রবিবার, ৩১ মার্চ, ২০১৩

To boost revenues, the taxman cometh ? in Afghanistan

Omar Sobhani / Reuters

Najib Ullah Latify, the owner of factory High Standard Pipe explains about their factory in Kabul March 17, 2013. High Standard Pipe employs 850 people and supplies pipes for projects providing clean water all over Afghanistan. Picture taken on March 17, 2013.

By Katharine Houreld, Reuters

KABUL ? One of Afghanistan's most surprising success stories lies tucked away on a potholed street notorious for suicide bombings and lined with rusting construction equipment.

The work of the country's top tax collector is more inspiring than the view from his office in Kabul. Taxes and customs raised $1.64 billion last financial year, a 14-fold increase on 10 years ago. That means, now, the government can pay just over half of its recurrent costs such as salaries.


Thanks to tougher enforcement procedures, Afghanistan's tax to GDP ratio today stands above 11 percent - ahead of neighboring Pakistan's dismal 9 percent.

Increasing revenues is vital as donors begin reducing aid ahead of the 2014 drawdown of NATO troops, who have provided the backbone for security since U.S. forces invaded after the September 11 attacks on the United States.

By the end of this year the United States alone will have spent $100 billion on Afghan reconstruction. But future pledges are a fraction of that.

"We are largely dependent on international aid. We would like to be independent," said Abdurrahman Mujahid, the new head of the revenue department. "I would like a sustainable Afghanistan for all the children."

Despite rising revenues, the government will rely heavily on donors for years to come. Taxes, customs and mining revenue will only meet $2.5 billion out of a $7 billion budget this year.

Most of the revenue comes from large corporate taxpayers, who complain their payments have not improved power cuts, potholed roads or security.

Corporations pay a flat tax of 20 percent - the same rate for an individual earning over $2,000 a month.

But unlike developed countries where personal income tax generates a sizeable chunk of revenue, most Afghans scoff at the idea of giving the government some of their meager earnings.

The average annual income, in a country ranked one of the world's poorest, is just $470, according to the World Bank. Those making less than $100 a month don't have to pay tax.

"It's not a good government," said moneychanger Abdurrahman Arif, 28, as he held a wad of soiled notes and scanned for customers. "I don't pay tax. The rich people don't and the government should go to them before they come to me."

Afghanistan has a similar problem to neighboring Pakistan - the very wealthy don't pay their share, and weak institutions often have little way of forcing them.

Authorities admit that taxing the rich isn't easy in a country where the powerful often command militias. But Mujahid promises tax evaders will "be introduced to the law enforcement agencies".

SUBSTANTIAL ACHIEVEMENT

Much of Afghanistan's money is in an undocumented black economy. Corruption is endemic and the country produces 90 percent of the world's opium. Billions of dollars in cash leave the country every year in suitcases.

The security situation is discouraging. Taliban and other militias have made gains in many areas as foreign combat forces wind down their missions.

But some Afghans still manage to make money. Many businesses are fuelled by the aid dollars that have poured into the country over the last decade. Luxury supermarkets, travel agencies and stationery shops crowd the capital's streets.

A U.S. embassy official in Kabul commended Afghanistan's ability to raise tax revenues.

"It's a pretty substantial achievement," the official said, but noted the nation still faced a large funding gap, partly because of its huge security bill.

"It's going to continue being a problem until they can get revenues from the extractive industry, and that's going to take some time," the official said, referring to Afghanistan's rich but undeveloped mineral deposits.

Donors currently pay for just under half Afghanistan's operating costs - mostly government salaries - and more than three-quarters of all development projects like roads, dams and electricity equipment.

Rampant corruption means this money is often stolen, angering donors, fuelling anti-government rage and keeping aid from some of the world's neediest families.

Donors hope that if Afghans foot more of the bill for public services they may become less tolerant of graft from their leaders.

PUGNACIOUS PREDECESSOR

Mujahid, the new head of the revenue department, has large shoes to fill. His predecessor Ahmad Shah Zamanzai oversaw much of the department's growth and didn't shrink from confrontation.

When a vice-president refused to pay tax on income from renting out houses he owned, Zamanzai threatened to leak it to the press. Elections were approaching. The vice president paid up.

Under Zamanzai, the tax department jailed more than 20 tax evaders, froze bank accounts, slapped on travel bans and shuttered the premises of businesses that refused to pay.

In one showdown, he took on the glitzy wedding halls that have mushroomed up in the capital. When the 60 or so venues refused to pay their dues, he had police padlock a dozen of the biggest until the rest fell into line.

Zamanzai was appointed head of the state-run Pashtany Bank as part of a bureaucratic reshuffle this month. His first task, he said, would be to use skills honed in the tax department to extract overdue loan repayments from powerful Afghans.

But the tough tax enforcement has angered some businessmen.

Najib Ullah Latify's spotless factory, full of humming machinery and rows of workers in blue overalls and yellow hard hats, stands a few minutes drive from the tax office. High Standard Pipe employs 850 people and supplies pipes for projects providing clean water all over Afghanistan.

Latify said he'd expand but harassment from the tax man was hurting his business.

In recent years, he says, he's been repeatedly overcharged by the tax office and promised refunds have not been credited. Officials frequently offer to slash his tax bill in return for bribes, he added. When he refuses, he says, officials disrupt his imports and suspend his license.

"I don't know what to do, I have shouted everywhere that they are ruining my business," he said.

"I don't mind paying taxes. Even if 60 percent of it is spent on drinking and shopping and trips for (politicians') wives, maybe 40 percent will go to schools or hospitals. But they must tax me correctly."

The new tax chief, Mujahid, was not familiar with Vitaly's case, but promised to investigate. More than 10 tax collectors - whose basic salaries start at $180 a month - have been fired for corruption in the last two years.

"Corruption is a part of public life in Afghanistan," said Mujahid. "We have the aim to make this department corruption-free."

This year he's planning to finish computerizing tax records, usher through a law on Value Added Tax, and strengthen collection in the provinces - more than 90 percent of government taxes currently come from the capital.

"There's a lot of achievements, but for sure we have problems, and the biggest problem is corruption," he said.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

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শুক্রবার, ২৯ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Teens' struggles with peers forecast long-term adult relationships

Mar. 28, 2013 ? Teenagers' struggles to connect with their peers in the early adolescent years while not getting swept along by negative peer influences predict their capacity to form strong friendships and avoid serious problems even ten years later. Those are the conclusions of a new longitudinal study by researchers at the University of Virginia that appears in the journal Child Development.

"Overall, we found that teens face a high-wire act with their peers," explains Joseph P. Allen, Hugh P. Kelly Distinguished Professor at the University of Virginia, who led the study. "They need to establish strong, positive connections with them while at the same time establishing independence in resisting deviant peer influences. Those who don't manage this have significant problems as much as a decade later."

Researchers followed about 150 teens over a 10-year period (starting at age 13 and continuing to 23) to learn about the long-term effects of their peer struggles early in adolescence. They gathered information from multiple sources -- the teens themselves, their parents and peers, and by observing teens' later interactions with romantic partners. The teens comprised a racially, ethnically, and socioeconomically diverse group.

Teens who had trouble connecting well with their peers in early adolescence had difficulty establishing close friendships in young adulthood. Teens who didn't connect well at 13 also had more difficulty managing disagreements in romantic relationships as adults.

Teens who had trouble establishing some autonomy and independence with peers (especially with respect to minor forms of deviance such as shoplifting and vandalism) were found to be at higher risk for problems with alcohol and substance use, and for illegal behavior, almost a decade later.

Conversely, teens who were seen as desirable companions -- those deemed empathetic, able to see things from different perspectives and control their impulses, and having a good sense of humor -- were more likely to have positive relationships in young adulthood.

Teens who were able to establish some autonomy vis a vis peers' influences were more likely to avoid problematic behavior in young adulthood, with teens who showed they were able to think for themselves in the face of negative peer influences using less alcohol as early adults and having fewer problems with alcohol and substance abuse as young adults. But teens who were seen as desirable companions were more likely to have higher levels of alcohol use in early adulthood and future problems associated with alcohol and substance use.

"The findings make it clear that establishing social competence in adolescence and early adulthood is not a straightforward process, but involves negotiating challenging and at times conflicting goals between peer acceptance and autonomy with regard to negative peer influences," Allen notes.

"Teaching teens how to stand up for themselves in ways that preserve and deepen relationships -- to become their own persons while still connecting to others -- is a core task of social development that parents, teachers, and others can all work to promote," adds Allen.

Teens who managed both of these goals simultaneously -- connecting with peers while retaining their autonomy -- were rated by their parents as being most competent overall by age 23. "There is a positive pathway through the peer jungle of early adolescence," says Allen, "but it is a tricky one for many teens to find and traverse."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Society for Research in Child Development, 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. Joseph P. Allen, Joanna Chango, David Szwedo. The Adolescent Relational Dialectic and the Peer Roots of Adult Social Functioning. Child Development, 2013; DOI: 10.1111/cdev.12106

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/Shaf-2ktyMQ/130328080223.htm

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৮ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Wachowskis to make sci-fi series for Netflix

NEW YORK (AP) ? Netflix's newest original series will be science-fiction from the duo behind the "The Matrix" trilogy.

Netflix announced Wednesday that it will stream "Sense8" late next year for subscribers. The series is the first foray into television for Andy and Lana Wachowski, the filmmaking siblings who directed "The Matrix" and last year's "Cloud Atlas."

Netflix called the 10-episode series "a gripping global tale of minds linked and souls hunted." The show runner will be J. Michael Straczynski, creator of "Babylon 5," which aired for five seasons in the 1990s.

Netflix made its biggest splash with an original series last month with the debut of the political thriller "House of Cards," starring Kevin Spacey. This spring, it will premiere the horror series "Hemlock Grove" and the reborn comedy "Arrested Development."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wachowskis-sci-fi-series-netflix-161811929.html

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Dana White?s latest video blog shows he is a fan of shooting guns, riding motorcycles and apple-picking

With no fight this week, UFC president Dana White released a video blog that shows what he and his "idiot friends" do when visiting his place in Maine. Yes, there's plenty of NSFW language. Take a look and see what White and his friends are up to, including:

1. Talk one friend into trying the spiciest hot sauce ever.
2. Blow things up.
3. Shoot guns while calling each other a nickname for a cat.
4. Apple-picking, though it doesn't look like they're picking honeycrisp apples, the finest of all apple varieties.
5. Milk goats in a way that looks pretty uncomfortable for the goat.
6. Drive motorcycles.

[Also: Nick Diaz can cry foul all he wants, but he's not getting a rematch with GSP]

And a little advice for Nick the Tooth. I was once told at an Indian restaurant, after eating very spicy food, that beer or soda pop are your best bets to cool a burning mouth.

Memorable Moments from Yahoo! Sports:

Other popular content on Yahoo! Sports:
? Top seeds L'ville, Kansas in the way of All-Big Ten Final Four
? Watch: Who could crash the Final Four?
? Report: Seahawks may have multiple trade partners for Matt Flynn
? NASCAR Power Rankings: A (Junior) Nation rises

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/dana-white-latest-video-blog-shows-fan-shooting-164921000--mma.html

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Rev. Emily C. Heath: Maundy Thursday and the Love Mandate

The most common question I get asked during Holy Week is about this night, the Thursday before Easter. People get Palm Sunday, and Good Friday, and Easter, but tonight, Maundy Thursday, is unclear. And the one thing people want to know the most, is this: What does "Maundy" mean?

It's a good question. Who uses the term "maundy" in their daily life? For those on the outside of the church, and even for those of us inside, it might just sound like a church service where we know we should want to go to it, but we have no idea why.

But before I talk about what the word means, I want to go back to that story we read from the Gospel. In it Jesus has gone to Jerusalem for the Passover. He's gathered his 12 disciples there at the table. And he knows what is going to happen. He knows that by the end of the night one of them will betray him to the authorities. One will deny him three times. And all of them will leave him alone in his hour of greatest pain.

And yet, there he is. Breaking the bread and pouring the cup. Eating with them. Blessing them. Getting down on his knees and washing their feet, showing them his love and grace and compassion, in a time when we might have better understood his wrath or anger.

In a world where we are often surrounded by messages of retaliation, or vengeance, or an eye for an eye cries for justice, it's a different message. Jesus had done nothing wrong. He'd lived a life of nonviolence, he'd healed the sick, raised the dead and freed the captives. He'd brought hope and life to those who needed it the most.

And in the end, he knew that he was not about to be thanked. He was about to be killed. Because in the end, the goodness and the kindness and the compassion he had brought were more of a threat to the Roman authorities, and clergy of his day, than any weapon or any army. He so radically upset the status quo that they decided their only choice was to kill him.

The night before, he wasn't running away. He wasn't preparing for a battle. He wasn't plotting his revenge. Instead, he was with the ones he loved most. The ones who loved him, but who weren't perfect. The ones who knew who he was, and what he had done, and who would be the witnesses to his life after he was gone.

And that's where that word "maundy" comes in. Because what do you do if you're Jesus? What do you do if you know you are not going to be around much longer, and you have to tell the people you love the most, the ones who followed you, the ones who sometimes make big mistakes, how to keep moving in the right direction after you're gone?

The word "maundy" comes from a Latin word: mandatum. And mandatum means "mandate" or a "commandment". And when we talk about "Maundy Thursday" we're talking about "mandate Thursday." We're talking about the night that Christ told his disciples exactly what he expected of them.

And if you read a book or watch a movie about almost anyone else, you might think the lead character right about now would be saying something like "avenge my death" or "make sure there's payback" or "don't let them get away with this ... strike back."

But this isn't any other story. This is a story that turns everything on its head. The mandate, the mandatory thing Jesus tells us to do in this passage is this:

"I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another."

It probably wouldn't do well at the box office. It wouldn't get Nielsen ratings. The story wouldn't soar to the top of the New York Times best-sellers list today. But it's a story that transcends all of those things. Because it's the beginning of a story about what happens when the world does its worst through violence and hatred and fear, and yet love wins anyway. It's a story of love that was rejected and buried, and yet was still too strong to stay in the ground.

It's not my job to rename Christian holy days. But if it were, I might change the name of Maundy Thursday. I might change it from this word that none of us really know anymore to something we would all understand. Something like "Love One Another Thursday" or "The Last Thing Christ Really Wanted Us to Know Thursday."

Because this is a message we Christians all need to hear. We don't need to hide it behind fancy terms. We don't need to just check it off as another night in holy week. We need to hear that this is how Christ said other people would know us: by how we love one another.

Maybe it would help us remember. Maybe it would help us remember not just what this night is about, but maybe it would help us remember what it means to be Christians. And maybe if we always had that reminder, if we always had that commandment to love in the front of our head, Christ's dream for us would come true.

Maybe we wouldn't be known as Christ's disciples by the fact we put a Christian fish sticker on our car. Or wore a cross around our necks. Maybe we wouldn't be know by what we said about what we believed. Maybe we wouldn't be known by our what we voted for, or against. Maybe we wouldn't be known by the anger some Christians express on the evening news, or the mean-spiritedness others show in their day-to-day lives. Maybe instead we would just be known by the one thing Christ wanted us to be known for: by how we love.

In a few minutes we will be celebrating Communion together, and you'll hear me repeat the words of institution, the phrases we are told Christ used as he broke bread and gave it to his disciples for the first time, on this same night many years ago. I'll say to you that "on the night Christ was betrayed he took bread, and blessed it, and gave it to his disciples."

You hear that all the time here, and if you are like me, you are uplifted by it.

But what if you heard this just as often too? "On the night Christ was betrayed he turned to his disciples and said, 'I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.'"

We don't say that often in service. Not in so many words. But I think we try to say it in the breaking of the bread and the sharing of the cup. It's no coincidence Christ said these things on the night of his last supper, but we sometimes forget the say the words.

This year, let's not forget. Between this Maundy Thursday and the one next year, let's not forget what the mandate is. It's so simple, and yet it demands our whole lives and our whole attentions. But here in the church, we can give Christ nothing less. Tonight, as we eat this bread and drink this cup, as simple as it seems on the outside, know that we are choosing no less than to feast upon Christ's love for us, and to bring that feast out to others. If every Christian would do that, no one would ever have to ask us who we follow. By our love, they would already know. Amen.

?

Follow Rev. Emily C. Heath on Twitter: www.twitter.com/calledoutrev

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rev-emily-c-heath/maundy-thursday-and-the-love-mandate_b_2941615.html

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FOR KIDS: This shrimp packs a punch

Researchers learn a lot from mantis shrimp, colorful marine creatures that possess deadly weapons and complex vision

Researchers learn a lot from mantis shrimp, colorful marine creatures that possess deadly weapons and complex vision

By Roberta Kwok

Web edition: March 27, 2013

Enlarge

The peacock mantis is brightly colored, with leopard spots on its deadly forelimbs. Adults can smash the glass of an aquarium.

Credit: Roy Caldwell

Mantis shrimp are crustaceans, a group of animals that includes crabs and lobsters. Resembling cartoon characters, the small animals sport?oddly shaped?antennae that detect chemicals.?Stiff, paddlelike flaps on the sides of their heads probably act as ears. Spines often decorate their tails. Big eyes on stalks bug out from their heads. And the animals come in dazzling colors, including green, pink, orange and electric blue.

But don't let their dazzling colors fool you. These critters can be very violent. When marine biologist Roy Caldwell tapped a tank to provoke a mantis shrimp, the animal smashed back. ?It broke the glass and flooded the office,? recalls Caldwell.

Visit the new?Science News for Kids?website?and read the full story:?This shrimp packs a punch

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/349241/title/FOR_KIDS_This_shrimp_packs_a_punch

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সোমবার, ২৫ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Meteorites reveal the secrets of last month's Russian fireball

Shards of meteorite, remnants of the fireball that streaked across Russia's skies on February 15, are giving scientists clues to the composition and origin of the space rock.

By Leonard David,?Space.com / March 21, 2013

A meteor streaked across the sky of Russia?s Ural Mountains on Friday morning, Feb. 15, causing sharp explosions injuring over 100 people, including many hurt by broken glass. Scientists have recovered broken fragments of the superbolide and are examining them for clues to its origin.

Nasha gazeta, www.ng.kz / AP

Enlarge Photos

Scientists studying small pieces of the meteor that exploded over the Russian city of Chelyabinsk on Feb. 15 are working to glean new insights into the rare impact by a space rock.

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Based on the meteorite analysis, researchers have determined that last month's meteor explosion in Russia ? which scientists call a superbolide ? produced a shock wave that reached the ground. That shock shattered windows and injured some 1,500 people due to flying glass.

The blast also created a shower of stony meteorites that fell to Earth in an impact region more than 60 miles (100 kilometers) long.

Thinly sliced meteorites

Some of the Chelyabinsk meteorite samples have made their way to planetary scientist Larry Taylor, director of the Planetary Geosciences Institute at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, who obtained the superbolide samples with the help of Russian colleagues.?

"I got three pieces that were completely coated with black fusion crust. The total of them is less than 10 grams," Taylor told SPACE.com here at the 44th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference.

Initially, the meteorite specimens were polished and thinly sliced for a detailed inspection under a petrographic microscope. The device is a type of optical microscope used in petrology and optical mineralogy that scientists are employing to identify rocks and minerals within the thin meteorite slices.

The small samples will undergo further scrutiny over the next few months, Taylor said.

"We've just started to skim the top of it," he added.

Tapping into superbolide secrets

Taylor and his associates are now deciding the best tactics to further reveal what stories the specimens have to tell.

"The magnitude of the explosion led a whole lot of us to believe that it must have been a very volatile-rich meteor that was coming in ? because it exploded so vigorously," Taylor said. Volatile materials are those that evaporate easily. ?In fact, everything we found so far points to an ordinary chondrite."

About 90 percent of stony meteorites are classified as ordinary chondrites, space rocks that are lacking in volatile materials.

"It is ordinary because it's common," Taylor said. "But it is special because it contains such a wide array of things ? a whole menagerie of things all in one."?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/-mNZ-WM7BWo/Meteorites-reveal-the-secrets-of-last-month-s-Russian-fireball

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রবিবার, ২৪ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Pet owners' fears as cats found in Wichelstowe canal (From ...

Pet owners? fears as cats found in Wichelstowe canal

From left, Wichelstowe residents by the canal. From left, Allison Brook, vet Lynne Gaskarth, Alison Marshall, Paul Hartigan, Jim Brook, Jane Carter and Kathy Smith Buy this photo ? From left, Wichelstowe residents by the canal. From left, Allison Brook, vet Lynne Gaskarth, Alison Marshall, Paul Hartigan, Jim Brook, Jane Carter and Kathy Smith

ANIMAL lovers in Wichelstowe are concerned someone is dumping their cats in the canal outside their homes.

Residents living near the canal say about 18 cats have gone missing or have been found dead in as many months, but police say they have only had reports of five being found in the canal and they are not treating the deaths as suspicious.

Paul Hartigan, 44, is the latest person to find his pet in the water and he believes his pregnant tabby cat?s death was not an accident.

?It seems to be an individual or more than one person actually getting the cats.

?She went out about 4am and we found her right outside our house floating in the canal,? he said.

?She looked like she had been strangled and held under water.

?We have got other cats and suddenly they are all petrified. Something is frightening them.?

The cat, called Socks, was the second of Paul?s cats to be found dead in the canal.

?In January three cats were dragged dead from the canal in one day. There is some sicko killing the cats as there are way too many to be accidents,? he said.

?People are worried around here. It?s a weird situation as no one can put their finger on what is going on.?

Emma Vicat, 24, who has lived in Wichelstowe for oa year, said her five-month-old black and white kitten Alfie went missing in January.

A week later, she received a call from a council worker to say Alfie had been found in the canal, with another cat.

?Alfie was one of the first cats it happened to, he went missing on New Year?s Day,? she said. ?We received a call from a man from the council who is called out when animals are killed on roads to ask if our cat was missing.

?They found him lying next to somebody else?s cat. They thought it was suspicious that the cats were lying together in the canal.

?It happened to our friends who live two doors away about a week later and their cat was just left outside their house which is horrible.

?We have no idea what is going on ? it is a busy footpath but nobody seems to see anyone or hear anything.

?We reported it to the police and they casked us some questions about it.

?Alfie was only a baby, he only ever used to go in to people?s gardens in the area, but he was friendly and would always go up to people.?

Allison Brook, who has been living in Wichelstowe for about a year, said her neighbours had been affected.

?If there is somebody doing this, they need to be caught,? she said.

Staff at Drove Veterinary Hospital are now trying to get permission to perform post-mortems if there are future victims and are offering to have a look at cats found in the canal free of charge to find out how they died.

Lynne Gaskarth, a vet at Drove, said: ?Nobody knows what is happening. We are advising residents who find cats in the canal to report it to us or the police.

?The cats may have fallen in but cats don?t generally jump into water.?

Residents are setting up CCTV cameras in a bid to find out what is happening.

A Wiltshire Police spokesman said: ?We are aware of reports that five cats have died in the canal since December.

?We have got no evidence those cats have died because of any foul play.

?If anybody has any any information for us they can call our neighbourhood policing team on 101.

?We have no reason at all to think these are anything other than tragic accidents.?

Source: http://www.swindonadvertiser.co.uk/news/10309245.Pet_owners____fears_as_cats_found_in_Wichelstowe_canal/?ref=rss

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BracketRacket: Zags, Ryan's Wiki and Geno is 59

Wichita State players and coaches celebrate a 76-70 win over Gonzaga during a third-round game in the NCAA men's college basketball tournament in Salt Lake City on Saturday, March 23, 2013. (AP Photo/George Frey)

Wichita State players and coaches celebrate a 76-70 win over Gonzaga during a third-round game in the NCAA men's college basketball tournament in Salt Lake City on Saturday, March 23, 2013. (AP Photo/George Frey)

Gonzaga head coach Mark Few looks down court late in their third-round game Wichita State in the NCAA college basketball tournament in Salt Lake City Saturday, March 23, 2013. Wichita State defeated Gonzaga 76-70. (AP Photo/George Frey)

Harvard's Siyani Chambers, Steve Moundou-Missi, Christian Webster and Wesley Saunders (23), from left, sit on the bench at the end of a third-round game in the NCAA men's college basketball tournament in Salt Lake City on Saturday, March 23, 2013. Arizona defeated Harvard 74-51. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan and his bench watch the final moments of the second half against Mississppi in a second-round game at the NCAA college basketball tournament Friday, March 22, 2013, in Kansas City, Mo. Mississippi won 57-46. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Louisville forward Chane Behanan, center, grabs a loose ball in front of Colorado State forward Pierce Hornung (4) in the first half of a third-round NCAA college basketball tournament game on Saturday, March 23, 2013, in Lexington, Ky. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Welcome back to BracketRacket, the one-stop shop for all your NCAA tournament needs.

Today, we say farewell to our first No. 1 seed and explain why Gonzaga's ouster was unusual compared to recent tournament history. We also check in with actor Josh Duhamel, browse Bo Ryan's Wikipedia page and get Coach K to compare Duke with the Yankees.

But first, let's see just how rough things have gotten for your bracket.

___

BYE, GONZAGA

You hear the basketball experts every year: Just pencil the four No. 1 seeds straight to the Sweet 16. But Gonzaga, whom Vegas bookmakers put behind three lower seeded teams in odds to win the title when the tournament began, lost to Wichita State on Saturday night. Higher seeds were 6-2 on Saturday, with Oregon pulling the other upset over Saint Louis.

And as you'll soon see, the Sunday round of 32 is where upsets have usually come the past couple years.

___

SORE LOSERS

Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan better hope nobody was using Wikipedia to research him recently.

After Wisconsin's first-round loss to Ole Miss, some bitter Badgers fans spent Friday vandalizing Ryan's page, the top hit on Google when you search for his name. The revisions quickly spread across social networks, touching off a back-and-forth wiki dance between anonymous fans and moderators fighting to keep the page as accurate as possible.

One revision replaced Ryan's image with side-by-side photos of Ryan and Jim Carrey's 2000 portrayal of the Grinch.

Another edit: "Bo Ryan has as many Final Fours as Daffy Duck, Tony the Tiger, Big Bird, your local mail man, the Geico lizard, Skeeter, Mickey Mouse, Homer Simpson, Sasquatch and Winnie the Pooh combined."

Technically, that's true, though Wisconsin has made the tournament all 12 years under Ryan, a run that's included five Sweet 16s and one Elite Eight. And while it's not NCAA hoops, Daffy Duck was on Michael Jordan's winning Space Jam squad in 1995.

Those and other less family-friendly changes to Ryan's bio page sprung several volunteer Wikipedia editors to action. Their mission: Undo.

One such editor, Dennis Murray of Pittsburgh, said he's not a big basketball fan and had never even heard of Bo Ryan before Friday, when he changed the page to "semi-protected" status, restricting who could edit it.

Murray says Wikipedia vandalism happens occasionally, depending on the event.

"You might see a similar level of activity if a referee makes a controversial call or if a player makes a boneheaded play, but that's not always a given. I would imagine Bill Buckner's Wikipedia article would have gotten pretty interesting if it was around back then," Murray told the AP on Saturday.

As if the former Boston Red Sox first baseman needs more reminders.

___

CELEBRITY ALUM

Actor Josh Duhamel spent the week preparing to host Nickelodeon's Kids' Choice Awards on Saturday night, but made sure to fax his bracket in time to enter sportscaster Dan Patrick's pool. A quick summary of the "Las Vegas" and "All My Children" actor's picks: Indiana wins it all, Pac-12 and Big Ten teams do well and Minnesota shows up as a dark horse.

"Duke, (Ohio State), Michigan State is always tough in the tournament. There's a lot of teams that could win it this year," Duhamel tells the AP's Ryan Pearson. "And there's been so many upsets that you know Miami could win the thing."

The 40-year-old Minot State alum says he tried several sports in college ? the Beavers are Division II ? but quickly got overwhelmed.

"I always thought I was going to be a professional athlete of some sort and then I realized I wasn't athletic enough."

___

FIRST TIME FOR EVERYTHING

Quick pop quiz: When was the last year neither Michigan nor Michigan State made the NCAA tournament?

Give up? It's 1997, and 1984 before that, the year before the field expanded to 64 teams.

But given the regular appearances and the schools' 17 combined Sweet 16 appearances since 1985, you might be surprised to learn that 2013 is the first time that both Michigan and Michigan State have made the tourney's regional semifinals in the same year.

Both teams advanced Saturday in the Detroit suburb of Auburn Hills, with Michigan beating VCU and Michigan State downing Memphis.

They've just been good at different times. As of Saturday, Michigan has reached the Sweet 16 a dozen times, while Michigan State has done it in 17 tourneys.

Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said it might shock some fans, but he's pulling for Michigan as conference colleagues.

"Thank God they're going to a different region so we don't have to worry about facing another Big Ten team right away," Izzo said.

___

JUST ONE EVIL EMPIRE (IN SPORTS)

Don't tell Mike Krzyzewski that Duke is college basketball's New York Yankees.

Coach K was asked Saturday about his Blue Devils being like the Bronx Bombers in terms of nonpartisan fans rooting against them because of their success. As AP Basketball Writer Jim O'Connell reports, Krzyzewski made sure at his news conference that everyone knew the rules are different for college programs than professional franchises.

"I don't know how the Yankees are. I don't coach the Yankees. We're not the Yankees," he said. "(Seth) Curry doesn't come back every year. We still don't have (JJ) Redick. (Christian) Laettner left a long time ago. If he was Mariano Rivera we'd still have Laettner. It's not the same. We have a different Duke team every time."

Either it's a remarkable coincidence that Laettner and Rivera are the same age, or Coach K's given this comparison some thought before.

___

NO EASY BUCKETS

D.J. Stephens of Memphis has been getting a ton of notice this tournament for his dunks, but his biggest moment Saturday against Michigan State was one of his four first-half blocks: http://bit.ly/15FyesK . Adreian Payne probably had no business trying for an off-balance layup in that spot, but he got his revenge in the second half: http://bit.ly/YMQEDO .

___

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, GENO

The start of the women's tournament Saturday was also a special day for Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma ? his 59th birthday.

And the No. 1-seed Huskies have a tradition when a member of their team marks another year: Everyone sings and the honoree skips around the room.

So as the AP's Pat Eaton-Robb watched during shootaround, Auriemma's players began to sing and he was forced to do his part.

"He was a baby about skipping," said center Stefanie Dolson. "He barely skipped. But he did, a little."

UConn then went out and ran all over Idaho, routing the Vandals 105-37.

The Huskies improved to 8-1 in games played on Auriemma's birthday ? the lone loss coming in 1998.

___

STAT OF THE DAY

Recent history suggests Sunday is the prime day for upsets in the round of 32. In the 2011 and 2012 tournaments combined, higher-seeded teams went 15-1 on Saturdays in the round of 32. The only loss was by No. 1 seed Pittsburgh to No. 8 Butler in 2011 in Washington. But on the second day of the round of 32 ? Sunday, of course ? it was almost even, with higher seeds winning only nine of 16 games. The upsets included some big surprises: No. 11 Marquette over No. 3 Syracuse (2011), No. 11 VCU beating No. 3 Purdue (2011), No. 10 Florida State over No. 2 Notre Dame (2011) and No. 11 North Carolina State toppling No. 3 Georgetown (2012).

___

QUOTE OF THE DAY:

"Florida Gulf Coast ? have you ever been there? I don't think it's hard to recruit to that campus. It's pretty nice." ? Indiana coach Tom Crean, as reported by the AP's Tom Withers.

___

Oskar Garcia is a news editor for The Associated Press in Honolulu. Write to him at ogarcia(at)ap.org and follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/oskargarcia

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-24-BKC-BracketRacket-032413/id-65592858cf714adbba5d95da3eb04c6d

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Broad Recognition ? Trans Woman Denied Admission to Smith ...

Sarah Giovanniello

About six months ago, I wrote a piece about my friend Calliope Wong?s attempt to apply to Smith College as a trans woman.? At her request, I?m here to present the conclusion to her story.

Calliope announced in a March 10th post on her blog that Smith had returned her application for the second and final time. The first time, her application and fee were returned due to a ?male? gender marker on her transcript. Calliope and her guidance counselor, despite some confusion, finally managed to correct the error and sent the application materials back to Smith. On March 5th, her application was once again mailed back to her. Debra Shaver, Dean of Admissions at Smith, told Calliope that the ?male? marker on her FAFSA forms rendered her ineligible for consideration.

Observing this ?technicality? a bit more closely, two important problems come to light. First of all, using an applicant?s FAFSA information as a determining factor in their eligibility for admission presents an inherent classist bias. Secondly, the Department of Education does not cross-reference the FAFSA gender marker with what is written on one?s current Social Security card or other federal documents. Members of Smith Q&A, a group working for trans woman inclusion at Smith, contacted Jon O?Bergh, Special Assistant to the Under Secretary of the US Department of Education. O?Bergh referred them to Cameron Washington, the Web Usability Specialist at FAFSA. Both O?Bergh and Washington emphasized that the gender marker on the FAFSA is used to make sure those who mark ?male? sign up for the Selective Service before receiving federal aid. The US Department of Education does not in any way track, check, or cross reference the gender students mark on the FAFSA. Therefore, a women?s college which chooses to accept an applicant whose FAFSA gender marker reads ?male? faces no legal federal consequences whatsoever.

FAFSA forms aside, even if Calliope had not needed or requested financial aid, would she have been eligible for admission? Quite frankly, probably not. If this had been the case, the admissions office could have found myriad other reasons not to admit her. In fact, they never needed a reason at all: private colleges can deny admission to anyone without justifying their decision. Dean Shaver?s decision to deny Calliope the right to have her application read at all therefore communicates a clear and deliberate message to the school?s applicants, current students, and alumni.

Calliope is not the only trans woman to have applied to Smith in recent years with unfavorable results. Bryn Kelly, a former applicant to Smith?s Ada Comstock program for non-traditional students, replied to Calliope?s tumblr post with her own story. In 2010, Kelly applied to Smith with an excellent community college GPA, an impressive reputation as an up and coming performing artist, and glowing recommendations. She had all her gender markers in order, including those on her FAFSA, except one: her high school transcript, which was impossible to change. Kelly had a friend in the admissions office who advocated for her, resulting in the admissions officers ?allowing? her application to be read and processed despite the inconsistency in gender. She was not admitted. Again, since private colleges are not legally obligated to accept anyone, we cannot definitively say that it was because she was trans. She writes, ?Certainly my rejection letter contained that old soft blow, ?we received so many qualified applicants this year?? and I?m sure they did. But given that I have never heard of an out trans woman being accepted at Smith, I have to wonder?

The Smith College administration has not directly commented on or responded to the vast amounts of criticism they have received for refusing to read Calliope?s application. However, on March 22nd, Smith updated its ?Gender Identity & Expression? page with new information regarding the institutional policy on trans applicants. In response to the question, ?How does Smith consider applicants from transgender students?? the page repeats what Dean Shaver told Calliope in their previous correspondence: ?An application from a transgender student is treated no differently from other applications: every application Smith receives is considered on a case-by-case basis. Like most women?s colleges, Smith expects that, to be eligible for review, a student?s application and supporting documentation (transcripts, recommendations, etc.) will reflect her status as a woman.? The next question on the page asks, ?What documents are part of Smith?s admission process?? The response lists the standard Common Application, transcript, midyear report, and recommendations. Noticeably absent from the list is the FAFSA or any documents not directly related to admission.? Thus, according to the policy on Smith?s website, Calliope?s application should have been eligible for review.

By refusing to comment on the incident, it remains ambiguous whether Smith College acknowledges that discriminating against Calliope based on her FAFSA gender marker was a mistake. It is possible that this recent website update functions as Smith?s subtle adjustment of its policies in order to refrain from public apology. However, this policy ?adjustment? merely allows the administration to keep its trans admission policy opaque and veiled from outside criticism.? It is important to note that even if Smith were to cease discriminating against applicants with male gender markers on their FAFSA, its policy is still far too rigid to be amenable to many teenage trans women. Acquiring consistently ?female? transcripts and recommendations requires the applicant to have the full support and understanding of her school administration, making it easy for Smith to continue to return applications based on bureaucratic error. This need for the high school administration?s support automatically restricts the access of applicants who would most benefit from a women?s college environment, barring the entry of those who might have attended high schools insensitive to their identification. A more understanding policy would allow mismatching documentation if accompanied by an appropriate letter from a doctor or therapist, much in the manner of the policy of the State of Massachusetts in order to change gender markers on state identification.

Ironically, Smith College?s inhospitality toward trans women ultimately threatens, rather than upholds, their institutional image as a women?s college. As Katherine Kraschel states in her article for the Harvard Journal of Law and Gender, an educational institution may retain its single-sex status only if it can prove that it is helping to achieve a civil rights objective. Trans women in particular are excluded from women-only and men-only spaces based on their gender identity and/or genitalia. Excluding trans women from women?s colleges continues the institutional oppression and marginalization of people based on their gender identity. This therefore places Smith?s admissions policy in direct conflict with the trans rights movement and with its ?civic-minded,? ?empowering? image as a whole.

It?s also important to note that while Smith has yet to admit an out trans woman, it and other women?s colleges are rapidly becoming known as safe havens for trans men.? The ?Gender Identity & Expression? page on the Smith College website notes, ?Once admitted, any student who completes the college?s graduation requirements ? regardless of gender identity, gender expression or sexual orientation ? will be awarded a Smith degree.?? This means that a trans man whose documents still read ?female? can easily apply for admission and transition while at Smith without being asked to leave or refused a Smith degree. Because of this policy, trans men are a small but conspicuous minority at Smith, and have been for some time. Many students feel that women?s colleges are, or could be, safe havens for anyone marginalized or oppressed by their gender identity. However, the administration?s ongoing refusal to admit anyone who was not assigned female at birth continually denies these marginalized groups a safe space.

Ultimately, Smith College?s actions fail to acknowledge that civil rights discourses in the 21st century have become much more fluid and inclusive than in previous decades, especially as more and more people begin to discount the gender binary. On its ?History? page, the College describes its overarching goals and interests as, ?an uncompromising defense of academic and intellectual freedom, an attention to the relation between college education and the larger public issues of world order and human dignity, and a concern for the rights and privileges of women.? In order for Smith to continue to fulfill its stated mission, it must adjust its policies to reflect the changing discourse surrounding gender and sexuality by admitting both trans men and trans women. By deliberately excluding an entire marginalized group from admission, the college silences them and diminishes the importance of their fight to access women?s spaces.? If Smith and other women?s colleges wish to continue to move discussion of gender identity and equality forward, they must acknowledge that the process underpinning an applicant?s gender identification is more complicated than ?just checking female.?

Whether or not they decide to pursue legal action, it is up to Smith students to respond to their administration?s blatant transmisogyny. The group Smith Q&A is currently mobilizing to fight on Calliope?s behalf. On March 13th, the group held a meeting open to all Smith students intended to clarify the week?s events and launch an awareness campaign. The group?s further plans are not known at this time, although an update on their Facebook page stated that the group ?will be organizing more specifically next week [March 24-30].? Q&A can be reached on Facebook and Tumblr. Have something to say? To contact Dean Shaver, email admission@smith.edu or call [413-585-2500].

Sarah Giovanniello is a freshman in Yale College. She is a staff writer for Broad Recognition.

Source: http://broadrecognition.com/politics/trans-woman-denied-admission-to-smith-college-why-just-checking-female-is-more-complicated-than-it-sounds/

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How low (or what %) do you set auto-decline on OBO? - Blowout ...

I think it really depends on the card and the seller's interest in the card

If its an artifically scarce insert of a semi-star that the "right buyer" or super collector will pay 30, 50% , 100% more than the average casual collector will, its an art to what to initially list it for . Many sellers may set an auto decline of 50% of the BIN/BO asking price. Also, if it's a card that is only $10-20, seller may decide that $10 is not worth the hassle of selling.

Many top RCs or autographed inserts of top superstars or 'safe' rising stars have a pretty close selling range and there'e no reason to accept an offer on a $100 card at $80 if either
a) there's a 98% chance that it will sell between $95-100 if the seller will wait a few more days.
b) if the seller believes that there's a more than 50% chance that the card will go up say 20%+ in value over the next year

As you have found out, most cards fall in the middle and I suspect that if it's a nice rookie card that might grade well and/or appreciate in value more than 20-40% (such as top Chrome color), seller will be more specific in his ask price.


Last edited by edhou1; Yesterday at 11:19 AM.

Source: http://www.blowoutcards.com/forums/baseball/478769-how-low-what-do-you-set-auto-decline-obo.html

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Report: Fargo should expect 1 of its worst floods

FARGO, N.D. (AP) ? Residents along the Red River in Fargo and neighboring Moorhead, Minn., should prepare for one of the top five floods in their history, the National Weather Service said Thursday.

Its latest flood outlook included a 50 percent chance that the river would top 38 feet later this spring. That would surpass the fifth-highest crest of 37.34 feet in 1969. Flood stage is 18 feet.

The weather service said the chances of a top five flood had increased with near-record cold temperatures that have delayed the snowmelt. Now, the melt cycle isn't expected to begin until the first week of April. The chances of a big rain also increase around that time, officials said.

"Those could be some tumultuous conditions," said Greg Gust, meteorologist for the weather service. He added later, "The bottom line is that we have a way above normal snowpack sitting out there right now."

Fargo officials said they believe the city is still in good shape because of recent flood protection improvements, but they plan to make 500,000 sandbags to add to a reserve of 750,000 bags.

City and county officials planned to discuss the flood outlook at a news conference later Thursday.

Fargo-Moorhead residents battled three straight major floods beginning in 2009, when the record crest of nearly 41 feet forced thousands to evacuate and caused an estimated $100 million in damage.

The river crested at 36.99 feet in 2010. It hit 38.75 feet in 2011, the fourth highest crest on record.

Fargo has built more than 20 levees since the 2009 flood and bought out hundreds of homes in flood-prone areas.

The flood threat comes as Congress is set to consider whether to help fund a nearly $2 billion diversion channel around the Fargo-Moorhead area. The White House has signed off on the project.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/report-fargo-expect-1-worst-floods-153129937.html

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Breakthrough could lead to cheaper, more sustainable chemical production

Breakthrough could lead to cheaper, more sustainable chemical production [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Kevin Stacey
kevin_stacey@brown.edu
401-863-3766
Brown University

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] A key advance, newly reported by chemists from Brown and Yale Universities, could lead to a cheaper and more sustainable way to make acrylate, an important commodity chemical used to make materials from polyester fabrics to diapers.

Chemical companies churn out billions of tons of acrylate each year, usually by heating propylene, a compound derived from crude oil. "What we're interested in is enhancing both the economics and the sustainability of how acrylate is made," said Wesley Bernskoetter, assistant professor of chemistry at Brown, who led the research. "Right now, everything that goes into making it is from relatively expensive, nonrenewable carbon sources."

Since the 1980s researchers have been looking into the possibility of making acrylate by combining carbon dioxide with a gas called ethylene in the presence of nickel and other metal catalysts. CO2 is essentially free and something the planet currently has in overabundance. Ethylene is cheaper than propylene and can be made from plant biomass.

There has been a persistent obstacle to the approach, however. Instead of forming the acrylate molecule, CO2 and ethylene tend to form a precursor molecule with a five-membered ring made of oxygen, nickel, and three carbon atoms. In order to finish the conversion to acrylate, that ring needs to be cracked open to allow the formation of a carbon-carbon double bond, a process called elimination.

That step had proved elusive. But the research by Bernskoetter and his colleagues, published in the journal Organometallics, shows that a class of chemicals called Lewis acids can easily break open that five-membered ring, allowing the molecule to eliminate and form acrylate.

Lewis acids are basically electron acceptors. In this case, the acid steals away electrons that make up the bond between nickel and oxygen in the ring. That weakens the bond and opens the ring.

"We thought that if we could find a way to cut the ring chemically, then we would be able to eliminate very quickly and form acrylate," Bernskoetter said. "And that turns out to be true."

He calls the finding an "enabling technology" that could eventually be incorporated in a full catalytic process for making acrylate on a mass scale. "We can now basically do all the steps required," he said.

From here, the team needs to tweak the strength of the Lewis acid used. To prove the concept, they used the strongest acid that was easily available, one derived from boron. But that acid is too strong to use in a repeatable catalytic process because it bonds too strongly to the acrylate product to allow additional reactions with the nickel catalyst.

"In developing and testing the idea, we hit it with the biggest hammer we could," Bernskoetter said. "So what we have to do now is dial back and find one that makes it more practical."

There's quite a spectrum of Lewis acid strengths, so Bernskoetter is confident that there's one that will work. "We think it's possible," he said. "Organic chemists do this kind of reaction with Lewis acids all the time."

The ongoing research is part of a collaboration between Brown and Yale supported by the National Science Foundation's Centers for Chemical Innovation program. The work is aimed at activating CO2 for use in making all kinds of commodity chemicals, and acrylate is a good place to start.

"It's around a $2 billion-a-year industry," Bernskoetter said. "If we can find a way to make acrylate more cheaply, we think the industry will be interested."

###

Other authors on the paper were Dong Jin and Paul Willard of Brown and Nilay Hazari and Timothy Schmeier of Yale.

Editors: Brown University has a fiber link television studio available for domestic and international live and taped interviews, and maintains an ISDN line for radio interviews. For more information, call (401) 863-2476.


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

?


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


Breakthrough could lead to cheaper, more sustainable chemical production [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Kevin Stacey
kevin_stacey@brown.edu
401-863-3766
Brown University

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] A key advance, newly reported by chemists from Brown and Yale Universities, could lead to a cheaper and more sustainable way to make acrylate, an important commodity chemical used to make materials from polyester fabrics to diapers.

Chemical companies churn out billions of tons of acrylate each year, usually by heating propylene, a compound derived from crude oil. "What we're interested in is enhancing both the economics and the sustainability of how acrylate is made," said Wesley Bernskoetter, assistant professor of chemistry at Brown, who led the research. "Right now, everything that goes into making it is from relatively expensive, nonrenewable carbon sources."

Since the 1980s researchers have been looking into the possibility of making acrylate by combining carbon dioxide with a gas called ethylene in the presence of nickel and other metal catalysts. CO2 is essentially free and something the planet currently has in overabundance. Ethylene is cheaper than propylene and can be made from plant biomass.

There has been a persistent obstacle to the approach, however. Instead of forming the acrylate molecule, CO2 and ethylene tend to form a precursor molecule with a five-membered ring made of oxygen, nickel, and three carbon atoms. In order to finish the conversion to acrylate, that ring needs to be cracked open to allow the formation of a carbon-carbon double bond, a process called elimination.

That step had proved elusive. But the research by Bernskoetter and his colleagues, published in the journal Organometallics, shows that a class of chemicals called Lewis acids can easily break open that five-membered ring, allowing the molecule to eliminate and form acrylate.

Lewis acids are basically electron acceptors. In this case, the acid steals away electrons that make up the bond between nickel and oxygen in the ring. That weakens the bond and opens the ring.

"We thought that if we could find a way to cut the ring chemically, then we would be able to eliminate very quickly and form acrylate," Bernskoetter said. "And that turns out to be true."

He calls the finding an "enabling technology" that could eventually be incorporated in a full catalytic process for making acrylate on a mass scale. "We can now basically do all the steps required," he said.

From here, the team needs to tweak the strength of the Lewis acid used. To prove the concept, they used the strongest acid that was easily available, one derived from boron. But that acid is too strong to use in a repeatable catalytic process because it bonds too strongly to the acrylate product to allow additional reactions with the nickel catalyst.

"In developing and testing the idea, we hit it with the biggest hammer we could," Bernskoetter said. "So what we have to do now is dial back and find one that makes it more practical."

There's quite a spectrum of Lewis acid strengths, so Bernskoetter is confident that there's one that will work. "We think it's possible," he said. "Organic chemists do this kind of reaction with Lewis acids all the time."

The ongoing research is part of a collaboration between Brown and Yale supported by the National Science Foundation's Centers for Chemical Innovation program. The work is aimed at activating CO2 for use in making all kinds of commodity chemicals, and acrylate is a good place to start.

"It's around a $2 billion-a-year industry," Bernskoetter said. "If we can find a way to make acrylate more cheaply, we think the industry will be interested."

###

Other authors on the paper were Dong Jin and Paul Willard of Brown and Nilay Hazari and Timothy Schmeier of Yale.

Editors: Brown University has a fiber link television studio available for domestic and international live and taped interviews, and maintains an ISDN line for radio interviews. For more information, call (401) 863-2476.


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/bu-bcl032113.php

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Avoid Hanger Bumps When Hangins Sweaters

Avoid Hanger Bumps When Hangins Sweaters Most people hang sweaters like they would and normal shirt or jacket, but the weight of the material means the hanger can create bumps on the garment's shoulders. Luckily, there's a somewhat wacky way to avoid this.

Joshua Davis shared his method for hanging sweaters on Snapguide, and it's a doozy. It will be easier to see what's going on by clicking the source link to see all of the photos, but he basically tells you to fold the sweater in half, place the hanger hook in the armpit, then fold each side of the garment over the hanger arms. The finished product looks a little strange, but it distributes the weight of the sweater more evenly over the hanger, and eliminates those pesky bumps.

How to Hang a Sweater | Snapguide

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/uhDUoHzjT48/how-to-hang-a-sweater-to-avoid-hanger-bumps

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INTERVIEW: Actor Jim Sturgess On Upside Down - ZAKI'S ...

Ever since his breakout performance in 2007's Across the Universe, actor-musician Jim Sturgess has leveraged his reputation as one of Hollywood's rising stars to seek out unique, interesting projects that represent unique, interesting artistic visions.

His latest film, the dreamlike modern day fairytale Upside Down, which opened yesterday in limited release, is no exception. Directed by Juan Solanes and co-starring Kirsten Dunst, the surreal, modern day fairy tale is about a pair of star-crossed lovers trapped on two conjoined worlds separated by inverted gravity. Check out the trailer here.

I recently, I had a chance to speak with Sturgess about the film, how he chose it, and what it was like seeing a green screen vision realized. I also briefly discussed his previous project, 2012's Cloud Atlas, and how close he came to snagging the lead in Marvel Studios' 2014 epic, Guardians of the Galaxy. Read the text of our conversation after the jump:

A script like this comes across your desk, and it?s a leap of faith. What prompted you to take that leap??

Juan Solanes, the director. For sure. There were a few stages; I read the script and I thought, ?This seems interesting, but how are they going to do this? How are they going to pull it off?? Then Juan sent me some visual imagery, these graphic designs that were a template for what he was hoping to achieve with the film. That really threw me into the world because without that you conjure up your own ideas of what the worlds look like but it wasn?t until I saw his vision of the film I thought, ?Wow, this could be really visually quite exciting.?

And then when I met him I just believed in him; I believed he?d been working on this idea for such a long time, he was so passionate about it, I?d seen a short film that he?d made previously which gave me the belief that he could pull it off. That leap of faith is always the exciting part. You all jump in and become part of a team and you?re all there to try to make that happen together. It?s a big giant, giant, giant team effort. That?s what?s exciting about making films, I think.

What was that first experience for you, seeing the movie for the first time having been on this green screen and then seeing it visualized??

For one thing it wasn?t as much green screen as I had imagined it would be. They really build the sets for you. A lot of it was built on the set, all that was real, that was all there [motioning to the movie poster]. Obviously it wasn?t hanging right from the ceiling [laughs].

Juan was really great in trying to make as much reality for us as possible. We shot on location, all around Montreal and they just add, they enhance the world by graphic design around you but the basics are all there. I was really more amazed with the lengths they go to to create the reality for you. They build these incredible sets and there might be some green screen out the window that furthers the world.

Obviously there were days when we had some stunts or something to do where you?re standing in a green room on a green box holding a green rope praying that some talented artist is going to fill in the world for you. But when you see the film you?re like, wow, you?re living in a dream. When you watch films like that as a kid you think, ?Wow, I?m in that world. I exist in that world.? So it?s really cool and I?m really looking forward to seeing the film really for the first time. I saw a very rough cut when it was still bits of green screen; it wasn?t finalized at all. Then I saw it in a small screening room and so I haven?t seen it in its entirety.

So you haven?t had the theatrical experience??

No. With the crowd and the audience, a big proper cinema screen with the sound and everything else. I?m really looking forward to that.

What, for you, was the human hook to this story, that made you say, ?Yes, I can relate to this character. I can understand this.?

I guess you try and imagine the lengths you would go to when you?re truly, truly in love with somebody. Try to get that heart and that warmth and just understand him as a dreamer. Just understand this drive that he has and understand that he has really very little to live for actually and the frustration of what it must feel like to be from a poorer background looking and seeing this rich world looming above you. The idea at times you?ve got nothing to lose. I try to think more about that; not that that relates to my life but it was a good way of seeing...

It?s relatable.?

Yeah. When you have nothing to lose how powerful that can be. I guess when you come from shit you?ve got more of a drive to move forward. Just speaking to Juan...it?s a very personal story for him, actually. He comes from Argentina. He comes from more of a third world background and now lives in Paris which is very beautiful and glamorous. There was a lot of personal stuff in the film for him I think.

It?s a literalization of a metaphorical societal divide that he?s probably experience in his life.?

Yeah, for sure. He took what he knows in reality and turned it into fantasy which sometimes can tell you more about reality than drama can. Most fairytales have a very strong sense of some metaphorical understanding of something bigger. I think the film does that quite well. It is and should be just a really fun ride, love story, fantasy, fairy tale, lose-yourself-in-the-fantasy-of-it but woven pretty delicately are some pretty strong subject matters that he?s addressing and discussing that don?t interfere or get in your face or get rammed down your throat at all. It?s nice to know that you?re doing something and it?s not just pure fantasy for entertainment pleasure. It?s just nice to know there?s a little message that lies within all this fairy tale stuff. It keeps you moving forward.

Between this and Cloud Atlas you definitely pick projects that are off the beaten path. They?re not your typical Hollywood blockbuster type thing. Is that something that?s important to you? To go off the reservation, off the beaten path, do something that?s not ?mainstream???

You change all the time, what?s important for you at that particular moment. I?m drawn to cinema, especially when you?re on a project that feels like it?s going to be a challenge. With something like Cloud Atlas it was a no-brainer really. They asked me to do it and of course you just say yes.

The Wachowskis call, and...?

For sure, of course. And it?s exciting to be in a project that really does try and move things forward and move things around and come at cinema from a different angle than we?re used to seeing. I love watching movies like that. I watch films to be turned on and switched on rather than watch movies just to switch off which a lot of people do, which is fine, of course. They?ve had a busy day, and they?ve worked hard and they just want to be bombarded by entertainment. But you?d hope there?d be enough people out there that want to be switched on. I guess they?re just exciting when you feel like there?s a cheeky challenge underneath there.

Now, completely opposite of the question I just asked, your name was ?mentioned as one of the finalists for Peter Quill in Guardians of the Galaxy. How far along did that get??

Further than I ever imagined, to be honest. They?re not films that I would go and see particularly but I really started to get intrigued by it. I went to the audition and I was called back for another audition and I had a screen test and another screen test. I think I got down to the last two people. It was fun. Again, I was really, really, really excited about the idea of making a film that other people were really, really excited about seeing. That?s been rare in my career: to make a film that people are actually already...

It?s an event.?

Yeah. I was amazed instantly by the fact that our names got put out there as a group of actors that had gone out for it and everybody was writing about it and excited about it. I just felt like I was at a place in my life where it would be so exciting to make a film that people really, really already excited about. Then I discovered more and more about the story and it felt like more of a Star Wars than it does Spider-Man.

So this is their attempt to do the space opera thing??

You don?t actually get to know that much about the project. It?s all under lock and key which is crazy but obviously, it?s based on a comic. What I realized is it?s not rooted in reality. It?s up in space and the character was a space pirate of some sort so it was much more in the vein of Han Solo rather than just dressing up in a tight fitting suit. I guess your competitive nature starts kicking in. When you go for the first audition you think, ?This is a bit of fun.? Then you get further and further down the line and then you think, ?Shit, maybe I really want to do this.?

Is that something you see yourself doing? These superhero flicks are a dime a dozen these days...?

I?m in this game just to experience as much as possible and whether that means doing some gruelling low budget film shoot in the back end of nowhere and that feels exciting or whether it?s to be in a giant blockbuster movie which people are excited about that?s equally exciting. You just try and do as much variation and as much difference and as much as possible so you put yourself out there to try anything really. As long as you feel you?re going to get something out of the experience it?s all worth it. There?s no point in limiting yourself to a certain style of film.

******

Many thanks to Jim Sturgess for taking the time to chat about the movie. Upside Down is playing right now. To hear audio from this interview, be sure to listen to the MovieFilm Podcast at the embed below:

Source: http://www.zakiscorner.com/2013/03/interview-actor-jim-sturgess-on-upside.html

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