Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Anna Torv In 'Open' On HBO ? 'Fringe' Star's Lesbian Role In Ryan ...

Anna Torv Open HBOAnna Torv is entering a new alternative universe: The former Fringe star is joining Ryan Murphy?s sex-and-relationships pilot?Open as the lesbian lover of Jennifer Jason Leigh, TVLine has learned.

RELATED | 30 Actors TVLine Readers Want Back on TV Now

The provocative script, which was penned for HBO by Murphy and?Dexter?co-executive producer Lauren Gussis, revolves around five characters.

Torv will play Windsor, a yoga instructor in a longterm relationship with Holly (Jennifer Jason Leigh), but upon meeting Grace (casting TBD) feels an instant connection. They join the previously cast?Scott Speedman and Wes Bentley.

Source: http://tvline.com/2013/07/30/anna-torv-hbo-open-ryan-murphy-lesbian/

april 4 wisconsin primary dallas fort worth airport texas tornados seattle seahawks new uniforms wisconsin recall wisconsin recall

Dead Zone the Size of Connecticut Blossoms in Gulf of Mexico http://blogs.dis...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151539973197076&set=a.62122417075.72510.9045517075&type=1

Chavez vs Martinez Yunel Escobar Irish Daily Star Black Mesa matt ryan matt ryan att wireless

Chinese Apple store Genius Bar appointment scalping rampant

?

Free appointments sold online for 10 yuan

Reports from inside China reveal a series of profiteers completely booking the Shangai Apple store's Genius Bar reservations, and then selling the reservations online. The scalpers are selling the appointments for 10 yuan ($1.60), and providing login information after sale, allowing the purchasers to modify the appointment to their needs. Most appointments are booked solid when the reservation system opens at 4AM local time.

A reporter from the Beijing Morning News discovered the process after finding no available appointments available on the Apple site for the iPhone, iPod, or iPad. The reported then contacted an advertiser who claimed to be able to offer appointments, asking for an available slot for the next day, and was given a choice of stores and times.

The report claimed that the store does not presently take measures to identify the appointment holder, due the the difficulty of verifying information. Standing in line outside the store for an opening is possible, but relies on a cancellation, with reports of customers waiting for up to four hours to be seen.

By Electronista Staff

Source: http://electronista.feedsportal.com/c/34342/f/626172/s/2f50dd96/sc/15/l/0L0Selectronista0N0Carticles0C130C0A70C290Cfree0Bappointments0Bsold0Bonline0Bfor0B10A0Byuan0C/story01.htm

nnamdi asomugha Zimmerman trial Siberia kaley cuoco big brother Siberia Tv Show pharrell

Clergy, faithful digest Francis' Brazil message

Pope Francis waves goodbye as he boards a plane after his week-long visit to Brazil to celebrate World Youth Day, at the airport in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sunday July 28, 2013. The trip marked the first international foray for the Argentine-born pontiff and his first voyage back to his home continent since becoming pope in March. (AP Photo/Andre Penner

Pope Francis waves goodbye as he boards a plane after his week-long visit to Brazil to celebrate World Youth Day, at the airport in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sunday July 28, 2013. The trip marked the first international foray for the Argentine-born pontiff and his first voyage back to his home continent since becoming pope in March. (AP Photo/Andre Penner

Pilgrims and residents gather on Copacabana beach before the arrival of Pope Francis for World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Saturday, July 27, 2013. Francis will preside over an evening vigil service on Copacabana beach that is expected to draw more than 1 million young people. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

An unidentified clergy member dances with performers before the start of a vigil on Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Saturday, July 27, 2013. Pope Francis is presiding over the evening vigil service that is expected to draw more than 1 million young people. (AP Photo/Luca Zennaro, Pool)

Pope Benedict waves to people from his popemobile at the start of a vigil with pilgrims in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Saturday, July 27, 2013. Francis will preside over an evening vigil service on Copacabana beach that is expected to draw more than 1 million young people. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)

Pope Francis, seen on a giant screen, speaks to pilgrims gathered on the Copacabana beachfront in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Thursday, July 25, 2013. Francis addressed young pilgrims from 175 nations Thursday, as Latin America's first pope continues his inaugural international trip as pontiff. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)

(AP) ? In word and deed during his trip to Brazil, Pope Francis put clergy and faithful alike on notice: Get energized, go out and spread the Gospel, give the Roman Catholic Church a more active role in society.

Francis led the way, with upward of 3 million faithful gathering for his Mass on Copacabana beach, a gushing local press following his every move on nationwide TV and even a group of nuns squealing in delight like groupies upon spotting him. By all measures, the pope's first international trip was a smash success.

But the burning question in the post-trip glow remains: How to carry out Francis' commands with a church that's loaded with challenges, from a severe shortage of priests to the fleeing of faithful for two decades in strongholds such as Brazil, as well as across Europe and the United States.

On Monday, priests, lay people and religious experts alike interpreted through their own cultural lens how to understand Francis' call to action, when he told bishops in Brazil that clergy must work on the peripheries, get out in the street and better understand how to communicate with modern society.

"As a younger priest, that's part of my idealism, to take our work into the streets," said Father Roy Bellen from Manila, who was in Rio for the papal visit. "It's encouraging for me to hear from the boss that the old school ways aren't welcome, that of clergy sticking to their comfort zones inside the church."

Some predicted a rough road ahead if the church is going to change its more traditional pastoral forms, which put a priest at the front of a Mass talking to instead of with parishioners. The growth sought by Francis will require many clergy to exercise atrophied missionary muscles.

"It's the mission of the church to go out and proclaim the Gospel to everyone, but there are people who don't like to do this; they prefer to stay within their parishes," said Jan Scheuthela, a 28-year-old seminarian from Poland attending the Mass on Copacabana beach. "In my parish we try to do things like this, but we need to do more: We need to organize missions on the streets, especially to bring in those young people who have lost interest in the church."

Francis told Latin American bishops they must be spiritually close to their parishioners and had earlier instructed Brazilian clergy to have the "scent of their flock" on them.

"There are pastoral plans which are 'distant,' ... which give priority to principles, forms of conduct, organizational procedures ... and clearly lack nearness, tenderness, a warm touch," Francis said Sunday. "The bishop has to be among his people in three ways: in front of them, pointing the way; among them, keeping them together and preventing them from being scattered; and behind them, assuring that no one is left behind."

Father Omar Mateo, secretary general of Ecuador's Episcopal Conference, addressed the elephant-in-the-room question: How do you take the Gospel to the street when the clergy are spread so thin?

Nearly 25 percent of the world's parishes don't have a resident priest, according to Vatican statistics. While the number of Catholics in the world grew by 68 percent between 1975 and 2010, the number of priests ticked up by just 1.8 percent, according to the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University.

In Brazil, the world's largest Catholic country, the percentage of the population calling itself Catholic dropped from 89 percent in 1980 to 65 percent three decades later, according to census statistics. Many Brazilian Catholics joined charismatic Pentecostal evangelical churches, while Americans joined flashy megachurches and many Europeans simply became secular.

Mateo said the answer will require both "asking God to send more workers to his cause" and by pragmatically "launching campaigns to go out and find new priests who will devote their lives to the Christian vocation."

"The holy father asks us to live our religious life in all settings," he said. "To understand and live religion and to go out into the community in a convincing and simple manner."

Beyond direct calls for a more active church, experts said the pontiff's Brazilian trip was rich in symbolism just as important in getting his messages across.

He paid a visit to a trash-strewn slum recently cleared of drug gangs. He met with young, recovering drug addicts to whom he gave deep hugs after they told their stories to him at a public event. He responded to a crowd mobbing his car on arrival in Brazil not by recoiling, but by rolling down his car window to shake hands and kiss babies.

"The symbolism Francis showed throughout the trip was perfect. He touched the hearts of all Brazilians, not just Catholics," said Fernando Altemeyer, a theology professor at the Catholic University of Sao Paulo. "It will be a long-term project to repair losses of the church, but what he's done is provide an immediate shock to the system."

Most of Francis' changes were in style rather than substance. He offered no bending on Catholic doctrine that splits some of the church's followers, including contraception, abortion and refusal to allow clergy to marry. Only on the plane flying home to Italy did he hint at new thinking from the church, saying he wouldn't judge gay priests for their sexual orientation.

Francis showed a deft ability to understand his audiences in Brazil and how best to communicate with whomever he might be interacting, something he's also asking of clergy.

During homilies and in public speeches, he used plain language that reinforced basic messages of help for the poor, of God's love for everyone, and of the need for Catholics to keep the Lord in their hearts.

When meeting with clergy in closed sessions, however, Francis switched to theologically complex discourses laden with thoughts on how the church must change, and said the church must end its overly intellectual and self-referential manner of communicating if it hopes to be understood.

"If the losses of the faithful are the result of church liturgy that is too staid or a message not being put across in a modern way in terms of how it's delivered, then, yes, he can make a difference," said Monsignor Raymond Kupke, who teaches church history at Seton Hall University's School of Theology in the U.S. "One trip to Brazil won't immediately change things, but it may have an impact on re-energizing people and reaching out to those who are nominally Catholic."

Shivering in a cold Rio de Janeiro dawn, light just starting to streak the sky, Fabio Feitosa da Silva, a 32-year-old waiter on his way to work, quietly spoke about his impressions of the pope, of how he's starting to look differently at the Catholic Church he stopped attending 15 years ago when its message no longer resonated with him.

"I didn't expect this, but I love him, everybody loves him," Silva said, neatly summing up the general feeling in Brazil. "He's won my interest, he has my attention, I'm listening. It's his humility that touches my heart. He's even got me convinced to attend Mass later on the beach."

___

Associated Press writers Marco Sibaja and Nicole Winfield in Rio de Janeiro and Gonzalo Solano in Quito, Ecuador, contributed to this report.

___

Bradley Brooks on Twitter: www.twitter.com/bradleybrooks

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-07-30-LT-Brazil-Pope-Challenges-Ahead/id-2595063588c149d98117e47e4c0532f6

Doodle 4 Google Sergio Garcia kellie pickler miranda kerr brian urlacher NBA Mock Draft 2013 Xbox reveal

EA motions to dismiss NCAA lawsuit before it becomes class action

EA asked a judge to dismiss the latest complaint in a lawsuit brought on by college athletes alleging EA, the NCAA and the Collegiate Licensing Company used players' names and likenesses in games without proper compensation. EA motioned to dismiss the plaintiffs' third amended complaint, which added six current NCAA athletes with the goal of certifying it as a class action lawsuit.

EA argued that the plaintiffs' new complaint pleaded "no facts to support their theory that EA participated in an antitrust conspiracy with the NCAA and CLC." This wasn't a new strategy ? EA and the CLC previously argued they were following NCAA rules and were therefore not involved in an antitrust conspiracy, and EA repeated this defense in the motion for dismissal.

This was the second lawsuit against EA from the law firm Hagens Berman. The first case alleged EA violated antitrust laws by entering into exclusive deals with the AFL, NFL and NCAA. EA settled in this case in 2012 for $27 million and the loss of its exclusive licensing deal with the NCAA. This month, the NCAA announced it would no longer work with EA, exclusively or otherwise.

Steve Berman of Hagens Berman said he viewed the dead deal between EA and the NCAA as a direct result of the pressure of litigation. The court will rule on the class status of the current lawsuit, and respond to EA's motion to dismiss, by September 5.

Source: http://www.joystiq.com/2013/07/30/ea-motions-to-dismiss-ncaa-lawsuit-before-it-becomes-class-actio/

teresa giudice bachelorette loretta lynn brandon jennings robin thicke Aaron Paul Eddie Lacy

Harper College wrestler, shot after walking into off-duty cop’s home, convicted of trespassing

KerRamirez. Phofrom Facebook

Kerin Ramirez. Photo from Facebook

storyidforme: 52840175
tmspicid: 17747897
fileheaderid: 7996823

Updated: July 30, 2013 5:03PM

A drunk Harper College wrestler shot while scuffling with an off-duty cop in the officer?s DuPage County home was convicted of trespassing but acquitted of a more serious charge of home invasion.

The split decision issued Tuesday by Judge George Bakalis comes three months after a jury couldn?t reach a verdict on the same home invasion charge facing 22-year-old Kerin Ramirez.

The ruling also means Ramirez, who was jailed for 18 months before going to trial last April, likely won?t serve any additional time behind bars.

Now free on bond, Ramirez faced a 6- to 30-year prison term if he had been convicted of home invasion.

His conviction for felony criminal trespass carries a maximum 3-year prison term. The jail time Ramirez already has served makes it unlikely he?ll spend any more time in custody, defense attorney Gal Pissetzky said.

Ramirez was charged following a Sept. 24, 2011 fight with Wood Dale Police Sgt. Michael Peters that erupted about 7 a.m. when a drunken Ramirez walked into the cop?s house after leaving a party in a nearby home.

Peters testified Ramirez attacked him, touching off a lengthy fight that ultimately included a neighbor who tried to aid Peters. Peters said he shot Ramirez once in the abdomen because the two men couldn?t subdue the college wrestler.

Ramirez?s attorney argued he mistakenly walked into the unlocked house and was quickly shot by the enraged officer.

Sentencing is set for Sept. 19.

Source: http://www.suntimes.com/news/metro/21628964-418/harper-college-wrestler-shot-after-walking-into-off-duty-cops-home-convicted-of-trespassing.html

michael kidd gilchrist national championship calipari national archives brock lesnar kentucky jayhawks

Euro zone unemployment falls for first time in two years

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The number of people unemployed in the euro zone fell for the first time in more than two years in June, the latest sign that the bloc's economy may be pulling out of recession, while inflation held steady in July, fuelled by spending on food.

Compared with May, 24,000 fewer Europeans in the single currency area were jobless in June, the EU's statistics agency Eurostat said on Wednesday, the first decrease since April 2011.

While too small a number to make an impact on the overall level of euro zone unemployment, which was stable at a record 12.1 percent for the fourth consecutive month, the data reverses the seemingly inexorable rise in joblessness numbers.

Alarming fiscal deficits, budget cuts, falling business confidence and the threat of a euro zone break-up drove the bloc into recession in 2011 and predictions of a rebound have so far proved illusory.

But the European Central Bank's pledge to stand behind the euro zone, a recovering U.S. economy and a lessening of harsh austerity policies have helped economic morale improve, taking it to its highest level in 15 months in July.

Low inflation has also helped households struggling with the impact of the 3-1/2-year euro zone debt crisis. Annual inflation was stable at 1.6 percent in July, according to Eurostat's first estimate for the month, the same level as June.

Spending on food, alcohol and tobacco during Europe's summer heat wave in July were the main factor behind the rise in prices, Eurostat said.

For further details of Eurostat data click on: http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/eurostat/home/ (Reporting by Robin Emmott)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/euro-zone-unemployment-falls-first-time-two-years-091218929.html

Joseline Hernandez red sox phil mickelson von miller nate robinson ryan braun BBC

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Stocks rise modestly as company earnings increase

This July 29, 2013 photo, Trader Michael Conlon rushes across the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. U.S. stock futures rose modestly Tuesday, July 30, 2013, with most investors taking a wait-and-see approach ahead of a two-day Fed policy meeting. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

This July 29, 2013 photo, Trader Michael Conlon rushes across the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. U.S. stock futures rose modestly Tuesday, July 30, 2013, with most investors taking a wait-and-see approach ahead of a two-day Fed policy meeting. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

(AP) ? Stocks rose modestly in midday trading on Wall Street Tuesday after several big companies turned in solid earnings.

The Dow Jones industrial average was up 32 points, or 0.2 percent, to 15,554 as of noon Eastern Daylight Time.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index was up five points, or 0.3 percent, to 1,690. Seven of the index's 10 industry sectors rose, led by technology stocks.

The technology-heavy Nasdaq composite rose 28 points, or 0.8 percent, to 3,627. Apple, the biggest component of the index, rose $8.49, or 2 percent, to $456.

Goodyear Tire & Rubber jumped $1.70, or 10 percent, to $18.74, the biggest gain in the S&P 500 index, after reporting that its second-quarter earnings more than doubled. Sales in Latin America rose sharply. Pfizer and Masco also rose after reporting earnings that were better than investors were expecting.

Jim Dunigan, chief investment officer of PNC Wealth Management, said investors have been encouraged by a recent pickup in mergers and acquisitions, including Monday's blockbuster deal combining Publicis Groupe and Omnicom Group to create the world's largest advertising firm.

The resurgence in corporate deals "gives investors confidence to make purchases at these levels," Dunigan said. "When you see others buying, it gives people a sense that they're not making a mistake."

Traders were also keeping a close eye on the Federal Reserve. The central bank began a two-day policy meeting Tuesday.

The Federal Reserve has been buying $85 billion in bonds every month to keep interest rates low and encourage borrowing and hiring. The Fed has said it might start to pull back on the stimulus later this year if the economy continues to improve, but the timing remains uncertain.

The Fed has also kept its benchmark short-term interest rate close to zero and has said it would stay there until the unemployment rate dips below 6.5 percent. The rate currently stands at 7.6 percent.

Crude oil fell $1.42 to $103.12 a barrel in New York. The price of gold fell $3.30 to $1,325.10 an ounce. The dollar edged higher against the euro and the Japanese yen.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note inched down to 2.59 percent from 2.60 percent the day before.

Among other stocks making big moves:

? Pfizer rose 42 cents, or 1.5 percent, to $29.97 after the pharmaceutical company reported that its income more than quadrupled, helped by the sale of its animal health business.

? Masco jumped $1.33, or 6.7 percent. The home furnishings company posted earnings that beat the forecasts of financial analysts as the company benefited from a surge in home construction.

? Time Warner Cable fell 94 cents, or 0.8 percent, to $114.26. The giant cable company is enmeshed in a nasty fee dispute with CBS over programming fees and is threatening to pull the broadcaster off its systems.

? Coach slumped $5.26, or 9 percent, to $52.59 after the upscale handbag maker reported a 12 percent drop in fourth-quarter profit as its home market of North America remained weak. Coach also said two more executives were leaving the company.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-07-30-Wall%20Street/id-a0ce171eb3c5425ca0676238e7679b68

David Rakoff Bourne Legacy London 2012 Soccer Olympics closing ceremony PGA Championship 2012 John Witherspoon george michael

Elderlaw As Family Law - Jotwell: Family Law

How do American law and culture accommodate the fact that old age is almost everyone?s fate, and that?though we know for sure that it ends at last in death?its course and the kinds of dependency it brings are so profoundly unpredictable and often categorically intense? ?In this brilliant, grimly humane page-turner of a book, Hendrik Hartog lays out three different historical periods marked by very different answers to this question.

Before the rise of a market economy in the middle of the nineteenth century, old people were cared for and died in their households, surrounded and aided by relatives and, if they had them, servants or slaves.? But as the master/servant relation was replaced by employment in the rapidly industrializing private sphere, and as the household nuclearized into the husband/wife, parent/child family, this ready-to-hand supply of helpers dwindled, often disappearing entirely.? In response to these changes, old people who had property started promising to bequeath it to children, other family members, and even housekeepers in exchange for their staying at home and devoting themselves to filling what we would now call the care gap.

Using New Jersey court records, Hartog?s archival research traces this large social transformation through a small legal shift: people started suing for specific enforcement of these promises, framing them as contracts no different from those typical of the marketplace, and courts started enjoining these inheritances or, in cases with weaker facts, granting unpaid wages payable from the decedent?s estate.? Finally, in post-World-War-II America, these lawsuits disappear from the archive as care for the old and the dying became a commodity paid for by social security programs, pensions, and private savings in the now-burgeoning care industrial complex.

By far the bulk of Someday focuses on the century-long middle chapter of this story, running roughly from 1850 to 1950.? The book?s first part takes the point of view of the old person, desperate to avoid solitude and the poor house and advised on all sides to retain control over property as the only way to gain any leverage over the young.? The family dramas that occupy these chapters are so vividly told, in such loving detail, that the chapters seem to be punctuated with perfect little short stories of human misery.? The second part of the book tells the story of the law, starting with the advice a potential plaintiff would get under the main theories of recovery, and then laying out in transfixing detail how the caselaw evolved to manage, catch up with, and even drive social change.

By the time Hartog reaches this stage of his story, he has built up so much narrative detail, so much social history, and so much law that he is able to trace minute but enduringly important sub-plots: the ways in which gender expectations for sons and daughters could skew decisions about who was doing ?extraordinary? work in the home; the ways in which family members sought to intensify status relations that had no legal backing using the tools of contract and property law; the ways in which nonfamily members entered into the care world ever so slowly, bringing contract even deeper into the home.? It is so fascinating to watch the old turn from spouses to children to nieces to stepsons to housekeepers for care, and to see how the legal rules that these relationships cue up shifted from those of traditional family law to those of the market. When is a housekeeper like a daughter?? When is a daughter like a housekeeper?? Throughout, large legal and social transformations appear in the form of highly specific institutional shifts.? For instance, the unpaid-wage cases boosted the rise of nursing as a profession and of the legal distinction between housework and care work that even today marks efforts to regularize domestic labor.? Equally intelligible as employment law and as family law, these cases persistently belie the idea, being cemented into American legal ideology during this very period, that the family and its law were the opposite of the market and the bodies of law peculiar to it, contract and property.

Hartog never loses sight of a large, highly paradoxical dynamic, in which the family, the market and the state have continually morphed around each other in response to changing social strategies for meeting human needs for care and freedom.? Every chapter refutes the dichotomy embedded in Henry Sumner Maine?s motto ?the movement of the progressive societies has ? been from Status to Contract.? ?Instead, as Hartog demonstrates again and again, liberal individualism and the market economy depend continually on some allocation of dependency needs among the market itself, the family and the state.?

A second major theme of the book is the problem of legal informality.? Old people promised to bequeath their farms and later their homes in exchange for care?but everyone seems to have known perfectly well that testamentary freedom meant that the elderly could die without performing their side of the bargain.? How many caregivers simply acquiesced when they did?? We will never know.? But courts confronted with the ones who sued could invoke the doctrine of partial performance to convert the promise into a binding contract, override the Statute of Frauds, and force the inheritance.? Hartog shows courts making diametrically opposite decisions on the basis of the same matrix of rules and similar facts, presenting a deeply ambivalent attitude about what to do when the need for formality collided with the need for substantive justice, when the moral complexity of the cases beggared the impulse for predictability.

To take another example that vexes family law today: what to do about informal family relationships that resemble formal ones in every other respect?? This theme is threaded throughout Someday, but we can focus on Hartog?s fascinating substory about informal children.? As indentured servitude, slavery and child labor became unthinkable, up came the practice of informal adoption?families bringing distant relatives or even complete strangers into their homes when they were infants or children and hoping that they would remain to care for the old and dying.? When they did, and were excluded from wills, and sued?what were they?? Were they children?? Did the onset of legal adoption make saying yes to that question harder or easier?? Were they lucky beneficiaries with no equitable claim on further largess?? Were they employees?? Anyone concerned about the policy problems we face in family law today, as nonmarital cohabitation and childbearing begin to compete demographically with their marital counterparts, will find this and many related strands of Hartog?s narrative endlessly fascinating.

Finally, the Epilogue produces a succinct account of the massive transformations that produced old age as Americans live it now: public law, public welfare, and individual savings meant and often required to be spent down to nothing, have almost evanesced the direct responsibility of family members, making them at most the managers of their elders? care in commercial establishments.? And yet, for all the grandeur of these shifts, Hartog concludes with a ?reversal? of the account, tallying all the ways in which, even in this diametrically new world, the same anxieties, fears, loves, resentments and regrets permeate the lives of the dying old and their family members today as he found in testimony before New Jersey?s equity courts in the 1880s.

Hartog tells us on his first page that he researched this book while his own mother was waning in a retirement community; the book?s last words dedicate it to his grandchildren.? He put himself into the story, and so I found it impossible to read this book without thinking of my own precarious place on the great conveyor belt of life.? This is family law writing at its best: legally subtle, socially precise, theoretically comprehensive, steadily engaging the human capacity to form productive, life-affirming, loving associations and to crash them in bitter conflicts, and fully exposed to the hard, brute facts of human existence.


?

?

Source: http://family.jotwell.com/elderlaw-as-family-law/

Fiscal cliff deal kathy griffin jadeveon clowney orange bowl Rose Parade 2013 rex ryan Louisville football

Top 10 Public Speaking Skills | USA IMAGING, Inc.


PodiumIs there anything more terrifying than facing an audience of strangers and knowing you have to deliver an entertaining and informative speech?

OK, some people thrive on this type of challenge! But the vast majority of us are at least a little nervous every time we have to speak publicly. In fact, fear of public speaking is probably one of the most universal fears throughout all walks of life.

Thankfully, public speaking is a fear that can easily be overcome with a little practice and the right approach. You can use the tips below to improve your public speaking skills.

1. Be prepared and practice.

The more you know what you want to say, the better you?ll get at it. First, brainstorm the topic of your speech and research it, if you need to. Write down all the points you want to make and then organize them into an outline. Fill in the details. Once you have the essential content of your speech written (at least in your head), transfer your main ideas to index cards. Write the main idea in dark ink on the front of the card, and if you think you?ll need cues, write them on the back of the card in pencil. Then, practice your speech out loud at least 3 to 5 times. If you can, practice it in front of a friend or family member and ask them for feedback and if that?s not possible, at least practice in front of a mirror. Do it until you can talk naturally, with only a glance at your cards. Don?t ever read your speech word for word!

2. Know your audience.

The better you know your audience, the easier it will be to connect to them as you speak. When you are able to make that connection, you?ll hold their attention. And seeing that you?re doing so will increase your confidence and comfort level, making it even easier for you to speak well. So, find out everything you can about the people you?ll be speaking to. Know what their ?hot topics? are, inside jokes and so on. The more you know about what makes them tick and what interests them, the better speech you?ll be able to give.

3. Dress the part.

When you?re standing up in front of an audience, all eyes are on you. Like it or not, your image is important in this situation. So, dress to impress this particular audience. If you know your audience well (see #2), then you?ll have an idea how to dress. For example, you might dress in a conservative navy suit if you?re speaking to a group of bankers, but in a more casual, fashionable outfit when the audience consists of artists and designers.

4. Pay attention to the old KISS principle, that is, Keep It Short and Simple.

The key is to get your points across as quickly as possible. Don?t beat around the bush or try to impress with complex metaphors. Stories, however, can be a powerful public speaking tool, especially when they contain at least a hint of humor. But again, keep them short and on point. Shorter messages leave the impression of a savvy, smart speaker. They?re also easier for your audience to remember.

5. Speak clearly and at just the right tempo.

The mark of an inexperienced, uncomfortable public speaker is someone who speaks all in a rush, slurring words in her desire to get it over with. Don?t be this kind of speaker if you want to hold your audience?s attention. On the other hand, don?t speak so slowly your audience?s minds start to wander.

6. Use visual aids to illustrate your points.

Many people will understand your message more clearly when it is more visual. What we see often leaves a more lasting impression than what we hear. You can use slides, photographs, PowerPoint presentations, or even a simple whiteboard to add visual cues to your speech. One caution though ? don?t turn your back on your audience as you use your visual aid, and don?t turn the lights on low for long periods, or you might be surprised to look up and see they are all sleeping!

7. Interact with your audience.

Lectures will rarely have the same impact on an audience that an open discussion will. Look for opportunities to involve your audience in what you are speaking about. Ask for validation of points you are making (?Am I right?? ?Has that ever happened to you??) or allow time for questions. Also, make sure to establish eye contact with your audience, and keep it throughout your speech.

8. Speak with sincerity and passion.

You want to leave a lasting impression with the audience about your speech topic. So be sure you are true to yourself and your topic as you speak and don?t be afraid to inject passion and enthusiasm into the speech as well.

9. Come out from behind the podium.

You?ll project confidence and a sense of comfort when you have the courage to let go of the podium and stand in front of your audience with nothing to ?protect? you. As you speak, you can walk back and forth across the stage, making eye contact with different people. Some speakers even walk out into the audience to get ?up close and personal.? Be respectful of people?s personal space, though, if you decide to do this. You don?t want to be perceived as threatening or overbearing.

10. Close your speech in a memorable way.

Give your audience something to think about as you finish up your speech. Certainly, it?s a good idea to summarize your main points one more time, but then finish up with an inspiring story or quote, or leave them with a thought-provoking question.

Public speaking is an essential life skill that every person should strive to master. The ability to speak confidently in public will serve you in every part of your life, whether you are sharing opinions in a small group or delivering a planned speech in front of a group of hundreds.

About the Author

Discover Kevin Sinclair?s system for making profits regardless of whether anyone joins your network marketing business.

Like this:

Like Loading...

Source: http://usaimaging.wordpress.com/2013/07/29/top-10-public-speaking-skills/

Johnny Manziel Reza Aslan Gold Cup final Brickyard 400 david ortiz Kidd Kraddick peyton manning

Brandt Snedeker wins Canadian Open

OAKVILLE, Ontario (AP) ? Zoe Olivia Mahan can expect something special from Brandt Snedeker.

Snedeker won the Canadian Open on Sunday, a day after Hunter Mahan withdrew with the lead before the third round when his wife went into labor. Kandi Mahan gave birth to daughter Zoe Olivia early Sunday in Texas.

"Zoe will be getting a very nice baby gift from me," Snedeker said. "I can't thank Kandi enough for going into labor early. I don't know if I'd be sitting here if she hadn't. But that is a way more important thing than a golf tournament. I missed a golf tournament when my first was born, and it was the best decision I ever made. I'm sure Hunter would say the same thing."

Snedeker closed with 2-under 70 for a three-stroke victory.

"Just ecstatic right now," Snedeker said. "This is a tournament I said early on in my career I wanted to win just because my caddie (Scott Vail) is actually from Canada and it's his national open. It meant a lot to him, meant a lot to me. Third-oldest tournament on tour and it's got some great history to it, and now to put my name on that trophy it means a lot."

Snedeker finished at 16-under 272. The six-time PGA Tour winner also won the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am in February.

"It feels great to get a win," Snedeker said. "To validate all the hard work I've put in over the past three months where I haven't played my best and know that I'm working on the right stuff and able to hold up under some pretty serious pressure this afternoon. To win a tournament like this with those pivotal holes coming down the stretch means a lot."

Snedeker had two birdies and a bogey on the front nine. He birdied the par-4 10th to move to 16 under, but gave the shot back on the par-3 12th. He birdied the par-5 16th and parred the final two holes.

"I hung in there really well and made the key putts I needed to and I was able to survive," Snedeker said. "That's what today is all about."

Dustin Johnson, William McGirt, Matt Kuchar and Jason Bohn tied for second.

Johnson was tied for the lead after a birdie on No. 16, then drove out of bounds and hit the lip of a fairway bunker en route to a triple-bogey 7 on the par-4 17th. He finished with a 70.

"I was playing really well," Johnson said. "Really confident, swinging the driver really good. So you know, it's a driver hole for me, and I just blocked it a little bit. Made a poor swing. ... Not too happy, but I felt really good with my golf game. ... It's nothing, nothing to worry about. I'll go get them next weekend."

McGirt had a 68, and Kuchar and Bohn shot 71.

David Hearn was the top Canadian, shooting a 73 to tie for 44th at 4 under.

"It wasn't the finish that I was really looking for. I had a nice chance today," said Hearn, a playoff loser in the John Deere Classic. "I'll take away some positives from the week. I appreciate the support from everyone here this week and it always feels good to play at home."

Mike Weir tied for 49th at 3 under after a 72.

"I'm playing fine. Just missing too many short putts," Weir said. "I missed a number the last couple days inside 6, 7 feet, just missing way too many of those. You need those to keep your round going sometimes and I just didn't capitalize when I had opportunities."

Pat Fletcher, born in England, was the last Canadian winner, taking the 1954 event at Point Grey in Vancouver. Carl Keffer is the only Canadian-born champion, winning in 1909 and 1914. Albert Murray, a Canadian also born in England, won in 1908 and 1913.

The 2014 tournament will be played at Royal Montreal.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/brandt-snedeker-wins-canadian-open-220424233.html

tony romo Good Friday 2013 good friday Dufnering What Is Good Friday Monsanto Protection Act Jenna Wolfe

'Hobbit' sequels wrap up filming in New Zealand

AAA??Jul. 29, 2013?5:45 AM ET
'Hobbit' sequels wrap up filming in New Zealand
AP

In this Friday, July 12, 2013 photo taken and released by Peter Jackson, actor Martin Freeman waves after he finished his last filming shot as Bilbo Baggins on the set of The Hobbit in Wellington, New Zealand. Jackson has wrapped up filming "The Hobbit" trilogy and shared pictures of his last day on the set with his Facebook fans. The New Zealand filmmaker provided a steady stream of updates and photos from the set of the final film, "The Hobbit: There And Back Again," on Friday, July 26. The second film, "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug," will be released in December, and the finale appears in 2014. (AP Photo/Peter Jackson) MANDATORY CREDIT

In this Friday, July 12, 2013 photo taken and released by Peter Jackson, actor Martin Freeman waves after he finished his last filming shot as Bilbo Baggins on the set of The Hobbit in Wellington, New Zealand. Jackson has wrapped up filming "The Hobbit" trilogy and shared pictures of his last day on the set with his Facebook fans. The New Zealand filmmaker provided a steady stream of updates and photos from the set of the final film, "The Hobbit: There And Back Again," on Friday, July 26. The second film, "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug," will be released in December, and the finale appears in 2014. (AP Photo/Peter Jackson) MANDATORY CREDIT

This Friday, July 26, 2013 photo taken and released by Peter Jackson, actor Ian Murray McKellen, right, as Gandalf poses with Jackson on the final day of filming of The Hobbit in Wellington, New Zealand. Jackson has wrapped up filming "The Hobbit" trilogy and shared pictures of his last day on the set with his Facebook fans. The New Zealand filmmaker provided a steady stream of updates and photos from the set of the final film, "The Hobbit: There And Back Again," on Friday, July 26. The second film, "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug," will be released in December, and the finale appears in 2014. (AP Photo/Peter Jackson) MANDATORY CREDIT(AP Photo/Peter Jackson)

This Friday, July 26, 2013 photo taken with self-timer and released by Peter Jackson, actor Graham McTavish, left, as Dwalin, stands with director Peter Jackson on the final day of shooting The Hobbit in Wellington, New Zealand. Jackson has wrapped up filming "The Hobbit" trilogy and shared pictures of his last day on the set with his Facebook fans. The New Zealand filmmaker provided a steady stream of updates and photos from the set of the final film, "The Hobbit: There And Back Again," on Friday, July 26. The second film, "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug," will be released in December, and the finale appears in 2014. (AP Photo/Peter Jackson) MANDATORY CREDIT(AP Photo/Peter Jackson) MANDATORY CREDIT

In this Friday, July 26, 2013 photo taken and released by Peter Jackson, actor Richard Armitage, left, and two unidentified actors stand as they face with a green screen set on the final day of shooting The Hobbit in Wellington New Zealand. Jackson has wrapped up filming "The Hobbit" trilogy and shared pictures of his last day on the set with his Facebook fans. The New Zealand filmmaker provided a steady stream of updates and photos from the set of the final film, "The Hobbit: There And Back Again," on Friday, July 26. The second film, "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug," will be released in December, and the finale appears in 2014. (AP Photo/Peter Jackson) MANDATORY CREDIT

In this Wednesday, July 24, 2013 photo taken and released by Peter Jackson, a monitor screen shows a scene at a sound studio on one of the final days of shooting The Hobbit in Wellington, New Zealand. Jackson has wrapped up filming "The Hobbit" trilogy and shared pictures of his last day on the set with his Facebook fans. The New Zealand filmmaker provided a steady stream of updates and photos from the set of the final film, "The Hobbit: There And Back Again," on Friday, July 26. The second film, "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug," will be released in December, and the finale appears in 2014. (AP Photo/Peter Jackson) MANDATORY CREDIT

SYDNEY (AP) ? Peter Jackson has wrapped up filming "The Hobbit" trilogy and shared pictures of his last day on the set with his Facebook fans.

The New Zealand filmmaker provided a steady stream of updates and photos from the set of the final film, "The Hobbit: There And Back Again," on Friday. The second film, "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug," will be released in December, and the finale appears in 2014.

The director posted pictures of dwarves, crew members and actor Martin Freeman, who plays the protagonist, hobbit Bilbo Baggins. The photo updates began and ended with pictures of Jackson's cat, Mr. Smudge. The final photo shows the director and feline cuddling, along with the caption: "A long day. A great day. Thank you all for being part of it! Now for some sleep!"

"The Hobbit," based on J.R.R. Tolkien's novel of the same name, is the prequel to Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings." It follows Baggins' adventures as he tries to help a group of dwarves regain their wealth and stature from the dragon Smaug.

The first film in the trilogy, "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey," opened in December 2012 and surpassed $1 billion in box-office receipts worldwide.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-07-29-AS-New-Zealand-The-Hobbit/id-eae94ac41eef44d1a356c8354e77c501

Hector Camacho Jill Kelly McKayla Maroney gronkowski jeremy renner best buy black friday deals breaking dawn part 2

Renting: Las Vegas in Top 10 for Most for Money

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Las Vegas Property Management and Residential Real Estate. Marshall Stearns Property Management, Real Estate, Las Vegas, NV ... Las Vegas Real Estate Agent Contact · Free Property Management Quote · Home; Find ...

Source: http://www.marshallstearns.com/las-vegas-real-estate/renting-las-vegas-in-top-10-for-most-for-money/

victoria beckham

Texas turtle with 2 heads crawls into hearts, Facebook

Published: Sunday, July 28, 2013, 5:39?p.m.
Updated 1 hour ago

SAN ANTONIO ? A two-headed turtle born last month at the San Antonio Zoo has become so popular her keepers started a Facebook page for her, the San Antonio Express reported.

?We get inquires from people wanting to know how they're doing,? said zoo spokeswoman Debbie Rios-Vanskike, who gets calls and emails from around the world about the two-headed Texas cooter, named Thelma and Louise.

While uncommon, two-headed turtles occasionally hatch as a result of twin embryos that didn't fully separate. So far, it appears that Thelma and Louise, born on June 18, are completely healthy.

?They are doing amazing,? Rios-Vanskike said. ?They're eating. They're getting along. They're swimming together. There are no signs that there's anything wrong with them.?

The Facebook page on Sunday listed Thelma and Louise as a single female who attended the ?University of Turtledome.? Favorite bands include the Turtles.

TribLive commenting policy

You are solely responsible for your comments and by using TribLive.com you agree to our Terms of Service.

We moderate comments. Our goal is to provide substantive commentary for a general readership. By screening submissions, we provide a space where readers can share intelligent and informed commentary that enhances the quality of our news and information.

While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderating decisions are subjective. We will make them as carefully and consistently as we can. Because of the volume of reader comments, we cannot review individual moderation decisions with readers.

We value thoughtful comments representing a range of views that make their point quickly and politely. We make an effort to protect discussions from repeated comments ? either by the same reader or different readers.

We follow the same standards for taste as the daily newspaper. A few things we won't tolerate: personal attacks, obscenity, vulgarity, profanity (including expletives and letters followed by dashes), commercial promotion, impersonations, incoherence, proselytizing and SHOUTING. Don't include URLs to Web sites.

We do not edit comments. They are either approved or deleted. We reserve the right to edit a comment that is quoted or excerpted in an article. In this case, we may fix spelling and punctuation.

We welcome strong opinions and criticism of our work, but we don't want comments to become bogged down with discussions of our policies and we will moderate accordingly.

We appreciate it when readers and people quoted in articles or blog posts point out errors of fact or emphasis and will investigate all assertions. But these suggestions should be sent via e-mail. To avoid distracting other readers, we won't publish comments that suggest a correction. Instead, corrections will be made in a blog post or in an article.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/alltribstories/~3/SFxvyBJD5X8/antonio-facebook-headed

samoyed kenny powers kenny powers carl hagelin triple play james neal virginia tech

Football: Eisenhower focusing on strong start

Eisenhower head football coach Travis Moore | File photo

Eisenhower head football coach Travis Moore | File photo

storyidforme: 52772233
tmspicid: 7019868
fileheaderid: 3225949

Updated: July 29, 2013 10:10PM

Missing the playoffs last season didn?t sit well with Eisenhower coach Travis Moore.

The Cardinals have qualified for the postseason in three of Moore?s six seasons, marking an unprecedented level of success for the football program. In 2011, Eisenhower recorded a historic undefeated South Suburban Red championship ? its first conference title since 1985.

Eisenhower was in position to qualify for the playoffs in 2012, needing a win over archrival Richards in its final game of the season to move to 5-4. Instead, the Cardinals absorbed an all-too-familiar beat-down (a 42-0 final) from their District 218 sister school, which ended their season.

However, Moore found something important to take away from last season and has applied it to this season: starting strong. A year ago the Cardinals lost four of their first five games before rallying for three straight wins and setting up the do-or-die scenario in Week 9 vs. Richards.

A few wins early in the season and Week 9 wouldn?t have carried as much significance.

?We put ourselves in a hole early,? Moore said. ?I was proud at how we dug ourselves out and actually had a shot at making the playoffs if we could have won our last game. If we wouldn?t have started 1-4, we wouldn?t have been in that position.?

Eisenhower has started all of its six seasons under Moore with a Week 1 loss. And all of those losses have come against Rich East, which will host the Cardinals at noon Aug. 31.

?Our focus isn?t on conference or making the playoffs or playing Richards,? Moore said. ?Our focus is on beating Rich East. That?s our priority. It?s something we have not been able to do.?

For the Cardinals to get the better of the Rockets, Eisenhower?s playmakers will need to make plays. Eisenhower boasts just one returning starter on its offensive line, senior Tiante Gatewood. Moore is optimistic senior Jordan Hughes, at 315 pounds, and junior Alonzo Lomax, will adapt quickly to varsity life.

What the Cards lack in experience up front, they more than make up for at the skill positions. Moore likes what he?s seen in 7-on-7 competitions. Quarterback Dion Parker returns and has made great strides during the summer.

?He?s been perfecting his craft,? Moore said. ?He?s improved his arm strength and his accuracy. He showed last year that he can run with the ball and make things happen.?

But if the Cards are going to be successful, they?re going to have to show opponents they have a capable passing attack.

Parker has three outstanding targets in senior receivers Derrick Cooper, Lonnel Hill and Ishmil Mitchell. Cooper and Hill are nice-size targets at 6-feet-2 and Mitchell, at 6-foot, is capable of making the big reception.

So are senior running backs T.J. Skeleton and Vince Colbert, though the majority of their yards are expected to come on the ground.

?Our backfield should be dynamic,? Moore said. ?Parker, Skeleton and Colbert are big-play guys. They have a lot of speed and have the ability to cut. We don?t have a lot of experience on the line, so our guys have to make plays.?

The Cardinals offense will emphasize getting the ball quickly into their playmakers? hands. From there, Moore is confident their skill will take over.

?We have guys in the backfield and at receiver who can make something out of nothing,? Moore said.

The Cardinals have some holes to fill on defense. Senior K.J. Swain is the only returning starter on the line. Josh Akins and Tramaine Franklin, both seniors, return at linebacker, as does senior Alec Esparza at strong safety.

Moore likes the team?s chemistry, which he?s confident will help overcome any growing pains or adversity during the season.

?One of the biggest things we stress to all of our players is developing a mentality of ?team? and not ?I,? ? Moore said. ?We stress being a team and being a family. You have to be genuine about that. As long as we keep those values, we can get through the good and the bad. This group could be the tightest unit we?ve had.?

Source: http://southtownstar.suntimes.com/sports/21601531-419/football-eisenhower-focusing-on-strong-start.html

jerome simpson hand sanitizer obama on jimmy fallon pilar sanders andrew young real life barbie zipper

Monday, July 29, 2013

Who is to gain by Cleveland union's prying? Sun News editorial

One would think the president of the Cleveland Teachers Union would have plenty to focus his attention on ? the beginning of the new year, improving test scores, implementing state-mandated changes, etc.

That?s what makes it somewhat curious that David Quolke has apparently decided instead to continue to pursue legal action over something we thought had been left to the past. Yet more than two months after the end to a divisive and bitter teachers strike in the Strongsville City Schools, the union is apparently continuing a lawsuit to acquire names, phone numbers and other information about those employed as substitutes during the strike.

What?s to be gained?

The strike is, to be sure, a chapter in the district?s history most would like to forget. Reviewing it recalls images that did not reflect the schools or the city in the best light. The Strongsville schools community, to its credit, appears committed to moving forward. It?s not clear why others won?t do the same.

Whether the information is public record, which the union is legally entitled to, remains a matter of dispute. But even if it is determined to be such, it stands to reason that information such as payroll data, home and cell phone numbers and home addresses isn?t going to be used to put those individuals on a mailing list for the union newsletter. And no other constructive motive is readily apparent. Let?s focus on the future, on the students ? in Strongsville, Cleveland and elsewhere ? and let the bitterness of the past remain there.

This is our opinion, what about yours?

We encourage readers to submit signed letters to the editor that are brief, typewritten and double-spaced. Deadline for letters is noon Monday.

A phone number must be included for verification purposes. Letters must be signed and we reserve the right to edit all letters. Mail or deliver letters and comments to Mark Morilak c/o Sun Star-Courier, 5510 Cloverleaf Parkway, Valley View, OH 44125 or email them to mmorilak@sunnews.com.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/strongsville/index.ssf/2013/07/who_is_to_gain_by_cleveland_un.html

Romina Puga Red Wedding The Fosters game of thrones michael douglas Tnt Nba.com

British banks still credit-shy towards small firms, study finds

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's risk-wary banks are reluctant to lend to small firms or pass on cuts in interest rates, according to government-commissioned research that points to a lack of supply rather than demand as the main brake on transactions.

Banks have clashed with policymakers and regulators over the reasons for scant flows of credit to small and medium-sized enterprises, seen as vital to Britain's economic recovery, arguing that firms lack confidence to borrow and invest.

A study by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR), the country's leading macroeconomic think-tank, published on Monday said subdued demand for finance and pressures on banks to shrink balance sheets played a role.

But it suggested lenders' excessive distaste for risk was a key factor.

"It's the aftermath of the credit-driven boom followed by a banking crisis which has led to a shift to risk aversion," said Philip Davis, one of the authors of the paper.

He said banks over-reacted to lax pre-crisis lending practices, noting that a typical SME was now less likely to obtain a loan than in 2001-04, a period the researchers consider "normal" in contrast to the "easy money" of 2005-07.

"In the boom, credit conditions are relaxed too much and then in the downturn credit conditions are tightened too much," he said.

The paper summarises research prepared by NIESR for Britain's Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, whose minister Vince Cable has regularly criticised banks and called for more action to boost business lending.

Additional factors constraining credit flow to SMEs include high margins on loans to the sector, with banks wielding greater monopoly power over smaller firms, while large companies have the option of borrowing via bond issues, the researchers found.

This suggests that "banks have to some extent taken advantage of the lower base rates to profit from SME lending," they wrote.

When the economy's prospects - and so the risk of defaults - are hazy, banks are particularly wary of lending to smaller firms as they are perceived as less stable.

Furthermore, "they have lower reporting requirements, have less need for formal reporting structures and are subject to less outside monitoring by equity investors," the paper said.

(Reporting by Olesya Dmitracova; Editing by John Stonestreet)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/british-banks-still-credit-shy-towards-small-firms-053544644.html

king arthur there will be blood there will be blood nigel barker secret service fenway park philadelphia flyers

Stunning 3D Rock Images Revealed in New Lab

PRINCETON, N.J. ? A geologist and an architect standing in a lab may sound like the start to a very nerdy joke, but a pair of these professionals have joined together to revolutionize the way scientists study structures, such as fossils, inside rocks.

Geologists use a variety of techniques to analyze fossils and other features trapped inside Earth's rocky layers. The most basic technique, dating back to the 19th century, involves slicing away layers of rock, taking pictures of each layer, and then recreating the full 3D shapes by connecting the dots between images. But this method is tedious and prone to human error.

"People have done this since Darwin," said Adam Maloof, a geoscientist at Princeton University who recently opened a rock imaging lab that brings this technique into the 21st century. "You can find very old articles from the 1870s where people sliced something five times, and then drew it, and put together a model of it."

Researchers have since devised more precise methods using electronic rock grinders and digital cameras, but, until now, the technique has not been automated.

Revolutionary redesign

Maloof has teamed up with architects at the Brooklyn-based Situ Studio to design a machine that automatically grinds layers as thin as 0.00025 centimeters ? thinner than a human hair ? and automatically takes high-resolution images along the way.

The grinding setup looks a bit like a mini car wash. On an automated steel shuttle, the rock first travels under misting nodules that clean away grime. Next, the rock passes back and forth under a 1-inch-thick (2.5 cm) diamond-studded grinding wheel, with a stream of water flowing to reduce dust. The sample then exits the grinder under a series of wiper blades and enters the limelight of an automated camera that snaps a shot from above. The shuttle then returns the rock to the start position, where the process repeats. [See photos of the lab and 3D rock models]

Maloof wears mist-covered safety goggles as he describes the special features of the room: Double-width cinder blocks in the walls help reduce sound pollution outside, and a climate control system maintains a constant room temperature.

"The main source of error with a grinder like this is the expansion and contraction of the steel," Maloof said, with the machine humming loudly behind him, and all of lights shut off except a beam glowing from the camera area. "If you have temperature fluctuations at night, for example, the steel will change size and there will be an error."

Even the slightest shift can cause images to misalign and jeopardize the precision of the digital model.

The machine hums along day and night, and can grind through several inches of rock within 24 hours. A modern manual setup would take up to two weeks to cover the same area, and would not be as accurate.

Ancient life

Maloof's interest in high-precision grinding was sparked in 2009 when he and his graduate students discovered what they thought could be the earliest evidence of fossilized animal life. In a 640-million-year-old rock formation in South Australia, the team found large patches of small red flakes that varied in size and shape, and looked nothing like the surrounding rock. The group brought samples back to Princeton, where they spent two weeks manually grinding and imaging about half an inch (1.5 cm) of sample. [Photos: The World's Most Famous Rocks]

With the help of Situ Studio, the group created a 3D model of their manual images and found what seemed to be remnants of ancient marine sponges. The team hopes to confirm this finding with their improved system.

"It definitely points to the potentials of interdisciplinary work," said Brad Samuels of Situ Studio, who helped Maloof choose the appropriate imaging and coding software, similar to what architects use to plan buildings. "The kinds of things that they needed in terms of tools and work flow are things that we have as a studio that we employ in designing spaces."

Oil drilling and meteorite dissection

A number of collaborators have already contacted Maloof about using the lab, including geologists in the oil industry wanting to analyze potential drilling rock, and geophysicists interested in dissecting meteorites.

"This is a very exciting instrument," said Roger Fu, a geophysics graduate student at MIT who will travel to the lab later this summer to study structures within meteorites that could help reveal information about how the solar system formed. "With the grinder, we should be able to get better 3D maps of meteorites than ever before."

A downside of the grinder is that it ultimately destroys the sample, Fu said. Some researchers avoid this by using X-ray scanning technology to peer inside rocks, but X-rays blur with depth, and do not differentiate between different materials of the same density.

The beauty of rocks

For now, Maloof is working out the final kinks of the system using less valuable samples. The results, so far, have produced stunningly beautiful images of structures inside rocks.

"If you looked at these with an X-ray, you would see absolutely nothing," Maloof said, pointing to an image of sand grains coated in concentric layers of calcium carbonate.

The compiled images of this rock reveals the full spherical form of each sand grain for the first time since they fused together hundreds of millions of years ago.

Editor's Note:?The author worked with Maloof's research group in 2010 and 2011 as a lab technician, and helped collect some of the fossil rocks from South Australia. She was not, however, involved in the analysis of the rock.

Follow Laura Poppick on Twitter. Follow LiveScience on Twitter, Facebook and Google+. Original article on LiveScience.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stunning-3d-rock-images-revealed-lab-125944027.html

Google Glass Tropical Storm Andrea 2013 alex rodriguez Netflix down paul george Warm Bodies Mexico vs Jamaica

Vampire Weekend at Fuji Rock Festival in Japan

This is a fan blog dedicated to Vampire Weekend, an American indie rock band from New York City.

Vampire Weekend
is
Ezra Koenig, Rostam Batmanglij, Chris Tomson and Chris Baio.

They formed Vampire Weekend in 2006 while attending Columbia University. In 2007 the band signed to XL Recordings. Their self-titled debut album was released on January 29th, 2008. "Contra", the band's second album, was released on January 12th, 2010.

Their third album "Modern Vampires of the City" was released on May 14, 2013.

MVOTC Reviews | MVOTC Timeline

?Suburban Punks

| DISCLAIMER | TAGS |
Follow us on Twitter!
Follow us on Instagram!

My name is Marice and you can email me at teamvampireweekend[at]gmail.com

SEND A MESSAGE | SUBMIT

LINKS
| Official Site | Myspace | Facebook |
| Shop | Twitter |

Ezra's Twitter | CT's Twitter
Rostam's Twitter | Baio's Twitter
Rostam's Tumblr | Baio DJ's FB page

PURCHASE MODERN VAMPIRES OF THE CITY XL Webstore | iTunes

Source: http://teamvampireweekend.tumblr.com/post/56679201009

planetary resources mothers day gift ideas natalee holloway scotty mccreery megan fox pregnant metta world peace suspension apple earnings report

Sony and Panasonic Think The World Needs a 300GB Optical Disc

Sony and Panasonic Think The World Needs a 300GB Optical Disc

With fewer and fewer computers packing an optical drive, you might be under the impression that the accompanying media is dead. Not if you're to believe Sony and Panasonic, who are planning to develop a next-gen optical disc with capacity of at least 300GB.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/e4PCDTvdwTo/sony-and-panasonic-think-the-world-needs-a-300gb-optica-947846443

American Airlines Carlos Arredondo Pat Summerall Martin Richard friends awkward awkward