneider, B. Abou, A. Hopf, U. F. Schaefer, M. Schneider, C. Schall, C. Wagner, C.-M. Lehr. Optical tweezers reveal relationship between microstructure and nanoparticle penetration of pulmonary mucus. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1214066109

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/~3/9Vl-JjA8Z0I/121023090522.htm

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Open Yourself Up to Pain/Loss ? Anytime Fitness Cudahy Blog

With yesterday?s tragic spa shooting in Brookfield and so many people going through trauma and challenges in their own lives, thought this might be helpful to us all. Take a step back and really open yourself up to the pain and/or loss. Will it control your life and bring you down? Or, will it change you for the better? What will you choose?

Written by: Gabe Martinez, the owner and main author of the blog ImprovemenTools, where he writes about self-improvement and gives his readers tools to help them grow.


Photo by h.koppdelaney

By Gabe Martinez

Pain and loss is a reality that we all have to deal with in our lives from time to time. It can control our lives and bring us down, or it can actually cause us to change in good ways and make us better.

It?s easy for us to want to push aside our negative feelings and not acknowledge their existence. We want to feel good and be happy all of the time.

And there?s nothing wrong with wanting happiness.

But what if when pain, heartache, or loss strike us, they can actually change us to make us better people? And what if it can help us deal better with future occurrences of pain?

Back in 2007 on the day after Christmas, I lost my best friend of many years to a brain tumor. Naturally, much grief and pain followed for quite some time. I became hopeless, I felt powerless, and I felt overwhelmed.

I also felt confused and I started wondering why these sorts of things happen.

At one point I could tell that these feelings were beginning to have a solid grip on my life. They were able to dictate how I acted and felt about similar situations.

That?s when I realized that I needed to make some positive changes, despite such negative circumstances.

Realize that good comes out of all bad

This is probably the first thing that helped me to deal with my grief and heartache. Realizing that good can come out of bad situations is a powerful realization.

I said to myself there must be a reason that humans feel such horrible feelings.

Though these feelings are considered ?bad? and ?negative,? they are really our allies.

Grieving and heartache means we are filled with love

It reminds us of how much we love others, which triumphs over all negative feelings. For most of us negative feelings are temporary, and feelings of love for our friends and family are permanent. Realizing this helped me in dealing with the loss of my best friend. It reminded me that I loved him dearly, which brought me much comfort. I would be very worried had I not felt grief after his death. That would?ve meant that I didn?t love him like a friend. But the grief reminded me otherwise. This is one of the ways good things come out of bad situations.

By accepting these feelings instead of wanting to push them aside, we are opening ourselves to more love and good feelings. Using this fact will help us to grow, even during our heartache. It will also prepare us in dealing with future situations that bring sorrow.

Pain and sorrow are a transition to new opportunities

We know that life changes rapidly and unexpectedly. My life instantly changed the moment I found out of my friend?s passing. At one point I felt hopeless. But when I decided to use those feelings to my advantage, I flipped them on their head.

Dealing with loss is a period of transition. But it is a period of transition to new and greater things. During my period of grief, I transitioned to a period of personal growth. I was able to easily reach out to my friends and family who were experiencing the same feelings.

By doing this not only did I grow as a person, it made the process much easier and quicker for all of us. We were able to grow together. Keeping this mentality helped me to realize that it?s ok to feel these feelings instead of wanting to push them aside so quickly. Had I pushed them aside, I would?ve crawled up in a corner and not had the opportunity to grow closer to my friends and family. I would?ve missed out on the opportunity to grow.

Learn to welcome pain, heartache, and loss

It sounds kind of strange that I?m saying that we should welcome the pain. Who wants to welcome any kind of pain? Welcoming in this context simply means acceptance.

By welcoming the pain, sorrow, and loss we are accepting that it?s there. By acknowledging its existence, we are allowing ourselves to begin the process of getting through the transition phase.

Grieving allows you to get more in touch with yourself

Most people would want to get rid of the bad feelings as quickly as possible in order to jump right back to happiness. We?ll distract ourselves any which way like connecting more to our computers and phones, or maybe even resort to drug and alcohol abuse.

The reason I welcomed the grief and sorrow over the death of my friend is because it really helped me to be more in touch with myself and know myself better. Sure I could?ve distracted myself however I could, but looking into myself is another way to help me grow.

No one wants to feel these feelings, but when they do come (because they will) they can really help you to be more in touch with yourself, which leads to more learning and greater opportunities.

When it?s over, you will have a new and better outlook on life

Though I still have a hard time when I think about my friend, I have a different outlook on life. Here are some things that will help you turn bad times into an opportunity to get more out of your life:

  • Appreciate your loved ones more. Every relationship has its ups and downs. There are the occasional times when we fight with each other. But in the end you?re still friends. You never know when life will make a sudden change. One thing my friend?s passing helped to realize is that whenever I?m angry with any of my friends or family, I think about my best friend and realize that life is too valuable and short to be spending time fighting. I?d rather spend that time helping myself to grow as well as others.
  • Appreciate your own life. Sometimes we take our own lives for granted. Like
    maybe spending too much time watching TV or lying around. My best friend?s life was cut short. This could happen to any of us. I realized that I should take advantage of any opportunity I have to be more productive and better my relationships and myself.
  • Realize your strength. I felt weak at the time of my friend?s death because I
    decided to let my feelings control me. When I made the decision to turn that around and instead control my feelings, I realized how much strength I had. Growing as a person also means growing stronger. By accepting the hurt, going through the transition, and finally getting over it, you will have come out a much stronger person. This strength is not only beneficial to you, but it will help you to be strong for those who are going through rough times.

Pain, heartache and loss will always be a part of our lives and is sometimes unavoidable. But I hope that we can all realize the good that can still come out these times. It?s up to you to make the change and take the reigns to your feelings. But when you do, it will surely change your life for the better.

Here?s to choosing to?learn from?the pain and/or loss and in choosing to?opening up ourselves to allow it to make us?better. Have a great week everyone!

Jen

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Source: http://anytimefitnesscudahy.wordpress.com/2012/10/22/open-yourself-up-to-painloss/

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Syrian regime and rebels constantly adapt arsenals

ALEPPO, Syria (AP) ? It was long past midnight, but the rebel commander couldn't sleep until his fighters returned from the Turkish border with the latest shipment of gear meant to help them battle the Syrian army. Wearing camouflage pants and black flip-flops, he waited anxiously, his eyes bloodshot.

In the morning, his team arrived with their prize: a single suitcase of night-vision goggles. For the first time, his brigade's snipers would be able to strike back at night against regime snipers who already have night-vision capabilities in the street-by-street fights for territory in the battleground city of Aleppo.

"We need one for every fighter," said the commander, Osama, who leads one of the rebel brigades fighting in Aleppo. Still, the small number in the shipment "is better than nothing. We will surprise the enemy when we start using them." He said the goggles were provided by a "sympathizer" in Europe, but refused to elaborate.

Piece by piece, Syria's rebels are slowly expanding their arsenal and getting their hands on more advanced weapons. The process still appears to be haphazard and improvised, far from the reliable, organized pipeline that rebels have sought for much of the 19-month-old uprising against the regime of President Bashar Assad. Instead, it often remains a scramble by individual units in the highly fragmented rebel forces to obtain what they can. Most units still rely on their staple arsenal of automatic weapons, hand grenades and rocket-propelled grenades, adapted to fit their needs.

But there have been notable advances. Most importantly, anti-aircraft missiles have made their first appearances in rebel hands in recent weeks, a weapon that some fighters boast could turn the tide against the regime.

Assad's forces have adapted too, although surprisingly they have at times turned more low-tech for the needs of urban warfare against guerrillas.

Rebel fighters say the most terrifying new regime weapons are cluster munitions, which scatter "bomblets" over a large area, and so-called "barrel" bombs. The latter are literally barrels packed with explosives, metal shards and sometimes fuel-soaked, igniting sand that are shoved out of helicopters or airplanes and can cause horrendous blasts and casualties.

Some analysts say the tactics adopted by Assad signal a military under strain. Although few expect the war to end soon, many say progressive changes in the sides' respective armories appear to favor the rebels in the long run.

"My sense is that the rebels are winning this war," said Jeffrey White, who studies Syria for the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. "They are winning by inches and the regime is doing its best to use its assets in innovative ways, but it is basically losing that fight."

Arms improvisation has been key to the rebel movement since it started months after the first protests of the anti-Assad uprising in March 2011. After deadly government crackdowns, civilians and army defectors took up arms to protect their towns and attack government troops.

The rebels have long asked sympathetic nations to arm them, complaining that they cannot get strong enough weapons to face Assad's powerful arsenal of tanks, artillery, mortars and warplanes. Though there have been reports of Persian Gulf nations funneling some arms, many rebel brigades say they have not received any such shipments. For most of the conflict, they have relied on smugglers and weapons captured from the Syrian military.

While he waited for his team to come back with the night-vision goggles last week, Commander Osama showed The Associated Press a sampling of the improvised armory his brigade of several hundred men has collected. Assault rifles hung from the walls, and bullets, mortars and rocket-propelled grenades sat in boxes nearby. Osama spoke on condition that he be identified only by his first name for fear of retaliation against his family.

One rifle had a telescopic sight crudely welded to its body to turn it into a sniper's rifle. His men bought the scopes separately for $150 each and assembled them to rifles.

"It's not really good, but we have to do what we can," he said.

He also showed a rocket-propelled grenade launcher that his men captured in a recent raid on an army garrison. It was a much larger caliber than the RPGs his men have and can disable the regime's most advanced tanks ? but only if the shooter gets within 400 meters (yards).

"That takes unbelievable courage," he said, because regime tanks on the move are closely guarded by snipers.

In what would be a significant advance, an official with the Free Syrian Army ? the rebel's loose umbrella group ? who is involved in procuring weapons said the rebels have now obtained dozens of shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles. Speaking to The AP in Turkey, he would not say who provided the rockets. He spoke on condition of anonymity for security reasons.

Several videos posted by anti-regime activists online last week show the missiles. In one video, an SA-7 launcher has been set on a rock to display it. Another shows a fighter in Aleppo firing one at a passing fighter jet, with the curly smoke trail of the rocket visible.

It remains unclear how many SA-7 missiles rebels have and if they can use them successfully. But "even if they don't bring anything down, it will make Syrian pilots think more about what they are doing," said White.

Reports of rebels shooting down regime aircraft have increased. Rebels claimed to have shot down at least two helicopters and two jets in August and September.

In the last week alone, however, amateur videos indicate they've shot down one jet and two helicopters. In one case, a video purported to show the capture of the jet pilot. In another, a rebel held up what he said was the head of another pilot, salvaged from the wreckage of his helicopter.

Other videos indicate that rebels have a growing number of heavy-caliber anti-aircraft guns, many mounted on pickup trucks for easy movement, as well as mortars and different kinds of homemade rockets.

The videos appeared consistent with other AP reporting.

From its side, Assad's regime has adjusted its professional military ? built to fight a war with Israel ? to fight guerrillas in Syrian cities.

Rebel fighters and activists say the "barrel bomb" is used nearly every day. On Saturday, an AP reporter visited a mosque in Aleppo that was hit by a barrel bomb three days earlier, killing at least 10 people: An annex to the mosque was razed, and the mosque itself and a half-dozen nearby apartment buildings nearby were severely damaged.

Amateur videos of barrel bombs that have failed to explode show them as large, metal containers filled with explosives and metal shards that are pushed manually from aircraft and detonate on impact with the ground. Some appear to be filled with sand soaked in fuel to cause huge fireballs.

One opposition activist in Aleppo said the barrel bombs don't seem to have tactical aims beyond killing as many people as possible. He spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation.

Joseph Holliday, who studies Syria for the Institute for the Study of War said the bombs have a wide blast radius ? advantages when fighting rebels in an urban area. "The idea is to drop it on a building and try to get it to catch on fire," he said.

Human Rights Watch has also accused Syria of using cluster munitions, which it says endanger civilians. Syria does not comment on its military tactics, though it has denied using cluster munitions.

The question is whether the regime is resorting to such things out of intentional tactics or necessity. Mark Hiznay of Human Rights Watch said the use of barrel bombs could reflect regime difficultly in transporting munitions to air bases in the battle zones, forcing soldiers to build their own.

Holliday cited other ways the regime has adapted, such as using pro-government gunmen known as shabiha to supplement its infantry, which has been weakened by defections. In northern Syria, it has also used its slower L-39 training jets for airstrikes rather than its advanced MiGs.

This could be tactical, he said: flying slower makes it easier to target groups of gunmen on the ground.

Or it could reflect strain. The L-39s are easier to fly and maintain, suggesting that defections may have deprived Syria of pilots who can fly advanced aircraft or that the regime lacks parts to keep those jets in the sky.

Hiznay of Human Right Watch said Syria may be saving its more advanced aircraft for a worse-case scenario. "If there is a land force invasion, this stuff is optimized for killing tanks and armored vehicles."

___

Hubbard reported from Beirut.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-regime-rebels-constantly-adapt-arsenals-063433278.html

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Bankelele: Real Estate Moment: Property Expo, Bubbles, Mortgage ...

A Homes expo took place? last weekend at KICC. Around that, other real estate matters include:

Mortgage rates down: The launch of the quarterly HassConsult property report showed? that the average mortgage interest rate in Kenya is now 19%, down from 22.5% three months ago.?

A Diaspora SACCO was launched with a view towards investing in real estate. Aground breaking was held for the recently announced next phase? of the Nairobi Business Park which will comprise 15,000 Sq.M of space for restaurants, a fitness centre and convenience stores. At the event, Mugo Kibati the Director General of Vision 2030 said that the property industry accounts for 5.3% of Kenya's GDP.

Exotic Marketing: Recognizing a challenge that homeowners face by moving further from the city, some developers now advertise themselves in terms of proximity to essential service centres. e.g. Olive Tree apartments [3Br for Kshs 7M] on Kiambu Road list about 5 schools, a mall, hospital and bus stop near the complex.

Others advertise their properties on trucks, on large roadside billboard, in bank halls, have scheduled bus tours for prospective buyers to view the upcoming properties, or send out targeted promotions aimed at the 'laptop and latte' class [?Legacy Apartments (starting at Kshs 3.95M in the Dagoretti area] or proximity to high altitude [Serene Valley Properties, Sigona Valley - 3 and 4 bedroom villas in three different house designs costing between KShs 16M - 19M.

Land Bubble: According to an A4Architect Q&A, construction costs have not changed much it it's land prices that have. Elsewhere they note an infrastructure effect on land prices which can be as much as 1,000% compared to 100% for other land prices over a short period.?
Coast Concern:
However at the Kenya Coast, it seems to be the other way as? land issues are among the key grievances that have resulted in unrest and recent attacks on police and politicians.

Expo: Using a 3 bedroom apartment or 3 bedroom house for comparison and with the US dollar exchanging at about 85 Kenya shillings, some properties and exhibitors at the Expo included:

Nairobi

- The Prism (model drawing below) by Kings Developers will be a new office block on one of the? Ngong Avenues in Upper Hill

- Dara Springs by the China Young Tai Co has 3BR Apts in Kileleshwa for Kshs 17M and they are also developing 6BR townhouses at Karen Splendour to sell at? Kshs 95M

- Imara Gardens are 3BR Apts in Imara Daima for Kshs 7.8M

North

- Edenville in Kiambu from HassConsult has 3BR Camellia Villa?s for Kshs 13.5M

- Chania Gardens in Thika have 3BR maisonettes for Kshs 8M

- Sahara Ridge in Ruiru have 3BR maisonettes? for Kshs 9.5M at Hass Consult

- Canary Springs are 3BR Apts in Ruaka for Kshs 7M?

South

- GreenPark Estate from Superior Homes? (winner of Best Development in a 2007 International Property Award)? is a managed estate

- Lukenya Hills have 3BR bungalows for Kshs 6M in Mlolongo, by SJR who put up the Safaricom headquarters buildings

- 360 Degree Court are apartments in Syokimau for Kshs 5.5M by Kings Developers

East

- Jacaranda Gardens off the Northern Bypass are 3BR Apts for Kshs 7.6M ? built by the Sietco & the Chengdu Jiangong 3rd Investment Company

Out of Nairobi

- Milimani Apartments in Nakuru by Kings Developers have? 3BR Apts for Kshs? 4.5M

- Konza? ? acre plots for Kshs 2M from Petu Properties and these are 11 Kilometres from the Malili technology city which, along with Tatu City (on Thika Rd), are two new cities planned to be built near Nairobi

Financers

- Investment & Mortgages Bank

- KCB?s Savings & Loan has finance of? 13.5% available up to 25 years for ready built or for construction of homes. A Kshs 8.5M (~$100,000) home will attract monthly repayments of Kshs 195,000 over 5 years or Kshs 99,000 (~$1,160) if paid over 25 years.

- National Bank? has mortgages of up to 20 years at 15%, with up to 90% finance.

- Standard chartered has mortgages at 14.9% and a Kshs 8M loan can be repaid over 5 years at Kshs 189,000 or Kshs 104,000 (~$1,220) per month over 20 years.

Other

The Mortgage Company (TMC) is a mortgage broker that help home buyers source loans from different banks. TMC, with it's partners Oaks Construction and Rafiki Microfinance also has a? makazi mema program that aims to? finance and construct houses within 6 months for maisonettes (and bungalows in 4 months) with the building cost of a 3BR home being about Kshs 2.4M ($28,000)

-???????

Savannah Cement is the sixth cement company in the country - and they have two brands of cement, one of which costs Kshs 670 ($7.90) for a 50Kg bag?

The Kenya Revenue Authority had at the stand there. Their brochures note that property owners in the Diaspora who rent our property in Kenya are meant to pay income tax in Kenya on their rental income.?

Source: http://bankelele.blogspot.com/2012/10/real-estate-moment-property-expo.html

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Castro spotted in public week after deathbed reports

NBC News

Former Venezuelan Vice President Elias Jaua showed reporters a photo that includes Fidel Castro that he says was taken on Saturday. Rumors swirled last week that Castro was near death.

By NBC News staff

New in this version: Adds photo of Castro at reported meeting?

Updated at 2:33 p.m. ET: Several people, including the former vice president of Venezuela, say they saw Fidel Castro ? reported last week to have been on his deathbed ? out and about in public on Saturday.

The Cuban government referred all request for comment to the state-owned Hotel Nacional de Cuba in Havana, where hotel officials said guests and staff chatted with Castro on Saturday after his car dropped off former Venezuelan Vice President Elias Jaua.

PhotoBlog: Former Venezuelan VP says he met with Fidel Castro


Jaua told NBC News that he met with Castro for five hours on Saturday. He showed reporters a photograph that he said was taken of the meeting. It was not immediately possible to confirm when the photo was taken.??

Castro, 86, was widely rumored among Cuban exiles and Latin American media organizations to have suffered a massive stroke and was said to be on a respirator, unable to talk or feed himself. His family denied those rumors.?

Castro last's public appearance was in March, when he met with Pope Benedict XVI in Havana. In response to the health rumors last week, the government read a statement in his name at an event marking the 50th anniversary of a Havana medical school.?

More world stories from NBC News:

Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/21/14596647-castro-reported-to-be-spotted-in-public-at-cuban-hotel?lite

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Scarborough subway line may have to wait: Toronto Mayor Rob Ford

Mayor Rob Ford
Mayor Rob Ford takes the bus from Don Mills subway station to a rally at Victoria Park and Sheppard Aves. to promote building the Sheppard subway in this file photo from March 15, 2012. (Veronica Henri/Toronto Sun)

Report an error

TORONTO?-?

Mayor Rob Ford won?t push a Scarborough subway ahead of a downtown relief line if that goes against TTC staff advice.

Ford ? who campaigned on building a subway to Scarborough ? admitted Monday he?ll take TTC CEO Andy Byford?s advice when it comes to expanding the transit system despite the mayor?s promise.

But Ford again repeated his belief that more subways would be built in the city, including the Sheppard subway.

Byford has been voraciously advocating the need for a downtown relief line.

?I?m all in favour of subways,? Ford said. ?I?m glad that people are thinking about subways.

?Now which one is a priority? That?s the one we?re going to have to sit down and talk about.?

Despite council?s decision earlier this year to build the Eglinton LRT at street-level in Scarborough rather than below ground, Ford said he still wants the LRT to be buried in the city?s east end.

?And I want the Sheppard (subway extension) and eventually Finch (subway),? he said.

?Now if the relief line is more important, let?s get our priorities ? what benefits the people of the city? That?s what we have to look at right now.?

Asked if he?s open to the relief line being the city?s next transit priority, Ford said it is up to Byford.

?I?m open up to the idea that benefits the city, that benefits the users of the TTC,? he said.

?I campaigned on subways. We?re going to get subways ? the relief line, the Sheppard line, Eglinton hopefully will go underground.

?Subways are coming to the city one way or another.?

TTC chairman Karen Stintz said the issue isn?t the line but the funding to pay for it.

?That remains our ongoing challenge,? Stintz said.

She said transit commissioners on Wednesday will likely recommend further study of the downtown relief line.

?We already know we need it and the question remains how are we going to pay for it,? Stintz said. ?We do need to get to the funding discussion, there is no question. And if we only talk about lines on a map then we will only ever have lines on a map.

?We need to find a way to pay for them.?

Are you Team Subway or Team Streetcar?

Source: http://www.torontosun.com/2012/10/22/scarborough-subway-line-may-have-to-wait-toronto-mayor-rob-ford

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Saturday, October 20, 2012

Answer: Intellectuals and Land-Change in Colorado [Search Research]

Answer: Intellectuals and Land-Change in ColoradoDaniel Russell knows how to find the answers to questions you can't get to with a simple Google query. In his weekly Search Research column, Russell issues a search challenge, then follows up later in the week with his solution?using whatever search technology and methodology fits the bill.

Yesterday's questions were all about a large-scale educational movement that began in New York state during the late 1800s. The simplest search to figure out what I meant by that would be: [ education movement New York ] which leads you pretty quick to the Chatauqua institution. (On my page, Chatauqua was the 5th link in the SERP.)

You could have also done: [ education movement New York 1800..1900 ] (the number range operator would give preference to pages that mention those years in the text of the page).

The Chatauqua was a cultural, religious, and political education movement that began in the 1870s on Lake Chataqua, New York as a move towards mass education and a commonly held sense that the people needed to have a socially acceptable way for family education.

Some consider it the first form of mass culture in North America. With encampments springing up to hold Chatauqua-style meetings throughout the US, Theodore Roosevelt called it "the most American thing in America." Some scholars credit it with sowing the seeds of liberal thought in the U.S. and Canada.

It was a social and cultural phenomenon that permeated rural North America until the mid-1920s. At its height, the Chautauqua Movement attracted millions to hear educators, preachers, explorers, travelers, scientists, prohibitionists, politicians and statesmen, comedians, singers, violinists, pianists, bands, and orchestras. But today, only a handful of Chautauqua communities survive.

While there's a good deal to say about the Chatauqua movement (which is fascinating itself), I want to focus on the Boulder branch. It began on July 4, 1898, when over 4,000 people gathered for the opening day of the Colorado Chautauqua which had been established when Boulder civic leaders and Texas educators joined together to create a cultural and educational summer retreat. (Basically, the Texas teachers wanted to escape the summer heat and have what we'd now call "professional development" time in a salubrious place. Boulder was just the ticket for them. The Boulder Chautauqua has been in business, holding sessions ever since.

So let's answer our questions:

1. Even after more than 100 years, one of these education franchises is still active and well-known in Colorado. What city is it in? (For search fans, give us the lat/long.)

Now that you know that it's the Chatauqua movement, [Chataqua Colorado] tells you it's Boulder, CO. A quick look at Google Maps finds the Chatauqua site at Lat/Long (from the Maps Lat/Long tool): 39?59?51.42?N 105?16?46.64?W

2. Can you find a current photo of the grounds of this institution AND a photo from a 1899? (We're going to ask for a highly reputable source for the image from more than 100 years ago.)

See answer below...

Getting a current photo is easy: use Street View or visit the Boulder Chautauqua web site.

3. What's the most striking difference in the appearance of the land between now and 100 years ago? (For extra credit, can you show the current and 1899 views side-by-side?)

For this kind of highly reputable information, one excellent resource to remember is the local public library! Many (MANY!) cities are proud of their local history and maintain superb archives. To find archival images of Boulder's Chautauqua, I first did a search for [ Boulder Colorado library history ], which led me immediately to Boulder's Carnegie Library which is their local history branch.

Answer: Intellectuals and Land-Change in ColoradoThis wonderfully historic library (one of the original Carnegie libraries in the United States) is full of a great collection of Boulder-iana, and has an extensive archival image collection-much of which is devoted to the local Chatauqua. (Pictured to the right)

I just clicked through to their catalog and was able to quickly find a trove of images from the site. A search for [ Chautauqua ] on their photographs archive (using their search tool, not Google) yields 972 images.

Here's the best pair of current vs. 1899 photos I could find. (Near the auditorium, looking roughly northwest at the front of the building) vs. now.

Answer: Intellectuals and Land-Change in Colorado

And then the closest place as seen by Street View:

Answer: Intellectuals and Land-Change in Colorado

This shows clearly the biggest difference between then and now. In 1899, as you scan through the libraries archival photos, you'll see this was all a VERY open space, dominated by a prairie landscape-short grasses and no trees. None.

Answer: Intellectuals and Land-Change in Colorado

Now, after more than 100 years of people living in this space, the land is covered in trees, making photo matching a bit of a challenge. Contrast these 1899 images with the aerial view of Boulder above.

A remarkable change for the place. And a remarkable place.

Search lesson: Don't forget the local resources! Libraries are wonderful repositories of information that can be easily accessed through their catalogs. Note that not all archives are available online-sometimes you just have to go there to see what they have. But most libraries have a description of their holdings, which IS searchable. If they seem to have what you need, it's time for a road trip.

Luckily, Boulder has scanned much of its archive and added pretty decent metadata, which makes our life (those of us who don't live in Boulder) much easier.

Answer: Intellectuals and land-change in Colorado? | SearchReSearch


Daniel M. Russell studies the way people search and research?an anthropologist of search, if you will. You can read more from Russell on his SearchReSearch blog, and stay tuned for his weekly challenges (and answers) here on Lifehacker.

Image by Snikt (Shutterstock).

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/sJs3Ak8Dp80/answer-intellectuals-and-land+change-in-colorado

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Friday, October 19, 2012

Video: Romney to debate moderators: Did you hear me?

'Women in Binders,' other Internet memes trump voter issues

??Like "Fired Big Bird," "Women in Binders" is spreading another negative Romney message so simple and crafty, suspicious types might wonder if it came from inside the Obama campaign. Because hey, all the quickest, catchiest memes in this, our very first "social media election," favor the incumbent president.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/49454338#49454338

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

IBM in talks to buy Israel mobile software firm Red Bend: media

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Study identifies characteristics of sunbed users, motivation for tanning

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

A telephone survey of 4,851 individuals in Germany suggests the overall prevalence of sunbed use was nearly 40 percent for participants who had ever used one and 14.6 percent had used a tanning bed within the last 12 months, according to a study published Online First by Archives of Dermatology, a JAMA Network publication.

Exposure to UV radiation (UVR) is one of the main risk factors for developing skin cancer and tanning beds are a common source of UVR. There also is evidence that the use of sunbeds significantly increases the risk of skin cancer, according to the study background.

Sven Schneider, Ph.D., M.A., of the Mannheim Institute of Public Health, Social and Preventive Medicine, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany, and colleagues sought to determine rates for sunbed use, investigate motivations for tanning, and identify targets for interventions to prevent skin cancer. A total of 4,851 individuals (ages 14 to 45 years old, 50.9 percent men) participated in the study, which included a nationwide telephone survey of the general population in Germany.

"The prevalence of ever use of sunbeds among the 14- to 45-year-olds in Germany was 39.2 percent, and every seventh person in this age group had used a sunbed during the last 12 months. A particularly large percentage of women, adolescents, immigrants and the employed reported using solariums," the authors comment.

Compared with men, women were more likely to have ever used a sunbed (49 percent vs. 29.8 percent) or to be currently using sunbeds (17.7 percent vs. 11.7 percent). Ever and current sunbed use was also more prevalent in persons with skin type III to VI than in those individuals with paler skin (40.7 percent vs. 36.5 percent and 17.4 percent vs. 8.9 percent). Those with an immigrant background were significantly more likely to be currently using a sunbed (19.7 percent vs. 13.2 percent). The main motivations for tanning were relaxation and attractiveness, according to the study results.

"The present study presents target groups for future interventions: For example, such interventions could target occupations in which predominantly younger women work because the group of working women are particularly likely to use sunbeds. Furthermore, the relationship between current sunbed use and immigrant background indicates a specific need for the education of this population subgroup," the authors conclude.

Researchers also suggest their study findings emphasize the need for standardized education of sunbed personnel by independent institutions that are not associated with the sunbed industry. The authors note that personnel often fail to inform sunbed users that their motivations for tanning are not medically sound.

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Article: Arch Dermatol. Published online October 15, 2012. doi:10.1001/2013.jamadermatol.562.

JAMA and Archives Journals: http://www.jamamedia.org

Thanks to JAMA and Archives Journals for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/124509/Study_identifies_characteristics_of_sunbed_users__motivation_for_tanning

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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Officials: Attacks across Baghdad kill 5 people

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Monday, October 15, 2012

Bahrain king blasts 'foreign' links in unrest

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