Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Craftmodo ? Crafts, DIY, Hobbies ? Green arts and crafts for the family

Are you looking for some new arts and crafts projects for you and your kids?

Why not use your next arts and crafts project to teach your children an important lesson about the environment and going green? Teaching your children green habits is important, and teaching them through arts and crafts is a great way to do it.

Green arts and crafts projects are fun for the whole family, and best of all they are inexpensive because many require recycling products that you use everyday! If you are looking for some fun and environmentally friendly arts and crafts projects for your family, look no further, and check out below to get some ideas!

Bird Feeder
Making a bird feeder out of recycled materials is a great way to show your children how to be green and reduce, reuse, and recycle. It?s very simple to make, and your children can decorate it however they?d like. It will look great in your backyard whether it?s day or night, and your solar spotlights can light it up at night.

All you need is a few simple materials that you probably already have in your house to make the bird feeder. First, take an old plastic bowl that you have laying around and sand down the outside of it. Then, take a hole punch and punch four holes near the top of the bowl so they essentially make a square, and hang yarn or string through the holes. Tie the string at the top, and you?ve got a bird feeder. Have your kids use biodegradable non-toxic paint to decorate the bird feeder, and hang it in your yard (filled with seed of course)!

Pencil Holder
Your kids will love making a recycled pencil holder that they can take to school to show off to all of their friends. Take some old, small milk cartons and wash and dry them. With scissors, cut off the top of the milk cartons so you have a tall, square box. Using wallpaper or construction paper, line the inside and outside by gluing the paper to the carton.

You can let your children pick out the colors of construction paper or wallpaper, and then color them however they?d like. It?s a great way to recycle milk cartons, and it?s a great activity for kids at a birthday party so they have souvenirs.

Leaf Prints
Another great idea for a green arts and crafts projects for you and your children to do is creating leaf prints. Have your kids go outside and collect a few of their favorite leaves, and then spread out some newspaper onto the table or floor. Take a single leaf and flip it to the side so its veins are raised. Then have your child paint the leaf, and press the painted side onto some white paper. Then, all you need to do is flatten the leaf and lift it off to reveal a beautiful print.

You can use the same leaf multiple times, or opt to make a collage with multiple leaves. You can use it as an educational opportunity to teach your children about the different kinds of plants and trees in your backyard!

Image credit: http://thehappyhousewife.com/

Source: http://www.craftmodo.com/2013/03/12/green-arts-and-crafts-for-the-family/

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Drugmakers, Interpol ramp up fight against fakes

More than two dozen of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies have agreed to provide funding and other support to Interpol's battle against counterfeit prescription drugs, the international police agency said Tuesday.

Interpol's newly created Pharmaceutical Crime Program aims to help health agencies, police and customs bureaus in countries around the globe stem the supply of bogus brand-name and generic medicines, as well as identify and dismantle the organized crime rings distributing them.

Those rings, which operate across borders, are raking in billions of dollars every year, costing legitimate drugmakers a small fortune in lost sales. Meanwhile patients who unknowingly take counterfeit drugs often are poisoned or get sicker because they're not receiving what the doctor prescribed. Experts estimate hundreds of thousands of people around the world die because of counterfeit medicines each year.

The pharmaceutical companies have pledged a total of ?4.5 million, or nearly $5.9 million, over three years to help Interpol with efforts including training local law enforcement officials on investigative procedures, evidence handling and how to better work with partners outside their countries.

Interpol also will help those authorities build up their infrastructure and target enforcement actions against crime rings that make and sell fake drugs, and also divert medication illegally to countries where it's not approved.

"We will develop a program according to what is best for the international community and what will save lives," Aline Plancon, head of Interpol's counterfeiting and pharmaceutical crime program, told The Associated Press in an exclusive interview.

"It's been difficult for us as Interpol to sustain our activities" against counterfeiting over the years, she said, because the agency's limited resources also are needed for areas the international community sees as more serious crimes. Those include human trafficking, narcotics dealing, terrorism and money laundering.

Besides the financial support, the pharmaceutical companies, most of which spend millions on their own investigations to fight counterfeiting of their medicines, will step up sharing with Interpol the intelligence they uncover.

Plancon said her agency, based in Lyon, France, plans to better coordinate its work and collaborate with its member countries. Interpol also will run pilot projects, experimenting with new strategies to find ways to be more effective.

The industry support "forms a bridge between the public and private sectors and will assist Interpol and each of its 190 member countries to more effectively tackle the problem of medical product counterfeiting," Interpol Secretary General Ronald K. Noble said in a statement.

The World Health Organization estimates sales of medicines that are counterfeit, contaminated or otherwise illegal total $430 billion a year.

In developing countries, up to 50 percent of the drug supply may be fake. That's many times more than in developed countries, where most potentially dangerous fake drugs are sold through rogue Internet pharmacies, but counterfeit drugs increasingly are getting into the supply of pharmacies and hospitals.

In the U.S., for example, three times in the last year counterfeit versions of the Roche Group cancer drug Avastin have infiltrated the wholesale supply and been sold to cancer clinics and hospitals. An unknown amount of those fakes was administered to patients. And in Pakistan last year, 109 heart patients died after taking counterfeit medicine.

The 29 companies supporting the effort include Amgen Inc., AstraZeneca PLC, Eisai Co., GlaxoSmithKline PLC, Johnson & Johnson, Eli Lilly and Co., Merck & Co., Novartis,AG, Pfizer Inc., Roche Group and Sanofi SA.

John Lechleiter, chairman of the trade group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America and CEO of Lilly, said Monday that the new program will supplement Interpol's existing efforts.

"Counterfeiting activity is evolving so rapidly" and becoming more common, he said.

As a result, one thrust of the program will be to try to more quickly spot new trends in which drugs are being counterfeited, where the crime rings are based and where they are distributing fake medicines, Lechleiter said.

"This is really meant to cement some of these efforts together," he said. "After the initial (three-year) period, depending on the results, we can certainly extend that out."

___

Linda A. Johnson can be followed at http://twitter.com/LindaJ_onPharma.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-12-US-Interpol-Counterfeit-Drugs/id-112a58e85da747968202396ba859542c

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20 ways grandparents can model a healthy relationship - Grandma's ...

My husband and I celebrated our thirty-second First Kiss Anniversary on Sunday. Yes, thirty-two years ago, PawDad and I smooched for the very first time, sealing forever our fate as parents, grandparents and more.

We've always marked the day in a small but special way. This year it was simply skipping church to go out to breakfast together.

In light of our celebration, I considered that one of the best things grandparents can do for grandchildren ? and parents can do for their children, regardless of the child's age ? is to model a positive personal relationship with their partners.

How can grandmothers do that, though, when time with grandkids is typically focused on the kids?

Here are 20 ways you can do both ? be a fun and interesting grandma to the kids while nurturing your relationship with their grandpa. At the same time. Together.

grandparents1. Make breakfast together ? Grandma, Grandpa and the grandkids.

2. Play an outdoor game that requires teams ? Grandma and Grandpa on one team, grandkids on another.

3. Play a board game using the same team approach.

4. Take a family bike ride.

5. Spread a blanket in the yard for some night-time stargazing as a family.

6. Wear matching No. 1 Grandpa and No. 1 Grandma T-shirts on the same day. (Okay, I must admit that this one might make me ? and Jim ... and our adult kids ? gag. But some grandparents do get into this. Which is cute.)

7. Hold hands while taking a walk around the block ? or through the mall ? with the grandkids.

8. Play Wii games together.

grandsons9. Go ice skating.

10. Or roller skating.

11. Have a dance party in the living room, playing songs you enjoyed when first dating. Don't hold back on showing the kids your best dance moves.

12. Create a video together to email or text to long-distance grandchildren.

13. Roast marshmallows by the outdoor fire pit or indoor fireplace.

14. Perform a musical number for the kids, playing instruments, singing or both. Kids love performing for Grandma and Grandpa; this gives them a turn at being in the audience.

15. Take a break from pushing swings and such at the park to hang out together on a blanket while the kids play.

grandparenting16. Share photo albums from the early years.

17. Better yet, share your wedding album.

18. And if it's your thing, take the kids to church with you?and sit by Grandpa.

19. Have a movie night featuring Grandma and Grandpa?s favorite movie ? and your favorite movie snacks.

20. Create a fort for the grandkids then surprise them when they arrive.

Today's question:

What memories do you have of your grandparents expressing love for each other?

Source: http://www.grandmasbriefs.com/home/2013/3/12/20-ways-grandparents-can-model-a-healthy-relationship.html

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Lunar impacts created seas of molten rock

Mar. 11, 2013 ? A new analysis of data from NASA's Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter (LOLA) shows that molten rock may have been present on the Moon more recently and for longer periods than previously thought. Differentiation -- a settling out of rock layers as liquid rock cools -- would require thousands of years and a fluid rock sea at least six miles deep.

Early in the Moon's history an ocean of molten rock covered its entire surface. As that lunar magma ocean cooled over millions of years, it differentiated to form the Moon's crust and mantle. But according to a new analysis by planetary scientists from Brown University, this wasn't the last time the Moon's surface was melted on a massive scale.

The research, led by graduate student William Vaughan, shows that the impact event that formed the Orientale basin on the Moon's western edge and far side produced a sea of melted rock 220 miles across and at least six miles deep. Similar seas of impact melt were probably present at various times in at least 30 other large impact basins on the Moon.

The research is published in the April issue of the journal Icarus.

Vaughan and his colleagues show that as these melt seas cooled, they differentiated in a way that was similar to the lunar magma ocean. As a result, rocks formed in melt seas could be mistaken for "pristine" rocks formed very early in the Moon's history, the researchers say.

"This work adds the concept of impact melt magma seas to the lexicon of lunar rock-forming processes," said planetary geologist James W. Head III, the Scherck Distinguished Professor of Geological Sciences and the senior researcher involved in the study. "It emphasizes that one must consider the detailed point of origin of the rocks in order to interpret them correctly."

That includes rocks brought back during the Apollo program and Russia's Luna missions. It's quite possible, the researchers say, that impact melt material is present in lunar samples thought to be representative of the early formation of the lunar crust. The amount of rock formed in melt seas is far from trivial. Vaughan and his colleagues estimate that impacts forming the Moon's 30 large basins produced 100 million cubic kilometers of melt, enough to make up 5 percent of the Moon's crust.

If lunar samples do include melt material, it would help to explain some puzzling findings from lunar samples. For example, in 2011 an analysis of a sample assumed to have originated in the early lunar crust suggested that the sample was 200 million years younger than the estimated time when the lunar magma ocean solidified. That led some researchers to conclude either that the Moon is younger than previously estimated or that the lunar magma ocean theory was flawed. But if that sample actually originated from a melt sea, its young age could be explained without rewriting the history of the Moon.

The melt sea at Orientale

The Orientale basin is only partly visible from Earth on the western edge of the Moon's near side. Because it's one of the few basins on the Moon that hasn't filled in with volcanic basalt, it provides a great place to investigate the geology of melt seas and to test whether they differentiate as they cool.

For the Orientale melt sea to have differentiated, it must have been liquid for a long time -- thousands of years. To be liquid that long, it must have been quite thick. That left the researchers with a question that wasn't easy to answer: How thick was the Orientale melt?

"In pictures, you're just seeing the top of an impact melt body, so we have to find a way to infer how thick it was," Vaughan said.

To do that, Vaughan and his colleagues took advantage of the fact that a liquid shrinks when it cools and solidifies. Data from the Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter (LOLA) showed that the sheet had subsided by about two kilometers from the surrounding rock, giving the researchers an idea of how much the sea shrank. With that data, they could calculate its volume and infer its depth.

According to the calculations, the Orientale melt sea must have been at least 10 kilometers thick. Far shallower melt sheets from impacts on Earth are known to have differentiated, so it's a safe bet that Orientale was thick enough to differentiate.

The next question was what that differentiation might look like. Based on the compositions of the lunar crust and mantle material melted, Vaughan could determine the composition of the impact melt sea. From there, he could make a model of what rocks would have formed as the melt sea cooled. According to the model, thick layers of rocks like dunite and pyroxenite form at the base of the melt sea from dense, early crystallizing minerals that sink through the melt. Other minerals float up through the melt to form layers of rocks such as norite at the top of the melt sea -- very similar to differentiation processes in the lunar magma ocean.

Vaughan's model is supported by remote sensing data from the Maunder crater, the remnant of an impact that excavated material from the melt sheet after it cooled. The data confirm a noritic composition at least four kilometers deep in the melt sheet.

Taken together, the findings suggest that impact melt seas produce rock in a way that's very similar to the lunar magma ocean. And that could help to clear up some lingering questions about the magma ocean paradigm.

"This is a mechanism by which the Moon was later modified to add petrologic complexity," Vaughan said. "It helps make sense of mineralogical data that doesn't always fit in this lunar magma ocean idea."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Brown University.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. William M. Vaughan, James W. Head, Lionel Wilson, Paul C. Hess. Geology and petrology of enormous volumes of impact melt on the Moon: A case study of the Orientale basin impact melt sea. Icarus, 2013; 223 (2): 749 DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2013.01.017

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/3YZ_LnhkiMc/130311151257.htm

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Matthew Watkins ? Inspired by Math #25 ? Wild About Math!

This podcast is quite different from the previous twenty four. Matthew Watkins and I dive into the sense of wonder and awe that is underneath the mundane experience of math that so many people never get below the surface of. The conversation is deep and a bit mystical at times but I completely agree with Matthew when he claims that the relationship of mathematicians and artists to their subject may not be as different as we imagine.

I absolutely loved Volume 1 of the "Secrets of Creation" trilogy, "The Mystery of the Prime Numbers." I bragged about how it was a remarkable fairy tale for children of all ages in my review here. I've not read volumes 2 and 3 (out soon) but I look forward to devouring them as well.

You might enjoy this email interview that Shecky Riemann did with Matthew Watkins.

Enjoy the podcast!

About Matthew Watkins

From the Secrets of Creation web-site:

Matthew Watkins completed a PhD in mathematics in 1994, but has always been more interested in trying to understand what mathematics "is" and "where it comes from" (as well as trying to explain it to his non-mathematical friends) than pursuing a conventional research or teaching career.

The second half of the 1990s were spent living as a nomadic musician (he plays the saz, a seven-stringed Turkish instrument), contemplating the underlying nature of reality while wandering the British Isles, busking, picking fruit, planting trees, visiting megalithic sites, etc. The music continues, documented here.

In 1999 he had a little maths and physics reference book published (also illustrated by Matt Tweed) as part of the popular Wooden Books series. This has since been licensed by Walker & Co., NYC and last time he checked, it had been translated into at least half a dozen languages.

Since 2000, he's been an Honorary Fellow in Exeter University's mathematics department (which keeps changing its name, but is currently part of the College of Engineering, Mathematics and Physical Sciences). During this time, as well as having done a bit of teaching work, he initiated and has been since been curating the online Number Theory and Physics Archive and the related (but more popularly accessible) site Inexplicable Secrets of Creation, a project which naturally led to the idea of this series of books.

More information is available at Matthew Watkins' homepage.

About the Secrets of Creation

From the trilogy site:

Volume 1, The Mystery of the Prime Numbers (published June 2010) begins by looking at the role of numbers in human cultures, particularly the extent to which they have come to dominate modern Western thinking. If this "number system" is so central to our view of reality, the author suggests, and so many of us give it so little thought, maybe we should have a closer look at it. Prime numbers are then introduced, along with the question everyone seems to ask: "is there a pattern in them?". The issue of what constitutes a pattern is then considered, before the puzzling "splatter" of primes along the number line is explained in terms of the uncoiling of a particularly beautiful spiral. The extent to which the actual arrangement of primes deviates from this "approximate" pattern is examined next, and this "deviation" is revealed to be concealing an infinite collection of wave-like forms. These "waveforms" are carefully explained, again in terms of spirals. In fact, in the absence of a better name (these objects only being of interest to a relatively small band of mathematicians, who communicate in equations), the author has chosen to call them spiral waves. Like a conventional wave (a "sine wave"), they have something like a "frequency". The frequencies of the first handful of spiral waves are presented: a mysterious string of awkward-looking numbers, raising the mind-boggling question where could these particular numbers, lurking within the structure of reality and entirely unknown for almost all of history, possibly have come from?

Information about volumes 2 and 3 can be found at the trilogy site.

Source: http://wildaboutmath.com/2013/03/10/matthew-watkins-inspired-by-math-25/

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Sunday, March 10, 2013

Four-time champ Buser leads Iditarod

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - Four-time champion Martin Buser was leading the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race on Saturday, but his potentially record-breaking pace was slowed by high winds, blowing snow and a soft trail, race officials said.

The Swiss-born Buser reached Kaltag, an Athabascan Indian village that is the last checkpoint on the Yukon River, at 2:24 p.m. Alaska time.

The 1,000-mile endurance race, which has grown from a little-known contest into a sporting extravaganza, began in Anchorage a week ago and the winner is expected to cross the finish line in the Bering Sea town of Nome on Tuesday.

Behind Buser were 2012 runner-up Aliy Zirkle, 2004 champion Mitch Seavey and 13 other mushers who were on their way to Kaltag. The village of 186 people 346 miles from the finish line in Nome, is the last checkpoint before the Bering Sea coast.

Official standings had Zirkle in second place, about three hours behind Buser at the previous checkpoint, with Seavey a close third.

But Sebastian Schnuelle, an Iditarod veteran writing a blog for the race organizers, reported the race has become closer than the standings indicate. He reported that both Zirkle and Seavey were catching up to Buser, and that all three were expected to leave Kaltag at the same time Saturday evening.

This year's Iditarod has been characterized by higher-than-normal temperatures, overflow from melting streams and creeks and, in some places, a hard-packed and fast trail.

Sixty-six mushers started the race this year. Four have since dropped out. Among them is Newton Marshall of Jamaica, who is searching for a dog that went missing from his team.

The Iditarod race commemorates a 1925 rescue mission that carried diphtheria serum to Nome by sled-dog relay. The race's name derives from a local Athabascan term meaning "a far, distant place," according to race officials.

The winner will take home $50,400 and a new truck, part of a total $600,000 race purse. Winners usually reach Nome after about nine days of mushing.

(Editing by Tim Gaynor and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/four-time-iditarod-champ-buser-leads-alaskan-dog-014131379--spt.html

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Avalanche End Blackhawks' Point Streak: Colorado Beats Chicago 6-2

DENVER ? The best start in NHL history is over. The Chicago Blackhawks finally left the ice without a point.

The Blackhawks were stunned 6-2 by the struggling Colorado Avalanche on Friday night. It was their first loss in regulation and ended a remarkable run in which they earned at least one point in their first 24 games, an NHL record.

Matt Duchene scored four points and Ryan O'Reilly got his first goal since his contract dispute was resolved more than a week ago. O'Reilly assisted on another goal in a four-goal onslaught in the second period that turned a 1-1 tie into a laugher.

The Blackhawks (21-1-3) hadn't lost in regulation since a 6-1 rout by Nashville on March 25, 2012, and their last loss in regulation on the road came more than a year ago, with a 5-1 defeat at St. Louis on March 6, 2012.

Dating back to last year's regular season, the streak was 30 games.

Chicago's overall points streak was the second longest in NHL history. The 1979-80 Philadelphia Flyers set the league record with a staggering 35-game unbeaten streak that included 25 wins and 10 ties ? all in the same season.

Duchene, John Mitchell and Jamie McGinn also put pucks past Corey Crawford in the second period for the Avalanche, who had lost six of their previous seven, including a 3-2 heartbreaker at Chicago 48 hours earlier.

Crawford (11-1-3) allowed five goals on 19 shots before being replaced in net by Ray Emery to start the third period.

Semyon Varlamov had 30 saves for Colorado.

The Avalanche nearly ended the spectacular streak in Chicago on Wednesday night before the Blackhawks pulled out the win when Daniel Carcillo scored the tiebreaking goal with 49.3 seconds left. Chicago was skating without three key forwards and playing its second game in two nights then.

There was no such comeback Friday night at the Pepsi Center, where a good portion of the sellout crowd was rooting for the Blackhawks, who hadn't allowed more than four goals in a game this season.

The crowd chanted, "End of streak! End of streak!" over the final minutes.

Bryan Bickell's goal with 11:07 left made it 5-2. He nearly scored again from the same spot 90 seconds later, but Varlamov smothered the shot.

The teams got into a scuffle with 5:04 left after Bickell squared off with Gabriel Landeskog, who had checked Duncan Keith in the back.

P.A. Parenteau's 10th goal of the season made it 6-2.

Chicago's Jonathan Toews got the scoring started when he knocked the puck past Varlamov after a turnover on a give-and-go with forward Marian Hossa, who returned from an upper-body injury.

Colorado (9-10-4) tied it when Paul Stastny, who was between the circles, tipped a pass from Duchene into the net. It was a rare power play goal for the Avalanche, who came into the game ranked 29th in the league with just 82 shots when skating with a man advantage.

Duchene's goal between Crawford's legs made it 2-1. Just 33 seconds later, Mitchell scored on an assist from O'Reilly, who was signed to a two-year $10 million deal last week after the Avalanche matched Calgary's offer sheet following a nasty contract dispute.

O'Reilly's goal came on a slap shot from the top of the right circle 4 seconds into another power play. Duchene set him up with a pass after Stastny won the faceoff.

Duchene got his third assist when he dug out a loose puck from the boards in a scramble with Keith and kicked it out to McGinn, who put made it 5-1.

The Blackhawks' run comes with somewhat of an asterisk because they actually lost three games along the way ? all in shootouts. Under NHL rules, that's still worth a point, but that makes it different from what the Flyers accomplished nearly a quarter-century ago.

During that streak, Philadelphia won 25 games and tied 10. There was no overtime until the playoffs, and the shootout was still a far-off creation. If the teams were tied after 60 minutes, that's how it ended. Each got a point.

Nowadays, both teams still receive a point if the game is tied at the end of regulation. Then, the team that scores in a five-minute, four-skaters-a-side overtime period or wins the shootout gets an extra point.

NOTES: Avalanche defenseman Erik Johnson returned to the lineup after missing 11 games with a head injury. ... Chicago RW Michael Frolik returned from an illness that sidelined him for two games. ... The Blackhawks were without forward Patrick Sharp, who left Wednesday's home win over the Avalanche with a shoulder injury after being checked along the boards by Colorado's Ryan O'Byrne. ... The Avalanche matched their season high for goals.

___

Follow Arnie Melendrez Stapleton on Twitter: http://twitter.com/arniestapleton

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/08/avalanche-end-blackhawks-point-streak-over_n_2841683.html

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travel & leisure: Why Limo Hire Sydney Is The Best For Your Occasion

By Adam Fairchild

Hiring a vehicle for your occasion is perhaps the best option for you because you are able to escape the main difficulties of maintaining them and also get the best. Most people want their occasions to be the best and unforgettable at all points from preparations to the final day. These are some of the reasons you will never go wrong with car hire in Sydney.

It is easy and enjoyable

The services are designed to ensure you get the highest value for you money and time. The vehicles are therefore maintained in the best conditions so that they do not fail you. All you need to do is book on time and you will have the best vehicle waiting for you. You can also check the type of vehicle that you want to use to increase your enjoyment when travelling around the city.

If you want to catch a fight in Sydney, the transport services will make sure you are never late. The driver will be at your doorstep ready to transport you to your waiting flight. Whether you are transiting with your family or with friends, you do not have to worry about the traffic in the city or the town geography, just hire the transport services and make the entire travel unforgettable.

Depending with the theme of your occasion, you will have a large selection of vehicles to match it. For example, if it is a wedding you could go for a stretched limo decorated with special ribbons. They also offer airport transfer Sydney services for tourists and guests.

Be reminded that finding of limo hire Sydney companies must do appropriate research and know if it is legal. You must also know the insurance coverage of the company. You must know that airport transfer Sydney and airport transport Sydney is also available. There is such case that some vehicles don't have any insurance coverage, in this case, you have to pay for all the damage if incident occurs.

The need to give you exemplary experience has led to the adoption of special staff by Limo Hire Sydney. The and other staff drivers are highly qualified and experienced to give you the most spectacular moments you are yearning for. You will never forget the moment you were in the hire company vehicles. Remember that whether it is wedding, birthday or even a special friends gathering, the employees are trained to deliver the highest possible value for you. The interiors are carefully designed to make you feel like a king or a queen during the time you spend in the vehicle. They are very courteous and will always attend to you with utmost courtesy. When you think of making the event the best, think Limo Hire Sydney.



About the Author:


limo hire sydney arranges all the movements that you need when travelling to make them faster and easy.airport transport sydney organizes for your travel from your town, through the airport and the town of destination.

Source: http://bidding-travel.blogspot.com/2013/03/why-limo-hire-sydney-is-best-for-your.html

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Saturday, March 9, 2013

Lenovo S920 and S820 leak, could pack Android 4.2.1, quad-core CPUs and dual-SIM slots

Lenovo's S920 and S820 leak out in blurrycam shots, could pack Android Jelly Bean, quadcore CPUs and dualSIM slots

Lenovo's still far from a boldfaced name when it comes to Android smartphones. Its Clover Trail+-packing K900 aside, the company's mobile focus tends to skew towards the lower-end. And so it seems the company's prepping two new Jelly Bean handsets for the Asian market, the purported S920 and S820, judging by a few leaked blurrycam shots over on MyDrivers.com. From what we can see, the devices appear to share a similar slim, rounded edge design language with a rear-facing camera protruding prominently on back. According to the rumored specs, both are tipped to rely on MediaTek's quad-core Cortex-A7 SoC, include dual-SIM support and run Android 4.2.1 (skinned, of course). It's not clear what resolution Lenovo has in store for the phones, but if the S920's 5.3-inch screen size proves true, it's likely to be of the 720p variety. The S820 is more of an unknown, but the Chinese site maintains it's meant for a more fashionable, female demo. Here's to hoping it launches with a charm dongle. Remember that?

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Via: Android4fans

Source: MyDrivers.com (Translated)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/08/lenovo-s920-s820-leak/

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This accessory for iOS devices tests your alcohol level

I’ve seen little devices like this before, but this one apparently has a Lightning connector to work with the newest generation of iOS devices. ?The Alcohol Tester for iPhone 5, 5th-gen iPod touch, iPad 4, and the iPad mini needs no apps to work; you just plug it in to the Apple device and it’s [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/03/09/this-accessory-for-ios-devices-tests-your-alcohol-level/

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Some biologists shun new media

Mar. 8, 2013 ? Although biologists think that "new media" such as blogs and online social networks have an important influence on public opinion and political decisions, they aren't much inclined to use them themselves to stay informed about developments in science. Rather, they prefer traditional outlets such as newspapers and television. That seems, at least, to be the implication of a study published in the April issue of BioScience.

The study, by Joachim Allgaier of the J?lich Research Center in Germany and four coauthors, examined the opinions of 257 neuroscientists working in Germany and the United States who completed an online survey. Although German scientists had a slightly lower opinion of the influence of new media than US scientists, most researchers in both countries thought new media were important even though they made "lackluster" personal use of them. Scientists under 40 made slightly more use of them than older scientists.

The findings could be misleading if those who replied are not typical of neuroscientists, and it is possible that neuroscientists' attitudes are different from those of other biologists. Still, the study is a significant addition to what is known about scientists' communication habits. It suggests, the authors write, that scientists "continue to value the vetting process to which information is subject in media channels."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Institute of Biological Sciences, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Allgaier, J., Dunwoody, S., Brossard, D., Lo, Y., & Peters, H.P. Supplementing but not supplanting: Journalism and social media as means of neuroscientists? observation of contexts of science. Biosciences, 2013

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/Lm2-cpsPApw/130308183834.htm

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Jack Reece helps a Noah's Ark of animals in India

From elephants to buffaloes, dogs to donkeys, Help in Suffering (HIS), a nonprofit animal welfare group in Jaipur, India, treats animals large and small at low or no cost.

By Amy Yee,?Contributor / March 8, 2013

Treating sick animals in India often requires ingenuity. But Mustana the elephant was an especially memorable patient for Jack Reece, a veterinarian in the northern city of Jaipur.

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It was 1999, and he and his colleagues at Help in Suffering (HIS), a nonprofit animal welfare group, were treating the elephant's wounds. It had painful sores from an ill-fitting saddle.

Mr. Reece hails from England, where elephants live in zoos, not in the midst of chaotic cities. But even his Indian colleagues gingerly approached the massive animal, who stood 9 feet, 6 inches at the shoulder.

General anesthesia wasn't practical, so they brought in 45 pounds of carrots to distract the pachyderm. As a vet stitched its wound, the elephant bellowed so loudly Reece could feel the vibrations in his chest.

"No patient before or since has made such a big noise," he says in a voice filled with both awe and laughter.

HIS treats the animals of poor clients, work animals or pets, for free or for a nominal charge; better-off pet owners pay market rates. The nonprofit's most notable achievement has been sterilizing and vaccinating more than 50,000 dogs since 1994. As a result, it has virtually wiped out rabies in this city of 3 million, likely the only big Indian city to do so.

Reece has guided the sterilization program since 1998. Back then he had planned to take a six-month break from his work as a veterinarian in England to volunteer in India. Fifteen years later he is still in Jaipur.

"His contribution to the animal birth-control program has been amazing,'' says Christine Townend, a former chair and trustee of HIS. "Without him, I don't know if it would have been so successful."

At the leafy, two-acre HIS compound on the outskirts of Jaipur, street dogs in kennels howl and bark. Orphaned monkeys romp and shriek in a large enclosure. In cages, kittens meow loudly, a wounded peacock struts, and pigeons with damaged wings coo.

In an area for donkeys, horses, buffaloes, and cattle, Reece, a rangy man with gray hair, points out a cow that has had 90 pounds of plastic bags ? not to mention 106 nails and a few batteries ? removed from its gut. (In India, cows wander the streets and eat garbage, including plastic bags that clog their innards and cause them to starve.)

Animals and people live cheek by jowl in India's huge cities. Dogs, cows, and monkeys are ubiquitous; camels, horses, and donkeys plod along busy highways pulling loads. Elephants carry tourists or work at parties as enormous door props.

Urban animal owners are usually poor, having little money to spend on veterinary care for their charges. HIS sees a stream of charity patients day and night.

HIS was founded in 1980 by Crystal "Mishy" Rogers, an Englishwoman who was making a stopover in India on her way to New Zealand. While in India she saw a sick horse being eaten alive by crows. The sight prompted her to cancel her trip and stay in India to promote animal welfare.

Since then, HIS has done pioneering work to improve working conditions for Jaipur's elephants. That has included devising reflectors for the elephants to make them more visible to motorists. HIS also holds free clinics for camels at India's annual Pushkar Camel Fair, and provides daily treatment to a Noah's ark of other furry and feathered creatures. It is supported by foreign and Indian donors and has a staff of 39.

Improving the lives of animals in India has made a profound impact on humans, too. With as many as 25 million street dogs, India has the world's highest human death toll for rabies, about 20,000 Indians every year. When cities are overrun with strays, or a mauling occurs, dogs are often killed by poisoning or beating. In Pushkar, about three hours from Jaipur, population control until recently meant tying dogs down in the desert sun to die.

Reducing the street dog population through sterilization and vaccination against rabies curbs the need for such brutality, and has kept the disease from spreading to people. HIS now has the challenge of finding still unsterilized street dogs in Jaipur; 87 percent of female dogs have been spayed and 80 percent of all street dogs have been vaccinated against rabies.

In 1998 a man walked six miles to HIS, desperately seeking help for the camel he had just bought with onerous loans. Camel owners eke out a meager living hauling bricks or other loads here in the desert state of Rajasthan. The camel had collapsed and couldn't even stand.

Reece had never treated a camel before but took on the task; the animal recovered.

"The man was extraordinarily poor. If his camel had died, he would have been ruined and would have lived the rest of his life with enormous debt," Reece explains. "Almost no one in [Britain] relies on an individual animal to keep them from destitution, whereas this man clearly did. It sounds pompous but you can make a difference here in a way you can't at home."

In 1998 Reece was working in rural Devon in the south of England when he saw an advertisement from HIS seeking volunteers. "I never intended to come to India," he says over a simple lunch of rice, lentils, and vegetables. He thought he would "hate India," both the food and people. Instead, he fell in love with it.

Reece lives on HIS's cacophonous grounds in a simple room with no heat during the chilly winters and no air conditioning in searing summers. He is still a volunteer, though he receives a small stipend, as well as room and board.

Why hasn't Reece returned to Britain? His face lights up. It's "just such fun here," he says. "We [do] things as a team, whereas much vet work [in Britain] is done on your own."

Much of the sterilization program's success has come from better record-keeping and data tracking, which Reece spearheaded. After scrupulously collecting data ? no easy feat in India ? he and his colleagues have published scientific papers about animal population control, rabies, and public health in peer-reviewed journals.

"While Help in Suffering and countless animals have benefited from Jack's direct work with them over the years, the international animal welfare and veterinary community have substantially gained as well," writes Kelly O'Meara, director at the US-based Humane Society International, which helped fund the sterilization program at HIS.

Jaipur is a long way from Horsham, the small town in Sussex, England, where Reece grew up. He graduated from the University of York and trained as a veterinarian at the University of Liverpool. By 1994 he was working in Devon, mostly tending to dairy cattle, as well as sheep, horses, and house pets.

After settling in Jaipur, Reece was moved by the warmth of the HIS staff, especially the technicians, who mostly belong to the Dalit, or "untouchable" caste, and were uneducated.

"You come here, and there are people who have no education, no money, and almost no possessions," Reece says. "Yet they sweep you up and engulf you in friendship. They are extraordinarily generous with whatever they can be generous with. I think it's extraordinary."

Reece has trained the technicians so that they are able to assist with surgeries and give basic treatments. He has learned to read and write Hindi, and he has encouraged them to do the same; now many are literate in that language. Some also have learned English from him and other Western volunteers and speak, read, and write English.

Mukesh Kumar Sangat has worked at HIS since 1999 and today is a highly skilled dog catcher and veterinary assistant. While working at HIS he has become literate in Hindi and even passed his eighth-grade exams last year. Reece is "so nice man. Really good teacher," Mr. Sangat says. "Just ask, 'How do I do that thing?' And then he teach."

Timmie Kumar, managing trustee of HIS, points out that the organization is larger than any one individual, and that many people have made enormous contributions over the years.

Yet in the next breath she adds, "Jack is worth his weight in all the precious metals."

? For more on HIS, visit http://www.his-india.in.

Ways to help

UniversalGiving helps people give to and volunteer for top-performing charitable organizations worldwide. Projects are vetted by Universal Giving; 100 percent of each donation goes directly to the listed cause.

Here are groups selected by Universal Giving that help pets and wildlife; one offers an opportunity to volunteer in Jaipur, India:

? The GVN Foundation supports the charitable and educational work of local community organizations in many countries. Project: Volunteer to help wild animals in Thailand.

? The San Francisco SPCA provides veterinary care for homeless animals and places them in homes with loving adopters. Project: Provide urgent care for a homeless animal.

? Greenheart Travel promotes cultural understanding, environmental consciousness, and world peace. Project: Volunteer in Jaipur, India.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/qT_mqXqD8Qc/Jack-Reece-helps-a-Noah-s-Ark-of-animals-in-India

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ASUS Transformer AiO launching Q2 for $1,299 and up, marries Windows 8 desktop with monster Android tablet

ASUS Transformer AiO launching Q2 for $1,299 and up, marries Windows 8 desktop with monster Android tablet

We were beginning to think the ASUS Transformer AiO was just a figment of a summer daydream after hearing nothing of it since our chance look many months ago. As it turns out, we were right about the furtive FCC filing last December, and with all that paperwork in order, we've now been granted a formal introduction. The Transformer AiO (all-in-one) is very true to its name, as like the Autobots, it has two completely different configurations. In desktop mode, you're looking at a Windows 8 machine running on a Core i3 / i5 / i7, with a 2GB NVIDIA GeForce GT730M GPU, between 4 and 8GB of RAM, and up to a 2TB SATA HDD. It also has a DVD-RW optical drive (can you believe it?), a card reader, a bunch of ports and even a TV Tuner should you want one. Being a Windows 8 rig, it's not surprising that the 18.4-inch, 1,920 x 1,080 IPS display has ten-point multitouch, but it gets even more interesting when you free that screen from its desktop restraints.

Popping it from the dock means you're now looking at a monster tablet with its own internal specs: a quad-core Tegra 3, 2 gigs of RAM and 32GB of flash storage. If you're in the mood to continue peering at Redmond's squares, it'll work as a remote terminal for the "PC Station." But, if you've got a sweet tooth, you can switch the slate to Android mode and knock around in 4.1 Jelly Bean. The Transformer AiO (P1801) is expected to be available in North America early second quarter at $1,299 for the basic model, which doesn't sound all that extortionate given the versatility of the desktop-come-tablet. Head to the source link for the full spec sheet, or check out the video below if you'd like a visual tour.

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Oakland: Crime takes bite out of Mayor Jean Quan's polling numbers

Click photo to enlarge

Oakland Mayor Jean Quan makes a point during her State of the City address, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013 at City Hall in Oakland, Calif. (D. Ross Cameron/Staff)

OAKLAND -- Oakland's crime epidemic has helped render Mayor Jean Quan by far the least popular big city mayor in the Bay Area.

Polling data released this week by KPIX found that only 23 percent of Oakland residents approved of Quan's job performance. Sixty percent disapproved.

By contrast San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed's job approval rating stood at 55 percent and San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee's was at 61 percent.

The polling was conducted by SurveyUSA from Feb. 28 through March 3 with 500 adults queried in each city. The margins of error in the three cities ranged from 4.3 to 4.5 percentage points.

In a prepared statement, Quan said current crime rates are "totally unacceptable" and reiterated recent steps to fight crime, including the recent hiring of famed police Chief William Bratton as a consultant. The mayor said she otherwise generally refrains from commenting on poll numbers in part because "any poll can be skewed by different methodologies."

Major crime in Oakland has risen sharply in both of Quan's two years as mayor. Burglaries surged by 43 percent last year and robberies jumped by 24 percent.

Seventy-one percent of Oakland residents listed crime as the city's top problem, compared to 34 percent in San Jose and 13 percent in San Francisco.

The poll also found that 65 percent of Oakland residents thought the city was on the wrong track and only 11 percent said that quality of life in the city was improving. In San

Jose, 54 percent of residents said their city was on the right track.

For Quan, the polling results wasn't as bad as the 78 percent negative rating she had shortly after the Occupy Oakland fiasco in late 2011. But it does show an overall deterioration of support since last spring when a poll conducted by Oakland-based political consultant Larry Tramutola found that 41 percent of voters viewed the mayor favorably and 51 percent viewed her unfavorably.

"I don't know if it's that she's not well liked or it's just overall frustration," Tramutola said of the mayor's poor polling figures.

If there's a bright side for Quan, it's that Oakland has few big name political figures, and no prominent public figure has stepped forward to challenge her in 2014. Councilwoman Rebecca Kaplan, who has won two citywide elections, said last year that she won't challenge Quan for mayor.

"I don't think she is really vulnerable," Tramutola said. "Vulnerability is going to come from someone credible being willing to step up and do it, and I don't see anybody like that."

Contact Matthew Artz at 510-208-6435.

Source: http://www.insidebayarea.com/breaking-news/ci_22724671/oakland-crime-takes-bite-out-mayor-jean-quans?source=rss_viewed

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Study: No quick savings from workplace wellness

The Barnes-Jewish Hospital is seen in St. Louis, Monday, March 4, 2013. Your bosses want you to eat your broccoli, hit the treadmill and pledge you?ll never puff on a cigarette. But a new study raises doubts that workplace wellness programs save the company money. In what?s being called the most rigorous look yet inside the wellness trend, independent researchers tracked the program at a major St. Louis hospital system for two years. Employee hospitalizations dropped dramatically, by 41 percent overall for six targeted conditions. But increased outpatient costs erased those savings. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

The Barnes-Jewish Hospital is seen in St. Louis, Monday, March 4, 2013. Your bosses want you to eat your broccoli, hit the treadmill and pledge you?ll never puff on a cigarette. But a new study raises doubts that workplace wellness programs save the company money. In what?s being called the most rigorous look yet inside the wellness trend, independent researchers tracked the program at a major St. Louis hospital system for two years. Employee hospitalizations dropped dramatically, by 41 percent overall for six targeted conditions. But increased outpatient costs erased those savings. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

The Barnes-Jewish Hospital is seen in St. Louis, Monday, March 4, 2013. Your bosses want you to eat your broccoli, hit the treadmill and pledge you?ll never puff on a cigarette. But a new study raises doubts that workplace wellness programs save the company money. In what?s being called the most rigorous look yet inside the wellness trend, independent researchers tracked the program at a major St. Louis hospital system for two years. Employee hospitalizations dropped dramatically, by 41 percent overall for six targeted conditions. But increased outpatient costs erased those savings. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

The sign for the Barnes-Jewish Hospital is seen in St. Louis, Monday, March 4, 2013. Your bosses want you to eat your broccoli, hit the treadmill and pledge you?ll never puff on a cigarette. But a new study raises doubts that workplace wellness programs save the company money. In what?s being called the most rigorous look yet inside the wellness trend, independent researchers tracked the program at a major St. Louis hospital system for two years. Employee hospitalizations dropped dramatically, by 41 percent overall for six targeted conditions. But increased outpatient costs erased those savings. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

(AP) ? Your bosses want you to eat your broccoli, hit the treadmill and pledge you'll never puff on a cigarette. But a new study raises doubts that workplace wellness programs save the company money.

In what's being called the most rigorous look yet inside the wellness trend, independent researchers tracked the program at a major St. Louis hospital system for two years. Hospitalizations for employees and family members dropped dramatically, by 41 percent overall for six major conditions. But increased outpatient costs erased those savings.

The study in Monday's issue of the journal Health Affairs has implications for a debate now taking place at companies around the country: how much pressure can you put on workers to quit smoking, lose weight, and get exercise before it turns into unwelcome meddling, or worse, a slippery slope toward a new kind of health discrimination?

Wellness programs started out offering gym memberships and modest cash rewards for participating in a health assessment focused on changing bad habits. But employers have been upping the ante, linking the programs to insurance discounts or penalties that can add up to hundreds of dollars.

Most major companies now have wellness programs, and smaller firms are signing up. President Barack Obama's health overhaul law allows employers to expand rewards and penalties, provided workers are also given a path to address lifestyle issues that could undermine their health.

"The immediate payback in terms of cost is probably not going to be there," said economist Gautam Gowrisankaran of the University of Arizona at Tucson, lead author of the study. But he noted there could be other benefits not directly measured in the study, such as reduced absenteeism and higher productivity.

And there's also a risk. "It's definitely true that there is a downside," Gowrisankaran said. "You are going to be charging people different rates based on their wellness behavior, and that could limit their ability to buy health insurance."

Obama's law forbids insurers from charging more if you get sick. But wellness incentives could mean you'd be penalized for the questionable choices that might get you sick.

Some previous studies have shown savings from wellness programs, while others found little change or even higher spending.

Steven Noeldner, an expert with the Mercer benefits consulting firm says well-designed programs generally show a positive return of about 2 percent by the third year.

Gary Claxton of the Kaiser Family Foundation, which produces a widely-cited annual survey of workplace health plans, says the financial impact is difficult to measure. "A lot of employers think it's the right thing to do and they're not so much interested in measuring," said Claxton.

The new study provides an in-depth look at the experience of BJC HealthCare, a hospital system that in 2005 started a comprehensive program linked to insurance discounts. BJC currently employs 28,000 people and provides health insurance for about 40,000, including family members. The overwhelming majority participated in the wellness program.

The program focused on six lifestyle-influenced conditions: high blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease, chronic lung problems, serious respiratory infections, and stroke. Employees had to join the program in order to get the hospital's most generous level of health insurance, called the Gold Plan. For family coverage, for example, the hospital paid nearly $1,650 more of costs in the Gold Plan.

Employees in the wellness program had to complete a health risk assessment that included height, weight, blood pressure, cholesterol, blood sugar and other measurements. They also signed a pledge to maintain a healthy diet and exercise regularly. Smokers had to get help to quit. Spouses were also required to sign the health pledge and, if they smoked, get help.

The study tallied up BJC's medical costs before the wellness program and for two years after. It also compared those costs with expenses of two other big local employers that did not have wellness programs. That was done to control for the possible impact of new drugs or medical innovations.

The results were counter-intuitive: A surprisingly large drop in hospitalizations for the six conditions targeted by the wellness program, but increased costs for medications and outpatient visits. When those were added to the cost of the wellness initiative itself, "it is unlikely that the program saved money," the study concluded.

BJC President Steven Lipstein said he doesn't dispute the conclusion, but he remains committed to the wellness program and would invite the researchers to take another look now.

Is the program saving money? "I do not know that," said Lipstein. "I can tell you that our health benefit expenses go up every year."

Lipstein said encouraging employees to make healthy lifestyle decisions and rewarding those who do reflects corporate values, not just the bottom line.

"It's not easy to change human health outcomes in the short term," he added. "When you make an investment in wellness and prevention you shouldn't expect an immediate return."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-03-04-Workplace%20Health/id-e6ae3d2e1af648588aec4fd5bf205d62

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

?R, Luxembourg sign agreement preventing double taxation ...

?TK |

6 March 2013

Brussels, March 5 (CTK) - The finance ministers of Luxembourg and the Czech Republic signed Tuesday an agreement on preventing double taxation which replaces the agreement of 1991.

The document, signed by Luc Frieden and Miroslav Kalousek on the sidelines of a regular meeting of finance ministers of the European Union, also seeks to prevent income and property tax evasion.

The new agreement provides for "exchange of information on all taxes including banking information," the Czech Finance Ministry said in a statement.

"Luxembourg has a very strong financial sector and exchange of information between the tax authorities will boost the fight against tax evasion in both countries," said Kalousek.

The 1991 agreement has no longer corresponded to the "current political, economic but primarily tax conditions," the ministry said.

The right to income and property tax collection will be shared in an objective manner by both states under the new agreement which also lays down the basic forms of cooperation of the two countries' relevant bodies, said the statement.

The agreement will be submitted to parliament for ratification.

Luxembourg is seen as a tax haven. Data of the agency Cekia show that owners of 1,173 domestic companies were based in Luxembourg last year.

Copyright 2011 by the Czech News Agency (?TK). All rights reserved.
Copying, dissemination or other publication of this article or parts thereof without the prior written consent of ?TK is expressly forbidden. The Prague Daily Monitor and Monitor CE are not responsible for its content.

Source: http://praguemonitor.com/2013/03/06/%C4%8Dr-luxembourg-sign-agreement-preventing-double-taxation

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Google+ (on the web) rolls out huge cover pics, new local reviews tab

Google+

Google+ today rolled out some interesting improvements to its web version. The biggest, obviously, is the gianormous new cover photos. What was once long and skinny is now long and not-so-skinny. (We know how it feels.) When fully expanded, the new cover photos have a 16x9 aspect ration and can be as large as 2,120px by 1,192px. That's big. So make sure your image doesn't suck.

Next is a new tab for your local reviews. If you've reviewed something in your hamlet, it'll show up here. You can use it to showcase specific reviews, or you can hide it altogether. Your call.

Editing your info also is easier now, with better separation of content in the About tab, with cards acting as category separators.

Source: +SaraMcKinley



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/6LKLCRVNXts/story01.htm

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New Chaldean patriarch enthroned in Iraq

BAGHDAD (AP) ? Iraq's Chaldean Catholic Church enthroned a new patriarch during a ceremonial mass Wednesday that was held amid tight security in Baghdad.

The mass at St. Joseph's Chaldean church in downtown Baghdad marked the final step as Louis Sako, 64, replaced Emmanuel III Delly, who has retired.

Iraqi troops sealed off all roads leading to the church in the middle-class neighborhood of Karradah and worshippers were searched by security forces before going in.

Last month, bishops of the Eastern rite church chose Sako, archbishop of Kirkuk since 2003, as their patriarch and later, Pope Benedict XVI approved the election.

Sako was ordained in 1974, earned two doctorates in Rome and Paris in the 1980s and then returned to Iraq. He has written books on church fathers. He speaks Arabic, Chaldean, French, English and Italian.

Since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, Iraqi Christians have suffered repeated violence by Islamic militants and hundreds of thousands have fled the country.

The most recent Iraq census in 1978 said there were 1.4 million Christians in the country, but the number dropped significantly to only several hundred thousand following the invasion. The vast majority of Iraqi Catholics are Chaldean with a small Assyrian Catholic minority.

During Wednesday's ceremony, Sako said he will push for dialogue with Muslim clerics, both Sunnis and Shiites, to ensure co-existence and cooperation in Iraq.

"I will work along with my Muslim brothers in order to provide our country with a better future," he said.

Senior Iraq officials, including Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and Sunni parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi attended the ceremony.

Al-Maliki reiterated calls for Christians who are still living in Iraq not to leave the country and be part of the efforts to build the new Iraq. He accused al-Qaida for being behind the attacks that targeted the Christians over the past ten years.

"I urge my Christian brothers not to emigrate from the country," he said. "We are saddened to see Christians leave because of the threats from a depraved group."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chaldean-patriarch-enthroned-iraq-092756818.html

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

baby shower drama

I think I have to agree with the PPs here.? I understand how you might feel like an afterthought to your DH's family -?and I'm assuming that you've felt this way for awhile (and it's not only because they won't drive 3 hours for your baby shower) - and that's really unfortunate.

Although DH's immediate family lives close, his extended family all live.. you guessed it... three hours away.? Although my SILs sent-out invites for my baby shower anyway so nobody thought they were being snubbed, we all knew they weren't going to come, and they didn't.? No gifts were mailed, no cards were sent.?? But I wasn't expecting any of that, so to me, it was no big deal.? I get why someone wouldn't want to spend 6 hours in the car driving, only to spend 2 or 3 hours at a baby shower.

It sounds like you've already put yourself in their shoes (re: not wanting to drive 3 hours one way), so I think you might want to give them a free pass this time around, and not overthink it or take it as a snub. Who knows, maybe the ones not attending will send their gifts (and their regrets) along with the MIL.? Not that presents are the be-all end-all, but it would go to show that they cared enough to put forth that effort, y'know?

Source: http://community.thebump.com/cs/ks/forums/thread/72473095.aspx

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