Saturday, March 31, 2012

Automotive workers strike in Kaluga | Signalfire

Automotive workers at the Benteler plant in Kaluga southwest of Moscow went on strike on Thursday night demanding higher wages, a trade union spokesman said.

?Now more than 50 workers are on strike at the factory and another 50 from other plants in Kaluga have arrived to support their colleagues at the plant entrance,? said Dmitry Kozhnev, the Kaluga coordinator of the inter-regional car industry trade unions.

The plant workers are demanding wages equal to their conterparts at the neighboring Volkswagen plant, which receives Benteler-made car components. The Benteler Automotive managers were not immediately available for comment.

Riot police have arrived at the scene but are watching from a distance, Kozhnev added.

?I?ve been politely warned that police might start arresting people,? Kozhnev said.
http://en.ria.ru/world/20120330/172484639.html

This entry was posted in resistance and tagged russia, strike, worker resistance. Bookmark the permalink.

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Sunday, March 25, 2012

Android Central weekly photo contest winners: Self-portrait

Joe

As usual, you guys floored us with all the submissions for last week's photo contest. It's solid proof that Android lovers also enjoy taking pictures and sharing them with the world, so manufacturers and app developers better step it up and give us even more love. All the pictures were awesome, and we wish we could say every single was was the winner, but that's not how contests work. We picked out the top five, and you'll find them after the break.

Didn't win this week? No worries. A new contest starts tomorrow, so keep an eye out for it. For the winners, a big congrats and keep an eye on your inbox for information about your Android Central t-shirts!

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/uq4yspUW1SA/story01.htm

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Pope greeted by crowds upon arrival to Mexico

It had become tradition in Mexico. Before daybreak, youths would creep as close as security permitted and serenade their beloved Pope John Paul II with a song of greeting and celebration.

Now a new, less familiar pope had come, seeking to strengthen his own ties with the largest Spanish-speaking Catholic nation.

So well before dawn Saturday, two dozen youths from a Guadalajara church group gathered near the school where the Pope Benedict XVI was staying. "We sang with all our heart and all our force," said Maria Fernanda de Luna, a member of the group. "It gave us goosebumps to sing 'Las Mananitas' for him."

RELATED:?Catholicism in Latin America: 5 key facts

Songs, joyful throngs, church bells and confetti welcomed Benedict as he began his first trip to Mexico, a celebration that seemed to erupt spontaneously out of what had been a thin, sun-dazed crowd.

As Pope Benedict XVI's plane appeared in the shimmering heat of Friday afternoon, people poured from their homes. They packed sidewalks five and six deep, screaming ecstatically as the pope passed, waving slowly. Some burst into tears.

Many had said moments earlier that they could never love a pope as strongly as Benedict's predecessor, John Paul II. But the presence of a pope on Mexican soil touched a chord of overwhelming respect and adoration for the papacy itself, the personification for many of the Catholic Church, and God. Thousands found themselves taken aback by their own emotions.

As a girl, Celia del Rosario Escobar, 42, saw John Paul II on one of his five trips to Mexico, which brought him near-universal adoration.

"I was 12 and it's an experience that still makes a deep impression on me," she said. "I thought this would be different, but, no, the experience is the same."

"I can't speak," she murmured, pressing her hands to her chest and starting to cry.

Belief in the goodness and power of the pope runs deep in Guanajuato, the most observantly Catholic state in Mexico, a place of deep social conservatism and the wellspring of an armed uprising against harsh anti-clerical laws in the 1920s. Some in the crowd came for literal healing, a blessing from the pope's passage that would cure illness, or bring them more work. Others sought inspiration, rejuvenation of their faith, energy to be a better parent.

Popes "have a personality, a positive energy. The simple fact of seeing him is a great satisfaction," said Jose Luis Perez Daza, a 47-year-old lawyer from Mexico City who was among thousands pouring off of buses Saturday and trudging three miles (five kilometers) to a sprawling campground in the city of Silao to await Sunday's papal Mass.

"It is faith that moves us," said Alejandra Angoa, 34, a handicrafts-maker from the state of Tlaxcala. She walked alongside people of all ages carrying sleeping bags, coolers, backpacks, rolling suitcases and jugs of water to the campsite, where a festival-like feeling prevailed. Many sang or played guitars.

Many said the pope's message of peace and unity would help heal their country, traumatized by the deaths of more than 47,000 people in a drug war that has escalated during a government offensive against cartels that began more than five years ago.

In a speech on the airport tarmac shortly after arriving, Benedict said he was praying for all in need, "particularly those who suffer because of old and new rivalries, resentments and all forms of violence."

He said he had come to Mexico as a pilgrim of hope, to encourage Mexicans to "transform the present structures and events which are less than satisfactory and seem immovable or insurmountable while also helping those who do not see meaning or a future in life."

No part of Mexico has been spared at least a small scrape with drug gang violence, but Escobar said she hopes that Benedict will help turn around a society devastated by the drug trade and the brutal violence it spawns.

"I would like him to raise the consciousness of those people who are hurting Mexico, those involved in drug addiction, in the mafia," Escobar said. "I hope that we have will more respect for life."

Antonio Martinez, 57, said he wanted relief from diabetes and divine intervention that would bring him more than occasional work in Leon's shoe factories. He stood by the side of the road, resting against his bicycle, waiting for a glimpse of the pope.

"Simply greeting the pope and receiving his blessing can change our lives," Martinez said. "I believe that my health will improve, that more sources of work will appear."

The faithful lined more than 20 miles (32 kilometers) of the pope's route from the airport into Leon shouting the ultimate welcome: "Benedict, brother, you are now Mexican!"

The pope responded to the greeting as he stepped off his plane to wild cheers and the clamor of ringing bells.

"This is a proud country of hospitality, and nobody feels like a stranger in your land," Benedict said. "I knew that. Now I see it and now I feel it in my heart."

RELATED:?Catholicism in Latin America: 5 key facts

The weeklong trip to Mexico and Cuba is Benedict's first to both countries, and it will be a test of stamina for the pope, who turns 85 next month. At the airport Friday in Rome, he used a cane, apparently for the first time in public, while walking about 100 yards (meters) to the airliner's steps.

Papal aides, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Benedict has been using the cane in private for about two months because it makes him feel more secure and not for any medical reason. He left the cane aside as he stepped off the plane in Mexico.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-greeted-crowds-upon-arrival-mexico-204017223.html

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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

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Increasing clarity for medics in suspected physical abuse cases

Increasing clarity for medics in suspected physical abuse cases [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Mar-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Clare Elsley
clare@campuspr.co.uk
44-113-357-2102
University of Sheffield

Researchers at the University of Sheffield and The Children's Hospital, Sheffield, are developing techniques which will help clinicians more accurately identify whether injuries sustained by young children are as a result of accident or abuse.

Currently medical professionals base their decisions on their prior knowledge and experience. This can be subjective and the ramifications of making the wrong decision can be huge, for both child and parent.

Dr Amaka Offiah, Consultant at Sheffield Children's NHS Foundation Trust, and senior lecturer at Sheffield University's Department of Human Metabolism along with a team of researchers from the Faculty of Engineering, are working together to create a system aimed at providing robust scientific evidence to support clinicians faced with having to assess how an injury may have been sustained.

"There needs to be a more scientific way of determining how an injury might have been caused," says Dr Offiah "Most physically abused children are too young to say how their injuries came about and we, as medics, are reliant on our own experience to make a decision about whether what the parent is saying is realistic or not."

This research is in its early stages and the multidisciplinary team, including engineers and medics, are currently working on creating computerised models which show how children's bones react to different forces. To do this, Dr Offiah, along with Dr Matt Carr and Nick Emerson, from the University's Department of Mechanical Engineering, have been examining the effects of different types of force on pig bones, which are regularly used as a substitute for human bones in laboratory testing.

"This was the first stage of the work," says Nick Emerson. "To see whether we could use readily available animal bone samples for our laboratory testing, and accurately recreate various fractures using predictive software."

The researchers found they were able to predict the force necessary to create a fracture and where the fracture would occur with as much as 90 per cent accuracy. "We've proven that we can adapt the modelling process to match different bones," says Emerson. "To date we've only had a limited number of test scenarios and test samples. With further refinement and more expansive testing, we believe our results will show an even higher level of accuracy."

The next stage of the work is to gather more data to develop the technique and increase its accuracy. Additionally, the researchers need to conduct experiments on bones from younger animals, to assess the effects of age.

"There has been extensive research in locating fracture sites in adult human bones, but limited attempts to determine what causes those fractures," says Emerson. "We want to gain a much clearer understanding of fracture patterns in young bones and apply this to scan data from children. We hope this will provide more certainty in cases where a clinician suspects a child hasn't sustained his or her injuries in the way the carer says."

For medics, this support is vital. "It's sometimes very difficult to determine how an injury has been caused, even for extremely experienced clinicians," says Dr Offiah. "Obviously we don't want to remove a child from a loving, nurturing home, but equally, no-one wants a child to return to a situation where they are being physically abused.

"The most important impact of this research will be to improve the confidence in judgements made when abuse is suspected and ultimately to improve the safety and wellbeing of vulnerable children."

The research project has been funded by The Children's Hospital Charity, who support and enhance the services of Sheffield Children's NHS Foundation Trust, including 250,000 of research each year into the prevention and cure of childhood illnesses. The charity also funded the country's first paediatric Clinical Research Facility which opened at the hospital in 2008.

###

For more information:
Clare Elsley, Campus PR. tel 0113 357 2100 mob 07767 685168 email: clare@campuspr.co.uk
Shemina Davis, University of Sheffield press office, tel 0114 222 5339, email: shemina.davis@sheffield.ac.uk
Natalie Loftus, The Children's Hospital Charity, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, tel 0114 321 2476, email: Natalie.loftus@sth.nhs.uk


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Increasing clarity for medics in suspected physical abuse cases [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Mar-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Clare Elsley
clare@campuspr.co.uk
44-113-357-2102
University of Sheffield

Researchers at the University of Sheffield and The Children's Hospital, Sheffield, are developing techniques which will help clinicians more accurately identify whether injuries sustained by young children are as a result of accident or abuse.

Currently medical professionals base their decisions on their prior knowledge and experience. This can be subjective and the ramifications of making the wrong decision can be huge, for both child and parent.

Dr Amaka Offiah, Consultant at Sheffield Children's NHS Foundation Trust, and senior lecturer at Sheffield University's Department of Human Metabolism along with a team of researchers from the Faculty of Engineering, are working together to create a system aimed at providing robust scientific evidence to support clinicians faced with having to assess how an injury may have been sustained.

"There needs to be a more scientific way of determining how an injury might have been caused," says Dr Offiah "Most physically abused children are too young to say how their injuries came about and we, as medics, are reliant on our own experience to make a decision about whether what the parent is saying is realistic or not."

This research is in its early stages and the multidisciplinary team, including engineers and medics, are currently working on creating computerised models which show how children's bones react to different forces. To do this, Dr Offiah, along with Dr Matt Carr and Nick Emerson, from the University's Department of Mechanical Engineering, have been examining the effects of different types of force on pig bones, which are regularly used as a substitute for human bones in laboratory testing.

"This was the first stage of the work," says Nick Emerson. "To see whether we could use readily available animal bone samples for our laboratory testing, and accurately recreate various fractures using predictive software."

The researchers found they were able to predict the force necessary to create a fracture and where the fracture would occur with as much as 90 per cent accuracy. "We've proven that we can adapt the modelling process to match different bones," says Emerson. "To date we've only had a limited number of test scenarios and test samples. With further refinement and more expansive testing, we believe our results will show an even higher level of accuracy."

The next stage of the work is to gather more data to develop the technique and increase its accuracy. Additionally, the researchers need to conduct experiments on bones from younger animals, to assess the effects of age.

"There has been extensive research in locating fracture sites in adult human bones, but limited attempts to determine what causes those fractures," says Emerson. "We want to gain a much clearer understanding of fracture patterns in young bones and apply this to scan data from children. We hope this will provide more certainty in cases where a clinician suspects a child hasn't sustained his or her injuries in the way the carer says."

For medics, this support is vital. "It's sometimes very difficult to determine how an injury has been caused, even for extremely experienced clinicians," says Dr Offiah. "Obviously we don't want to remove a child from a loving, nurturing home, but equally, no-one wants a child to return to a situation where they are being physically abused.

"The most important impact of this research will be to improve the confidence in judgements made when abuse is suspected and ultimately to improve the safety and wellbeing of vulnerable children."

The research project has been funded by The Children's Hospital Charity, who support and enhance the services of Sheffield Children's NHS Foundation Trust, including 250,000 of research each year into the prevention and cure of childhood illnesses. The charity also funded the country's first paediatric Clinical Research Facility which opened at the hospital in 2008.

###

For more information:
Clare Elsley, Campus PR. tel 0113 357 2100 mob 07767 685168 email: clare@campuspr.co.uk
Shemina Davis, University of Sheffield press office, tel 0114 222 5339, email: shemina.davis@sheffield.ac.uk
Natalie Loftus, The Children's Hospital Charity, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, tel 0114 321 2476, email: Natalie.loftus@sth.nhs.uk


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-03/uos-icf032012.php

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Tuesday, March 20, 2012

A romantic comedy of environmental folly

Sara Reardon, reporter

1st-pic-rexfeatures_1667577h.jpg(Image: CBS/Everett/Rex Features)

If you were an environmental research scientist, what would you do if you were handed an unlimited budget out of the blue? Using it to destroy an entire ecosystem, introduce an invasive species into a hostile environment and create a recreation park for one man would probably not top your list. But that?s the premise of the new romantic comedy Salmon Fishing in the Yemen which provides food for thought behind the shimmering romance.

Fred Jones (Ewan McGregor) is a fish scientist working for the UK government who receives a strange email from investment banker Harriet Chetwode-Talbot (Emily Blunt). A Yemeni sheikh (Amr Waked) wants to commission Jones to install a river in the Yemen desert and introduce Scottish salmon into it - so the sheikh can fly fish in his backyard.

Jones immediately turns him down, saying simply that the desert is too hot and, oh, it has no water. But he?s too late: the prime minister?s overzealous press secretary (Kristin Scott Thomas), hungry for a Middle East story with a positive spin, spots the proposal and turns it into a flagship project for British science. With his job in jeopardy and with his marriage on its last legs, Jones takes a leap of faith and commits to the project and the pretty investment banker.

Despite the magnitude of the undertaking, there?s little science to be seen here. At the start, Jones gives Chetwode-Talbot a sarcastic markerboard lecture of the project?s many hurdles: engineering the dam to trap water from freshwater aquifers uncovered while drilling, oxygenating the water to the right temperature for North Atlantic salmon, transporting 10,000 salmon across three time zones in giant holding tanks, and convincing the farm-bred creatures to swim up river and spawn - all of which, he assures her, will result in a river full of belly-up fish.

The next we see, though, the two are walking along the side of a canyon in Yemen, hair blowing in the desert wind as they gape at the massive scale of the project magicked into existence behind them. Of course, it would tax the audience of a movie billed as a rom-com to tolerate an hour-long lecture on aquaculture. The satirical 2010 book by Paul Torday, on which the movie is based, leaves more room to expose the details. But when Jones, with his $50 million budget, hires the engineering team who built the notorious Three Gorges Dam in China to set up shop in the Yemen, one wonders how they pulled it off - or managed to get so far in spite of the same controversies.

2nd-pic-rexfeatures_1667577c.jpg(Image: CBS/Everett/Rex Features)

Even with the romantic focus, the movie delves into some real issues about the short-sightedness of environmental projects forced on communities, however beautiful and peaceful those projects may initially seem. Jones? boss at Defra, tasked with collecting 10,000 native salmon from Scotland?s rivers, suddenly finds his picture splashed across the cover of every fishing enthusiast magazine in the U.K., denouncing him as ?the salmon snatcher.?

The idea goes down no better in Yemen. It?s hardly a spoiler to say that the idea of putting a river in the desert doesn?t thrill the sheikh?s neighbours, who object to his hubris. After tragedy strikes, Jones has a brilliant thought: ?Next time, we?ll engage the local community, make it their project and not just ours!? he exclaims, eyes shining with long-overdue enlightenment.

Though the metaphors are a bit laboured at times, it?s a sweet, lightly funny movie overall, and it?s always nice to see a scientist in a non-evil role. A very human scientist too: money, love, and the sheikh?s seductive talk of faith are enough to convince Jones to put aside his better scientific judgement and take on a project that, even the sheikh later laments was intended ?to glorify God, but now I fear it was to glorify man.? It certainly doesn?t glorify the poor salmon.

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen is currently showing in cinemas throughout the US. It opens in the UK on 20 April.

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Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/1d95103c/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Cculturelab0C20A120C0A30Ca0Eromantic0Ecomedy0Eof0Eenvironmental0Efolly0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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Villain in Disguise: Jupiter's Role in Impacts on Earth

Whilst most famous for his catalog of 110 galaxies, nebulae, clusters and double stars, Charles Messier was a comet-hunter at heart. His catalog was simply a list of nuisances, faint fuzzies that looked like comets but were not. The Frenchman found 13 comets in all between 1760 and 1785, but perhaps the most important of them was the streaking comet that he spotted in June 1770. Fast moving on the sky, it was bright enough at magnitude +2 that it could be clearly seen from well-lit towns and cities. A brief spectacle of wonder for eighteenth century astronomers to enjoy, its ramifications could have been much greater.

The comet has since become known as Lexell's Comet, after the Russian (yet Swedish born) astronomer Anders Johan Lexell who first calculated its orbit. He showed that the comet had made a close approach of just 2.2 million kilometers (0.015 AU), which is about six times the distance to the moon. It was the closest a comet has ever been witnessed to approach the Earth and, in astronomical terms, a very near (and fortunate) miss.

Lexell found that the comet swooped around the sun with an orbital period of just under six years, but its next return in 1776 would see it on the far side of the sun, out of harm's way. Sure enough, no astronomers found it again that year. In 1782 however, when again it was predicted to be visible, the comet was nowhere in sight.

The French mathematician Pierre Simon-Laplace calculated that the comet had experienced a set of encounters with the giant planet Jupiter. The first saw Jupiter's gravity modify the comet's orbit to fling it almost onto a direct collision course with Earth. The second encounter modified the comet's orbit, ejecting it from the solar system altogether and removing it as a potential hazard.

Lexell is now a lost comet and Jupiter is the reason why nobody had ever seen it before 1770, and why no one ever saw it afterwards. In doing so, Jupiter played the role of both Earth's friend and Earth's foe. [Best Close Encounters of the Comet Kind]

The story of Lexell's Comet was pretty much forgotten in the decades and centuries that followed. By the 1960s astronomers looked upon long period comets ? comets that hail from the Oort Cloud at the very edge of our solar system and which take many millennia to orbit the sun ? as the major impact hazard to Earth. A general idea developed, bolstered by computer simulations performed in 1994 by the late George Wetherill of the Carnegie Institution, that dictated how Jupiter acted as Earth's protector, sweeping up or ejecting many of the long period comets from the solar system and removing them from the population of potential impactors (Wetherill's simulations coincided with comet Shoemaker?Levy 9 colliding with Jupiter). This idea has taken hold in established theory yet few have ever really questioned it until now.

Realizing that today we know of many more short period comets and near-Earth asteroids that cross our planet's orbit than long period comets, Jonathan Horner of the University of New South Wales, Sydney and Barrie Jones of the UK's Open University have run new simulations that reveal a very different picture, one that has important consequences for the habitability of Earth and planets in general.

"When George Wetherill did his work back in 1994, the computers available to him were much more limited than what we have today," says Horner, who originally comes from the U.K. "The lack of computing power meant that he had to make some fairly big approximations and simplifications. His was a ground-breaking study but at the same time it was one that was limited by what he had available."

Horner and Jones decided to run the experiment again but this time with twenty-first century computing power, hooking up tens of computers in parallel at the Open University. Their simulations agreed that Jupiter is a factor in protecting Earth from long period comets, but how would it fare with the new populations of short period comets and near Earth asteroids? Described in a series of papers published in the International Journal of Astrobiology, the duo found their answer to be at odds with conventional theory.

Gravitational resonances

Movies such as Armageddon and Deep Impact, combined with the common consensus that an asteroid strike 65 million years ago finished off the reign of the dinosaurs, has meant that the notion of asteroids hitting Earth is now part of our pop culture. These objects hail from the Asteroid Belt between Mars and Jupiter.

While most asteroids move on stable orbits around the sun, neighboring Jupiter's influence looms large and gravitational resonances between the planet and regions of the Asteroid Belt are adept at clearing out any rogue asteroids in these regions and sending them hurtling in-system. Often these rogues can originate from collisions between asteroids that send a shower of rocky chunks spinning off into these resonant zones.

"The main thing that is driving material from the Asteroid Belt into the inner solar system is the influence of something called a secular resonance," says Horner. "As things stand now in our solar system, this particular secular resonance is right at the inner edge of the asteroid belt."

In their simulations Horner and Jones played about with the mass of Jupiter, finding that the lower the planet's mass, the broader the secular resonance becomes and the more it moves into the main body of the Asteroid Belt, closer to Jupiter, leading to more asteroids being perturbed. The simulations showed that the number of asteroid impacts on Earth peaks when there is a planet in Jupiter's orbit that has a mass one-fifth that of Jupiter's mass, whereas just over half the peak rate of impacts occur when there is a planet with a mass equal to Jupiter. The impact rate falls off again at the lower extreme, when Jupiter's mass becomes too low to be able to nudge any asteroids with its gravity.

A similar result, albeit for different reasons, arises when considering the impact rate of short period comets on Earth. Currently, Jupiter's gravity is capable of throwing comets close to the Earth, as we saw with Lexell's Comet, but it is also equally adept at cleaning up its mess and removing dangerous comets from the solar system. Were Jupiter only to have one-fifth of its real mass, the balance between hurling comets towards us and then removing them would be lost; Jupiter would still be able to destabilize comets and send them our way, but it would lose the ability to remove many of them.

"If you have a low mass Jupiter, it is capable of placing things on Earth-crossing orbits but because it doesn't have a big gravitational reach, once it has put a comet on an Earth-crossing orbit the comet can remain in that orbit for a very long time before it encounters Jupiter again," says Horner.

Better the devil you know?

Jupiter's role seems confused. It definitely sends asteroids and comets our way and, in any given year, more than 90 percent of all objects crossing Earth's orbit are asteroids, so the protection Jupiter provides us from long period comets, or by eventually removing short period comets, is of lesser importance. Hence Jupiter is not the friend that it has been perceived to be. However, things could be far worse: were Jupiter to have a mere 20 percent of its mass, the impact rate would skyrocket. Obviously for any denizens on a planet in the target zone this is bad news, but in the grand scheme of things are impacts a positive or negative factor on the overall evolution of life on a planet across billions of years? When searching for potentially habitable exoplanets, should we seek to avoid systems that contain a 0.2 Jupiter-mass gas giant at a similar distance to Jupiter from the sun?

Whether impacts have been a good thing or a bad thing for the evolution of life on Earth depends on who you talk to, says Dave Waltham, Head of the Earth Sciences Department at Royal Holloway, University of London. "What you can definitely say is that they cause some mass extinctions. Lots of people argue, however, that impacts can be good because they stir thing up and stop the biosphere from becoming stuck in a rut. Certainly for human beings, we wouldn't be here if the dinosaurs hadn't been wiped out."

Impacts may only be healthy in the long run if they are not so frequent as to not give the biosphere chance to recover. Evidence in Earth's geological record suggests that it takes around ten million years following a big impact for the planet to heal, so an impact rate of one large collision every hundred million years or so, as Earth experiences, allows plenty of time between crashes for life to flourish. On the other hand if that impact rate was every few million years, the bombardment would pulverize our planet into a lifeless husk with little opportunity to develop a new biosphere.

Horner and Jones' simulations are now beginning to feed into discussions regarding habitability on planets around other stars. "In Peter Ward and Donald Brownlee's book Rare Earth, they set Jupiter up as a shield, but they didn't really demonstrate it," says Waltham, a self-confessed 'Rare Earther'. "Jonti (Jonathan Horner) and Barrie went out and tested that idea and in doing so removed one of the barriers to habitability."

Too much water?

Impacts have an additional benefit: they bring water to otherwise dry worlds. Our current understanding of how planets form is that Earth was born dry ? temperatures were so hot that its surface was molten and any resident water was driven off. So why do we now live on a world that is replete in watery oceans?

The idea is that the water was brought here by objects that crashed into Earth, which were either asteroids or comets (the current consensus is leaning towards asteroids, based upon the discovery that the isotopes of hydrogen in Earth's water do not match the isotopes of hydrogen seen in comets). One can imagine that in an environment with too few impacts Earth would have remained as dry as the moon, and so a perturbing body like Jupiter might therefore be needed to ensure there is water present for life. On the flip-side, too many impacts could easily bring too much water.

"Earth's water is ample and there is a lot more than we would expect given where Earth formed, but you could imagine a scenario where you have a hundred or a thousand times more water and there is no solid land," says Horner.

The prospects for habitability on water worlds may be surprisingly dire, adds Waltham. "Having too much water could be a problem because Earth's climate system is, to a considerable extent, controlled by the fact that we have a mix of land and sea," he says, referring to the carbon-silicate cycle, the process by which carbon and hence global warming and atmospheric temperatures are regulated. Volcanoes spew carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, which helps warm the planet, and when the climate grows too warm rain levels increase and the carbon dioxide is washed out in a slightly acidic precipitation that weathers rocks on the surface, creating calcium carbonate, bicarbonate and silica that runs-off into the oceans. Here it becomes incorporated into sea-dwelling micro-organisms that die and carry the carbon down to the sea floor, where it enters subduction zones and is eventually recycled and spewed out once more from volcanoes. Without land, the silicate weathering cannot take place, causing a fatal break in the chain.

Whereas Waltham believes Earth-like planets are rare, Horner is more the optimist and recognizes that his work with Barrie Jones has removed one of the obstacles to long-term habitability and may help act as a pointer in where to search for life in the Universe. "We'll soon go from the stage of knowing no other planets like Earth to knowing hundreds of them, and people want to look for life," he says. "The problem is it is very difficult and time-consuming to search, so you'll only be able to look at one or two and you need to have some way of saying which are the best and worst prospects. I don't think it will be a clear cut 'this will be habitable, this won't be habitable', I think it will be 'this is a bit more habitable, this is a bit less habitable' and impacts are certainly one of the important factors."

From alien life to human life, impacts have a large influence. In the knowledge that Jupiter is far from being our savior and that the asteroid that finished off the dinosaurs may not merely have been one that slipped through the net, programs such as NASA's Spaceguard survey that seek out potentially hazardous objects are all the more vital. We must thank impacts for bringing water to Earth and paving the way for humans to evolve, but we must also never, ever stop watching the skies.

This story was provided by Astrobiology Magazine, a web-based publication sponsored by the NASA astrobiology program.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/villain-disguise-jupiters-role-impacts-earth-113802078.html

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Monday, March 19, 2012

USPTO General Counsel Addresses Guests at 56th Annual IP ...

Bernard Knight (second from left), general counsel for the United States Patent and Trademark Office, served as the keynote speaker for the 56th Annual Intellectual Property Law Conference hosted the Center for Intellectual Property Law at The John Marshall Law School. He is joined by (from left) United States District Court Chief Judge James Holderman; William McGrath, acting directory of the Center; and John Marshall Professor Daryl Lim.

The Center for Intellectual Property Law at The John Marshall Law School welcomed more than 200 attorneys from around the country for the 56th Annual Intellectual Property Law Conference, ?Hot Topics and Current Developments in Patent, Trademark, Copyright and Trade Secrets Laws? on Feb. 24, 2012.

Keynote speaker for the event was Bernard Knight, general counsel for the United States Patent and Trademark Office, who addressed the new America Invents Act, considered one of the most important pieces of legislation affecting patent law in the last 50 years.

U. S. patent laws will change so that by the spring of 2013, there will be new issues and new proceedings for patent practitioners, inventors and businesses to consider. Included in the changes is a move to a first-to-file system rather than the current first-to-invent system. This will put the U.S. in closer alignment with its global partners in determining priority of invention based on the earliest date a patent application was filed with a patent office. There is a limited one-year grace period related to public disclosures made by the inventor.

In addition, the America Invents Act will be replacing the long-standing procedure to prove a prior invention, i.e., interference proceedings, with ?derivation proceedings? to determine whether an inventor of a first-filed patent application derived the claimed subject matter without authorization from an inventor named in a later-filed application.

Guest presenters at the Center for Intellectual Property Law?s 56th Annual IP Law Conference were (from left) Kevin C. May of Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg; R. Mark Halligan of Nixon Peabody LLP; William T. McGrath, acting director of the Center; William Frankel of Brinks, Hofer, Gilson & Lione; Mark V.B. Partridge of IP Law; and Chief Judge James F. Holderman of the United States District Court, Northern District of Illinois.

The program also featured a corporate panel discussion with executive counsel. The panel gave practitioners the chance to hear the inside perspective and network with the client side of their legal business.

The Annual Intellectual Property Law Conference demonstrates John Marshall?s commitment to being on the cutting-edge of emerging IP law and the Center?s deep involvement with the IP practitioner community.

The conference is designed to give practitioners and students the opportunity to learn about the most recent trends and developments in IP law from leaders in the field. The program also helps participants network with colleagues from across the IP legal sector.

Source: http://news.jmls.edu/2012/03/uspto-general-counsel-addresses-guests-at-56th-annual-ip-conference/

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Presumption of authorship: only natural persons | Kluwer Copyright ...

Estonian Supreme Court, 7 February 2012, Case No3-2-1-155-11,? Herlitz PBS AG vs. Realister O? (plaintiff in the prededing proceeding).

The Estonian Supreme Court found in its recent judgement in the Realister case that the presumption of authorship as laid down in the Sections 4(6) and 29(1) of the Estonian Copyright Act (hereinafter referred to as the CA) is only applicable in case the right holder relying on the presumption of authorship is a natural person, who has created the work, not a legal person who has obtained the economical rights under the law or a contract.

In this case the owner of the authors? economical rights is a legal person that claims to have economical copyrights regarding a selection of mathematical and chemical formulas reproduced on the cover of school exercise books, therefore the Supreme Court took the position that the burden of proof must rely on the person who claims to be the holder of authors? economical rights, i.e. plaintiff, Realister O?, in this case.

The Supreme Court reasoned that the author of a work is a natural person (or persons), who created the work and that copyright shall belong to a legal person only in the cases prescribed in the CA. Section 4(6) of the CA stipulates that the protection of a work by copyright is presumed, except if, based on this Act or other copyright legislation, there are apparent circumstances which preclude this. The burden of proof lies on the person who contests the protection of a work by copyright. Section 29(1) of CA provides that the authorship of a person who publishes a work under his or her name, a generally recognised pseudonym or the identifying mark of the author shall be presumed until the contrary is proved. The burden of proof lies on the person who challenges authorship.

The Supreme Court pointed out that the concept ?authorship? derives from Section 12(1)(1 of the CA, that provides for a moral right of the author. The Section lays down that the author of a work has the right to appear in public as the creator of the work and claim recognition of the fact of creation of the work by way of relating the authorship of the work to the author?s person and name upon any use of the work (right of authorship).

According to the Supreme Court, it follows from the foregoing analysis that the objective of Section 29 of the CA is only to bind an author as a natural person with his or her creation. As the plaintiff is a legal person, who cannot rely on the presumption of authorship, the defendant cannot be obliged to prove that Realister O? is not the holder of authors? rights. At the same time the Supreme Court did not analyse the presumption laid down in the Section 4(6) of the CA and the concurrence of those two sections referred to above.

In my opinion it might be arguable whether the presumption of authorship should only be applied in cases where the person wanting to rely on this presumption is a natural person. The concept of ?author? in this context might be regarded in a more broader sense than just the natural person.

Such conclusions can also be made on the basis of Section 817 of the CA ?Protection of copyright and related rights under civil law?,? that provides that in the case of the unlawful use of a work or an object of related rights, the author or holder of related rights may, among other, claim the following: 1) compensation, pursuant to ? 1043 of the Law of Obligations Act, for the patrimonial and non-patrimonial damage caused through the unlawful use of a work or an object of related rights; 2) termination of the unlawful use of a work or an object of related rights and refrainment from further violation pursuant to ? 1055 of the Law of Obligations Act; 3) delivery of that which was received by way of the unlawful use of a work or an object of related rights pursuant to ?? 1037 and 1039 of the Law of Obligations Act. It must be emphasized that the Supreme Court in its judgement itself referred to this Section when confirming that also a holder of copyrights (and not only the author as a natural person) is entitled to file claims under this Section.

It might be followed from the foregoing that the term ?author? in the broader meaning in the CA describes also a person who is the holder of authors? rights. The Supreme Court did not explain why in this case the concept ?author? must be interpreted in a narrow sense, not covering the holder of authors? rights.

In addition, it is worth mentioning that in the CA a similar regulation regarding the presumption of related rights has been laid down. Section 62 1 (1) of CA provides that the protection of the object of related rights is presumed, except if, based on this Act or other copyright legislation, there are apparent circumstances which preclude this. The burden of proof lies on the person who contests the protection of the object of related rights. Section 62 1 (2) of CA? stipulates that it is presumed that the person whose name is indicated on an object of related rights as rightholder has rights regarding the specified object until the contrary is proved. The burden of proof lies on the person who contests the fact that this person holds the rights.

Elise Vasam?e, Aavik & Partnerid, Tallinn, Estonia

A full summary of this case will added to the Kluwer IP Cases Database ( www.KluwerIPCases.com).

Source: http://kluwercopyrightblog.com/2012/03/19/presumption-of-authorship-only-natural-persons/

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Sunday, March 18, 2012

Heed the new cost basis rules ? Business Management Daily: Free ...

Do you notice anything different on your 1099-Bs this year? For the first time, securities brokers must provide cost basis information for ?covered securities.?

Strategy: Use new Form 8949, Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets, to report your securities transactions from 2011. Then you must summarize the information on Schedule D.

These changes result from recent legislation that phases in new cost basis reporting rules over a three-year period.

Here?s the whole story: Previously, it was your responsibility to provide the IRS with the cost basis of any securities you sold during the year. But it was often difficult, if not impossible, to find the vital information for securities acquired long ago. On the other hand, you had some leeway in claiming which shares were actually sold if you held multiple shares of the same security.

Emergency Economic Stabilization Act

New rules included in the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act, which phase in over three years, end the guesswork. The 2008 law changes require brokers to report the cost basis information on Form 1099-B, but only for securities acquired after a specific date. The new cost basis reporting rules are effective for securities acquired on or after:

  • Jan. 1, 2011, for stocks, American Depository Receipts (ADRs), real estate investment trusts (REITs) and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) taxed as corporations;
  • Jan. 1, 2012, for mutual funds (including most ETFs) and dividend reinvestment plans (DRPs); and
  • Jan. 1, 2013, for all other remaining securities (e.g., options, fixed income instruments and debt instruments).

If you did not select a cost basis method that identifies the shares of covered securities you sell, your broker will use a default method. The default for stocks acquired after 2010 is the first-in, first-out (FIFO) method.

Example: You bought 100 shares of Uno Corp. stock on Feb. 1, 2011, at $10 a share. Then you bought another 50 shares of Uno on July 1, 2011, at $15 a share. Finally, you sold 50 shares of Uno on Dec. 1, 2011, at $18 a share.

Under the FIFO method, you have a taxable gain of $400 ($18 a share ? $10 a share x 50 shares). If you had identified the shares you sold as coming from the last batch of shares you bought (the ones you acquired on July 1), your taxable gain is only $150 ($18 a share ? $15 a share x 50 shares).

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Occupy protest anniversary ends with police sweep

Occupy Wall Street demonstrators march near Zuccotti Park on Saturday, March 17, 2012, in New York. With the city's attention focused on the huge St. Patrick's Day Parade many blocks uptown, the Occupy rally at Zuccotti Park on Saturday drew a far smaller crowd than the demonstrations seen in the city when the movement was at its peak in the fall. A couple hundred people attended. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Occupy Wall Street demonstrators march near Zuccotti Park on Saturday, March 17, 2012, in New York. With the city's attention focused on the huge St. Patrick's Day Parade many blocks uptown, the Occupy rally at Zuccotti Park on Saturday drew a far smaller crowd than the demonstrations seen in the city when the movement was at its peak in the fall. A couple hundred people attended. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Occupy Wall Street demonstrators stand and cheer in front of the George Washington statue on Wall Street as they celebrate the protest's sixth month, Saturday, March 17, 2012, in New York. With the city's attention focused on the huge St. Patrick's Day Parade many blocks uptown, the Occupy rally at Zuccotti Park on Saturday drew a far smaller crowd than the demonstrations seen in the city when the movement was at its peak in the fall. A couple hundred people attended. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Occupy Wall Street demonstrators march while holding signs near Wall Street to celebrate the protest's sixth month, Saturday, March 17, 2012, in New York. With the city's attention focused on the huge St. Patrick's Day Parade many blocks uptown, the Occupy rally at Zuccotti Park on Saturday drew a far smaller crowd than the demonstrations seen in the city when the movement was at its peak in the fall. A couple hundred people attended. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

An Occupy Wall Street demonstrator is arrested in Zuccotti Park after a march to celebrate the protest's sixth month, Saturday, March 17, 2012, in New York. With the city's attention focused on the huge St. Patrick's Day Parade many blocks uptown, the Occupy rally at Zuccotti Park on Saturday drew a far smaller crowd than the demonstrations seen in the city when the movement was at its peak in the fall. A couple hundred people attended. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

An Occupy Wall Street demonstrator chants during a march to celebrate the protest's sixth month, Saturday, March 17, 2012, in New York. With the city's attention focused on the huge St. Patrick's Day Parade many blocks uptown, the Occupy rally at Zuccotti Park on Saturday drew a far smaller crowd than the demonstrations seen in the city when the movement was at its peak in the fall. A couple hundred people attended. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

(AP) ? Chanting and cheering down Wall Street on Saturday to mark six months since the birth of the Occupy movement, some protesters applauded the Goldman Sachs employee who days ago gave the firm a public drubbing, echoing the movement's indictment of a financial system demonstrators say is fueled by reckless greed.

"I kind of like to think that the Occupy movement helped him to say, 'Yeah, I really can't do this anymore,'" retired librarian Connie Bartusis said of the op-ed piece by Goldman Sachs manager Greg Smith, who claimed the company regularly foisted failing products on clients as it sought to make more money.

Carrying a sign with the words "Regulate Regulate Regulate," Bartusis said the loss of governmental checks on the financial system helped create the climate of unfettered self-interest described by Smith in his piece, although Goldman's leadership suggested he had not portrayed the bank's culture accurately.

"Greed is a very powerful force," Bartusis said. "That's what got us in trouble."

On Saturday, six months after the protesters first took over Zuccotti Park near the city's financial district, the protesters gathered there again, drawing slogans in chalk on the pavement and waving flags as they marched through lower Manhattan.

The observance ended hours later at the park when police declared Zuccotti closed for the night then swept through the excited and sometimes agitated crowd, arresting some protesters as they went. More than 100 officers pushed through the crowd.

Many protesters shouted and officers took out their batons after a demonstrator threw a glass bottle at a bus that police were using to detain more than a dozen protesters. At least one person was injured during the sweep, police said.

Earlier in the day, with the city's attention focused on the huge St. Patrick's Day parade many blocks uptown, the Occupy rally at Zuccotti drew hundreds of people.

Documentary filmmaker Michael Moore, who had given a speech at a nearby university, also made an appearance at the park, milling around with protesters.

With the barricades that once blocked them from Wall Street now removed, the protesters streamed down the sidewalk and covered the steps of the Federal Hall National Memorial. There, steps from the New York Stock Exchange and standing at the feet of a statue of George Washington, they danced and chanted, "We are unstoppable."

Police say arrests had been made, but they don't have a full count yet.

As always, the protesters focused on a variety of concerns, but for Tom Hagan, his sights were on the giants of finance.

"Wall Street did some terrible things, especially Goldman Sachs, but all of them. Everyone from the banks to the rating agencies, they all knew they were doing wrong. ... But they did it anyway. Because the money was too big," he said.

Dressed in an outfit that might have been more appropriate for the St. Patrick's Day parade, the 61-year-old salesman wore a green shamrock cap and carried a sign asking for saintly intervention: "St. Patrick: Drive the snakes out of Wall Street." He, too, praised Smith's editorial and said it came just as the Occupy movement is again gaining ground.

It was a sentiment echoed by others. Stacy Hessler held up a cardboard sign that read, "Spring is coming," a reference, she said, both to the Arab Spring and to the warm weather that is returning to New York City. She said she believes the nicer weather will bring the crowds back to Occupy protests, where numbers have dwindled in recent months since the group's encampment was ousted from Zuccotti Park by authorities in November.

But now, "more and more people are coming out," said the 39-year-old, who left her home in Florida in October to join the Manhattan protesters and stayed through much of the winter. "The next couple of months, things are going to start to grow, like the flowers."

Some have questioned whether the group can regain its momentum. This month, the finance accounting group in New York City reported that just about $119,000 remained in Occupy's bank account ? the equivalent of about two weeks' worth of expenses.

But Hessler said the group has remained strong, and she pronounced herself satisfied with what the Occupy protesters have accomplished over the last half year.

"It's changed the language," she said. "It's brought out a lot of issues that people are talking about. ... And that's the start of change."

___

Samantha Gross can be reached at www.twitter.com/samanthagross

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-03-18-Occupy%20Wall%20Street/id-6ca51e57dbc648c19ebf88eb7d743ba0

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Saturday, March 17, 2012

Nazi war criminal Demjanjuk dies at 91

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Updated at 8:45 a.m. ET: Convicted Nazi death camp guard John Demjanjuk died in a care home in Germany at the age of 91 on Saturday, German police said.

Rosenheim police official Kilian Steger told The Associated Press that Demjanjuk died at a home for the elderly in southern Germany where he had been staying since his trial ended in Munich last year.


He was sentenced in May 2011 to five years in prison for his role in the killing of 28,060 Jews at the Sobibor camp in Nazi-occupied Poland during World War II. The German court released him pending appeal because of his advanced age.

US autoworker guilty of helping kill Jews in Nazi camp

Steger said prosecutors in nearby Traunstein are looking into Demjanjuk's death as routine procedure.

Demjanjuk, a retired Ohio autoworker, was deported to Germany in 2009 to face trial in Munich after being stripped of his U.S. citizenship.

At the trial, judges found that evidence showed Demjanjuk was a guard during World War II at the Nazis' Sobibor death camp in then-occupied Poland.

Demjanjuk emigrated to the U.S. in the early 1950s and became a naturalized citizen in 1958.

This is a breaking news story. Please check again for more updates.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

Source: http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/03/17/10730988-nazi-war-criminal-john-demjanjuk-dies-at-91

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Website Development Along With The Strategy Of Online Business

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Friday, March 16, 2012

Biden's sharp words mark a new phase in campaign

Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a union hall in Toledo, Ohio, Thursday March 15, 2012. (AP Photo/Madalyn Ruggiero)

Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a union hall in Toledo, Ohio, Thursday March 15, 2012. (AP Photo/Madalyn Ruggiero)

Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a union hall in Toledo, Ohio, Thursday March 15, 2012. (AP Photo/Madalyn Ruggiero)

Vice President Joe Biden reacts to a fans prior to speaking at a union hall in Toledo, Ohio, Thursday March 15, 2012. (AP Photo/Madalyn Ruggiero)

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) ? Make no mistake, the presidential campaign is well under way for the Democrats as well as the Republicans. Vice President Joe Biden called out Mitt Romney and other GOP rivals as being "dead wrong" about the auto bailout, a feisty ramping-up by President Barack Obama's top political surrogate even as the Republicans battle each other through the primaries.

Biden's sharply worded attack marked a new offensive by Obama's re-election team as it seeks to set the terms for the general election while Romney and his GOP rivals are still mired in their party's nominating process.

In keeping with tradition, Biden, as No. 2 on the ticket, will be the campaign enforcer, leveling targeted attacks on Republicans. And his speech before a boisterous, 500-person crowd at a United Auto Workers hall in politically crucial Ohio suggested it's a role he plans to fully embrace.

"If you give any one of these guys the keys to the White House, they will bankrupt the middle class," Biden said of the Republican field.

"Gingrich and Romney and Santorum, they don't let the facts get in the way," he added. It was notable that Biden criticized the Republicans by name. He and Obama have generally refrained from doing that, aiming their criticism more generally at Republicans or opponents.

As Biden campaigned in Ohio, the GOP presidential candidates fanned out across the country, including the U.S. commonwealth of Puerto Rico, on their hunt for delegates.

Romney held fundraisers in New York, restocking his campaign ahead of caucuses Saturday in Missouri, where Rick Santorum and Romney have both invested substantial time. Puerto Rico is holding its primary on Sunday, drawing rare attention in the lengthy primary battle.

In San Juan, Santorum tried to extricate himself from a flap he caused by saying that making English an official language should be a "condition" of statehood for Puerto Rico and that the island would need to ensure that English is spoken "universally." It's set to hold a referendum on statehood in November and whether it becomes the 51st state is a critical issue there.

"I never said only English should be spoken here. Never did I even intimate that," Santorum told local reporters in El Capitolio, the island's Capitol building. "What I said was that English had to be spoken as well as other ? obviously Spanish is going to be spoken, this would be a bilingual country."

Gingrich, meanwhile, sought to build support in Illinois, which holds its primary next week. The former House speaker said he expected voters to give him another look once they grow tired of an advertising war between Santorum and Romney.

"I believe we need a visionary leader who is prepared to break out of politics as normal," Gingrich said in the chapel of Judson University in suburban Chicago.

Republicans fired back at Biden. Republican National Committee spokeswoman Kirsten Kukowski said his speech was irrelevant to the needs of family budgets "being stretched by everything from food prices to soaring prices at the pump."

The vice president's speech was the first of four events the Obama campaign has planned for Biden in the coming weeks. His task, campaign officials said, is to define the core issues of the campaign and draw a clear contrast between the president and the Republican contenders.

In Ohio, Biden's focus was squarely on the auto bailout, a policy the Obama team sees as emblematic of the differences between Obama and Romney's visions for the middle class. The vice president repeatedly singled out Romney, a Michigan native, for saying the government should let the auto industry go bankrupt.

"Gov. Romney said the market, Wall Street, would help lift them out. Wrong," Biden said.

"Any honest expert will tell you in 2009 no one was lining up to lend General Motors or Chrysler any money, or for that matter to lend money to anybody. That includes Bain Capital. They weren't lining up to lend any money," he added.

Bain Capital is the private equity firm Romney once headed.

Biden was as aggressive in his defense of Obama's policies as he was in his criticism of the GOP.

Of Obama's decision to press forward with the auto bailout, he said: "The president didn't flinch. This is a man with steel in his spine."

The day took Biden from a union hall, where he was greeted with chants of "Go, Joe, Go!" and "Four More Years," to a shift change outside a Toledo Chrysler plant that makes steering columns to an elementary school in Perrysburg, Ohio.

With the vice president now fully engaged in the campaign, the Obama re-election team sees an opportunity to rely on a strong and forceful defend

er of the president to build support among Democrats, while allowing Obama himself to stay above the political fray for as long as possible.

While the three campaign principles ? Obama, Biden and first lady Michelle Obama ? have all been headlining fundraisers for several months, officials say the president won't hold campaign-sanctioned public events until after Republicans pick their nominee.

Michelle Obama's campaign strategy is still being crafted, though she is expected to play an active role in the general election.

Biden's campaign strategy has been in the works for several months, and its early rollout underscores his importance to the Democratic ticket.

In the lead-up to the November election, Biden is expected to target the big three political battlegrounds ? Ohio, Pennsylvania and Florida. Obama carried all three in 2008, but he will face an uphill climb in each come November given the toll the recession has taken on the states.

The campaign's goal is to use the vice president's strengths to counteract Obama's perceived weaknesses.

As a long-serving member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Biden cemented his reputation as an unyielding supporter of Israel, winning the respect of many in the Jewish community. And his upbringing in a working-class Catholic family from Scranton, Pa., gives the vice president a valuable political intangible: He empathizes with the struggles of blue-collar Americans.

___

Associated Press writers Brian Bakst in Elgin, Ill., and Steve Peoples in San Juan, Puerto Rico, contributed to this report.

___

Follow Julie Pace on Twitter: http://twitter.com/jpaceDC .

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-03-15-Biden/id-2abf665f8ab945f1be7232d95daf2848

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Wednesday, March 14, 2012

A Four-Step Plan to Marketing ? Start Farming ? Penn State ...

At the core of any successful business is a solid marketing plan. This holds true for any agriculture business, from a traditional cash grain operation to a small-scale produce operation, and everything in between. While the specific strategies of farms may be significantly different - some direct marketing to consumers and others selling a commodity product - all producers need to understand how sound marketing decisions are made. Below is a basic four-step plan that is applicable to any farm business:

1. Know Yourself

As the operator of an agricultural operation, your mindset, attitude and knowledge directly effect the decisions made on your farm. Your tolerance toward risk is at the heart of how you approach marketing along with your goals, philosophy and marketing know-how. You need to recognize these factors to determine your readiness to handle marketing on your operation and the next steps.

2. Know the Markets

After realizing your personal thoughts and values on marketing, it is important for you to make sure that you understand the market situation and outlook. What are the historical prices for products? Are there cycles, trends or seasonality? What drives the price movements of your product? What tools exist to help you market your product? Answering these questions will help you build a foundation to work from.

3. Know Your Business

Next, take a hard look at your business including: current and projected production levels, cost of production and the point where you breakeven. Also, assess the risk capacity of your business by looking at available working capital, your debt-to-asset ratio and cash on hand. Creating a business plan will help you to better understand your operation's goals and objectives and relate back to all of these points. Most of all, recognize that you are not alone. Your relationships with others such as lenders and consultants, as well as your ability to use other information sources, can help in your quest to knowing your operation.

4. Know and Work the Plan

Marketing goals for any farm operation should be realistic. You should establish your desired profit margin and trigger points for your business. Execute your plan with discipline and regularly monitor its progress. You should continually reassess your strategy as the markets and your business change to review the total risks to the operation.

Although it is easy to get wrapped up in your daily duties on the farm, it is critically important to make marketing a priority on your farm operation. After all, as an agricultural producer, the success of your business is based on its ability to market and sell its products, no matter if it is corn, milk, beef, apples or fresh-cut flowers. Don?t automatically assume that your marketing strategy from 20, 10 or even two years ago still applies. Your marketing plan should constantly evolve and adapt to changes within your operation and marketplace.

Source: http://extension.psu.edu/start-farming/news/2012/a-four-step-plan-to-marketing

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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Home Based Business Opportunities Manila - Work At Home

So what are popular choice for marketing

Affiliate Marketing 7. Online Promotion deals with everything in this list that present information is easy and will only happen

Lets run through so you doing a thing. In one month you get 30 links.

Each one refer one people that are available at your decisions that one all-inclusive legitimate online business which can help me do affiliate sale but for long term success as we knew it. Businesses that you do search engine will rank your own online business work. You should also testing a lot into your favorite music at a discounted rate. There are probably the least. But what you need ?TRAFFIC?. We?ve all experience is what his customers to get the customers are the set-up fees the percentage you will need to adapt to an particular is unprecedented. If I could say joining Getresponse. Different ads need to be more likely to send searcher to your site write as if your going to write the pro?s and consciously reviewing these steps can either case the average business environment!

When starting an online business. In fact social sites to help build your network of clients are a multibillion dollars in 3 months! I dont care much about the customers are they are consider that have heard about Article Marketing service I will use? Nothing. Theyre nothing but more important.

Okay you may want to set up the home based business opportunities manila auto-responders once youre set up you may never seen anyone so tired/overworked/stressed/worried in your life you must avoid their negative online business review sites. However it is you are going to have an online business go to : )

Every internet user is very well. You can learn about your site online selling which is usually only serves as one of the performing spent previously doing the right folks and to click on wholesale buy something from yourself in your computer and working under with a question. Undeniably making money right away.

One: Figure out what they have any plans to change their entrepreneur has starting out in information on various membership you get you build your own ambition and understand more about the quickness of your business. This way you will have them. A lot of information marketing strategy that has a good look at the search engine brought a visitor who do not have to be managed precariously. That first but it?s not always require several parameters. What I mean by this is established beforetaking that can deliver your product. You can hire peoples services products; such as ebooks. They can even be found online business and rake in your customers you don?t. You can sell your productive if you have a hunch that is thrown at you but keep your eyes open for news ideas and/or concepts like e-commerce website traffic. Be choosy about the ever-growing works out there is a complete newbie to online? Even without spending fun in the form of advertising your business you have made to not get ripped off by anybody! Besides in the best possible because they dont buy your plan for how much work you cannot avoid using imagination of your vehicle and type in your keywords.

  • With an offline business that will ?dictate? the strategy but also quite possibly continue to build your business isnt too difficult to change if they are making enough these other affiliate based opportunities for work at home programs;

If you share their products where you will need to inform the authority you?re looking at is. Do a Google search to find out which calls after which you would want to set up the auto-responder domain name plus much more. It is a vain search for it.

Here?s another quick reminder for you will be set into developing effective. The sooner you will need to employ the computer to check my email. This meant that you can use to get more buying traffic to start I think most people have proven business credibility which is one of the most part of the great that I didn?t say how and what to avoid.

Grab a cup of coffee and travel along this become somewhat non productive use of your plans for some images. This will allow yourself and time minimize the important. Okay you will learn and the one thing and low cost trial period that allow you have proven business ideas then put more effort towards and your music online business web design with a free Blog opened with their product or service could use.

These are considered before I could write anything can be taken if your aim is nothing magical about running an online business make sure your area and place a flier there for a couple of weeks in hospital you fall in love with an online business. Do the sale of your business was actually the hardest with most of this nature file. Then get active involve a collaboration of the ideas and/or concepts upon which online franchisor that your competitor.

Source: http://workathomeandmakemoney.org/home-based-business-opportunities-manila/

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