Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Antibiotics in pregnancy tied to asthma in kids | canada.com

Children whose mothers took antibiotics while they were pregnant were slightly more likely than other kids to develop asthma in a new Danish study.

The results don?t prove that antibiotics caused the higher asthma risk, but they support a current theory that the body?s own ?friendly? bacteria have a role in whether a child develops asthma, and antibiotics can disrupt those beneficial bugs.

?We speculate that mothers? use of antibiotics changes the balance of natural bacteria, which is transmitted to the newborn, and that such unbalanced bacteria in early life impact on the immune maturation in the newborn,? said Dr. Hans Bisgaard, one of the authors of the study and a professor at the University of Copenhagen.

Those effects on the immune system could lead to asthma later on, although it?s still not clear how, said Anita Kozyrskyj, a professor at the University of Alberta who also studies the antibiotics-asthma link but wasn?t involved in the new study.

Previous research has linked antibiotics taken during infancy to a higher risk of asthma, although some researchers have disputed those findings.

To look for effects starting at an even earlier point in a baby?s development, Bisgaard and his colleagues gathered information from a Danish national birth database of more than 30,000 children born between 1997 and 2003 and followed for five years.

They found that about 7,300 of the children, or nearly one quarter, were exposed to antibiotics while their mothers were pregnant. Among them, just over three per cent (238 kids) were hospitalized for asthma by age five.

In comparison, about 2.5 per cent, or 581 of some 23,000 kids whose mothers didn?t take antibiotics were hospitalized for asthma.

After taking into account other asthma risk factors, Bisgaard?s team calculated that the children who had been exposed to antibiotics were 17 per cent more likely to be hospitalized for asthma.

Similarly, these children were also 18 per cent more likely to have been given a prescription for an asthma medication than kids whose mothers did not take antibiotics when they were pregnant, according to findings published in The Journal of Pediatrics.

In an email to Reuters Health, Bisgaard said he expected to see a higher risk of asthma ?because the mother is a prime source of early bacterial colonization of the child, and antibiotics may (have) disturbed her normal bacterial flora.?

Bisgaard?s team also looked at a smaller group of 411 kids who were at higher risk for asthma because their mothers had the condition and found these children were twice as likely as their peers to develop asthma too if their mothers took antibiotics during the third trimester of pregnancy.

Kozyrskyj, who is research chair of the Women and Children?s Health Research Institute, said it?s also possible that something other than the antibiotics are to blame for the findings in both groups of children ? such as the illness that caused the mothers to take antibiotics.

?This study, it doesn?t tell us whether it?s the antibiotic use or whether it?s the infection. That?s one thing we can?t decipher,? she told Reuters Health.

The results don?t suggest that women should avoid taking antibiotics to try to reduce their kids? risk of asthma, Kozyrskyj emphasized.

Some infections can be quite dangerous to a fetus, and ?there are very good indications for these antibiotics,? she added.

Bisgaard agreed that women should be treated, ?but we see 1/3 of pregnant women in our region receiving treatments (often for urinary tract infections), which may reflect an uncritical use,? he wrote in an email.

Bisgaard said his group is also studying the types of bacteria in pregnant mothers and newborn children to get a better understanding of their role in asthma.

Kozyrskyj said Bisgaard?s study suggests that the development of asthma might start before birth, something researchers hadn?t studied very closely.

?We?re beginning to appreciate that some of the origins of asthma and changes to the immune system, maybe they start earlier than right after birth. It might be happening in utero,? she said.

SOURCE: The Journal of Pediatrics, online November 8, 2012.

Source: http://o.canada.com/2012/11/20/antibiotics-in-pregnancy-tied-to-asthma-in-kids/

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

Photos: Nevada Election Will Be a Nail-Biter

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Friday, November 2, 2012

How to manually update to iOS 6.0.1 over-the-air (OTA)

How to manually update to iOS 6.0.1 over-the-air (OTA)

Good news, iOS 6.0.1 has been released! It promises fixes for a bunch of annoying bugs, but if you're brand new to the iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad, you might be wandering how you can get it? iOS will popup an alert to tell you iOS 6.0.1 is available, but if you miss it, or you simply don't want to wait, you can start the update process manually as well.

iPhone 5 users only

Before updating to iOS 6.0.1, you'll be asked to install the iPhone 5 Updater which fixes a bug that prevents iPhone 5 users from being able to update over-the-air. If you are updating a device other than the iPhone 5, you can skip this section and continue on to the next one.

  1. Go to Settings on your iPhone 5.
  2. Tap on General and then Software Update.
  3. You'll be asked to install iPhone 5 Updater. Tap on Learn More.
  4. Now tap on Download and Install.
  5. A popup will come up asking you to confirm the install. Tap Install.
  6. Once the install is complete you can go ahead and move on to the next section.

How to manually update to iOS 6.0.1

  1. Launch the Settings app.
  2. Tap General.
  3. Tap Software Update.
  4. Tap Download and Install
  5. Agree to the Terms and Conditions
  6. Watch the progress bar (This part depends on the speed and quality of connection. Don't be alarmed if it takes a long time, speeds up or slows down, or appears to jump around -- be patient.)
  7. Once it's finished downloading, you'll be prompted to instal (and restart) your device. If you don't explicitly hit Later or Install within a few seconds, it will install on your behalf.
  8. Apple will verify the install.

You're done! Once your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch reboots you should now be on iOS 6.0.1.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/UKo_l6Xy-ow/story01.htm

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ScanSource: Bring Your Own Device | ShoreTel Blog

By: Steve Weinstock, Sr. Product Manager ? OEM and Alliances

One of the focal points of our annual ShoreTel Champion Partner Conference is the Innovation Center ? where technology partners are available to chat with resellers about ways to increase revenue and margins, while making the customer experience even stronger.

In the days leading up to this year?s event, some of our top sponsors have shared their thoughts on our industry.

Today we hear from ScanSource and their thoughts on the latest mobile trend: BYOD.

**********

The concept of Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) is a huge trend in the unified communication space. This flood of technology into the workforce is causing IT teams to reconsider their network infrastructure, and to react quickly.

Facetime, Skype, Google+, and social media sites are putting low-cost video communication in the hands of consumers via their smart phones and tablets. Once the benefits of video communication are realized by consumers, they carry the expectation of its availability into their workplace. This is forcing companies to not only adopt video conferencing as part of their business processes, but also to provide the network to which their employees will connect their video-enabled devices.

Fixed Mobile Convergence (FMC), when using solutions like ShoreTel Mobility, gives employees the freedom to replace their desk phones with a mobile phone. Using an available wireless network to transmit phone calls from a smart phone as VoIP calls, and automatically transitioning the call to the mobile network when WiFi is lost makes FMC a popular method of cutting operating costs. In addition to lowering a company?s monthly mobile usage costs, FMC greatly improves the availability and accessibility of their workforce. Once the availability of a mobile workforce without mobile network costs is realized, companies are more willing to allow for employees to bring their own device, and possibly bring their own network.

In the case of FMC, IT staffs now have multiple networks to worry about. First, they must be concerned with the cellular or mobile network(s) to which their employees? phones will connect.? They already have limited control over the user experience on a mobile network, and by allowing employees to use their own devices and own networks, they no longer have a single provider with which to work to resolve issues.

The second network that could affect their users is the public WiFi connection, for example the Guest network at the local coffee shop. FMC is designed to take advantage of those networks, but there is no accountability for the quality of the network in those cases. Lastly, and most importantly, is their own wireless LAN. Moving all of this traffic from the networks dedicated to it, as in the case of a legacy PBX, to a network traditionally designed for data is a major task, if it?s to be done correctly. When taking advantage of any BYOD-centered technology, IT departments have to take a look at their existing equipment to ensure that it can support the tasks being asked of it, and often have to replace or upgrade the equipment.

Looking to the future, these decisions about wireless infrastructure will be affected by new technologies, such as the increased bandwidth available in 802.11ac, new product offerings designed to provide quality voice across data network experiences, and increased exposure of consumer-accessible communication methods through advertisement and social media. WiFi has almost become an add-on to a solution sell, and it may be time to add some mystery back into the sales cycle for this technology.

Remember where there is mystery, there is margin. So how can the channel involved in the sales cycle of these products help resellers bring WiFi into the forefront of a Unified Communications solution pitch?

Some of the individuals posting to this site, including the moderators, work for ShoreTel, Inc. Opinions expressed here and in any corresponding comments are the personal opinions of the original authors, not of ShoreTel. The content is provided for informational purposes only and is not meant to be an endorsement or representation by ShoreTel or any other party.

Categories: Enterprise Mobility, Guest Post

Tags: BYOD, distributor, FMC, scansource, wi-fi

Source: http://blog.shoretel.com/2012/11/scansource-bring-your-own-device/

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Video: Crude Oil Inventories Down 2.05M Barrels

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/49642262/

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

Investor Toolkit: How ?practice accounts? can tempt you into risky ...

Time vs Money

Every Wednesday, we publish our ?Investor Toolkit? series on TSI Network. Whether you?re a new or experienced investor, these weekly updates are designed to give you advice on how to trade stocks and other investment topics that will help you develop a successful approach to investing. Each Investor Toolkit update gives you a fundamental tip and shows you how you can put it into practice right away.

Today?s tip: ?Practice accounts are advertised as a good way to learn how to invest, but they can encourage investors to develop bad habits.?

The online brokerage industry is winning a lot of attention and goodwill for itself by offering ?practice accounts?. These accounts are supposed to be identical to real accounts in all but one respect: you trade in them with imaginary or ?play? money, rather than the real thing. The industry says this gives would-be traders a free opportunity to learn how to trade online, without risking any money.

I?d say that?s a misstatement?a classic example of the essence of marketing, which is to describe a feature in such a way that the prospect comes to see it as a benefit.

Practice-account users aren?t learning how to invest. They are just learning how to enter orders online. Rather than an educational experience, practice accounts are a little like play-money sessions at Las Vegas, where gambling novices can learn to play casino games without risking any real cash.

In the casino, you are learning how to play the game. But you aren?t learning how to win the game, because that?s not possible. In the end, players can?t overcome the statistical advantage built into casino games that gives the house an edge. You are learning how to avoid losing your money any quicker than you choose to, and how to avoid making a spectacle of yourself in the process.

"Canadian Stock Market Basics: How to Trade Stocks and Make Good Investments in Canada": In this special report, Pat McKeough gives you his time-tested advice on how you can make more money from your investments and save thousands on brokers' fees and other expenses. Best of all, you can get a copy absolutely FREE. Click here to claim yours now.

How a lucky streak could lead to big risks

Using an online broker?s practice account, you can learn online trading essentials, such as how to enter a buy order or a sell order; how to double-check your order before submitting it, so you avoid obvious but common mistakes like buying 10,000 shares when you only meant to buy 1,000; and so on. In doing so, you can choose what stocks to buy, but the only feedback you?ll get on your choices is the price changes they go through after you buy.

However, there is a large random element in short-term stock market results. It will take months or years before you know if your choices are likely to provide attractive long-term returns. In fact, the real test will come only when you see how you do in the next bear market.

Public-relations efforts on practice accounts often refer to them as good places to learn about day trading and options trading, which are big money earners for online brokers. Most non-professionals who get involved with day trading or options trading wind up losing money if they stick with it long enough. In that respect, they are a lot like casino games.

The big risk with practice accounts is that you?ll try out a risky and ultimately unwinnable investment approach, like day trading or options trading, and hit a lucky streak. This could embolden you to put serious money at risk just when your results are about to regress to the mean and deliver losses instead of profits.

COMMENTS PLEASE?Share your investment experience and opinions with fellow TSINetwork.ca members

Have you ever used a brokers? online practice account? What did you learn from it? Did it make you a more successful investor in any way? Let us know what you think.

One Comment

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Source: http://www.tsinetwork.ca/daily/investing-for-beginners/investor-toolkit-practice-accounts-tempt-risky-investing-habits/

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Republicans aim to expand gubernatorial power (CNN)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/259939268?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Identity theft can haunt you for years : News : CarolinaLive.com

[unable to retrieve full-text content]If you're among those who have had your identity stolen in the South Carolina Department of Revenue's cyber attack, your first indication may be strange charges showing up on your credit card account.

Source: http://www.carolinalive.com/news/story.aspx?id=819851

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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Microsoft Wedge Touch Mouse


Microsoft is clearly pushing itself to appear more innovative. This is pretty clear with Windows 8, but just as clear with Microsoft's Windows 8 peripherals, like the ultra-portable Wedge Mobile Touch Mouse. It crams all of the touch functionality of the Editors' Choice Microsoft Touch Mouse ($79.95 direct, 4.5 stars) into a tiny mouse with Bluetooth connectivity. The tiny size and extra functionality won't do much for deskbound users or systems running Windows 7, so it's tough to recommend to a broad audience.

Design and Features
The Wedge Touch Mouse is tiny, weighing 2.08 ounces (0.13 pound) and measuring 1.1 by 2.3 by 2.0 inches (HWD)?about the size of a thick stack of Post-it Notes, but with a distinctive wedge profile. As wireless mice go, it's the polar opposite of the HP Wi-Fi Touch Mouse X7000 ($59.99 direct, 3 stars), which boasted Wi-Fi connectivity, but was a whopping six ounces and too big for comfortable use.

The Wedge Mouse takes compact design to a new level, chopping off the entire back half of the traditional mouse, leaving only the right and left buttons. But these aren't your usual mouse buttons, either, as the two clickable buttons are actually part of a single clickable surface, and the entire surface also functions as a touchpad. Your first inclination may be to grab it with the tapered end facing toward you, but that's backwards. The downward slope serves as the two buttons for your mouse. With no palm rest, however, your hand will either rest on the desk or tabletop being used, or held just off the surface, which I can't imagine will do good things ergonomically.

The design isn't simply compact, it's made for portability as well. The small mouse features "Backpack Mode," which senses when the mouse has been lifted from the desk surface and inactive for a while, switching power off automatically. Microsoft's BlueTrack technology, allows the Wedge Mouse to be used on virtually any surface that doesn't have a mirror finish, meaning that you can use it nearly anywhere?on the back of a book, across the leg of your pants, on the arm of a couch. It's nearly as versatile as the Logitech Couch Mouse M515 ($49.99 direct, 4 stars).

Scrolling (both vertical and horizontal) is simple and intuitive, done by simply dragging a finger on the touch surface. Horizontal scrolling becomes all the more important in Windows 8, because the Start Screen stretches out to the sides whether in portrait or landscape orientations.

Setup and Performance
Setup is simple: Insert an AA battery and power on the mouse. Press the Bluetooth Connect button for 3-5 seconds, and then add the mouse using your Control Panel under Add a Device. Within moments, you'll be up and running.

Once you're connected, all of your usual cursor control and left- and right-clicking functions will work without any trouble. The one area you might find troublesome is scrolling, as the mouse uses its touchable surface for both vertical and horizontal movement. While vertical scrolling is pretty simple, horizontal scrolling might take some getting used to, as it means swiping your finger side to side, a move that isn't as ingrained for longtime mouse users. You'll also need to grow accustomed to scrolling without clicking, as the same finger used for clicking is the same one you'll be swiping side to side.

The Wedge Mobile Touch Mouse is easily one of the most portable and versatile mice we've reviewed?it's certainly the smallest?and the addition of four-way scrolling is indispensable for Windows 8 users that may not have a touch screen to work with. However, the super-compact design may be a bit further outside of the box than some users want to go. It's definitely the mouse to grab if you need both portability and Windows 8-friendly four-way scrolling, but for deskbound users and other operating systems, there are better, cheaper mice available. For similar four-way scrolling in a more traditional form-factor, check out the Editors' Choice Microsoft Touch Mouse, which is getting a Windows 8 upgrade.

More computer mouse reviews:
??? Microsoft Wedge Touch Mouse
??? Targus Ultralife Wireless Mouse
??? HP Wireless Mouse X4000
??? Logitech G600 MMO Gaming Mouse
??? Razer Taipan
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/V7ddzGKLXNY/0,2817,2411473,00.asp

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Art Speak: Irma Cavat Talks Recycled Robots with Tal Avitzur - 1 ...

Two California-based artists talk about the inspiration for a line of scrap metal robots called Talbotics.

Talbotics Art Speak: Irma Cavat Talks Recycled Robots with Tal Avitzur

Talbotics: ?Jigsy,? ?Arghh,? ?Primo? and ?Conqueror.? All photos courtesy of Tal Avitzur.

?Talbotics,? a collection of artist Tal Avitzur?s scrap metal robots conceived from found objects, are a sight to behold. Shiny faces and limbs, gleaned from salvage yards, yard sales and other sources, are pieced together intricately by Avitzur because, well, he simply likes to do so.

Utilizing only his metallic finds, Avitzur has become known as a robot-minded Dr. Frankenstein, searching for perfect chunks of metal to form his next creation.

In this interview, Avitzur sits down with his long-time artistic inspiration (and California neighbor), Irma Cavat. Avitzur credits Cavat with inspiring him to start down an artistic path, and all these years later, Cavat wanted to pose some questions about the inspiration behind all these little robotic friends.

As Avitzur recalls, ?In 1983, I moved from Allentown, PA, to Santa Barbara, CA, and lived in Irma Cavat?s house while attending University of California at Santa Barbara to get a Master?s in Mathematics. There was a constant stream of artists coming and going in her large communal artists? compound.?

The two convened in Santa Barbara in October 2012 to talk all things Talbotics.

 Art Speak: Irma Cavat Talks Recycled Robots with Tal Avitzur

Tal Avitzur (left) and Irma Cavat in Santa Barbara, CA

Irma Cavat: What got you started making robots?
Tal Avitzur: I was visiting scrap metal yards in search of materials for home improvement projects. Little did I know I would find all kinds of treasures hiding in huge piles of aluminum, brass and copper. They were on their way to the smelter and would be gone forever, unless I brought them home with me. That?s how it began.

IC: Where else do you get your materials?
TA: Auto and marine salvage yards, garage sales, university and military surplus? and now that the word is out about what I do, I often find parts dropped off for me at my front gate.

IC: What challenges do you encounter in making your art?
TA: Sometimes I?ll find a great part, say a robot arm or leg, but only one. Finding a mate for the arm or leg can be difficult. I thought of making some with missing limbs and dangling wires, but that seems a bit sad.

Intergalactia700 Art Speak: Irma Cavat Talks Recycled Robots with Tal Avitzur

?Intergalactia?

IC: Your robots seem happy. Did you set out to make cheerful robots?
TA: Actually that was not my intention, but the words ?cheerful,? ?happy? and ?cute? have been used a lot to describe them. Guess I?m just a happy guy.

IC: I?ve known you for 30 years, and yes, I?d say that you are happy. What is the process you go through in making a robot sculpture?
TA: A piece always starts with a found object that looks like it would make a good robot head or some other body part. Then it?s like a puzzle, playing around and matching other body parts that seem to be in the right proportions and fit with the initial piece.

IC: How long does it take you to make a piece?
TA: It varies. Depends on whether or not I have all the parts on hand. A few days if I have the pieces; months if I have to scavenge for missing parts.

IC: Are you trying to make a statement with your work?
TA: It?s pretty simple. No hidden meanings, no statements. Just robots meant to make you smile.

IC: Any plans for the future?
TA: Bigger robots. Thanks for the interview, Irma. It?s really because of you that I am doing something creative, as you were my first art teacher and the person who opened up the art world to me. So, thank you!

Grinder700 Art Speak: Irma Cavat Talks Recycled Robots with Tal Avitzur

?Grinder?

For more information on Tal Avitzur?s Talbotics,? see talbotics.com.

About Irma Cavat

A native of Brooklyn, Cavat became a professional artist in her early 20s. She studied with Ukrainian sculptor Alexander Archipenko and modeled for Belgian surrealist painter Ren? Magritte. She also studied at the New School for Social Research in New York. Cavat designed the windows of FAO Schwartz toy store on 5th Avenue in New York, illustrated science-fiction books and designed her own jewelry. As a young artist in the early 1950s, she worked with Willem de Kooning and became part of the Abstract Expressionist group, which included Jackson Pollack and Larry Rivers.

Cavat?s awards include residencies at Yaddo in New York, the McDowell Colony in Maine, the Djerassi Foundation in Northern California and a Fulbright Grant to Rome. Cavat resided in Rome from 1955 to 1964, where her daughters were born. She then moved to Santa Barbara and became a Professor of Art at UCSB from 1965 to 2000.

From the mid-1980s until the time of his death in 2002, sculptor George Rickey used Cavat?s California home as a winter studio. In 1995, in collaboration with landscape architect Isabelle Greene and Walter Kohn, a Nobel laureate in theoretical physics, Cavat helped create the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation?s Sadako Peace Garden on the 50th anniversary of the Hiroshima tragedy.

Cavat has lived for extended periods of time in Paris; Provence, France; Athens, Greece; and London. An avid traveler, she has also journeyed to the open markets of Morocco, Tiananmen Square in China, the Taj Mahal in India, and throughout parts of Turkey, Japan, Hungary, the Baltic States and Russia. Each country she visited offered bountiful inspiration for her paintings. Cavat continues to reside in Santa Barbara.

Source: http://1800recycling.com/2012/10/art-speak-irma-cavat-recycled-robots-tal-avitzur/

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'42nd Street' the place where dreams of stardom come true | dorothy ...

While much of it has become so overused as to be hackneyed, when the 1933 movie musical "42nd Street" was released, it was fresh, new and exciting.

The show was one of Hollywood's earliest valentines to that all-American creation, musical theater, replete with the unabashed hype that is the hallmark of show-biz.

Julian (Damon Kirsche) and Peggy (Tessa Grady) lead the entire company in the joyous song-and-dance scene "Lullaby of Broadway" during Musical Theatre West's staging of "42nd St."

ALYSA BRENNAN

ADVERTISEMENT

?42nd Street?

When: Through Nov. 11. 8 p.m. Fridays, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays, 7 p.m. Nov. 4, 8 p.m. Nov. 8

Where: Richard and Karen Carpenter Performing Arts Center, 6200 E. Atherton, Long Beach

How much: Prices start at $20

Length: 2 hours, 30 minutes

Suitability: All ages

Call: 562-856-1999, extension 4

Producer David Merrick and director Gower Champion's 1980 stage adaptation, written by Michael Stewart and Mark Bramble, holds true to all of the above. Like the film, it showcases the great songs of Harry Warren and the equally timeless lyrics of Warren partner Al Dubin.

Based on both the 1933 film and the Bradford Ropes novel, the show pulls in a few more Warren songs, lyrics by Dubin and others, from other films.

The show's demands pose difficulties to any theater company, meaning Musical Theatre West's current production will probably be your last chance to see "42nd Street" until, oh, the year 2035.

Director and choreographer Jon Engstrom and musical director Michael Borth clearly have an affinity for the material. Working from the 1980 original (and not the 2001 revival), cutting extraneous songs and reprises, they've both tightened the show and improved upon it.

The result, to use the parlance of the show itself, is socko and boffo, an exhilarating evening of heady song and dance.

At the height of the Depression, legendary Broadway producer Julian Marsh (Damon Kirsche) is determined to launch a huge new musical extravaganza called "Pretty Lady." Backers are scarce, so he's forced to give the leading role to aging star Dorothy Brock (Tracy Lore), whose sugar daddy is keeping the production afloat.

At best, Julian's relationship with Dorothy is testy and unpleasant. Things only get worse with the arrival of Peggy Sawyer (Tessa Grady), a fresh-faced newbie from the boondocks (well, Allentown, Pa.).

Peggy is by no means worldly, but she isn't dim ? just wholesome and goodhearted. While Julian finds her amusing, Dorothy simply finds her annoying. When Peggy accidentally causes Dorothy to slip, breaking her ankle and forcing her out of the new show, Dorothy becomes convinced that Peggy has it in for her.

Naturally, the only person who can take over for Dorothy last-minute is Peggy, who becomes that clich? of all show-biz clich?s: the unknown chorine rocketed to stardom overnight.

Engstrom's staging starts with a bang ? nearly the entire cast tap dancing in precision ? and never looks back.

The show's framing device is ingenious, and it helps justify many of the songs, presented ostensibly as scenes from the fictitious show "Pretty Lady," while the rest exist as numbers that express what's going on with the various characters struggling to keep "Pretty Lady" alive.

All of Warren and Dubin's greatest hits are here ? "Young and Healthy," "Lullaby of Broadway," "You're Getting to Be a Habit With Me," "About a Quarter to Nine," "Shuffle Off to Buffalo" and, or course, the title song, which expresses the irresistible lure of the Broadway musicals.

While each song scene has its own hook, the "Shadow Waltz" number and "We're in the Money" are just as visual as they are melodic or rhythmic. "Money" is the great showstopper, with its huge prop 1933 Mercury dimes, green-and-silver costumes and backdrop, and Engstrom's elaborate dances, which salute the famed routines of Busby Berkeley.

The big finale is also socko, as the entire company sings the title song, "Forty-Second Street" while tap dancing to it. Through this number, Engstrom, Borth and the entire MTW company communicate the jubilation of the song and the exultation felt by the characters.

The tall, rangy Kirsche is aptly sharp-edged as the tough, cynical, irritable Julian, his voice dripping with acid. The producer is a tense, hard-driving taskmaster, force-feeding Peggy to prepare her for the opening night of "Pretty Lady."

Grady's Peggy is ingenuous and self-effacing ? a jittery, excited human dance machine overjoyed at being in New York. Lore's Dorothy avoids caricature, her actions and emotions, whether unseemly or noble, coming from the heart.

Zach Hess shows the cocky yet generally bland charm of Billy Lawlor, the juvenile lead for Marsh's new show. Jamie Torcellini, Barbara Carlton Heart and Caitlyn Calfas shine as, respectively, two longtime Marsh cronies and a veteran chorus girl. The huge ensemble is, in a word, stellar.

The sets, courtesy Reagle Music Theatre of Greater Boston, are bright and simple, using the famed "42nd Street" logo from 1980 to represent "Pretty Lady." The costumes, by The Theater Company (of Upland, Ca.), are eye-catching and colorful.

Rarely do the musical theater stars align so perfectly, so tap dance your way over to "42nd Street" while you still can.

Online: www.musical.org

Contact the writer: emarchesewriter@gmail.com


Source: http://www.ocregister.com/entertainment/dorothy-376182-peggy-street.html

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

?Man in Moon? created by asteroid the size of Austria

The "Man in the Moon" may have been created by a giant asteroid (National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science??The famous flattened image across the surface of the moon, long dubbed the "Man in the Moon," appears to have been created by a giant asteroid the size of Austria.

A new study published in the British journal Nature Geoscience says the flattened, 1,800-mile-wide section of the moon's Procellarum basin was caused after the large asteroid crashed into the moon's surface.

"The nearside and farside of the Moon are compositionally distinct," reads the introduction to the study. "The detection of low-calcium pyroxene around large impact basins suggests that the huge Procellarum basin on the nearside may be an ancient impact structure and a relic scar of the violent collision that produced the lunar dichotomy."

Scientists at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology studied the distribution of minerals on the moon's surface using data collected by Japanese moon exploration orbiters, the Asahi Shimbun reported.

The size of the asteroid is estimated to have been 180 miles in diameter, hitting the moon's surface 3.9 billion years ago.

"The latest study explains why the moon's two sides are so different," said Junichi Watanabe, a professor of astronomy at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan. "It helps unravel the mystery of the moon's history."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/man-moon-created-asteroid-impact-size-austria-181819184.html

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Good reads: a 'hidden' nuclear crisis, how China sees the US, and 'Chilecon Valley'

This week's long-form good reads may change your perspective on which country is rolling out the welcome mat for foreign entrepreneurs, the 'end' of the Cuban Missile Crisis, and how China views the US.

By Allison Terry,?Correspondent / October 19, 2012

Jeremy Melul is a Stanford grad and creator of Jogabo, a social network for amateur soccer players. Here he hangs out at Start-Up Chile, a government sponsored program whose seed money was a major reason why Mr. Melul left France to grow his career.

Courtesy of Ignacio Espejo

Enlarge

The world thought that the Cuban missile crisis ended in October 1962 when the United States lifted its quarantine around Cuba and the Soviet Union withdrew its medium-range missiles. However, ?the secret crisis still simmered? through November, writes Svetlana Savranskaya in Foreign Policy?. Unknown to American intelligence, the Soviets had also delivered almost 100 tactical weapons including 80 nuclear front cruise missiles, 12 nuclear warheads for dual-use Luna short-range rockets, and 6 nuclear bombs for IL-28 bombers.

Skip to next paragraph Allison Terry

Allison Terry is national news intern for the Christian Science Monitor. She previously worked on the cover page desk and contributed to the culture section of the Monitor.

Recent posts

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?Even with the pullout of the strategic missiles, the tacticals would stay, and Soviet documentation reveals the intention of training the Cubans to use them,? writes Ms. Savranskaya, a senior fellow at the National Security Archive.

Soviet Deputy Prime Minister Anastas Mikoyan was tasked with handling the delicate negotiations with Cuba and an angry Fidel Castro, who found out about the US-Soviet agreement on the radio. Savranskaya includes a transcript from the Nov. 22, 1962, meeting between Mr. Castro and Mr. Mikoyan in which Castro expresses his humiliation: ? ?What do you think we are? A zero on the left, a dirty rag. We tried to help the Soviet Union to get out of a difficult situation.?

?In desperation, Castro almost begged Mikoyan to leave the tactical warheads in Cuba, especially because the Americans were not aware of them...,? Savranskaya writes. ?But Mikoyan rejected Castro?s pleas and cited a (nonexistent) Soviet law proscribing the transfer of nuclear weapons to third countries.

Castro had a suggestion: ?So you have a law that prohibits transfer of tactical nuclear weapons to other countries? It?s a pity. And when are you going to repeal that law?? Mikoyan was non-committal: ?We will see. It is our right [to do so].??

Understanding China?s perspective

China?s economic, cultural, and security goals do not need to be at odds with those of the West. When US policymakers understand how Beijing policymakers perceive US words and actions, a more polite and positive relationship could result.

In their essay ?How China Sees America,? Foreign Affairs writers Andrew J. Nathan and Andrew Scobell examine the perspectives of Chinese analysts and political strategists in order to understand how China perceives US actions and promises. The US, according to Beijing, is omnipresent in both its internal and external affairs, bullying it on cultural issues, trade agreements, and security issues. Chinese analysts also see the US through the Marxist political thought, ?which posits that capitalist powers seek to exploit the rest of the world,? they write.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/baXCJDYU_4E/Good-reads-a-hidden-nuclear-crisis-how-China-sees-the-US-and-Chilecon-Valley

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Insurer subsidiary lifts Loews Corp. 3Q profit

NEW YORK (AP) ? Loews Corp. said on Monday that its third-quarter net income rose 9 percent as improving performance at the diversified holding company's CNA Financial insurance subsidiary offset lower earnings at deepwater driller Diamond Offshore Drilling.

Loews reported net income of $177 million, or 45 cents per share, for the three months ended Sept. 30. That was up from earnings of $162 million, or 40 cents per share, in the same period a year ago.

Excluding a $166 million charge writing down the value of a subsidiary's natural gas properties because of declining natural gas prices, Loews earned $339 million, up from adjusted earnings of $177 million a year ago.

Revenue rose 8 percent to $3.72 billion from $3.44 billion.

Loews, which is controlled by New York's Tisch family, reported net income of $195 million at CNA Financial, more than double the $84 million that CNA reported in the year-ago period. That subsidiary, 90 percent owned by Loews, reported higher net investment income and lower catastrophe losses.

But at the Diamond Offshore Drilling unit, about half of which is owned by Loews, earnings fell 31 percent to $83 million from $121 million.

Loews also owns a 55 percent interest in Boardwalk Pipeline Partners, and HighMount Exploration & Production and Loews Hotels are wholly-owned subsidiaries.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insurer-subsidiary-lifts-loews-corp-3q-profit-125132217--finance.html

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Luggage seller Tumi's Q3 net income up tenfold

SOUTH PLAINFIELD, N.J. (AP) ? High-end luggage seller Tumi Holdings Inc. said Monday that third-quarter earnings increased nearly tenfold as its sales grew beyond travel merchandise and its overseas markets expanded.

Net income was $10.5 million, or 15 cents per share, in the three months ended Sept. 25. That compares with $1.6 million, or 3 cents per share, a year ago. The number of outstanding shares increased to 67.9 million in the latest quarter from 52.5 million last year.

Sales jumped 22.3 percent, to $95.9 million.

Tumi, known for its premium suitcases and business cases, sells products in more than 70 countries. It became a publicly traded company in April.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/luggage-seller-tumis-q3-net-income-tenfold-215347258--finance.html

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Hurricane Sandy Live Streams Tracking East Coast Storm | The Web ...

As a New Yorker, I will be confined to my apartment all day today for fear of stepping out into the heavy rains and whipping winds of the ? Frankenstorm ? , which is mainly composed of the incoming Hurricane Sandy . Luckily, the Internet is well prepared for the storm, with several outlets offering rained-in Easterners live stream and video coverage of the storm. Livestream.com is hosting an event on its website offering an event with live cameras and up-to-the-minute storm warnings

Read more here:
Hurricane Sandy Live Streams Tracking East Coast Storm Tags: articles, body, chris christie, homepage feature, html, live-stream, live-streaming, michael bloomberg, news, the weather channel, weather

Source: http://www.thewebvideocompany.com/latest-web-video-news/hurricane-sandy-live-streams-tracking-east-coast-storm

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News Summary: NYSE to trade electronically Monday

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

Guest lineups for the Sunday news shows

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/guest-lineups-sunday-news-shows-183815643.html

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72-Hour Emergency Preparedness Kit ? Vancouver Blog Miss604

October 28th, 2012 @ 1:09am (PT) by Rebecca Bollwitt

Last night a 7.7 magnitude earthquake struck Haida Gwaii and led to tsunami warnings up and down the coast. Rolling aftershocks hit while everyone was looking for information about our coastal communities. Fortunately our warnings in our area were downgraded to ?advisories? however places like Hawaii were still on guard hours later in anticipation of a tsunami-like event, of whatever size.

It?s times like these that make us think about preparedness. If you grew up in the Lower Mainland like me you?ve probably participated in drills for the last few decade but during my recent trip to the Canadian Red Cross? Emergency Response Unit (?ERU?) practice facility, the idea of being prepared for a disaster scenario really hit home. In an emergency situation you want to be sure to have enough supplies for you and your family for 72 hours, packed away in an easy-to-carry container like a suitcase with wheels or a backpack.

Canadian Red Cross ERU

Here is a list of recommended emergency kit items from the Canadian Red Cross:

  • Water: During an emergency, tap water can become polluted or supply may be cut off. Store two litres of drinking water and two litres of water for washing per person, per day, keeping a 72 hour supply on hand for your family and any pets. Listen to public announcements about treating the water in your area after a disaster. Once per year, make use of your water supply and add fresh water to your kit.
  • Food: Store at least a 72 hour supply of non-perishable food for each person. Select foods that are compact and lightweight, non-perishable and require no refrigeration, cooking, preparation or added water. Once per year, check the expiration dates of your food items. Ensure that there is enough for each member of your family.
  • Manual can opener
  • Crank or battery-operated flashlight, with extra batteries
  • Crank or battery-operated radio, with extra batteries
  • Extra keys, for house and car
  • First aid kit
  • Cash in small bills
  • Special needs items ? medications, baby formula and diapers, and equipment for people with disabilities. Learn more about plans for people with disabilities.
  • Copy of your emergency plan

There is much more information available on the Red Cross? website and during an event like this in the future, you can follow @EmergencyInfoBC on Twitter, the Government of BC on Facebook, and Emergency Info BC online.

Source: http://www.miss604.com/2012/10/72-hour-emergency-preparedness-kit.html

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The Reference Frame: Galileo's 1633 trial: a tragic hero

I was pleased that virtually all the media criticize the recent manslaughter verdict against the Italian seismologists.

Many outlets compare the trial to the 1633 trial against Galileo Galilei. So I decided to find a video explaining some details about that event in particular and Galileo's life in general ? and the 52-minute Chicago talk by Rocky Kolb (whom I hosted once at Harvard) from 2011 turned out to be a very informative choice although I clearly disagree with many sentiments that Kolb expressed during the talk.

Some people say that Galileo has overreached, he was arrogant because throughout his life, he enjoyed to point out why idiots around him were idiots, and all this stuff.

Galileo wasn't arrogant when he explained that the difference between him and the stupid folks around him was greater than the difference between humans and animals. He wasn't arrogant because his statement was clearly true and very important. It was very important from the viewpoint of the abstract truth; it was very important for the civilized character of the present, too.

Off-topic: Decay: Something truly unexpected has been discovered at the LHC! By young Oxford employees at CERN.

At the beginning of the talk, Rocky Kolb tells us various things about Galileo's ability to get the maximum out of the telescope (that he "devised" but didn't invent ? but he deliberately used the ambiguous verb "devised") and he describes other events from Galileo's CV.

Kolb says that astronomy had been a part of the mathematics (and not physics) departments because astronomers were only supposed to find "kinematic fits" for the observed trajectories but they were not trying to find the "physical or dynamical causes". And he reminds us that the Catholic Church hadn't had an official position on Copernicanism: they would say it's just some models that didn't say anything direct about the reality (they were agnostic in the disagreement between Ptolemy and Copernicus). Galileo's own effort to codify his understanding of the astronomy (he only became a Copernicanist at some point when he studied this problem at depth) is what forced the Church to adopt an official position (unfortunately, one chosen by theologians and incompetent astronomers according to a literal interpretation of the Bible) and to bring him into trouble and impose a sort of a ban of Copernicanism for him.

I am extremely grateful to Galileo for having done what he has done and he was just right about these scientific and political issues. Let me mention some of the aspects discussed by Kolb.

For example, Galileo was being implicitly criticized for claiming to be able to correctly interpret the astronomical statements in the Bible. Was he overreaching? I don't think so. Because Christianity was such a universal and omnipotent part of the culture of that epoch, it was virtually impossible to convince anyone of anything if you outright denied the tenets of Christianity such as "the validity of the Holy Scripture (at least in some sense)".

Another fact, and it is a related fact, was that the Church bureaucrats had a monopoly to "interpret the reality". Everyone else was doing just some "details" that were not allowed to influence any "greater questions". But Galileo Galilei clearly had the insights that were going to substantially change some "greater questions": he was giving birth to the scientific method as we know it and it is no detail.

Because of this reason, it seems totally obvious that he simply had to struggle to overtake the competency to determine what is true about the deepest cosmic questions from the Church bureaucrats. After all, as Kolb admits, Copernicus himself wrote just a cryptic text filled with complicated mathematical expressions and jargon that didn't even attempt to reach a broader readership, so his work became a hobby for a small group of astronomers only. Thank God, Galileo didn't want to be satisfied with a similar outcome. If he were satisfied, the Western civilization could be as unscientific and unenlightened in 2012 AD as the Islamic anticivilization is. The religious leaders could dictate what to think about the motion of celestial bodies ? and all other fundamental enough questions ? even today.

So the statement "I am able to properly interpret the biblical astronomy" was simply saying "I know how the things actually work" translated to the Latin of the time in which the "power to define the truth" and the "power of Church bureaucrats to preach" were considered synonymous. The Bible was considered true by definition, so of course that given this assumption, the ability to explain how the Solar System actually worked was the same thing as explaining how it worked according to the Bible.

For the very same reason, Galileo ? who wanted to become a monk but (because of the pressure from his father) tried to become a physician for a while ? ultimately grabbed the credentials as a mathematician as well as a philosopher. He realized that the "philosophers" of his time were just doing rubbish ? and they were mostly parroting and uncritically celebrating folks like Aristotle which meant that there was almost no potential for genuine progress. At the same time, these deluded people had lots of influence so Galileo realized that he needed to be considered a philosopher as well in order to gain the capacity to correct many of the unscientific misconceptions that were spread by the "philosophers".

Much of this stuff that Galileo was doing was politics but Galileo was the good guy who actually possessed the truth.

In 1632, Galileo wrote The Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems. It is a fictitious discussion between Salviati, a hero named after Galileo's friend and presenting many of Galileo's positions, and Simplicio, a guy described as an idiot who presents the opinion of some stupid people of the time such as Ludovico delle Colombe (1565-1616?), Galileo's fiercest detractor, and Cesare Cremonini (1550?1631), a colleague who rejected all the observations based on telescopes as a matter of principle. And of course another stupid guy, the Pope (Urban VIII, reign 1623-1644). The discussion is moderated by a smart laymen called Sagredo who is neutral at the beginning.

Kolb says that "he had no idea" why Galileo would write a text in which an idiot looked like he was the Pope. Well, I have some idea. It's because this was exactly what was happening in the real world, too. The Pope was one of the idiots of Galileo's time and it was totally necessary for any progress to challenge this particular idiot, too. Again, I think that if Galileo hadn't had the courage to challenge the Pope, the Western civilization wouldn't really change and the scientific revolution couldn't begin because obsolete dogmas and their champions would continue to have the power to stifle any important scientific development.

Galileo's "Dialogue" quickly made it to the bestseller lists. At some moment, the book was banned. Of course, the book became even more popular because of that. Soon afterwards, the Pope complained to the Inquisition. In 1633, Galileo arrived for the trial to Rome (his clever attempt to relocate the trial to friendly Florence was denied). See a 5-minute cartoon version of the trial. Galileo faced a possibility of Giordano Bruno's fate ? whose tongue was (after an 8-year-long trial) glued to the mouth so that the politically correct assholes of his time didn't have to worry that he would say something "dangerous" before he is burned at stake.

All the materials from the trial became publicly accessible ? despite the obvious Catholic Church's efforts to keep them secret ? thanks to Napoleon Bonaparte. He visited Rome and kindly asked them, with a minor help of this army, to hand out the materials so that they may be kept in Paris. ;-) In 1845, the French agreed to return all the materials to the Vatican but there was a condition: everything must be published.

But back to 1633. The Pope was the clear driver of attempts to harass Galileo. So the court was filled with Galileo's enemies. But what could have they accused him from? The book actually had signatures of several Catholic officials who authorized the book as OK for all audiences. So how could they punish him if they had allowed him to write it?

The trial was pretty short: about five pages. Four depositions. First one: Do you know why you're here, Dr Galileo? It's probably about my book. Do you recognize it etc.? Were you in Rome in 1616? Yes, I came to learn about the geocentrism vs heliocentrism debate. The Church had banned him from promoting heliocentrism, at least the possibly fake official documents suggest so. Galileo argued he didn't really remember what he wasn't allowed to do ? defend, teach, study, promote, whatever. Galileo argued that he didn't even defend heliocentrism; instead, he was promoting both sides of the debate, including the imbeciles, mental pygmies, dumb idiots, people hardly deserving to be called human beings, people too stupid to recognize their own limitations (these are Galileo's actual words but yes, great minds think alike), in a fair and balanced way. But the Church said he wasn't allowed to teach it in any way.

To defend himself, Galileo said an incredible lie: he said that the book defended the geocentrists (called the "imbeciles" etc.). An attorney would probably stop him from making such an implausible claim but he was defending himself.

Next time, Galileo said that he suddenly understood why they were thinking he was defending Copernicanism. He actually was so smart and nice that he described the Copernican interpretation ? so obviously wrong ? in a way that actually looks much more plausible than it is. :-) He offered them to fix the things in another edition of the book.

Galileo got 8 days to prepare a defense. He said he didn't remember any ban on "teaching" heliocentrism. And he said he believed that he didn't have to inform the censors about the injunction. My only error was the ambition to appear smarter than everyone else, he said. And Galileo complained about his health, old age, and good name.

The Inquisition asked him a simple question: Had he ever been a Copernican? Galileo said he was uncertain until 1616 but since the official position was taken, he believed Ptolemy. Clearly a lie. He denied being Copernican. The Church said they didn't believe him.

On June 22nd, 1633, Galileo had to listen to the sentence in humiliating clothes. He's suspect of the heliocentric heresy, he was told. Galileo saved his life by a verbal self-destruction. There is no way how he could have said "it is moving, anyway" during this scene. The life in prison was signed by 7 of the 10 cardinals only. It's not clear to me whether the remaining 3 wanted a tougher or milder punishment, however. The Pope ? who orchestrated the trial behind the scenes ? later changed the verdict to a "life-long house arrest" in order to look magnanimous.

Galileo died in 1642. His remains were soon moved to a more prestigious place but as recently as in the 19th century, his "Dialogue" could imperil your immortal soul even if you just read it.

Kolb asks whether Galileo was a classical tragic hero. My answer is Yes, he was. But he was much more than that, too. He was a man who opened the doors to scholars' ability to challenge the opinions held by the entire hierarchy of Church bureaucrats (the Christian churches became able to reform themselves and compatible with the modern world as a result of that), who established the scientific method, and who was still able to save his life by a sequence of tricks and lies. His achievements included the highly technical and experimental ones, conceptual and theoretical ones, as well as political ones, and all these three groups were very important.

Source: http://motls.blogspot.com/2012/10/galileos-1933-trial-tragic-hero.html

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