Sunday, September 30, 2012

NYC Ferris wheel project has big backers

NEW YORK (AP) ? The Ferris wheel may be a steam-age invention, but it is back in vogue in New York, which this week joined a long list of cities where urban planners or developers have bet that massive, modern versions of the old ride can serve as economic engines.

After the towering London Eye debuted in early 2000, it seemed as if there was no end to the number of cities dreaming about stimulating tourism by building their own giant observation wheel, modeled after the one drawing 3.5 million riders per year in Britain.

Re-creating London's success has proved to be daunting, with failed or postponed projects in a number of world-class cities. But the concept still has luster. Work is being done on two new massive wheels in Las Vegas. Seattle saw a smaller version open on its waterfront last spring.

Now, the biggest test yet will come in New York, where city officials announced Thursday that a private development group had been given approval to build the world's tallest Ferris wheel, at 625 feet, on the waterfront in Staten Island.

The proposal, with a $230 million price tag, is audacious. Its success would rely on people being willing to travel by miles by ferry across New York Harbor to a remote, mostly suburban part of the city that has always been an afterthought to visitors.

Yet the people behind the project, led by a newly formed company, New York Wheel, include some heavy hitters.

The primary financial backers include Lloyd Goldman, a real estate baron who is part of the partnership redeveloping the World Trade Center site, and Joseph Nakash, a co-founder of the Jordache apparel company who now chairs an investment group that also owns airlines and real estate. The third primary investor is The Feil Organization, a real estate powerhouse that owns or manages commercial and residential properties across the country.

New York Wheel CEO Richard Marin spent decades as an executive at Bankers Trust Company, then led a subsidiary at Bear Stearns until some black eyes related to bad bets on mortgage securities led to his departure in 2007. After that, he had a job turning around a distressed real estate portfolio as CEO of Africa Israel Investments.

Now, though those real estate connections, he's found himself in the carnival business ? or at least the venture capital version of it.

"It's a short trip from Wall Street to P.T. Barnum," Marin joked in a phone interview Friday.

Marin said the heft in the investment group shows it isn't just blindly following a trendy tourism gimmick.

While the London wheel was "wildly successful," he isn't naive about the challenge in replicating its success. Marin said the company spent a year and a half in discussions with city officials about a possible site before agreeing on Staten Island.

Under the deal announced Thursday, New York Wheel will pay the city $1 million per year on a 99-year lease for a waterfront location within walking distance of the Staten Island Ferry terminal. Simultaneously, another development group will be building a 350,000-square-foot shopping mall and hotel on the opposite side of the terminal. The neighborhood is already home to a minor league baseball stadium.

"It's a location and a site that I have come to love," Marin said.

Having the wheel next to the ferry, which is already ridden by an estimated 2 million tourists annually, will save the developers about $100 million in transportation infrastructure costs, he said. And, despite the distance from other tourist sites, the view of New York harbor will be thrilling and unique enough, he predicted, to draw the millions of riders needed to earn back the ride's high cost.

Several other giant Ferris wheels built in the past decade have been successful. China's 525-foot-tall Star of Nanchang and Singapore's 541-foot Singapore Flyer have both been a hit with tourists.

In other places, planned wheels never got off the ground. A 682-foot-tall wheel that was supposed to open in Beijing in time for the 2008 Olympics was never completed. An earlier pioneer in the business, the Great Wheel Corp., had projects in the works to build similar wheels in Dubai, Berlin, Orlando, Fla., and Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, but all were either suspended or collapsed.

"These are expensive and difficult, big projects," said Wil Armstrong, the North American representative for Starneth, a new company, formed by veterans of the London Eye design and engineering team, that is providing the designs for the New York wheel. "Every city, it seems, of any size, has thought about it. But wanting to do and actually doing it is a large step."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nyc-ferris-wheel-project-big-backers-224238184.html

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Thompson/Baldwin Debate Live Blogging Pt. 2 (talking-points-memo)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/251864717?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

NBA finalizing flopping procedures

ELIZABETH, N.J. (AP) ? The NBA is about to act in hopes of stopping the floppers.

Spokesman Tim Frank said Thursday the league is finalizing procedures to deal with flopping, the art of falling down when little or no contact was made in an effort to trick referees into calling a foul.

Frank said the competition committee met two weeks ago and discussed plans that would go in place this season. Commissioner David Stern believes too many players are deceiving referees by flopping and has been seeking a way to properly penalize them.

The procedures will likely involve a postgame review of the play by the league office, rather than an official calling an infraction during the game, Frank said. Players would likely be fined if the league determined they flopped.

The proposed plan mirrors a "postgame analysis" option Stern discussed after the competition committee met in June. The league already retroactively reviews flagrant fouls to determine if they need to be upgraded or downgraded.

"If you continue to do this, you may you have to suffer some consequences," Stern said about flopping during the NBA Finals. "What those exactly should be and what the progression is, is to be decided, because ... we just want to put a stake in the ground that says this is not something that we want to be part of our game, without coming down with a sledgehammer but just doing it in a minimalist way to begin stamping it out. And I think there are ways we can do that and we'll have to wait and see exactly what we come up with."

The league's 62-person referee staff is holding its training camp, its first under the leadership of former NBA player and longtime league executive Mike Bantom. Bantom replaced Gen. Ron Johnson as executive vice president of referee operations earlier this month.

"I think one of the things that I'd just like to focus on is I think there's a perception out there that kind of throws into question sometimes the competence of our officials and even the integrity of them at times, and I think that that's not true to begin with and unfair, and I want to try and change that perception," said Bantom, who had been the league's senior vice president of player development since 1999.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nba-finalizing-flopping-procedures-165340353--spt.html

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Americans Turning to More Upscale-Oriented Leisure Travel ...


After several years of being "cost-conscious" travel consumers, Americans are starting to place greater meaning and emphasis on the importance of their vacations. In other words, Americans are spending more freely and their starting to put luxury back into leisure travel.
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At least that's what travel experts at MMGY Global/Harrison Group learned during their newly released survey, "2012 Portrait of American Travelers."
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Indeed, despite years of challenging economic conditions, the nationally representative survey points to a very promising tourism future here in American and abroad. As MMGY Global/Harrison Group puts it, there appears to be a "revival of the most meaningful driver of American vacations: the emotional connection between travel and quality of life."
Consequently, leisure travelers are doing less of the things that characterized the economic hardship of recent years and are now adopting more behaviors that confirm the importance of travel in their emerging lifestyles, according to the study of 2,527 U.S. households (respondents had annual household incomes of $50,000 or more and at least one overnight trip of 75 miles during the previous 12 months).

For instance, one of the more striking results is more travelers today prefer upscale hotels and resorts this year than last, with 26 percent of vacationers preferring luxury lodging versus just 15 percent in 2011 - a statistically significant boost. Moreover, travelers increasingly place a premium on the convenience associated with access to full hotel services with eight in 10 now opting for a full-service hotel or resort with a restaurant, compared to 75 percent just two years ago.

Meanwhile, more travelers in all annual household income groups now value "quality" over "savings."? Basically, Americans are now more willing to pay full price "as long as I am guaranteed the quality and service I deserve."

?In a surprising departure from the travel planning scenarios that prevailed during the recent recession, today's travelers choose the destination (34 percent) and type of trip (33 percent) first, before setting a budget (18 percent) and searching for deals (eight percent)

Also, the number of travelers engaged in general cost-cutting shopping behaviors has also declined, according to the study. Furthermore, significantly fewer vacationers now wait for items to go on sale, purchase generic or less expensive brands, or maintain a membership in a travel rewards program.

Interestingly, the in-depth, annual survey reveals that while the average number of overnight leisure trips taken during the past year has remained essentially unchanged versus the previous year, the motivations underlying these getaways are evolving.

Clearly, the days of "staycations," "trading down" and other cost-conscious travel behaviors that emerged during the Great Recession have waned, MMGY Global/Harrison Group reports, and the new findings augur well for a boost in 2013 travel spending thanks to a renewed interest in quality experiences that Americans deem "worth it."

To be sure, perceived "value for the price" still remains the most influential factor for nine out of 10 travelers when choosing their lodging destination. The influence of "value" on hotel and resort selection has increased coincidental with a decline in the influence of "room rates," suggesting that travelers really do make a distinction between "price" and "value."

Another key insight from the latest MMGY Global/Harrison Group survey is more than nine in 10 travelers agree, "The memories I get from my vacations make the trip worth it."

This and other emotional connections echo throughout the study, MMGY Global reports, suggesting this sentiment is the primary reason for renewed interest in travel by consumers who endured years of having less money and time to do so.

Vacationers' top goals for the coming year speak to this connection - they want to see more of the world and spend more time with family and friends (37 and 29 percent, respectively). Additionally, 75 percent of leisure travelers agree, "Taking a vacation is the event I most look forward to each year," and fully half would even take a vacation by themselves to "get away from it all," if given the opportunity.

Another fundamental value of vacations in recent years is the notion of "family" getting together, especially the growing trend of multi-generational get-togethers.

The recent study confirmed this element is as valuable as ever showing that "togethering" vacations rose in the face of an uncertain economy, with 43 percent of leisure travelers saying family getaways were the primary purpose of one or more leisure trips during the past year, compared to 40 percent just two years ago.

This renewed familial focus has also given way to a significant boost in multigenerational travel - with 23 percent of all active leisure travelers reporting they are now grandparents, and 37 percent of those grandparents took at least one vacation with their grandchildren during the past 12 months (compared to just 32 percent in 2011).

As for Americans' overall attitude about leisure travel, that too is more upbeat outlook. For instance, U.S. travelers now embrace a more positive view of the world - no doubt another reason for their renewed interest in rediscovering the emotional benefits of travel.

Specifically, MMGY Global/Harrison Group says significantly more leisure travelers now say they are extremely/very optimistic about "their own future," "the future of their children," "their jobs," "their companies" and "the world in general" than just two years ago.

Source: http://www.worldpropertychannel.com/featured-columnists/luxury-living-column-mmgy-globalharrison-group-us-tourism-luxury-travel-trends-upscale-tourism-trends-new-luxury-resorts-6119.php

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Bioengineers design rapid diagnostic tests inspired by nature

ScienceDaily (Sep. 27, 2012) ? By mimicking nature's own sensing mechanisms, bioengineers at UC Santa Barbara and University of Rome Tor Vergata have designed inexpensive medical diagnostic tests that take only a few minutes to perform. Their findings may aid efforts to build point-of-care devices for quick medical diagnosis of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), allergies, autoimmune diseases, and a number of other diseases. The new technology could dramatically impact world health, according to the research team.

The rapid and easy-to-use diagnostic test consists of a nanometer-scale DNA "switch" that can quickly detect antibodies specific to a wide range of diseases. The research is described in an article published this month in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

The design was created by the research group of Kevin W. Plaxco, a professor in UCSB's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry. He noted that, despite the power of current diagnostic tests, a significant limitation is that they still require complex laboratory procedures. "Patients typically must wait for days or even weeks to receive the results of most STD tests," said Plaxco. "The blood sample has to be transported to the lab, its content analyzed by trained personnel, and the results sent back to the doctor's office. If we can move testing to the point of care, it eliminates the lag between testing and treatment, which would enhance the effectiveness of medical interventions, and, for infectious diseases like STDs, reduce transmission."

The key breakthrough underlying this new technology came from observing nature. "All creatures, from bacteria to humans, monitor their environments using amazing 'molecular nanoswitches' that signal the presence of a specific target by changing their structure," said Alexis Vall?e-B?lisle, a postdoctoral scholar and co-first author of the study. "For example, on the surface of our cells, there are millions of receptor proteins that detect various molecules by switching from an 'off state' to an 'on state.' The beauty of these switches is that they are able to work directly in very complex environments such as whole blood."

Plaxco's research group teamed with Francesco Ricci, professor at University of Rome Tor Vergata and co-first author of the paper, to build synthetic molecular switches that signal their state via a change in electric current. This change in current can be measured using inexpensive electronics similar to those in the home glucose test meter used by diabetics to check their blood sugar. Using these "nature-inspired" nanoswitches, the researchers were able to detect anti-HIV antibodies directly in whole blood in less than five minutes.

"A great advantage of these electrochemical nanoswitches is that their sensing principle can be generalized to many different targets, allowing us to build inexpensive devices that could detect dozens of disease markers in less than five minutes in the doctor's office or even at home," said Ricci.

The authors noted that it may take several years to bring the devices to the market.

The additional co-authors are Fan Xia of Huazhong University of Science and Technology in Wuhan, China; and Takanori Uzawa of Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan.

This work was funded by the National Institute of Health, the Fond Qu?b?cois de la Recherche sur la Nature et les Technologies; the Italian Ministry of University and Research (MIUR) project "Futuro in Ricerca;" and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, through the Grand Challenges Explorations Grant.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Santa Barbara.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Alexis Vall?e-B?lisle, Francesco Ricci, Takanori Uzawa, Fan Xia, Kevin W. Plaxco. Bioelectrochemical Switches for the Quantitative Detection of Antibodies Directly in Whole Blood. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2012; 134 (37): 15197 DOI: 10.1021/ja305720w

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/~3/LDWWmF4zukY/120928093721.htm

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Researchers find risk markers for erectile dysfunction following ...

Researchers find risk markers for erectile dysfunction following radiation in prostate cancer

Thursday, September 27, 2012

In the first study of its kind, a research team led by Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University discovered 12 genetic markers associated with the development of erectile dysfunction (ED) in prostate cancer patients who were treated with radiation. The findings, published in the International Journal of Radiation Oncology? Biology? Physics, are an important step towards helping clinicians determine the best course of treatment for prostate cancer patients and may lead to the development of therapies that alleviate side effects.

The main treatments for prostate cancer ? surgery, brachytherapy (seed implants) and external beam radiation therapy ? are all very effective at curing prostate cancer. Unfortunately, each treatment places patients at risk for ED. According to the National Cancer Institute, the prevalence of erectile dysfunction following external beam radiation for prostate cancer ranges from 65 percent to 85 percent. The Prostate Cancer Foundation estimates prevalence of ED following seed therapy at 25 to 50 percent. Many men will be able to regain their potency with time and treatments, but doctors would like to identify which men may be more likely to develop this side effect.

In the first large scale Genome-Wide Association Study to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with susceptibility for the development of erectile dysfunction following radiotherapy for prostate cancer, researchers conducted a two-part study, first, to discover the candidate genetic markers of side effect risk, and second, to confirm which of those markers are replicated in a second group of patients. In the first group of prostate cancer patients, which included 132 men who developed erectile dysfunction after radiotherapy and 103 men similarly treated who did not develop erectile dysfunction, they found a set of genetic markers associated with erectile dysfunction. In the second part of the study, which examined 128 patients who developed erectile dysfunction after radiotherapy and 102 who did not, researchers confirmed that 12 SNPs were associated with erectile dysfunction.

"Thankfully, current treatments for prostate cancer offer excellent rates of long-term survival, so patients and their physicians have a choice about which treatment path to take," said Barry Rosenstein, PhD, Professor of Radiation Oncology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine. "However, the risk of developing erectile dysfunction after radiation treatment is highly variable, suggesting there may be a genetic component to determining that risk. Our study confirms that specific markers make certain patients more susceptible to this side effect."

Patients in the study cohort were given one of three treatments: internal radiotherapy, known as brachytherapy; brachytherapy plus external beam radiation; or external beam radiation alone. They were followed for an average length of nearly four years to determine level of sexual function after treatment.

Interestingly, the 12 SNPs identified in this study were located near genes that seem to be related to erectile function rather than related to radiation response. The researchers conclude that these SNPs may affect genes that sensitize a patient to developing erectile dysfunction when exposed to radiation during therapy.

"Prostate cancer screening and treatment are undergoing major shifts," said Harry Ostrer, MD, Professor of Pathology and Genetics at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Director of Genetic and Genomic Testing at Montefiore Medical Center and co-principal investigator of the study. "This is part of our ongoing effort to identify men at highest risk for disease, identify the aggressive tumors that would be responsive to therapy, and to improve quality of life for men with indolent prostate cancers who might benefit from active surveillance, rather than therapy."

The authors indicate that examination of a large, independent cohort of similarly treated patients will be necessary to definitively determine which SNPs to include as part of a clinically useful predictive test to identify which men are at greatest risk for developing erectile dysfunction following prostate cancer radiotherapy. The researchers are also evaluating the impact of radiation treatment on urinary complications and proctitis, the inflammation of the rectum.

###

The Mount Sinai Hospital / Mount Sinai School of Medicine: http://www.mountsinai.org

Thanks to The Mount Sinai Hospital / Mount Sinai School of Medicine for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/123916/Researchers_find_risk_markers_for_erectile_dysfunction_following_radiation_in_prostate_cancer

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Dickey gets 20th win, leads Mets over Pirates 6-5

New York Mets starting pitcher R.A. Dickey puts his hand to his heart as the thanks the fans as he celebrates his 20th victory of the season after the Mets 6-5 win against the Pittsburgh Pirates in a baseball game at Citi Field in New York, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

New York Mets starting pitcher R.A. Dickey puts his hand to his heart as the thanks the fans as he celebrates his 20th victory of the season after the Mets 6-5 win against the Pittsburgh Pirates in a baseball game at Citi Field in New York, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

New York Mets starting pitcher R.A. Dickey tips his cap to the crowd as he celebrates his 20th victory of the season after the Mets 6-5 win against the Pittsburgh Pirates in a baseball game at Citi Field in New York, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

New York Mets starting pitcher R.A. Dickey acknowledges fans as he celebrates his 20th victory of the season after the Mets 6-5 win against the Pittsburgh Pirates in a baseball game at Citi Field in New York, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

Fans pay tribute to New York Mets pitcher R.A Dickey, who is going for his 20th victory, during a baseball game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Citi Field in New York, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

New York Mets starting pitcher R.A. Dickey acknowledges fans as he celebrates his 20th victory of the season after the Mets 6-5 win against the Pittsburgh Pirates in a baseball game at Citi Field in New York, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

(AP) ? R.A. Dickey was so close yet so far from 20 wins, faltering from fatigue and fuming he had failed to seize the moment.

"About the fourth or fifth inning I felt exasperated. I was not myself today for the most part," he said.

"And then I'd come out for an at-bat and I would hear this kind of growing surge, and it really was neat. I mean I don't know if I've ever experienced something like that before. Maybe I never will again. Although I wasn't distracted from the moment, how could you not be motivated to go out there and give the fans and, well, your teammates and yourself all that you have?" he said.

Absorbing the energy from 31,506 fans at the final home game of another sorry Mets season, Dickey summoned his strength and concentration. David Wright boosted him into the lead with a tiebreaking three-run homer, and Dickey led New York over Pittsburgh Pirates 6-5 Thursday to become the first knuckleballer in more than three decades to win 20 games.

"It's like a big exhale," Dickey said.

Throwing his hard knuckler at up to 78 mph, Dickey (20-6) allowed three runs and eight hits in 7 2-3 innings, tying his career high with 13 strikeouts and walking two.

With New York winding up its fourth straight losing season, he capped a trinity of highlights that began with the first Mets no-hitter by Johan Santana in June and continued with Wright setting the team career hits record on Wednesday.

"This was about R.A. today," Mets manager Terry Collins said. "It was about him. It was about his connection with the fans, the connection with the city. And so I said use that."

Quite a turnaround from 2010, when Dickey began the season at Triple-A Buffalo and had to prove he belonged in the majors. And from last year, when he was 8-13.

The 37-year-old had never won more than 11 games in any previous season is just 61-56 in his big league career.

"I was the picture of mediocrity by my own admission," he said.

But in the late stages of his career, he has mastered the knuckler ? a pitch that has flummoxed most of those who have tried and must survive on fastballs.

"I think everybody here today would have taken one swing where they thought they were going to crush one and they swung right throw it," Pirates outfielder Travis Snider said.

Dickey had never set a numerical goal for his pitching.

"It's just much more for me if I can really harness the moment and suck the marrow out of every second, then I've done what I want to do and I can be satisfied," he said.

Dickey became the first 20-game winner for the pitching-proud Mets since Frank Viola in 1990 and the first knuckleballer to accomplish the feat since Houston's Joe Niekro in 1980, according to STATS LLC. Viola also reached 20 with a win over the Pirates.

New York had altered its rotation, giving Dickey a chance to win 20 at home. The fans gave Dickey his first ovation when he walked to the bullpen to warm up. He waved his cap as they applauded when he walked off after his 128th and final pitch ? his most in eight years ? and got a final round of applause when he returned to the field for a postgame interview that was broadcast over the stadium sound system.

"Growing up, you just want to compete. And once you have the weaponry to compete, you want to be really good," he said. "And then when you're really good, you want to be supernaturally good. And I think for me there's been this steady kind of metamorphosis from just surviving to being a craftsman. Ultimately the hope is to be an artist with what you do."

The milestone following two life-changing events. He authored a book last spring, "Wherever I Wind Up," revealing he was a sexual abuse victim when he was 8. And he climbed Mount Kilimanjaro to raise awareness for the Bombay Teen Challenge.

"When you get to a comfort level about who you are and you don't have secrets and you feel the freedom to be who you feel like you're called to be, that's something," Dickey said. "Is this the result of the cathartic experience of writing the book, I don't know. I'm going to say this, it certainly hasn't hurt. And to be comfortable in your own skin, which I was not for so long in my life, there's something to that."

His memorable year began with a climb to the 19,341-foot Uhuru Peak of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania.

"He was taking his career and putting it in jeopardy, putting it in harm's way," Collins said. "You don't know what's going to happen. But it wasn't about him. It has never been about him."

Dickey joined Washington's Gio Gonzalez (20-8) as the top winners in the majors. They figure to duel for the NL Cy Young Award.

Dickey fell behind 2-0 and 3-1 and overcame an outstanding, climbing catch by Snider more than 2 feet above the right-field wall that robbed Mike Baxter of a tying home run in the second inning.

Former Texas teammate Rod Barajas hit an opposite-field RBI double that hopped the right-field wall in the second, and Jordy Mercer following with a run-scoring infield single.

Ike Davis led off the bottom half with his 31st homer, but Barajas boosted the lead to 3-1 when he homered on an 0-2 pitch in the fourth, a drive over the old 16-foot wall in left. Kevin Correia (11-11) gave up Scott Hairston's RBI single in the fourth and Murphy's tying single in the fifth before Wright hit an opposite-field drive to right for his 21st home run this season and a 6-3 lead.

Dickey was watching on TV in the clubhouse at the time.

"There were times he picked us up and really carried us as a team on his back," said Wright, happy to provide the hit that made the difference.

Dickey said after the seventh inning he was "pooped," but Collins sent him out for the eighth.

"I said, look, this ballpark is filled with energy today. Use it to your advantage," the manager recalled. "These people deserve to see you walk off the mound."

Responded Dickey: "Don't leave me hanging."

Jon Rauch, pitching on his 34th birthday, came in after a two-out walk, finished the eighth and allowed Alex Presley's two-run homer in the nervy ninth. Bobby Parnell retired Josh Harrison on a groundout and Jose Tabata on a flyout for his fifth save.

Dickey came back on the field for handshakes and soaked in the fans' love.

"I feel it in my face. I don't know if that makes any sense," Dickey said. "I want to get emotional. It's hard because we've had the type of season that we've had."

His family stayed back in Nashville, Tenn. ? the kids are in school ? but planned to meet him in Atlanta on Thursday night for the start of the Mets' final trip. He had some close friends at the game.

Through all the tough times, Dickey pictured this type of success in his mind.

"I never abandoned hope. I always held that out," he said. "My hope always outweighed my doubt, and that's what kind of kept me going."

NOTES: Pittsburgh, which led the NL Central at the All-Star break, lost for the 20th time in 26 games and dropped to 76-80. ... Snider gave the Pirates a memory with one of the best defensive plays of the season. He dug his cleats into the chain-link fence, hooked his left arm on top of the wall in front of the Mo's Zone seats, hoisted himself up and grabbed Baxter's drive in the webbing of the glove on his right hand well about the 8-foot wall. ... Andrew McCutchen bruised his left knee on a failed attempt at a diving catch on a soft fly to center in the seventh inning. He went 0 for 4, dropping to .332 and giving up the NL batting lead to San Francisco's Buster Posey, who went 2 for 4 and is hitting .333. ... The Mets drew 2,242,803 to Citi Field this year, down from 3.15 million in 2009, 2.56 million in 2010 and 2.35 million last year. This is the team's lowest home attendance since 2.19 million at Shea Stadium in 2003. ... Mets broadcaster Keith Hernandez shaved off his mustache before the game in a charity fundraiser.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-09-27-BBN-Pirates-Mets/id-0c06d79c47e441e5bfe9e7e0c2f4d416

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Anderson Cooper to Teresa Giudice: "You Seem Mean"

Anderson Cooper has been watching The Real Housewives of New Jersey, and he is not Team Teresa. During cast member Teresa Giudice's appearance on his daytime talk show, Anderson Live, Cooper confronted Teresa about her dramatic falling-out with fellow Housewives Melissa Gorga, Jacqueline Laurita and Caroline Manzo. And he said to her face what many viewers were thinking: "You seem really mean!"

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/anderson-cooper-real-housewives-new-jersey-star-teresa-giudice-you-seem-really-mean/1-a-490168?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Aanderson-cooper-real-housewives-new-jersey-star-teresa-giudice-you-seem-really-mean-490168

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Report: Sharp increases layoffs number, aiming for profitability by March 2014

Report Sharp cutting 11,000 jobs, 19% of its workforce, by March 2014

Japanese electronics giant Sharp is reportedly planning a major restructuring to bring the company back to profitability by 2014, as reported by Kyodo News. Said restructuring will see Sharp cut nearly 11,000 (10,966) jobs from its 57,170-person workforce by March 2014 -- just under 20 percent of all employees -- and sell off various assets, resulting in ¥213.1 billion ($2.7 billion) of much needed capital from lenders. Named assets to be sold include international manufacturing plants, and shares in other Japanese electronics company, Toshiba. The company also plans on shuttering its international manufacturing plants, as well as once again cutting employee wages.

So, what's gonna save Sharp from more turmoil? A rethinking of its LCD TV business, apparently, as well as a "strengthening" of the company's smartphone LCD offerings. Sharp's also moving away from solar batteries, selling off its US-based solar firm Recurrent Energy LLC. Company prez Takashi Okuda will head up the massive restructuring, leading an "emergency management committee" starting in October. All of this adds up to Sharp expecting a return to profitability by next April. You'll forgive us if we're a bit wary of that prediction, but our best wishes are with those impacted by the chaos.

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Report: Sharp increases layoffs number, aiming for profitability by March 2014 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Sep 2012 14:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TechCrunch  |  sourceMainichi, Kyodo News  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/SXi5oC3CKNg/

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Banks up number of strings on checking

By Herb Weisbaum, NBC News contributor

A just-released study by Bankrate.com finds that checking account fees have hit unprecedented highs. At the same time, it?s becoming harder to get a truly free checking account, one with no strings attached.

Here are the key findings from the Bankrate 2012 Checking Survey:

  • The average monthly maintenance fee for a non-interest checking account is now at a record high of $5.48. That?s a 25 percent jump from last year.
  • Overdraft fees are also at a record high. The average NSF or nonsufficient funds fee is $31.26, up from $30.83 last year.?
  • The cost to get cash from an out-of-network ATM is up dramatically. Expect to pay an average fee of $2.50 to the owner of the ATM, a new record and up 4 percent from last year. Plus your bank will charge you another $1.57 on average, an increase of 11 percent.?

As fees go up, ?free? checking ? with no minimum balance requirement and no monthly fee ? continues its march toward extinction.?

?And that?s going to continue over the next few years,? said Bankrate?s senior financial analyst Greg McBride. ?I don?t expect it to reverse anytime soon.??

The Bankrate survey shows that only 39 percent of the major banks in the U.S. offer non-interest checking accounts that have no fee. That?s down from a peak of 76 percent just three years ago and 45 percent in 2011.?

Why is this happening??
Bankers are responding to new federal regulations that have reduced their revenue from both overdraft fees and debit card swipe fees.?

?Free checking accounts have become the casualty of those regulatory changes,? McBride said. ?Rather than handing out that free checking to everybody who walks through the door, you typically have to have some other relationship or business with the bank.?

You can avoid the fees
Bankrate found that with most non-interest checking accounts ? about 95 percent ? there are ways to avoid the fees.

?The easiest way to get your account for free is to sign up for direct deposit,? McBride said. ?That?s the most common string attached and it?s a pretty low hurdle to clear.?

Some banks require a minimum balance to waive the fee and that amount continues to rise. In some cases, it can be thousands of dollars. According to the Bankrate survey, the average minimum balance to avoid a fee now stands at $723, an increase of 23 percent from last year.

There is another option: move your money. Look for a financial institution ? a credit union, community bank or online bank ? that offers totally free checking with no requirements to qualify. Bankrate found that 72 percent of the largest credit unions still offer free checking.

Consumers Union, the advocacy arm of Consumer Reports, has prepared a tip sheet on how to move your money to a new checking account.?

Skip most interest-bearing checking accounts
Bankrate found that these accounts have become even less attractive in the last year.

They have higher fees than non-interest accounts and require a larger balance to have those fees waived.?

  • The minimum balance required to avoid a monthly maintenance fee now sits at a whopping $6,118. That minimum has nearly double in the last two years.
  • Miss the minimum threshold and you?ll get hit with a monthly maintenance fee that averages $14.75.

More importantly, the yields are ridiculously low. The average interest-bearing checking account in the U.S. right now pays a paltry 0.05 percent. If you had $250,000 in that account for a year, you?d only earn $125.?

?This is not an efficient use of cash,? McBride said. The interest earnings you receive are a pittance and really don?t justify tying up that amount of money at very low and uncompetitive rates of return.??

Beat the banks
Most bank penalty fees can be avoided and it?s not all that difficult to do. You just need to remember what triggers a fee and act accordingly.?

Plan ahead if you need cash?
Only use your bank?s ATM or one that is in-network. In a pinch, make a purchase with your credit or debit card and get some cash back. That way, there?s no fee.?

Avoid overdraft fees?
We all make mistakes, but you?ll get clobbered if you overdraw your account. Monitor your account: keep track of automatic bill payments, debit card charges and cash withdrawals. It?s easy to check your balance online or on the phone. See if you bank offers email or text alerts that let you know when your checking account balance drops below a level you set.?

Link your checking account to a savings account that can be tapped if you overdraw. That service is a lot cheaper than paying an overdraft fee.?

If you want to prevent overdraws with a debit card (and avoid NSF fees) don?t opt-in to the bank?s overdraft protection program. Sign up for this ?courtesy? service and you will be able to overdraw your checking account when you make a purchase with your debit card ? and you?ll pay a hefty fee if you do. Without debit card overdraft protection the transaction will be declined at the register if you?re about to trigger an overdraft.?

Do you know if you have overdraft protection on your debit card account? If you?re not sure, call your bank.

ConsumerMan: Customers still confused about overdraft protection?

Herb Weisbaum is The ConsumerMan. Follow him on Facebook or visit The ConsumerMan website.

More money and business news:

?

Source: http://bottomline.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/24/14068938-bank-fees-soar-free-checking-offers-decline?lite

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Whisky 'leftovers' to fuel cars

By-products, like draff, from the Tullibardine distillery are to be turned into biofuel

A deal has been signed to turn by-products from a Scottish distillery into fuel for cars.

In what is claimed to be a world first, the Tullibardine distillery in Perthshire has linked up with a spin-out company from Napier University in Edinburgh.

They plan to use bacteria to feed on the "leftovers" from the whisky making process.

This will produce butanol which can be used to fuel vehicles.

More than 90% of the stuff that comes out of a whisky distillery is not whisky. It is leftovers like draff and pot ales - both produced in the early stages of the process.

They are high in sugar and are currently used for things like fertiliser and cattle feed.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

It takes a cost to us and turns it into something that has social as well as commercial value?

End Quote Douglas Ross Tullibardine distillery

Napier University's Biofuel Research Centre (BfRC) has already shown that the right bacteria can feed on those by-products to produce butanol - a direct replacement for vehicle fuel.

Now the spin-out company, Celtic Renewables, and independent malt whisky producer Tullibardine have signed a memorandum of understanding.

Together they will apply the process to thousands of tonnes of the distillery's leftovers.

Professor Martin Tangney, founder of Celtic Renewables, said: "Our partnership with Tullibardine is an important step in the development of a business which combines two iconic Scottish industries - whisky and renewables.

"This project demonstrates that innovative use of existing technologies can utilise resources on our doorstep to benefit both the environment and the economy."

Douglas Ross, managing director of Tullibardine, which spends ?250,000 disposing of its by-products every year, said: "We are delighted to be partnering Celtic Renewables in this innovative venture, the obvious benefits of which are environmental.

"It takes a cost to us and turns it into something that has social as well as commercial value."

The project is being supported by a grant from the Scottish government's Zero Waste Scotland initiative.

Celtic Renewables said it eventually aimed to build a processing plant in Scotland, with the hope of building an industry that could be worth ?60m a year.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-business-19708915#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Monday, September 24, 2012

Maria Bonanno commented on article GOP Aims to Refocus Campaign on Economy

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make extra money online - Free Internet Advertising

Make Fast, Easy Money Selling Haunted Items

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The simple fact is there?s more money being made by people selling the ?weird? stuff than by the people selling the electronics, collectibles or other consumer goods. The really smart and daring people know how to make money on eBay the fast and easy way. And if you can cash in on this unique market you can make money on eBay fast and easy too.

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This entry was posted in Free Internet Advertising Books. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://freeinternetadvertising.earn-cash-make-money.net/2012/09/23/make-extra-money-online-make-fast-easy-money-selling-haunted-items/

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AP photo leads to man's reunion with daughters

NEW ORLEANS (AP) ? When a Florida man saw a news photo of a man rescued from Hurricane Isaac's floodwaters, he was sure it was his brother. It wasn't ? but the mistaken identity started a search that ultimately reunited that homeless man with the two daughters he hadn't seen in 16 years.

The saga began Aug. 30, when The Associated Press published a photograph of the soaked, bearded man being helped by two rescuers in Slidell after he nearly drowned, swept away in waist-deep water. Although he has since been identified as 60-year-old Larry Bailey, his identity was then unknown.

Marcus Michels of West Melbourne, Fla., called the AP's New Orleans bureau on Aug. 31, certain the man was his brother Mitchell Lee Massey, who has been missing for six years.

The AP reached out to the Louisiana Red Cross, where a spokeswoman examined the photo and was able to figure out where the rescuers were based ? and the nearest shelter in Slidell.

Debbie Kemp, a Red Cross volunteer with Safe and Well, a disaster program that helps find people with medical or mental health problems, took up the search. Kemp, of Ann Arbor, Mich., called the number Bailey had given at the shelter and reached Johnny Sontag of Slidell, who gives Bailey food for doing yard work and lets Bailey stay in a trailer he owns.

"He's my buddy, so I always try and look out for him," said Sontag, who has known Bailey seven or eight years. He described Bailey as a wonderful man who often talked about his family and once explained why he hadn't eaten a lunch received from Sontag: "Oh, I gave it away. He was hungrier than me."

However, like so many other times, Bailey wasn't at the trailer. Sontag said he disappeared so often that he had a neighbor call him whenever Bailey returned.

Days later, Sontag found him, but Bailey took off again. Someone ? Sontag doesn't know who ? brought Bailey back to the trailer, incoherent and bleeding from a badly infected head injury. He smelled terrible and was so weak that Sontag said he had to bathe him.

Sontag didn't know where to turn. He couldn't afford medicine. He called Kemp, who told him to take Bailey to an emergency room. Doctors said Bailey would have been dead in a month without medical care, Sontag said.

As Bailey recovered, he and Kemp called Michels from the hospital, and it became clear the two men weren't related. However, the search for Bailey's family continued.

As he regained his strength, Bailey was able to recall the names of relatives and where they lived. Kemp reached his ex-wife, who told her daughters their father had been found.

Bailey had struggled for decades with bipolar disorder and substance abuse, said his 38-year-old daughter, Heather Atkinson of Bradenton, Fla. She said her father had built a successful yard business and a house, but lost both to the alcoholism that made her and her sister stop seeing him.

Atkinson's oldest daughter was a year old when she broke off visits. "He was drinking and I couldn't have my daughter around that," she said.

When she learned he had been found, "I thought maybe when he got out of the hospital we could get him into an addiction program," said Atkinson, who now has three teenage daughters.

Bailey's other daughter, Brenda LaFlamme, of the Orlando, Fla., area, came to Slidell on Sept. 11, the day Bailey was released from the hospital. She soon signed Bailey into a nursing home.

Atkinson said her father told her his skull had been fractured when he was beaten by two men in New Orleans about a month before the flood. He had been treated in an emergency room but not since, and the injury got infected, she said.

Atkinson said she calls Bailey daily, and he's shown improvement.

"All of a sudden, he was totally lucid. He said, 'It's so good to hear from you.' He said, 'I love you.'"

After so many years apart, that was overwhelming.

"He started tearing up. I started tearing up. I said, 'I love you, too. There's no reason you have to be in this situation. Make some life choices and changes and you can have your family around.'"

As for Michels, he remained hopeful his brother is still out there somewhere, and said he was thrilled the man in the photo had been reunited with relatives.

"I'm so happy!" Michels said.

"Now he's got family and hopefully he'll get help that he needs."

___

Online:

Red Cross Safe and Well: https://safeandwell.communityos.org/cms/index.php

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-photo-leads-mans-reunion-daughters-162035201.html

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Friday, September 21, 2012

Earnings schedule for week of 9/24/2012

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How to Set Up Your New iPhone 5 the Right Way [IPhone]

You got a new iPhone 5! Now what? Here's a how to get started with a new iPhone, whether you're a first-timer or an iOS pro. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/mCCN5AOfnTo/how-to-set-up-your-new-iphone-5-the-right-way

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User:LeslyTurley537 - The FOSS India Wiki

From The FOSS India Wiki

Search engine optimization: How Much More Important Is Social Media Being an SEO Tool this year

Social networking integration continues to soar in global popularity. Recently, social media has effectively helped companies market their products and services to mass audiences. By generating an immediate buzz, these companies have benefited from recurring customers and business. Consequently, they have been able to generate both leads and revenue. As an integral part of Search engine optimization, this media continues to be an important SEO tool in 2012. With over 50,000 companies now with social media pages, this trend will continue to attract new commercial ventures across the board.

In the past, Seo mainly revolved around strategic keyword placement. This would help websites secure higher rankings across leading search engines like google. With article marketing, however, several search engines like google set new parameters for Internet businesses and customers. For one, white hat techniques were implemented to counter illegal keyword stuffing and hidden backlinks. SEO also encompassed pay-per-click advertising, along with promotional videos and business ads across vast digital networks. Although this entailed some cost, the media of the social simply stepped in and dominated the as a whole. With little to no cost involved, businesses are now able to interact in real-time with existing and potential customers. They can also market products, services, sales, and even promotional specials with only one click of the mouse.

SEO Web Design Services

To make use of SEO, media integration is simply essential. Not only can it secure back links for your company pages, additionally, it may attract customers from all over the planet. Although this type of person to person media has been around for some time, it's still an important tool in any internet marketing campaign or endeavor. In fact, most customers rely on media business pages for precise information. No longer do customers have the time to read lengthy content at websites or blogs. Instead, they would rather scan via a social media business page to choose the information they require. Despite its name, social media is far more than an online meeting place. While its great to rekindle old friendships and make new ones, companies from all sectors are utilizing this media to secure growth and longevity.

Social networking also enables site owners to talk with blog or forum members in real time. Site owners may also plan special calendar events, that will instantly notify all members. Social media posts also accept video links, images, and even media file links from various formats. What better way is there to market your site than with this comprehensive online portal? Whether for business or personal reasons, social networking remains a strong and effective SEO advertising tool.

Source: http://www.foss-india.org/mediawiki-1.17.0/index.php/User%3ALeslyTurley537

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Thursday, September 20, 2012

Ben Affleck changes "Argo" postscript to appease former Canadian ambassador

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Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Name Your Own Price for $340 Worth of Mac Apps, a Portion Goes to Charity [Bundles]

Name Your Own Price for $340 Worth of Mac Apps, a Portion Goes to CharityOS X: Bundles are one of the best ways to get a great discount on software. This one is pretty unique. Up for grabs are 9 award-winning Mac apps worth $340?but you pay what you want. 10% of that goes to a select charity of your choice.

The 9 apps are:

  • MacFlux 4: web design program (one of our favorite WYSIWYG editors)
  • Typinator: text expansion app
  • ForkLift 2: dual-pane file manager with syncing, also useful for file transfers
  • iDocument: document management app
  • iClip: clipboard manager
  • MacCleanse 3: delete unwanted files
  • Sparkbox: capture and organize visual inspirations (see our review here)
  • Jaksta Music Converter: converts to/from all popular audio formats
  • skEdit: HTML editor

Many of these are alone well worth the $11 or so average price users are currently paying for the bundle. If you pay $49, you're still getting the bundle for 85% off the total value.

A really great bonus is that part of the proceeds go to charity, your choice of: Electronic Frontier Foundation, Charity Water, or Stand Up To Cancer.

There's one catch: To get all 9 apps, you have to choose a price higher than the average everyone else is naming (currently that's $11.76, which comes out to $1.31 per app). If you name a price below that, you'll get 6 of the apps?all of them except MacFlux4, ForkLift 2, and Typinator.

The deal ends in 15 days, so go name your price, grab some useful apps, and donate to charity all at the same time.

The Name Your Own Price Mac bundle | Stack Social

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/iA_yoDMi85o/name-your-own-price-for-340-worth-of-mac-apps-a-portion-goes-to-charity

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