রবিবার, ৩০ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১২

Scientists Turn To Unsaturated Fats For Healthier Ice Cream

Cover Image: January 2013 Scientific American MagazineSee Inside

Scientists are experimenting with unsaturated fats for a rich but less artery-clogging dessert


ice cream, ice cream cone, vanilla ice cream, chocolate ice cream Image: ADRIANNA WILLIAMS Corbis

Ice cream is a complex, three-phase food system in which ice (solid), air (gas) and unfrozen water (liquid) coexist. Much that makes ice cream an indulgence derives from its relatively high fat content, which can range from 10 to 18 percent in premium varieties. In addition to its role in taste and flavor development, fat is crucial to ice cream's texture. No wonder, then, that most low-fat varieties fail to offer the same taste sensation.

Lately food scientists have found clever ways to experiment with unsaturated fats aiming to bring consumers the full satisfaction of ice cream with fewer of the health consequences associated with saturated fats. Solid fat builds structure in ice cream via partial coalescence, which occurs when two fat droplets collide and fuse only ?at their hip,? remaining distinguishable from each other. The fusion is mediated by crystals that protrude from the surface of the spherical droplets?imagine the thorns of a prickly pear?that pierce neighboring droplets as they collide. These droplets then aggregate and deposit onto the surface of air bubbles and stabilize the frozen foam. In this way, partial coalescence enables ice cream to taste creamier, hold its shape and melt more slowly.

Given that unsaturated fats are liquid, the original thought was that they would not be good candidates to make ice cream less of a sin. Recent research, however, has the skeptics thinking twice. New studies led by Douglas Goff of the University of Guelph in Ontario suggest that plateletlike or needlelike droplets (as opposed to spheres) that contain 40 to 60 percent unsaturated fats are very effective at building structure in ice cream. Such fats can be blends of any highly unsaturated oil (such as high-oleic sunflower or canola oil) and saturated fats such as coconut oil or cocoa butter. Platelets formed only when Goff's team added commonly used unsaturated emulsifiers, such as glycerol monooleate, which are thought to force the fat crystals to grow preferentially in one dimension, hence generating the needlelike profile. Because of their shape, the amount of fat needed to create a stable frozen foam (via partial coalescence) decreases. This opens up the possibility for low(er) fat, creamy, slow-melting ice cream.

This article was originally published with the title Healthier Ice Cream?.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)

Vega is a research manager at Mars Botanical, a division of Mars, Inc. His opinions are his own.


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=b029811bfa9778de6fbe09b8e1523065

blue moon ann romney marco rubio marco rubio farrah abraham Paul Ryan Speech chris cooley

Tom Felton dons a ?Lakeside Golf Club? cap while grabbing lunch by the beach wit...

Tom Felton dons a ?Lakeside Golf Club? cap while grabbing lunch by the beach with his beautiful girlfriend Jade Olivia on Friday (December 28) in Miami, Fla. The day before, the 25-year-old actor tweeted, ?Saw ?les mis? tonight. Fantastic. Flawless. ?

Source: http://www.facebook.com/justjared/posts/10151245317479093

the curious case of benjamin button secret service prostitute rich ross april 20 jennifer love hewitt secret service prostitution 4 20

Obama pushes for a 'fiscal cliff' deal, demands a vote (Los Angeles Times)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/273744461?client_source=feed&format=rss

chicago news golden girls robert e lee golden globe winners the express zappos hacked jane fonda

শনিবার, ২৯ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১২

A Florida Mom's Lonely Fight for Her Disabled Son ? HCAFeNews

By Carol Marbin Miller, The Miami Herald

Tereza Pereira had cared for her woefully disabled son at home for most of his life. But she was in her 50s now, working two jobs to stay afloat, and state health administrators had repeatedly refused to pay for enough in-home nursing care to keep Bryan safe.

Pereira wanted her teenage son to live at a place called Baby House, a small group home for medically fragile children and young adults, with a long track record of treating children like Bryan as family. His care would have cost the state $300 per day there.

State health and disability administrators had a different plan: For $200 more each day, Bryan would live in a nursing home.

?I don?t want my son in this place,? Pereira wrote to disability administrators of the Florida Club Care nursing home in Miami Gardens. ?If something happened with my son, (if) he died,? she wrote, ?I will feel that this place killed? him.

Two years later, that is just how Pereira feels.

Disability administrators insisted that Bryan move to the nursing home. And there he died, a year later, on July 29, 2010.

?The best place for Bryan was with me,? Pereira said. ?I wanted my son to leave this world in peace ? not the way he passed away.?

Bryan Louzada was one of five medically complex children to die at Florida nursing homes in the last six months of 2010 ? and among 130 such children who have died in those homes since January 2006, records show. Though medically fragile children who live with their parents, or in a community setting, also die, state records show they die in far lower numbers.

State health administrators insist that the choices of parents like Pereira are the guiding force behind their decisions on where sick children live. But interviews and records show Pereira had fought for half Bryan?s life to find a homelike setting for him. And at every turn state health and disability chiefs steered him toward an institution or nursing home.

It is the dirty little secret of Florida?s health and social service system: Though institutional care can be dramatically more expensive than in-home care, state agencies push children toward institutions.

Here?s why: Medicaid, the state and federal insurance program for needy and disabled people, has become the insurer of last resort for virtually all children with catastrophic disabilities. Under federal law, a nursing home or facility bed is an entitlement, and that means Florida health administrators must provide such a bed to any family that asks. Sometimes-far-less-costly in-home nursing services are not an entitlement. Because they can, Florida lawmakers cap spending for such care, resulting in a waiting list of 25,000 for home- and community-based services.

Federal health polices ?lead to irrational outcomes,? said Jim DeBeaugrine, who was director of the state Agency for Persons with Disabilities under former Gov. Charlie Crist. ?People go into higher-cost facilities than what they need, and, quite frankly, what is best for them.

?It?s referred to as the ?institutional bias,? and that?s what the system has, because that?s where the dollars have to go. It?s nonsensical.?

The irrational outcome in Bryan?s case was that a sickly teen was forced to live in a nursing home that is considered one of the state?s worst ? Golden Glades, formerly known as Florida Club Care, is on the state ?nursing home watch list? of homes that did not meet even minimum standards of care during a recent inspection.

After a year of pleading, Pereira said disability administrators told her they would consider removing him from the nursing home in May 2010. Before they could, he died.

?I didn?t have a choice,? Pereira said. ?Now Bryan has passed away. What will I do with the rest of my life??

The U.S. Justice Department has sharply criticized the state, saying it is warehousing disabled children like Bryan in adult nursing homes, violating their rights in the process.

Liz Dudek, head of Florida?s Agency for Health Care Administration, has vigorously disputed that.

?The bottom line is simple: Florida cares about kids,? she wrote to the?Miami Herald.??We provide every medically necessary service and we are in compliance with the law.?

Officials with Golden Glades did not return phone calls seeking comment.

A second chance

Pereira, a psychologist in her native Brazil, was still grieving the AIDS-related death of her 5-year-old son, Bernardo, who had hemophilia and had been given an infected blood transfusion, when she learned she was pregnant with Bryan. It was as if she?d been given a second chance.

But when Pereira was 27 weeks into her term ? and on a trip to Miami ? she suddenly went into labor. The consequences were calamitous.

Bryan suffered a hemorrhage, and spinal fluid flooded his skull. He began to experience seizures. Before doctors could insert a shunt to drain the cerebral fluid, he contracted meningitis, a life-threatening infection.

In the nursery at Jackson Memorial, Bryan?s head swelled, his eyes bulged. Pereira went to a local Catholic church to pray when she was interrupted by a parishioner. ?A lady touched me. She said, ?talk to me.? ? The woman was a pediatrician at Miami Children?s Hospital, and Pereira transferred her son there.

?My son is dying,? she said. ?I have nothing to lose.?

At Miami Children?s, doctors inserted two shunts into Bryan?s underdeveloped brain and fought his infection. And though he slowly recovered, the list of his final diagnoses proved to be long and terrible: cerebral palsy, mental retardation, blindness, seizures, severe reflux, asthma and hemophilia.

Medical professionals told Pereira to send her son to an institution. Instead Pereira ? whose husband returned home to Brazil, leaving her with two small children ? took him home, and organized her small Kendall apartment into a makeshift hospital.

For the next 18 years, Pereira kept detailed records of Bryan?s health and his often-cruel journey through the state?s medical and social service system.

There were visits to the pediatrician, the hematologist, the neurologist, the gastroenterologist and the child development experts. Physical therapists stretched and relaxed Bryan?s legs, and occupational therapists worked to keep his fists from becoming permanently clenched. Speech therapists helped him suck and swallow.

Doctors charted every milestone, though they were few, and far between. At one year of age, Bryan had the cognition and the fine motor skills of a one month old.

Bryan remained with his mother until he was about 6.

Pereira says disability administrators refused to provide her with enough nursing hours to enable her to both work and be a caregiver. Hospital case notes quote a case worker as saying Pereira ?lacked the facilities at home to provide care for Bryan.?

Bryan?s older sister was a teenager, and was struggling over the caregiver demands on her life. ?She was crying. She said, ?I want a normal life. I can?t stand this anymore.? ?

That?s when the Department of Children & Families intervened, strongly recommending Bryan leave the house, Pereira said.

Pereira felt like the state was forcing her to choose between her two children.

?All the social workers and doctors pressed me to put my son in a group home, because my daughter was very depressed, without any attention,? Pereira wrote years later in an email to the state. ?But Bryan will continue to be my son, and I am his guardian.?

Pereira said she asked disability administrators to place her son in Baby House, a specialty group home run by United Cerebral Palsy, a national disability provider. Pereira had toured the home, and liked what she saw.

But Baby House is not an institution, and Medicaid administrators refused to pay. Bryan ended up in what is called an intermediate-care facility, an institution for people with severe disabilities.

Bryan spent most of the next decade bouncing between developmental disability institutions, nursing homes and Miami Children?s, which had become the hospital where Pereira felt her son was safest. In 2005, when Pereira had to move her son from one facility to another, disability administrators gave her a state handbook. ?You?re The Driver? it said, under a picture of a gas station. The message: Parents and guardians are decision makers over how and where loved ones receive care.

To Pereira, it seemed like a cruel joke. ?He was my son,? she said. ?I wanted to make the decisions for him.?

Pereira?s records document a litany of disappointments: At one institution in Miami, Bryan was repeatedly bitten by another child. At a nursing home in Plantation, his hemophilia was so poorly controlled, she said, that he developed raccoon eyes from internal bleeding.

Reordering her life

By the mid 2000s, Pereira had had enough. Bryan was at a nursing home in Broward for only a month when Pereira called police to report he?d been sorely neglected, police reports show. ?I was scared he would die,? she said. ?I was scared he would suffer.?

She removed him from the nursing home, and took him home ? again.

Photos from that time show how Pereira rearranged her world to take care of her then-16-year-old son. She moved all the furniture out of her cramped living room to accommodate Bryan?s hospital bed. White plastic shelves were moved in to store diapers, wipes, a dozen medications and a host of medical gadgets and supplies. An IV towered over the bed, along with an adjustable lamp to illuminate Bryan when his mom fed him and administered medications.

But the ping-ponging continued: Unable to care for Bryan with limited in-home nursing. Pereira agreed to send him again to a disability institution. ?What time am I going to take a shower? I am alone,? she said. ?If I had to go to the supermarket, who would take care of Bryan??

Bryan went to Baptist Hospital in Miami, then back to Miami Children?s. The hospital was eager for him to leave, but Pereira was not eager to place him in another nursing home. ?The hospital is making my life impossible,? she wrote to the state, adding social workers were insisting Bryan once again go to a nursing home.

Bleak choices

The state offered Pereira two choices: Bryan could return home with 10 hours each day of in-home nursing help ? an option a judge later called ?unacceptable as it would not allow the mother to work, and would not meet (Bryan?s) medical needs, as he requires an extensive amount of care just for feedings.?

Or he could go to a nursing home.

Pereira wanted a third choice. She had been to Baby House, in a small, nondescript ranch house off of Northeast 163rd Street in North Miami Beach. Baby House?s director, Carol Montiel, had visited Bryan. ?She said my son is a lovely, handsome boy,? Pereira wrote, and she would take very good care of him.

At Baby House, she wrote, staff would see him as a human being, ?not as a dollar.?

In March 2007, Pereira began her futile campaign to move her son to Baby House. She applied for a state program that provides money for noninstitutional care for disabled people, and was, instead, placed on a long waiting list.

Pereira wrote a longhand note to health administrators. ?I am alone in this country,? she said. ?I am not able to care (for) Bryan in home even with home care,? because the nursing hours weren?t sufficient, and because the nurses often failed to show up, or showed up late, even when they were scheduled.? It was, she wrote, ?a disaster.?

A March 24, 2007, email to the Department of Children & Families had this in the subject line: ?Please. I beg.?

?I want to beg, please, that my son be approved? for community-based care, the only funding pot the state could use to pay for Baby House. ?I don?t have anybody in this country. All my family is in Brazil,? she wrote

?If Bryan survived so far, it is because I have been a good mother caring for my son,? she added. ?I cannot permit Bryan to suffer any more.?

The waiting list

To get Bryan into Baby House, Pereira would first have to get him off the state?s disability wait list ? where he was languishing along with 25,000 other Floridians. The only way to get off that list, records show, would be for Bryan to become ?homeless,? or ?in danger of being neglected or abused.? Pereira was being punished for being a good mother.

In a letter dated July 23, 2008, a worker told Pereira the Agency for Persons with Disabilities planned to cut spending on those in community-based programs to accommodate a few clients stuck on the waiting list. The shift, which might have moved him up a few notches, was referred to as a ?cost efficiency.?

?They were only interested in dollars and cents, and I told them that,? said Carol Montiel, the Baby House director who had been speaking with Pereira for years, and was trying desperately to help.

Pereira wrote letters to then-U.S. Reps. Kendrick Meek and Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and Sen. Bill Nelson. She went to Washington for a family advocacy day and was pictured in the?Herald?alongside Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen.

?Please remember,? she wrote to the state, ?that Bryan is a person with very involved medical and emotional needs, and not just another ?case.?

?I want to be with my heart full and happy that I did the best for him. I don?t want him to suffer anymore.?

?Mommy is here?

Two of Pereira?s thick files document a desperate mother?s attempt to keep her son out of a nursing home ? in legal format: notices of continuance, subpoenas for deposition, proposed orders to dismiss, multiple notices of hearings, and a final order.

At a hearing in July 2007, an administrator with Florida?s Agency for Persons with Disabilities and a nurse with the state?s Agency for Health Care Administration testified that Bryan?s medical needs could be met in a nursing home. Pereira, who speaks fluent Portuguese but strained English, represented herself. The state, she said, ?hired a lawyer to go to court.?

A state administrative law judge ruled against her two months later. He offered Pereira a half-sentence as a consolation:

?That (Bryan) has survived to the age of 15 is a testament to his mother?s devotion, and the skilled medical care he has received since birth, primarily at Miami Children?s Hospital.?

Bryan was sent to the nursing home.

He remained there for a year, and his mother drove the length of Miami-Dade County as often as she could to see him.

In the middle of the night on July 29, 2010, Pereira says, she had a premonition: ?I called there to ask how he was. They told me he was fine; he was sleeping.?

At 5:30 a.m., Bryan was rushed to the Joe DiMaggio Children?s Hospital Emergency Room in Hollywood. Though she had instructed the nursing home to transport him whenever his heart rate exceeded 130, his heart had raced to 178, she said. ?Somebody should have noticed.?

At the hospital, Pereira found a doctor performing CPR. She yelled at him to stop. The compressions, she said, would cause him to bleed uncontrollably.

?I said, Bryan, Mommy is here. I will be with you.?

Bryan died at 11:39 a.m. Cause of death: respiratory failure. Pereira said she wanted an autopsy, wanted to know if the death could have been avoided, but doctors told her she?d have to pay $4,000 to get one.

Without an autopsy, a lawyer told her, she had no recourse against anyone.

?He was safe with me,? Pereira said.

Aside from the nursing home, Pereira said she holds state social service administrators responsible for Bryan?s death ? for forcing her to make a terrible choice.

?I want to know the reason why my son passed away,? she said.

Like this:

Be the first to like this.

Tags: Agency for Health Care Administration, Agency for Persons with Disabilities, Baptist Hospital of Miami, Bill Nelson, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Department of Justice, Elizabeth Dudek, Florida Department of Children and Families, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Miami Children's Hospital, United Cerebral Palsy

Source: http://hcafnews.com/2012/12/28/a-florida-moms-lonely-fight-for-her-disabled-son/

south by southwest i want to know what love is courtney mercury retrograde bath salts heart shaped box lucid

Harry Carey Jr. dies at 91; character actor in John Ford films

Harry Carey Jr., a venerable character actor who was believed to be the last surviving member of director John Ford's legendary western stock company, died Thursday. He was 91.

Carey, whose career spanned more than 50 years and included such Ford classics as "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" and "The Searchers," died of natural causes in Santa Barbara, said Melinda Carey, a daughter.

"In recent years, he became kind of the living historian of the modern era," film critic Leonard Maltin told The Times on Friday. "He would get hired on films by young directors who just wanted to work with him, to be one step away from the legends. Some hired him to just hear his stories between takes."

Director Joe Dante, who used Carey in his 1984 comic-fantasy "Gremlins," told The Times in 2003: "You got a lot of free movie history when you cast him."

The son of silent-film western star Harry Carey Sr. and his actress wife, Olive, Carey made more than 100 films. They included "Red River," "Beneath the 12-Mile Reef," "Big Jake," "Cahill U.S. Marshal," "The Long Riders," "The Whales of August" and 1993's "Tombstone."

The boyishly handsome Carey lacked the screen-dominating star quality of his longtime pal and frequent co-star, John Wayne. Instead, Carey brought a rare authenticity to his westerns as one of Hollywood's best horsemen.

That was amply illustrated in 1950's "Rio Grande," for which he and cowboy-turned-character actor Ben Johnson learned to ride two horses while standing up, with one foot on the back of each horse.

His other films with Ford include "3 Godfathers," "Wagon Master," "The Long Gray Line," "Mister Roberts," "Two Rode Together" and "Cheyenne Autumn."

Carey also appeared in dozens of television shows, most of them westerns, and portrayed the boys' ranch counselor in the popular 1950s "Spin and Marty" serials on "The Mickey Mouse Club."

According to Dante, Carey was at his best in Ford's 1950 western "Wagon Master," in which Carey and Johnson co-starred as horse traders who join a Mormon wagon train.

"Harry was a straight-arrow, realistic person on the screen," Dante said. "It didn't seem like he was acting. He really had an aw-shucks quality."

He was born Henry George Carey on May 16, 1921, on his father's ranch north of Saugus and a 45-minute drive from Universal Studios, where Harry Sr. made westerns in the 1910s and 1920s. More than two dozen were directed by John Ford, who became a close family friend.

When Carey was born, his father, Ford and then-New York City Mayor Jimmy Walker awaited the baby's arrival by drinking a whiskey named Melwood.

From then on, as Carey wrote in his 1994 memoir, "Company of Heroes: My Life as an Actor in the John Ford Stock Company": "Every time Ford saw me with my father he'd say, 'Mellllwood ? li'llll Mellllwood,' alluding to how drunk he and my dad were that night."

The young Carey graduated from Black-Foxe Military Institute in Hollywood in the late 1930s, studied voice and made his stage debut, with his father, in summer stock in Maine.

During World War II he served in the Navy in the Pacific theater, then worked in Washington on Navy training and propaganda films for Ford, at that time a naval officer.

In 1944, Carey married Marilyn Fix, daughter of character actor Paul Fix.

After the war, Carey attempted a singing career but turned to film with a small role as a cowboy in the 1946 movie "Rolling Home."

"When he went into the movies, everybody suggested he go by Harry Carey Jr., but I think he regretted that forever," his daughter said. "He just wanted to be Dobe, the nickname he always went by," and which his father gave him because his red hair matched the ranch house's adobe bricks.

John Wayne recommended the fledgling actor for the role of a cowboy who dies in a cattle stampede in the 1948 Howard Hawks' classic "Red River." Shot in 1947, it also featured the elder Carey in his final role. He died the same year at 69.

When Ford made "3 Godfathers," he cast Harry Jr. in a leading role as the Abilene Kid and dedicated the 1948 film to Harry Sr. The film's three desperadoes ? played by Wayne, Pedro Armendariz and Carey ? risk their lives in the desert to save a baby.

Before filming in Death Valley, Ford ? who was well-known for his sadistic behavior toward actors in his films ? told Carey: "You're going to hate me when this picture is over, but you're going to give a great performance."

After the first take of Carey's death scene, filmed in scorching heat, Ford cussed him out and left the actor to bake in the sun for 30 minutes. When the director returned, a near-delirious Carey delivered his death speech, his mouth so dry he couldn't swallow and with a voice that resembled the croaking of a dying man.

"Why didn't you do that the first time?" a grinning Ford told Carey. "See how easy it was? You done good! That's a wrap!"

Carey is survived by his wife, Marilyn; daughters Melinda and Lily; son Tom; three grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.

McLellan is a former Times staff writer.

news.obits@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/obituaries/~3/00SatL8nAQE/la-me-harry-carey-20121229,0,4888843.story

last house on the left rich forever mixtape blow the unit bob weston bill obrien reggie mckenzie

The 12 best* Android apps of the year

*At least according to Google

Perhaps you were lucky enough to activate one of the the mind-blowingly large number of new Androids and iOs devices ??17.4 million?to be exact ? on Christmas Day, easily eclipsing the 6.8 million tablets and smartphones activated at the same time last year. We've already covered a few iOS apps to help get you started with your new iPad. But what about new Android owners? If you unwrapped a glitzy new Nexus 7 on Christmas, here, in no particular order, are Google's favorite apps of the year:

1. Zappos
The mobile version of the popular shoe-shopping service is even better than its web counterpart, thanks to an elegant, easy-to-browse user interface. Consider your credit card warned. (Free)

2. Evernote
The popular note-taking app was given a dramatic overhaul this year, making it more usable than ever. Clipping photos, notes, memos, and more has never been this easy. (Free)

3. Pinterest
Pin Grandma's pie recipe for all your followers without ever having to open your laptop. Then give The Week a follow while you're at it. (Free)

4. Grimm's Snow White
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is re-imagined as an interactive pop-up game. Perfect to hand off to the kids on long car rides.?($1.99)?

5. Pocket
Pocket lets users clip articles or stories they come across on the web to read later. It's like Instapaper but free. (Free)

6. Mint
Manage your money with this award-winning personal finance app. Then try not to cry when it tells you your balance is low. (Free)?

7. Expedia Hotels and Flights
Tablets like the Nexus 7 are the perfect light travel device. Now, booking a room's a breeze with this beautifully designed, photo-heavy interface. (Free)

8. Ancestry
Prove to your snooty friends once and for all that you really are the great, great, great, great nephew of Ulysses S. Grant by mapping your family tree. (Free)

9. Fancy
It's like a modern re-imaging of the catalog. Browse cool photos of products you love and unlock a few deals for yourself in the process. All shopping should be this stress-free. (Free)

10. Series Guide
Is it just me, or is there just way too much good stuff on TV? Keep track of all the shows you want to watch with this easy-to-use organizer and never miss the season finale of, say, The Walking Dead, ever again. (Free)

11. Pixlr Express
Need to give your Instagram shots some pizazz? Pre-edit your photos with Pixlr ? which lets you quickly re-size, crop, apply filters, and more. Watch the likes pile up. (Free)

12. TED
Put over 1,200 TED Talks from some of the world's brightest thinkers right in your pocket. Feel smart. (Free)

SEE MORE: The 10 most Googled search terms of 2012

View this article on TheWeek.com Get 4 Free Issues of The Week

Other stories from this topic:

Like on Facebook?-?Follow on Twitter?-?Sign-up for Daily Newsletter

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/12-best-android-apps-125300529.html

the raven zerg rush david wilson playstation all stars battle royale kim zolciak kim zolciak travis pastrana

শুক্রবার, ২৮ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১২

George H.W. Bush (cbsnews)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/273419826?client_source=feed&format=rss

prop 8 maria menounos proposition 8 ricky martin larry bird chauncey billups caucus results

Is Google Using AdWords Express Budgets To Promote Google+?

Google now offers small businesses using its AdWords Express service a way to promote their Google+ pages seemingly everywhere but on Google+ itself, which Google reasserts should be an ad-free zone. That?omission may make these ads less effective for those seeking new customers or followers to their Google+ pages. Meanwhile, the push gets those same small businesses spending their advertising dollars to promote Google+ itself for Google.

AdWords Express & Google+ Pages

In case you?re not?familiar?with AdWords Express, it?s Google?s version of automated paid search. With AdWords Express, small and local businesses who are in a time crunch and don?t have time to properly set up campaigns let Google run their ads. Google then chooses where to show the ads. Some will appear in Google search results, based on terms that Google selects. Some appear within Google Maps. Some appear on non-Google sites that are part of the Google advertising network.

Since some small businesses don?t have web sites, Google has offered them free ones to use with AdWords Express through its Get Your Business Online service. But now, Google has said businesses can drive visitors to their Google+ pages.

In a?post?late last week Christian Oestlien, a member of?Google Product Management, announced that AdWords Express would now ?offer? businesses a new way to promote their Google+ pages:

Along with the announcement Oestlien mentioned that this option would be available for all Google properties ? except, well, Google+. In fact, Oestlien took a pseudo-swing at Facebook by stating:

? we only show these promotions when they?re appropriate?not overwhelming people with random ads when they?re trying to spend time with friends.

Why No Advertising On Google+?

Many could argue that if you are trying ?attract more followers? they would want to do so on Google+ itself. Why show social network ads in search? Why show them for your Google+ page in maps? This is a hard stance that Google+ took throughout 2012. But the thing is, social ads work. There simply isn?t a better place for admins to try and grow fans with ads than from targeted ads in the social network.

Well, Can You Advertise To Just Google+ Users?

The answer is no. A Google representative?confirmed to us that the only targeting option is ?normal targeting,? so it will reach everyone. This is a huge negative for those AdWords Express advertisers who are trying to build a following for their Google+ page. Seeing that you can?t advertise on the social network and you can?t target those across the Google network with a Google+ enabled account, you have no guarantee that a click is coming from someone who has a Google+ account or if they have even heard of Google+ before.

So Just What Is This New Service That Google Is ?Offering??

The 10,000-foot view of this announcement reads like this:

  • You give your money to Google to handle online advertising
  • Google spends your money across their network
  • Instead of driving traffic to your site, the new?announcement??offers? businesses the ability to let Google drive traffic to a Google property
  • The goal is to ?attract new followers and customers? but Google can?t show ads within the social network itself.
  • Nor can active Google+ users be targeted

Why Is This A Bit Suspect?

While Google+ has been relatively successful, it has come at the hands of a huge investment. From advertising during big NFL games, to worldwide print and TV campaigns, to big NFL partnerships, Google has spent?inordinate marketing resources on the Google+ product. In a way, Google is now leveraging AdWords Express users? budgets to do so, too.

The glaring lack of ability to target ads on Google+ itself, or even to target users who are on Google+ makes for un-targeted, poor advertising for those looking to build their pages. The majority of those users who click will have to be sold on Google+ first before they can follow a brand page. Instead of hitting active users, advertisers are simply handing money to Google to blast the budget across the general Google network.

None of the other social networks operate in this fashion. Facebook offers a variety of advertising options across the social network, Twitter has a handful of ad options across Twitter. The key is that all of these are on the network that has that social scent trail to it.

So Is This New Service Helpful For Anyone?

Is this worth doing? In some cases, absolutely. If a company doesn?t have resources for a website and they don?t want to promote their Facebook page, this gives them an option to get up and running. If you are on a shoestring budget and need a landing page, this option may?quench?your?thirst?for more eyeballs. The issue isn?t with the ?attract new customers? statement that Oestlien made, but more about the attraction of new followers aspect as there is no Google+ user targeting built into the service.

While this new targeting may look valuable at-a-glance, severe lack of targeting makes it tough to recommend to anyone. From Google?s standpoint however, this would be an ideal selection for advertisers as a big byproduct of the budget is more awareness of the Google+ product.

Related Topics: Google | Google: Google+ | Top News



SMX - Search Marketing Expo

Source: http://marketingland.com/is-google-using-adwords-express-budgets-to-promote-google-29583

knowshon moreno knowshon moreno sovereign citizen komen chrome for android hatchet leah messer

Mazda6 gets all dressed up for Tokyo Auto Salon

Mazda6 Racer

Mazda is heading to the 2013 Tokyo Auto Salon next month with a trio of Mazda6 concepts. There?s the Mazda6 Racer, based on a six-speed manual variant. This one features sported up bits like custom aerokit parts, gun-metal alloy wheels and a Brembo brake system.

As for the Mazda6 GT Sound Special, the automatic transmission show car is fitted with a special Diatone premium audio system ? it?s also dressed up with a two-tone interior, complete with a wood-finish fascia and door handle inlays to provide contrast.

Lastly, there?s a Wagon version of the 6 called the Grand Touring, and the Soul Red Premium Metallic example also gets tarted up with bodykit fare and BBS wheels, while interior kit includes a sports steering wheel and accents done in red.

?

Source: http://paultan.org/2012/12/28/mazda6-gets-all-dressed-up-for-tokyo-auto-salon/

Michael Clark Duncan michael jackson courtney stodden Ncaa Football Scores Plaquemines Parish michigan football michigan football

বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৭ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১২

Birdsong study pecks theory that music is uniquely human

Dec. 27, 2012 ? A bird listening to birdsong may experience some of the same emotions as a human listening to music, suggests a new study on white-throated sparrows, published in Frontiers of Evolutionary Neuroscience.

"We found that the same neural reward system is activated in female birds in the breeding state that are listening to male birdsong, and in people listening to music that they like," says Sarah Earp, who led the research as an undergraduate at Emory University.

For male birds listening to another male's song, it was a different story: They had an amygdala response that looks similar to that of people when they hear discordant, unpleasant music.

The study, co-authored by Emory neuroscientist Donna Maney, is the first to compare neural responses of listeners in the long-standing debate over whether birdsong is music.

"Scientists since the time of Darwin have wondered whether birdsong and music may serve similar purposes, or have the same evolutionary precursors," Earp notes. "But most attempts to compare the two have focused on the qualities of the sound themselves, such as melody and rhythm."

Earp's curiosity was sparked while an honors student at Emory, majoring in both neuroscience and music. She took "The Musical Brain" course developed by Paul Lennard, director of Emory's Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology program, which brought in guest lecturers from the fields of neuroscience and music.

"During one class, the guest speaker was a composer and he said that he thought that birdsong is like music, but Dr. Lennard thought it was not," Earp recalls. "It turned into this huge debate, and each of them seemed to define music differently. I thought it was interesting that you could take one question and have two conflicting answers that are both right, in a way, depending on your perspective and how you approach the question."

As a senior last year, Earp received a grant from the Scholars Program for Interdisciplinary Neuroscience Research (SPINR), and a position in the lab of Maney, who uses songbirds as a model to study the neural basis of complex learned behavior.

When Earp proposed using the lab's data to investigate the birdsong-music debate, Maney thought it was a great idea. "Birdsong is a signal," Maney says. "And the definition of a signal is that it elicits a response in the receiver. Previous studies hadn't approached the question from that angle, and it's an important one."

Earp reviewed studies that mapped human neural responses to music through brain imaging.

She also analyzed data from the Maney lab on white-throated sparrows. The lab maps brain responses in the birds by measuring Egr-1, part of a major biochemical pathway activated in cells that are responding to a stimulus.

The study used Egr-1 as a marker to map and quantify neural responses in the mesolimbic reward system in male and female white-throated sparrows listening to a male bird's song. Some of the listening birds had been treated with hormones, to push them into the breeding state, while the control group had low levels of estradiol and testosterone.

During the non-breeding season, both sexes of sparrows use song to establish and maintain dominance in relationships. During the breeding season, however, a male singing to a female is almost certainly courting her, while a male singing to another male is challenging an interloper.

For the females in the breeding state every region of the mesolimbic reward pathway that has been reported to respond to music in humans, and that has a clear avian counterpart, responded to the male birdsong. Females in the non-breeding state, however, did not show a heightened response.

And the testosterone-treated males listening to another male sing showed an amygdala response, which may correlate to the amygdala response typical of humans listening to the kind of music used in the scary scenes of horror movies.

"The neural response to birdsong appears to depend on social context, which can be the case with humans as well," Earp says. "Both birdsong and music elicit responses not only in brain regions associated directly with reward, but also in interconnected regions that are thought to regulate emotion. That suggests that they both may activate evolutionarily ancient mechanisms that are necessary for reproduction and survival."

A major limitation of the study, Earp adds, is that many of the regions that respond to music in humans are cortical, and they do not have clear counterparts in birds. "Perhaps techniques will someday be developed to image neural responses in baleen whales, whose songs are both musical and learned, and whose brain anatomy is more easily compared with humans," she says.

Earp, who played the viola in the Emory orchestra and graduated last May, is now a medical student at the Cleveland Clinic.

So what music makes her brain light up? "Stravinsky's 'Firebird' suite," Earp says.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Emory University. The original article was written by Carol Clark.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Sarah E. Earp, Donna L. Maney. Birdsong: Is It Music to Their Ears? Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience, 2012; 4 DOI: 10.3389/fnevo.2012.00014

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/NQfpAL3gUUg/121227080110.htm

tagged Heptathlon London 2012 shot put London 2012 Track And Field Jordyn Wieber michael phelps Kerri Strug

THG Celebrity of the Year Finalist #5: Justin Bieber!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/12/thg-celebrity-of-the-year-finalist-number-5-justin-bieber/

whitney houston passed away heartbreak hotel don cornelius whitney houston i will always love you breaking news whitney houston carmen whitney houston last performance

সোমবার, ২৪ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১২

Excessive protein synthesis linked to autistic-like behaviors, neuroscientists find

Dec. 23, 2012 ? Autistic-like behaviors can be partially remedied by normalizing excessive levels of protein synthesis in the brain, a team of researchers has found in a study of laboratory mice. The findings, which appear in the latest issue of Nature, provide a pathway to the creation of pharmaceuticals aimed at treating autism spectrum disorders (ASD) that are associated with diminished social interaction skills, impaired communication ability, and repetitive behaviors.

"The creation of a drug to address ASD will be difficult, but these findings offer a potential route to get there," said Eric Klann, a professor at NYU's Center for Neural Science and the study's senior author. "We have not only confirmed a common link for several such disorders, but also have raised the exciting possibility that the behavioral afflictions of those individuals with ASD can be addressed."

The study's other co-authors included researchers from the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and three French institutions: Aix-Marseille Universite'; Institut National de la Sant? et de la Recherche M?dicale (INSERM); and Le Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS).

The researchers focused on the EIF4E gene, whose mutation is associated with autism. The mutation causing autism was proposed to increase levels of the eIF4E, the protein product of EIF4E, and lead to exaggerated protein synthesis. Excessive eIF4E signaling and exaggerated protein synthesis also may play a role in a range of neurological disorders, including fragile X syndrome (FXS).

In their experiments, the researchers examined mice with increased levels of eIF4E. They found that these mice had exaggerated levels of protein synthesis in the brain and exhibited behaviors similar to those found in autistic individuals -- repetitive behaviors, such as repeatedly burying marbles, diminished social interaction (the study monitored interactions with other mice), and behavioral inflexibility (the afflicted mice were unable to navigate mazes that had been slightly altered from ones they had previously solved). The researchers also found altered communication between neurons in brain regions linked to the abnormal behaviors.

To remedy to these autistic-like behaviors, the researchers then tested a drug, 4EGI-1, which diminishes protein synthesis induced by the increased levels of eIF4E. Through this drug, they hypothesized that they could return the afflicted mice's protein production to normal levels, and, with it, reverse autistic-like behaviors.

The subsequent experiments confirmed their hypotheses. The mice were less likely to engage in repetitive behaviors, more likely to interact with other mice, and were successful in navigating mazes that differed from those they previously solved, thereby showing enhanced behavioral flexibility. Additional investigation revealed that these changes were likely due to a reduction in protein production -- the levels of newly synthesized proteins in the brains of these mice were similar to those of normal mice.

"These findings highlight an invaluable mouse model for autism in which many drugs that target eIF4E can be tested," added co-author Davide Ruggero, an associate professor at UCSF's School of Medicine and Department of Urology. "These include novel compounds that we are developing to target eIF4E hyperactivation in cancer that may also be potentially therapeutic for autistic patients."

The study's other co-authors were: Emanuela Santini, the study's lead author, Thu Huynh, Andrew MacAskill, Adam Carter, and Hanoch Kaphzan of NYU's Center for Neural Science; and Philippe Pierre of Aix-Marseille Universit?, INSERM, and CNRS.

The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NS034007, NS047384, NS078718, and CA154916), a Department of Defense Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program award (W81XWH-11-1-0389), and the Wellcome Trust.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by New York University, via Newswise.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Emanuela Santini, Thu N. Huynh, Andrew F. MacAskill, Adam G. Carter, Philippe Pierre, Davide Ruggero, Hanoch Kaphzan, Eric Klann. Exaggerated translation causes synaptic and behavioural aberrations associated with autism. Nature, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/nature11782

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/c_SoB9I5JVs/121223152410.htm

los angeles dodgers christie brinkley seattle mariners geraldo rivera supreme court health care joe oliver joba chamberlain

বুধবার, ১৯ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১২

Astronaut study holds promise for elderly

Soft bones. A risk of fainting. Hardened arteries.

These conditions are risks for any space traveler, but they're also problems facing many seniors living on Earth.

To accelerate scientists' ?understanding of how the body ages, Canada's leading space and health agencies are pooling money and researchers, and plan to showcase the results of the research internationally.

The Canadian Space Agency (CSA) will work with the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) to examine the medical issues associated with spaceflight and connect them to issues facing regular people on the ground. While researchers have investigated these topics for years, this new effort represents the first inter-agency formal step for Canada. The goal is to develop treatment for Earth-bound seniors.

First spearheaded by the CSA's Nicole Buckley, chief scientist for life sciences, the partnership produced a national workshop in June. In the next couple of years, the Canadians plan to host an international working group to bring in research from NASA, the Japanese Space Agency and other government space stakeholders.

Despite the initiative's youth, Buckley said the CIHR is excited about gaining more access to the station's orbital laboratory, where health research is performed by space residents.

"There's increasing interest in the whole process of aging ? pretty soon, we?re all going to be there ? and we have this great resource in space that can complement terrestrial research. Why have it in two separate (research) areas?" Buckley asked.

New center in the works
Thanks to five decades of human spaceflight, there is already a wealth of information available on how humans react to the microgravity environment. Weightlessness produces negative changes in bones, blood vessels and other parts of body that no longer have to work against gravity.

Several CIHR-funded scientists already receive money from the Canadian Space Agency, with Richard Hughson of the University of Waterloo among the most experienced in that group.

Since the space station's Expedition 15 mission in 2007, astronauts and cosmonauts on station willingly donned sensors and blood cuffs to perform the researcher's experiments. Hughson's latest investigation will take place on Expedition 34, which launches to space Wednesday. [ Expedition 34 in Photos ]

  1. Space news from NBCNews.com

    1. Moon?probes crash; impact site?named after Sally Ride

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: NASA's twin Grail spacecraft crashed as planned, in a safe "corner of the moon" that will be named after space pioneer Sally Ride.

    2. Watch online as world doesn't come to end
    3. NASA spoofs 'Gangnam Style' video
    4. Holiday calendar: Volcano in 3-D

"Richard is an example of a crossover scientist ? a life scientist that does fabulous space research," Buckley said of Hughson.

Hughson's specialty is aging, and his university is pushing hard to gain world-class specialty expertise in that area. Next spring, the University of Waterloo will break ground on a long-term care facility that will host 192 seniors in its first phase.

The facility ? the first of its type worldwide ? will open its doors around 2014. Construction will cost $130 million Canadian (U.S. $132 million) over several phases. The first stage includes a privately funded $3 million (U.S. $3.05 million) research center next door. ?

"It will allow us to test and monitor individuals more in their normal, natural daily setting," Hughson said. While seniors come into his lab regularly for blood pressure and stand tests, by the time they arrive, they've already been up for several hours and their body has adjusted to walking.

"It's not the same as trying to catch someone in their home environment," he said.

Experiments in space
Expedition 34 astronauts Chris Hadfield (also a Canadian) and Tom Marshburn will perform an experiment called Blood Pressure Regulation (BPReg), which is supposed to monitor the risk of fainting. The experiment will take place near the end of their five-month flight, when they are the most adapted to space.

The astronauts will put large blood pressure cuffs on the top parts of their legs, puff the cuffs up for three minutes, and then rapidly release the pressure. This will produce a large rush of blood to the legs, similar to what occurs when one stands up.

Hughson will compare the high-flying results to control experiments that Marshburn and Hadfield do before and after their flight. His aim is to make predictions about what will happen to their blood pressures and heart rates.

Additionally, Hughson just published several papers showing how long stays in space affect astronauts' hearts, and the crucial vessels that send blood to the brain.

His work, called Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Control on Return from ISS, shows that strenuous exercise in space likely combats changes in the heart rate.

Stiff arteries
However, Hughson has intriguing findings about arteries in space, showing that they do harden in similar ways to what occurs with the elderly on Earth. The experiment is called Cardiovascular Health Consequences of Long-Duration Space Flight, or Vascular for short.

As the blood goes through the stiff vessels, it pushes through and creates large pulses of pressure that radiate into the brain artery. A similar process occurs on Earth when collagen builds up in aging people.

"We think ? we're still in the thinking stage ? what's happening is you damage the brain blood vessels to the extent that you have a reduction in total brain blood flow," Hughson said. ?

He's now analyzing data from 100 seniors on Earth, collected in the past 2.5 years.

"Our CIHR part of the funding has been looking at a fairly large group of elderly (people) to examine arterial stiffness and blood flow, and now to examine cognitive and motor function to see whether there is a relationship," Hughson said.??

To monitor for blood changes in astronauts on the station, the spaceflyers will take samples while still in orbit, then ship them back to Earth. The SpaceX unmanned Dragon flight in October included refrigerated blood for Hughson on its return trip to Earth, he said.

Hughson emphasized that his research is in the early stages, but added the potential for improving senior health is worth the time the astronauts spend on it in space.

"If we can learn something from the astronauts that we can apply back to the population on Earth ... that's really great," he said.

Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook and Google+.

? 2012 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50240906/ns/technology_and_science-space/

george zimmerman sheree whitfield weather dallas pat summitt real housewives of atlanta colton bo ryan

Portico Windows Phone update to hit T-Mobile HTC 8X tomorrow

We've been hearing about the first feature update for Windows Phone 8, dubbed Portico, for a few weeks now. The last we heard was that the update would start pushing out this month, and now it looks like tomorrow might be the day the update kicks off. T-Mobile has been sending out e-mails to HTC 8X users saying that December 19th, 2012 will see the release of the Portico update.The update changelog isn't completely known at this point. We do know that it is expected to have bugfixes to stop the annoying random reboots and freezes that some WP8 users have reported, and it will add a couple features to the SMS system, like?SMS call reject, and the ability to mass select SMS messages. The update is also expected to include optimizations to increase battery life.?

Not a bad update overall. No word yet on when the update will come to the Verizon or AT&T models of the 8X, or to other WP8 devices.?

Source: http://www.phonearena.com/news/Portico-Windows-Phone-update-to-hit-T-Mobile-HTC-8X-tomorrow_id37812

leprechaun night at the museum pope shenouda bolton muamba crystal cathedral sxsw st. patrick s day

Greeks can???t find euros to buy heating oil with winter economy

Greeks can?t find euros to buy heating oil with winter economy


By Oliver Staley

In the Greek mountain town of Kastoria, less than an hour from the Albanian border, Kostas Tsitskos, 88, can?t afford fuel to heat his home against the winter?s cold. So he and his son live in a single bedroom, warmed by a small electric heater.

?One room is enough,? said Tsitskos, who lives on a 734 euro-a-month ($971) pension and doesn?t have the 1,000 euros a month he needs to buy heating oil.

Greece is facing a heating-oil crisis. With an economy that has contracted for five years and an unemployment rate at a record 25 percent, residents in northern Greece can?t heat their homes. Kastoria hasn?t received funds from the central government to warm schools and the mayor said he will close all 53 of them rather than let children freeze, a step already taken in a nearby town. Truckloads of wood are arriving from Bulgaria as families search for alternative fuels.

?This is the coldest place in Greece,? said Emmanouil Hatzisimeonidis, Kastoria?s mayor, in an interview in his office. ?It?s winter from October to April. This year we are very lucky. Last year, it was snowing for four months.?

When temperatures fall below freezing, Tsitskos spends most of his time in his bedroom and rarely leaves the house, he said. For meals, he and his son move the electrical heater to the kitchen. Other older residents in the town spend their days at a senior center and cafes to save on heating costs, returning home only to sleep, he said.

Austerity cuts
?
Austerity measures have cut government salaries and benefits, raised the retirement age and reduced services.

The household price for heating oil in Greece reached 1,266 euros per 1,000 liters (264 gallons) in the second quarter of 2012, surging 48 percent from a year earlier, according to the International Energy Agency, a Paris-based organization. The same quantity cost 700 pounds (861 euros) in the U.K., according to the IEA, and $1,045 (790 euros) in New York, according to a state agency.

Greeks pay both excise and value-added taxes on heating oil that can make up 42 percent of the total cost. The mayors of the region are petitioning the government to be exempted from the tax.

Greece?s oil prices are high because of laws that protect the country?s two refining companies and prevent competition, said Pavlos Eleftheriadis, a lecturer in law at the University of Oxford in England, who studies monopolies.

?The Greek political system works for the insiders,? said Eleftheriadis, a native of Greece. ?If you?re an insider, there will be an attempt to protect you. If you?re a poor person in Kastoria, you are on your own.?

Frozen lake
?
Kastoria, a town of about 36,000, is on a peninsula jutting into a lake 625 meters (2,050) feet above sea level. Restaurants and taverns sit by the water, where rowers scull year round. On winter days, the sky is a clear blue and the air is crisp. In some years, the lake freezes over and residents from neighboring villages walk across. At night in December, the temperature can fall to -10 degrees Celsius.

Kastoria is the center of Greece?s fur industry and mink is raised in the area. Many of the area?s furriers cater to a Russian clientele, and signs with Cyrillic letters hang from their stores.

Nick Sersemis, 32, said he would need 3,500 euros to heat his home with oil this winter. Instead, he?s bought 15 tons of wood for 1,500 euros and his family is sleeping in one room around the wood stove, he said. He worries about the schools his two boys attend.

?I know this winter they won?t have heat at their school,? Sersemis said. ?I?ll keep them home if I have to.?

Bread money
?
Sersemis runs his family?s 15-year-old bakery in a residential neighborhood and worries that he will have to close it next year. Over the past two years, his sales have fallen 35 percent while ingredients cost 30 to 40 percent more. He takes home about 500 euros a month, down from 1,200 two years ago.

?People don?t have money to buy even bread,? he said.

Sales of wood for heating have soared 40 percent from last year, according to Alexis Tsekouras, a Kastoria wood seller. Because of limits imposed by the forestry service on the amount of timber that can be harvested, wood is imported from Bulgaria, he said.

Greece?s central government has cut the funding for heating schools by 60 percent, said Hatzisimeonidis, Kastoria?s mayor.

On Oct. 31, residents of Florina, an hour north of Kastoria, traveled to Athens to protest the lack of funds for heating oil, emptying buckets of ice in front of the parliament building.

Senior center
?
At a Kastoria senior center in a small building next to the lake, several dozen grey-haired men play cards and pay 80 cents for coffee. Among them is Kostas Tsitskos, who said the suffering he sees now reminds him of the devastation caused by the German occupation in World War II.

?People were looking in the garbage for food then and they are now,? Tsitskos said. ?In World War II, people were selling furniture for food. If the situation continues now, we will be selling our furniture.?

This winter, Tsitskos bought an electric heater for his 100 square-meter (1,076 square-foot) home and he turns it down at night. He has two thermometers and on a recent December day, the temperature was 17 degrees inside and 6 degrees outside.

If the weather is good, Tsitskos uses a walking stick to travel the few blocks to the senior center. The center is usually heated, although not well and not every day, he said.

?Sometimes we are heated with the heat from our own bodies,? he said.

No buyers
?
Christos Tsitskos, his 43-year-old son, lives with his father. Christos owned a small fur business before closing it in the crisis. He now works at another company manufacturing pelts, earning 5 euros an hour. There are no buyers, he said.

?We?ll make 100 pelts and sell two or three,? he said. ?We don?t sell anything.?

A veteran of the Greek Civil War, which was fought from 1947 to 1949, the elder Tsitskos worked in the fur industry in Montreal and New York before opening his own business manufacturing coats in Kastoria, retiring at 65. His wife died 15 years ago.

Tsitskos has relatives in Astoria, New York, who have considered returning to Greece to retire and he cautions them to stay in the U.S. He would leave if he could afford it, he said.

?I was expecting a different type of life,? he said. ?There?s nothing that makes me happy. I?m living just to live.?

Even after 40 years in the trade, Tsitskos doesn?t have any furs to keep warm. The one fur coat he owned was sold years ago.

[Bloomberg]

?

Source: http://www.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_wsite1_1_19/12/2012_475115

clint eastwood Julian Castro Blue Moon August 2012 Eddie Murphy Dead michelle obama robin roberts Democratic National Convention 2012

মঙ্গলবার, ১৮ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১২

Gift fit for a queen? UK monarch gets 60 place mats

Jeremy Selwyn / AFP - Getty Images

A picture shows place mats which were presented to Britain's Queen Elizabeth II when she sat in on a Cabinet meeting inside 10 Downing Street in central London Tuesday.

By Rachel Elbaum, NBC News

Updated at 12:25 p.m. ET: Queen Elizabeth II sat in on a U.K. Cabinet meeting for the first time in her reign Tuesday, after an invitation from ministers wanting to present her with a gift celebrating her 60 years on the throne, a Buckingham Palace spokeswoman said.

Wearing a royal blue dress and diamond brooch, the queen was met at her car by Prime Minister David Cameron outside his official residence, 10 Downing Street.

She met with members of the Cabinet in a side room and then took a seat between Cameron and Foreign Secretary William Hague to observe the weekly meeting.

PhotoBlog: Queen breaks?with centuries-old tradition and sits in on UK Cabinet meeting

While she was there, the Cabinet presented the queen with 60 place mats in honor of her six decades on the throne, the palace said.

An historic first as Queen Elizabeth attends a cabinet meeting at 10 Downing Street as part of her diamond jubilee celebrations. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

?We think the last time the monarch attended the Cabinet was in 1781 during the American War of Independence,? Cameron said at the start of the meeting, according to video footage.

Diamond Jubilee celebrations: Queen 'touched' by 'happy atmosphere'

The queen, whose duties are mostly ceremonial, spoke twice during the meeting, Downing Street told NBCNews.com.

Born third in line to the throne, she never expected to ascend to it, but a twist of fate led to her becoming Queen Elizabeth II at a young age. Now the woman who once famously said she would have enjoyed a quiet life in the country is celebrating a six-decade reign. NBC's Meredith Vieira reports and speaks with Charles Anson, the queen's former press secretary.

Once to encourage ministers not to make her annual queen?s speech -- when she reads the government's plans for the year -- too long and then again to wish everyone a ?happy Christmas.?

Slice of Antarctica named after her
Since she assumed the throne in 1952, the queen has sat through the terms of 12 prime ministers.

Also on Tuesday, the U.K. announced that the southern part of the British Antarctic Territory had been named Queen Elizabeth Land in honor of her 60 years on the throne.

The area in Antarctica is almost twice the size of the U.K., according to the government.

?The British Antarctic Territory is a unique and important member of the network of 14 U.K. Overseas Territories,? Hague said on the U.K. Foreign Office website. ?To be able to recognize the U.K.?s commitment to Antarctica with a permanent association with Her Majesty is a great honor.?

/

Her Majesty celebrates 60 years on the throne.

More world stories from NBC News:

Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

Queen Elizabeth II is celebrating 60 years on the throne. Watch archival footage from her childhood and ascension to the throne to the present day.

?

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/18/15993439-queen-elizabeth-given-place-mats-by-uk-cabinet-as-thanks-for-60-year-reign?lite

daniel von bargen the beach blood diamond 8 bit google maps kids choice awards 2012 micah true kansas vs ohio state

White House repeatedly declines to comment on gun control proposals (Washington Bureau)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/271378394?client_source=feed&format=rss

tiny houses maya angelou joan of arc tony robbins bon iver abraham lincoln vampire hunter their eyes were watching god

Snow forecast for parts of New England, Northwest

By NBC News staff

Up to 12 inches of further snowfall is forecast for parts of northern New England - and a second wintry storm is crossing the U.S. in its wake, according to Weather Channel meteorologist Kevin Roth.?The current snowfall in northern New York state and New England will continue through Tuesday night and into Wednesday, with as much as 15 inches possible in some areas.

Meanwhile, another cross-country storm ? Winter Storm Draco ? was expected to bring heavy snow to the Northwest on Monday.

The higher elevations of the Cascades will see as much as 2 to 3 feet of snow above 7000 feet, Weather.com reported, with significant accumulations below 3000 feet.

/

Ice and snow changes our environment, as winter engulfs our world.

The National Weather Service said the probability of ?large amounts of snow remains high across the majority of windward facing slopes of the Pacific Northwest and portions of the Northern Rockies.?

King5.com reported that the storm is expected to bring?high winds to Western Washington and whiteout conditions to the west slopes of the Cascades and passes.

The system is expected to move to the Southwest and Rockies Tuesday and Wednesday before bringing snow to the eastern half of the country later Wednesday through Friday.

Roth added there would likely be lake-effect snow threat behind the storm on Thursday and Friday.

More content from NBCNews.com:

Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/17/15966601-snow-storms-forecast-for-parts-of-new-england-northwest?lite

memorial day ivan rodriguez planetary resources mothers day gift ideas natalee holloway scotty mccreery megan fox pregnant