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Electric cars and commercial space flight -- what more could a person want? The Tesla / SpaceX founder is bringing all of that to his keynote on this, this second day of South By Southwest Interactive. The exec has never been on to mince words, so this ought to be an interesting one. Join us after the break, won't you?
Filed under: Transportation, Science
Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/bCFho1y9Jsk/
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NEW ORLEANS (AP) ? BP is warning investors that the price tag will be "significantly higher" than it initially estimated for its multibillion-dollar settlement with businesses and residents who claim the 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico cost them money.
The London-based oil giant estimated last year that it would spend roughly $7.8 billion to resolve tens of thousands of claims covered by the settlement agreement. But in a regulatory filing this week, BP PLC said businesses' claims have been paid at much higher average amounts than it had anticipated.
The company also said it can't reliably estimate how much it will pay for unresolved business claims following a ruling Tuesday by the federal judge supervising the uncapped settlement. U.S District Judge Carl Barbier rejected BP's interpretation of certain settlement provisions.
Barbier upheld claims administrator Patrick Juneau's interpretation of settlement terms that govern how businesses' pre- and post-spill revenue and expenses ? and the time periods for those dollar amounts ? are used to calculate their awards.
BP had argued that Juneau's interpretation would lead to "absurd results" and "false positives," but the judge said the settlement agreement anticipated that "such results would sometimes occur."
"Objective formulas, the possibility of 'false positives,' and giving claimants flexibility to choose the most favorable time periods are all consequences BP accepted when it decided to buy peace through a global, class-wide resolution," Barbier wrote.
BP spokesman Geoff Morrell said the company believes the way Juneau is processing business economic loss claims is "contrary to the agreement."
"His approach has produced unjustified windfall payments to numerous business claimants," Morrell said in a statement, adding that BP will pursue "all available legal options" to challenge Barbier's decision.
BP already had revised its estimate for the total cost of the settlement before Barbier's ruling, saying earlier this year that it expected to pay $8.5 billion instead of the $7.8 billion it estimated when it first cut the deal.
In this week's regulatory filing, the company said it has been analyzing the processing of recent claims to determine if they can be used to predict future claims, but concluded it can't.
Excluding business claims that Juneau hasn't received or processed yet, the company now estimates it will pay $7.7 billion to resolve the rest of the claims covered by the settlement.
"If BP is successful in its challenge to the court's ruling, the total estimated cost of the settlement agreement will, nevertheless, be significantly higher than the current estimate of $7.7 billion because business economic loss claims not yet received or processed are not reflected in the current estimate and the average payments per claim determined so far are higher than anticipated," the company said.
Barbier also is presiding over a non-jury trial designed to determine the causes of BP's April 2010 well blowout and assign percentages of fault to the companies involved in the disaster, which killed 11 workers and spawned the nation's worst offshore oil spill.
The trial, which opened Feb. 25 and is scheduled to resume Monday, could last several months if BP doesn't settle separate claims by the federal government and Gulf states over environmental and economic damage from the spill.
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Samuel Weigley and Michael B. Sauter , 24/7 Wall St. ? ? ? 1 day
Friday is International Women?s Day, meant to raise awareness of violence against women and the inequalities that affect women around the world. One area the United States continues to struggle with is gender equality in pay. In 2011, the median annual earnings of men was $47,233. Women earned just 78.8 percent of the men's pay, or more than $10,000 less. This difference has remained basically unchanged over the past five years in the U.S.
In some places in this country, women have begun to approach truly equal footing. In Los Angeles, women earned more than 91 percent of the male median. However, in other parts of the country, the gender pay gap is far more severe. In Provo-Orem, Utah, the median earnings of women employed full-time, year-round, was just 61.6 percent of men, or nearly $20,000 less. Based on a review of the 100 most populous metropolitan areas, 24/7 Wall St. identified the worst-paying cities for women in the United States.
Some industries have a much smaller gender pay gap than others. In food preparation, health care, and computers and mathematics, the median earnings of women in 2011 was at least 85 percent that of men's. The areas with a higher concentration of these jobs tended to have a smaller pay gap.
Other industries have extremely wide gaps in earnings. In the legal profession, women earned barely half what men did. And because it is such a high-paying field, the difference in income was roughly $54,000. In sales, construction, mineral extraction and manufacturing jobs, there are similar gaps both in median wages and access to high-level jobs.
The cities that tend to have the biggest gender wage gap have higher concentrations of industries where earnings are unequal. Ogden, Utah has a high proportion of manufacturing jobs. Cities such as Baton Rouge, La., and Lancaster, Pa., have large construction and extraction industries.
Culture may also play a part in the cities with a higher gender wage gap. The two metropolitan regions with the biggest gap are both in Utah. In an interview with 24/7 Wall St., Ariane Hegewisch, a research director for the Institute For Women?s Policy Research, explained that while Utah may also have a high proportion of industries that tend to favor men in pay -- ?they are a more traditional culture? -- meaning women are more likely to avoid high-paying jobs or receive offers.
To identify the cities that pay women the least, 24/7 Wall St. compared the median earnings for the past 12 months of both men and women who worked full-time, year-round in the country?s 100 largest metropolitan statistical areas, based on data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau. We also reviewed employment composition by sector, also from the Census Bureau. All data was for 2011, the most recent period available.
These are the worst-paying cities for women.
1. Provo-Orem, Utah
? Women?s pay as percentage of men?s: 61.6 percent
? Median income for men: $51,692
? Median income for women: $31,846
No metropolitan area had a greater pay disparity between men and women than Provo, where the median income in 2011 for men working full time was nearly $20,000 more than the median income for women. Women who worked in personal care and service occupations earned a median of just $18,590, or 44.3 percent of the earnings of their male counterparts. The pay gap was still vast even in higher-wage positions. Women working in business and financial operations earned just 57.8 percent of what men earned in 2011, one of the largest pay gaps in that field.
2. Ogden-Clearfield, Utah
? Women?s pay as percentage of men?s: 65.2 percent
? Median income for men: $52,184
? Median income for women: $34,018
Ogden-Clearfield was one of just two metro areas where the median income for women was less than two-thirds of that of men's. The median income for women was less than half the median income of men in many occupations. In the legal profession, women working full-time earned just 26.3 percent of what men earned, the biggest pay discrepancy of all metro areas in that field. Women working full time in personal care and service occupations earned just 40.3 percent of the pay that men did, again the largest pay discrepancy of all metro areas. Other jobs where women?s median income was less than half that of men's include sales, health diagnosis and treatment, and transportation occupations.
3. Lancaster, Penn.
? Women?s pay as percentage of men?s: 68.6 percent
? Median income for men: $47,318
? Median income for women: $32,446
Lancaster is an industrial town. About 11.6 percent of all full-time, year-round jobs in the region are in the manufacturing industry, the third-highest percentage of the top 100 largest metropolitan areas. Major manufacturers in the region include Armstrong World Industries and R.R. Donnelly & Sons. The median income for women in the manufacturing industry was just 64.3 percent that of men's in 2011. The gap was even worse in other fields. In the transportation industry, the median income of women was just 43 percent that of men's in 2011, one of the widest pay gaps among the largest metropolitan areas in that field.
4. Baton Rouge, La.
? Women?s pay as percentage of men?s: 69.3 percent
? Median income for men: $51,037
? Median income for women: $35,362
The median income for a woman working full time in Baton Rouge was nearly $16,000 less than the median income for a man. About 7.6 percent of the population works in the construction and extraction industry, the second-highest percentage of all metro areas measured. Many of these people are employed in chemical extraction. Chemical companies have a significant presence in Baton Rouge, with companies such as Dow Chemical, BASF and ExxonMobil?s chemical unit among the largest employers in the region. In the construction and extraction industry, women earned just 52.4 percent of what men earned in 2011. Other fields where the pay gap between men and women in Baton Rouge was large include production, where the median income of women in 2011 was just 40.6 percent of the median income of men, and transportation, where women?s earnings were just 42.8 percent that of men?s.
5. Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, Fla.
? Women?s pay as percentage of men?s: 69.8 percent
? Median income for men: $45,582
? Median income for women: $31,820
The median earnings for women in the Palm Bay metropolitan area in 2011 who worked full time was less than 70 percent of that for men. The pay gap in the Palm Bay area actually bucks the trend in the state as a whole. In Florida, the median income for women was 83.8 percent that of men's, the sixth-smallest gap of all states. Nearly 3.7 percent of the population works in health support, a higher percentage than all but one other city. The pay gap in that field is very large. Women earned just over 55 percent the pay of men in 2011. One bright spot was in computer and mathematical occupations. Women earned a median income of more than $67,000, or approximately $3,900 more than the median wage for men.
Click here to read the rest of 24/7 Wall St.'s The Worst Paying Cities for Women
Related content:
24/7 Wall St.: American Cities with the Highest (and Lowest) Taxes
24/7 Wall St.: Ten Companies Profiting Most from War
24/7 Wall St.: America's Most Miserable States
?2013 24/7 Wall St.
Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/worst-paying-cities-women-1C8753154
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? The future is unclear for a promising heart device aimed at preventing strokes in people at high risk of them because of an irregular heartbeat.
Early results from a key study of Boston Scientific Corp.'s Watchman device suggest it is safer than previous testing suggested, but may not as good as a drug that is used now for preventing strokes, heart-related deaths and blood clots in people with atrial fibrillation. That condition causes the heart to flutter rather than beat as it should, which can lead to clots that cause strokes.
The results were to have been the top study at an American College of Cardiology conference in San Francisco on Saturday but the presentation was pulled because the company released results early.
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Despite common sense, lots of pencil sharpeners don't come with a container to hold the shreddings, and you end up making a mess. YouTube user digitaLLoupe solves this problem with a simple Tic Tac box.
Once you've enjoyed all your delicious mints, you can shove the pencil sharpener in the opening to create the perfect, mess-free sharpener. There's nothing we could say that explains it better than the video above, so check it out and enjoy your slightly-cleaner workspace.
DIY Pencil Sharpener Container | YouTube
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TEHRAN, Iran (AP) ? Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has left for Caracas to attend the funeral of his Venezuelan ally Hugo Chavez.
Ahmadinejad is the head of an Iranian delegation that flew out of Tehran on Thursday.
The Iranian leader has praised Chavez, comparing him to a saint and saying he will return on resurrection day.
In his condolences on Wednesday, Ahmadinejad also said he has "no doubt Chavez will return to Earth together with Jesus and the perfect" Imam Mahdi, the most revered figure of Shiite Muslims, and that he'll help the two "establish peace, justice and kindness" in the world.
Ahmadinejad also says he believes something "suspicious" had caused Chavez's cancer.
The Iranian president had close ties with Chavez and the two leaders met frequently over the past years.
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With so many companies competing with each other online, the internet has become overloaded with content. Everywhere you look, businesses are on a mission to produce more blog posts, more eBooks, more videos, more podcasts and more of everything else in order to increase their online presence. And why not?? If you want to compete with all the noise out there, then you simply have to make more noise than everyone else, right?
At the moment, many marketing professionals will tell you that hiring extra content creators and churning out more content is the way to go. With more content, you can target more keywords, reach niche areas and get seen by more viewers.
While all of this is true, more certainly doesn?t mean better.
Of course, more content was a good thing ten or so years ago, when online content marketing was new. But now with every company advertising itself on the internet, content marketing has become the norm. As a result, quality instead of quantity is what?s going to set a company apart from its competitors. So instead of contributing to the clutter, companies should change their marketing ways and make their strategies about better content, not more.
To do this, first ask yourself these questions:
?
How do you know if you?re really producing content that is worth publishing? The answer lies in customer behaviour. Are more customers sharing your content? Are people on the net discussing your content? Are new customers signing up for your newsletter and registering at your site? If you haven?t delivered your scheduled content on time, do your customers contact you to find out when it?s coming out?
?
If you can say ?yes? to most of these questions, then you know you?re on the right track. You?re creating quality content that your customers want.
Adrian is a content writer who?s obsessed with language and literature. If he?s not writing, then he can be found reading or playing guitar and piano.
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Yamaha came roaring back into the headphone realm with its recent PRO series. At $299.95 (list), the Yamaha PRO 400 is the middle-tier option in the group, with the recent Editors' Choice PRO 500 at the top and the still-not-cheap PRO 300 as the entry-level option. The good news is, all three pairs earn their prices. The PRO 400 offers a powerful sound signature with realistic bass response and a nice sense of space and depth. With a focus on the midrange, it lacks the booming bass some readers may be seeking, and it is not super-bright or crisp, either, but it delivers audio cleanly, even at top volumes.
Design
Yamaha's PRO series has a distinctive look that's not for everyone?glossy plastic (offered in white or black) and a large, shiny Yamaha tuning fork logo on each ear. The plush, circumaural (over-the-ear) ear cups are quite comfortable, but the headband's cushioned, rubbery underside can, unfortunately, get a bit uncomfortable on the scalp during longer listening sessions, and feels this way regardless of adjustments. For shorter durations, this is far less of an issue.
The PRO 400 ships with two detachable cables?both are black, flat, linguini-esque designs, and one has an inline remote control and microphone for mobile devices. The remote-free cable, intended for pro and studio applications, is a whopping 10 feet long, compared with the other cable's more typical 4-foot length.
Call clarity on the PRO 400 is nothing mind-blowing, but your call partner will be able to hear you loud and clear, and vice versa. Yamaha can't really improve on the low fidelity of cellular audio.
The headphones collapse down at hinges above either ear into a more compact size, but the frame still takes up a hefty amount of space. A zip-up, hard-shell protective case comes with the PRO 400, and adds even more size to the equation?basically, this pair will take up a significant portion of bag space. A ?-inch headphone jack adapter is also included.
Performance
On tracks with tremendously deep bass, like the Knife's "Silent Shout," the PRO 400 flirts with distortion at maximum (unsafe) listening levels, but never gives in, offering instead a powerful sub-bass response. Things aren't quite as boosted here as there are on the Beats Pro by Dr. Dre, but they are still plenty intense. The focus of the bass response is rooted a bit higher than the very deepest, lowest sub-bass frequencies, so we hear slightly less subwoofer-esque push than you hear on the Beats or the similarly-priced Denon Music Maniac AH-D340, but the PRO 400 definitely packs a punch.
Much of its focus seems to be on midrange frequencies, both low-mids and hi-mids. This helps bring out a different portion of the bass response to the forefront. On Jay-Z and Kanye West's "No Church in the Wild," the kick drum loop's attack has both a nice treble edge to it, as well as a solidifying thump?not the deep, throbbing sub-bass thump you hear in a club, but the more natural kind you get from a real kick drum. The sub-bass synth hits have a nice roundness to them, but they're not in any danger of overtaking the mix. This is a good thing, but bass fiends will probably want a pair with a bit more oomph.
On Bill Callahan's "Drover," his voice could benefit from a little bit more treble edge, but the PRO 400 does a good job of not letting low-mid frequencies muddy up the mix. The constant drum hits on this track often receive too much low-end boost on bass-heavy headphones, making them compete with Callahan's vocals for center-stage. Here they sound natural and intense, but they still take a backseat to the vocals.
On classical tracks, like John Adams' "The Chairman Dances," the lower register strings still get a nice bit of low frequency boost, primarily because they exist more in low-mids than in the truly low, sub-bass frequency realm, and this is a range the PRO 400 focuses on. Things sound natural, never overly bright nor muddy. The big drum hits at the end of this piece pack a pleasant low-end punch, but nothing that ever seems overly-boosted or out of place.
Basically, this pair is for the flat response, purists crowd who wants to hear bass frequencies, but not have them amplified significantly louder than everything else in the mix. The semi-recessed drivers inside the earcups add a nice sense of space and depth to the sound stage. If there's any complaint, it would be that the PRO 400 could probably sound a bit crisper in the hi-mids.
As it is, however, the PRO 400 offers a clean sound that will appeal to anyone not overly-obsessed with deep bass. If deep sub-bass is what you seek, the aforementioned Beats, as well as the Denon Music Maniac AH-D340, are both heavier hitters, to differing degrees, in that department. The PRO 400's pricing makes sense?it sounds a bit fuller and more intense than its cheaper sibling, the PRO 300, and lacks the power, spatial depth, and overall clarity of its pricier sibling, the Yamaha PRO 500. All three pairs, however, are very solid additions to the headphone realm. If all of these pairs are a bit out of your price range, consider the sub-$200, excellent Sennheiser HD 558?its lower price seems almost incongruous with its rich sound signature.
More Headphone Reviews:
??? Denon Music Maniac AH-D340
??? Denon Urban Raver AH-D320
??? Yamaha PRO 400
??? Moshi Dulcia
??? Polk Audio UltraFocus 6000
?? more
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/GzP1gJUI9VA/0,2817,2415950,00.asp
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Virginia and parts of West Virginia are being buried by a "dense, wet snow," which will continue to travel up the East Coast into New England. TODAY's Al Roker reports from Front Royal, Va.
By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News
A sloppy winter storm swept over the nation?s capital Wednesday, forcing federal offices to close and threatening to dump 4 to 8 inches of snow ? perhaps the heaviest in Washington in two years.
Snow began falling around midnight and later snarled the morning commute. Most school districts in the area were closed as 4,000 salt trucks and plows set out to clear roads through northern Virginia.
A fierce, late-season storm has been pummeling the Midwest, making a snowy mess on sidewalks and highways and creating headaches for air travelers. NBC's John Yang reports.
?It will be a wet, heavy, gloppy snow consistent with wallpaper paste,? National Weather Service spokesman Chris Vaccaro said.
More than 600 flights were canceled at Reagan National airport and more than 500 at Washington Dulles.
In Congress, at least 13 committee hearings were postponed because of snow.
The storm originated in Montana and moved east over the Ohio Valley, dropping 6 inches of snow on Chicago?s O?Hare International Airport on Tuesday. More than 1,100 flights were canceled in and out of that city?s two airports on Tuesday, according to NBC Chicago.
In the Chicago suburbs, part of the roof of a banquet hall caved in Tuesday afternoon, and snow poured into one wing of the building. Fire officials in the city of Des Plaines said that the building was empty and no one was hurt.
Illinois banquet hall roof collapses under weight of snow
Meanwhile, a New England coastal storm looked prepared to mix with winter weather over the New York area on Wednesday, leading to a messy concoction of rain and snow that could lead to as much as 2 inches of accumulation in New York City. The system could buffet Sandy-battered portions of the New Jersey coastline, leading to beach erosion and minor to moderate flooding, NBC New York reported.
Residents in the New Jersey towns of Brick and Toms River were issued a voluntary evacuation notice, and residents in low-lying areas were encouraged to move their vehicles to higher ground, according to a statement on the town?s website.
The weather already has already caused accidents. At least 215 car crashes were reported on slick roads in Minnesota on Tuesday, a state public safety official told Reuters.
Power outages were expected in some areas of Virginia on Wednesday as the storm moved in.
?We expect it?s going to have a pretty profound impact on the western and northwestern part of the state,? Dominion Virginia Power spokesman Karl Neddenien said on Tuesday. ?We?re going to do what it takes to get ready for the storm to keep the lights on and, when outages occur, to get them on as quick as we can.?
Reuters contributed to this report.
The latest winter storm is slated to arrive in Boston on Wednesday and continue into Thursday, bringing beach erosion from Maryland to Cape Cod. The Weather Channel's Mike Seidel reports.
Related:?
Full coverage from weather.com
This story was originally published on Wed Mar 6, 2013 4:42 AM EST
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Deshaun Thomas and Aaron Craft scored nine of Ohio State?s points in a decisive 11-2 run, leading the 14th-ranked Buckeyes to a 67-58, Big Ten victory atNo. 2 Indiana on Tuesday night.? ?
Thomas finished with 18 points and Craft added 15 as the Buckeyes (22-7, 12-5) won their fourth straight. ?
The Hoosiers had big plans for Senior Night in in Bloomington, Ind. After clinching a share of its conference title for the first time in 11 years with losses by Michigan State and Wisconsin on Sunday, IU (25-5, 13-4) was trying to claim its first outright Big Ten crown since 1993. The Hoosiers will have another chance Sunday at No. 7 Michigan. ?
Cody Zeller scored 17 and Christian Watford added 12 points for the Hoosiers. ?
Ohio State retook the lead midway through the second half when Indiana went more than 5 minutes without a basket, took control with the late run and never allowed the Hoosiers to get closer than six points. ?
OSU has won four straight. ?
Part of Indiana?s problem early was foul trouble. Victor Oladipo spent the final 11 minutes of the first half on the bench after picking up his second foul and Zeller wen to the bench 6 minutes later when he was called for his second foul. ?
But the Buckeyes made things tough inside and never allowed the Hoosiers to pull ahead. Instead, Ohio State continually quieted a crowd that seemed ready to party from the moment it entered Assembly Hall. ?
Neither team led by more than three points until Watford hit a 3-pointer with 4:47 left in the first half to give the Hoosiers a 25-21 lead. It didn?t last long. ?
Ohio State scored the final seven points of the half, ending the run with Craft?s three-point play with 1:08 to go that gave the Buckeyes a 28-25 lead. ?
TOP 25
(3) DUKE 85, VIRGINIA TECH 57: Seth Curry scored 20 points in his final home game and the Blue Devils (26-4, 13-4) pulled away from the Hokies (13-17, 4-13) for the ACC win in Durham, N.C. Erick Green scored 25 points for Va. Tech. ?
(9) KANSAS ST. 79, TCU 68: The Wildcats have a chance to finally end Kansas? run atop the Big 12 after the victory over the Horned Frogs in Manhattan, Kan.? ?
K-State is tied with the Jayhawks with each team having one game leftt. If Kansas State wins and KU loses the Wildcats will win their first title since 1977. Kansas holds the tiebreaker between the teams having beaten their rival twice this season. ?
The Jayhawks close out their regular season at Baylor. ?
"Chemistry is so important, and I think we have great chemistry in the locker room," Kansas State coach Bruce Weber said. "We?ve built a great relationship, coaches and the players. ?
"We?ve won 25 because they?ve bought in," he added. "Now the whole thing ? do they want more? That?s what it?s going to come down to."
Kyan Anderson had 29 points for the Horned Frogs (10-20, 1-16). Devonta Abron scord 10. ?
(5) MARQUETTE 60, RUTGERS 54: Jamil Wilson scored all 10 of his points in the second half, including the late 3 that helped the Golden Eagles (22-7, 13-4) rally to the Big East win over the Scarlet Knights (13-15, 4-13) in Piscataway, N.J. Vander Blue had 22 points and made two game-sealing free throws with 13.9 seconds left for Marquette. ?
(24) NOTRE DAME 66, ST. JOHN?S 40: Jerian Grant had 21 points and eight assists for the Irish (23-7, 11-6), who held the Red Storm (16-13, 8-9) to 18 percent shooting in the Big East win in South Bend, Ind.
(25) MEMPHIS 56, UTEP 54: Chris Crawford scored 15 points and Adonis Thomas added 11 and the Tigers remained undefeated in Conference USA with the win in El Paso, Texas. ?
C.J. Cooper had an opportunity to tie the game for the Miners after being fouled from beyond the arc but he missed the first free throw. He made the second and purposely missed the third in an attempt to rebound the ball and get the win. Tarik Black was fouled getting the rebound for Memphis (26-4, 15-0). ?
Julian Washburn led UTEP (16-13, 9-6) with 19 points.
?
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Parenting is like a hike. A steep alpine trail we must travel to take our children from birth to adulthood. There?s adventure and a time of bonding along the way. There are also?for those who attempt to find it?places of peace and contentment. Spots to enjoy the view. (I promise there are!)
As a mom of four I know that anything worthwhile (vacations, holidays, grocery shopping, coffee with friends, Lego castles) deserve time to prep. But so often in parenting we set off with no real plan. We grab our backpacks (a.k.a. our schedules/life) and pile more in. This leads to weariness and crankiness, blisters and burdens.
You Gotta Plan & Pack
When hiking, water, food, proper clothing, and sturdy footwear are essentials. In life we too often let clutter push out the priorities. We say ?yes? to many good things?to the detriment of the necessities.
Enriching activities, play groups, lessons, and sports sound worthy of our backpack space. Yet we miss out on the most important things: family games night, dinners around the table, Bible study, and service.
What helps? Becoming an expert packer. What things MUST you include? Sleep, food, shower, school/work. After those are scheduled, what?s next? Family dinners, homework time, church. Now, what things can unload from your backpack? (Honestly take time to consider this?it protects you from being burdened down.)
Your list will be different from mine. The Goyers focus on family movie nights, bike rides, and board games. Due to numerous practices and games, cost, and travel, we allowed our three oldest kids to participate in only one sports activity per year. (The littlest one is just a toddler, but we plan to do the same.)
Do you need to unload??Just because something is a good opportunity doesn?t mean it?s right for you.
Also,?look at the deeper issues?that lead to hurry and worry. Do you hurry because you wasted time on Facebook? Do you worry because you read too many blogs and drool over too many Pinterest images and think you must keep up?
Consider the unique needs of your unique family. There is only one family in the world like yours. What is God?s plan for you?
Finally, map out your family. What things are most vital to your spouse and kids??Ten years from now what would they say was worth it? God put those kids in your family for a reason. Traveling the path together involves teamwork. It?s not just your path?it?s theirs, too. More than that, it?s a hike God?s designed for you. Seek Him. Trust Him. Turn to Him. God?s not going to leave you alone, but He has a few things to say along the way: Follow me. You?re doing great. Turn right. Let me help you carry that?.
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Tricia Goyer is a busy mom of four, grandmother of one, and wife to John. ?A bestselling author, Tricia has published thirty-three books to date and has written more than 500 articles. She is a two-time Carol Award winner, as well as a Christy and ECPA Award Nominee. In 2010, she was selected as one of the Top 20 Moms to Follow on Twitter by SheKnows.com. Tricia is also on the blogging team at MomLifeToday.com, TheBetterMom.com and other homeschooling and Christian sites. ?She is the founder of Hope Pregnancy Ministries in Northwestern Montana, and she currently leads a Teen MOPS Group in Little Rock, AR. Tricia, along with a group of friends, recently launched www.NotQuiteAmishLiving.com, sharing ideas about simplifying life. She also hosts the weekly radio podcast, Living Inspired. Learn more about Tricia at www.triciagoyer.com.
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Source: http://themobsociety.com/2013/03/preparing-for-the-parenting-hike/
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Analysts agree that after Ch?vez, no politician can succeed in Venezuela without a platform that touches on social inclusion.
By Andrew Rosati,?Correspondent, Whitney Eulich,?Staff writer / March 6, 2013
EnlargeCaracas, Venezuela; and Boston
Many Venezuelans awoke this morning still coming to terms with the loss of their president, Hugo Ch?vez, and wondering ? along with the world ? what the future holds for a post-Ch?vez Venezuela.
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Vice President Nicolas Maduro announced Ch?vez?s passing after a two-year battle with cancer yesterday afternoon in a nationally televised broadcast. Immediately a large number of Venezuelans, including retiree Carmen Gonzalez, flocked to Caracas?s iconic Plaza Bol?var.
"I'm so upset; it's incredibly painful," Ms. Gonzalez says, holding back tears. "Venezuela suffered a huge loss ? President Ch?vez can't be replaced."
Replacing him, however, is a must: The Constitution stipulates that elections be called within 30 days, with the president of the National Assembly taking over as interim leader.?But in a sign that Ch?vez?s word is law, even after his death, his designated successor as presidential candidate for the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), Mr. Maduro, has stepped into the interim position instead, Foreign Minister Elias Jaua announced last night.
There are no shortage of variables playing into the transition ? from respect for the Constitution to peace in the streets to the possibility of food shortages. It is expected that the individual who steps into the role of president will be faced with continuing much of Ch?vez?s popular social programming, while dealing with an unstable economy that depends on international imports and petrodollars.
But analysts agree that after Ch?vez, no politician can succeed without a platform that touches on social inclusion.???
"[Ch?vez has] given real hope to members of the lower classes," says Eric Farnsworth, vice president of the Council of the Americas. ?That's not something an opposition candidate will want to ? or even be able to ? walk away from.?
Condemned by his critics for causing rampant inflation, crime, and corruption, Ch?vez's special brand of populist-fueled socialism struck a resonant chord with Venezuelans fed up with the decades of exclusive ?politics as usual? that preceded his time in office. His electoral base has been the poor and working class, who felt for decades they were brushed aside by the two parties that dominated the political spectrum.
Coining the term "socialism for the 21st century," the former Army paratrooper shored up unprecedented support during his tenure by investing the country's vast oil wealth in subsidies and popular assistance programs providing anything from free medical care to housing and groceries.
Almost 60 percent of Venezuelans favor his policies, according to Luis Vicente Leon, president of the polling firm, Datanalisis, though he also calls the number ?incredibly volatile."
But ?the situation today in Venezuela is very difficult," says Herbert Koeneke, a political science professor at Simon Bolivar University, referring to skyrocketing public debt accrued during the Ch?vez years and a faltering oil industry.
Despite having the world's largest proven oil reserves, South America's largest oil exporter is now importing oil products from the US to meet its domestic demand. Production has dwindled by an estimated 25 percent since Ch?vez took office. The US Energy Information Agency reported last year that 89,000 barrels were exported daily to Venezuela.
And that presents an added challenge to his successor ? whether it?s Maduro from the PSUV, or the opposition?s expected candidate, Henrique Capriles.
?An election without Ch?vez could increase the opposition's prospects should shortages of food, medicines, and other basic goods continue intensifying in Venezuela,? IHS Global Insight Latin America analyst Diego Moya-Ocampos said via email.
The latest polling data from Hinterlaces, collected prior to the announcement of Ch?vez?s death, shows that if Maduro and Mr. Capriles face off in a presidential election, Maduro is projected to win 50 percent of respondents support; Capriles 36 percent; with 14 percent of respondents undecided. And though Maduro had Ch?vez?s backing, that doesn?t make him Ch?vez.
"The popularity of Ch?vez is not solely based on his policies but rather on Ch?vez himself.? He's a phenomenon," says Eduardo Brown, a retired public administrator, while paying his respects to the president at the Plaza Bol?var last night. "It's his charisma, the rational behind his actions. He's the only president that has truly reached the people."
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NEW YORK (AP) ? The Dow has never been higher.
The Dow Jones industrial average surged 154 points early Tuesday, reaching 14,283 and breaking through its previous record high set in October 2007.
The gains represent a remarkable comeback for the stock market. The Dow has more than doubled since falling to a low of 6,547 in March 2009 following the financial crisis and the Great Recession. Stocks have rebounded sharply since then with the help of a large dose of stimulus from the Federal Reserve, even as the U.S. economy has failed to get out of first gear.
"Whether they want to admit it or not, everyone is very impressed with the resilience of the market," said Alec Young, a global equity strategist at S&P Capital IQ.
The last time the Dow was this high, Apple had just sold its first iPhone and George W. Bush had another year as president. The U.S. housing market had yet to implode, and the financial crisis that brought down Lehman Brothers was still a year away.
Despite the stunning gains in the stock market since then, the U.S. economy has not fared nearly as well. Unemployment was just 4.7 percent when the Dow last reached a record, versus 7.9 percent today.
Stocks have rallied powerfully this year, impressing even market's most ardent skeptics, on optimism that the housing market is recovering and companies are slowly starting to hire again. Strong corporate earnings have also helped increase demand. The Dow is already up 9 percent so far this year, which many would consider a respectable gain for a full year.
The market has benefited from economic stimulus from the Federal Reserve and other global central banks. The U.S. central bank is buying $85 billion each month in Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities to keep long-term interest rates very low.
Tuesday's gains were driven by industrial and technology stocks. That's a signal that investors are optimistic about the economy, since those companies stand to gain the most when the economy recovers. More stable, conservative stocks like utilities and consumer staples also rose, but trailed the market. IBM, United Technologies and the manufacturer 3M led the Dow higher.
On Tuesday investors received another piece of positive news on the U.S. economy, a report that U.S. service companies grew in February at the fastest pace in a year, thanks to higher sales and more new orders. The gain suggests higher taxes have yet to slow consumer spending on services.
Home builder PulteGroup rose 42 cents to $20.12 following news that home prices rose at the fastest pace in almost six years in January, a sign that the housing market is gaining momentum as it nears the spring selling season. Home prices rose 9.7 percent in January from a year ago and had the biggest gain since April 2006, according to data released by CoreLogic
The Dow's gain early Tuesday was equivalent to 1 percent. If it stays this high it will finish above its record high close of 14,164 set on Oct. 9, 2007.
In other trading, the Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 16 points, also 1.1 percent, to 1,541. The S&P is also within striking distance of its own record close of 1,565. The Nasdaq composite gained 41 points, or 1.3 percent, to 3,213.62.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which moves inversely to its price, rose one basis point to 1.89 percent.
Among other stocks making big moves:
? Ascena Retail Group gained $2.37 to $18.80 after the clothing store reported stronger-than-expected sales in its most recent quarter.
? J.C. Penney fell $1.29 to $15.45 following media reports that one of its largest shareholders is selling a major stake in the retailer. CNBC and The Wall Street Journal reported that Deutsche Bank is shopping around the sale of 10 million shares of the company's stock held by Vornado Realty Trust, a real estate investment trust.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dow-jones-industrial-average-surges-record-151541694--finance.html
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WASHINGTON ? In Florida, President Barack Obama has nominated the first openly gay black man to sit on a federal district court. In New York, he has nominated the first Asian-American lesbian. And his pick for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit? The first South Asian.
Reelected with strong support from women, ethnic minorities and gays, Obama is moving quickly to change the face of the federal judiciary by the end of his second term, setting the stage for another series of drawn-out confrontations with Republicans in Congress.
The president has named three dozen judicial candidates since January and is expected to nominate scores more over the next few months, aides said. The push marks a significant departure from the sluggish pace of appointments throughout much of his first term, when both Republicans and some Democrats complained that Obama had not tried hard enough to fill vacancies on federal courts.
The new wave of nominations is part of an effort by Obama to cement a legacy that long outlives his presidency and makes the court system more closely resemble the changing society it governs, administration officials said.
?Diversity in and of itself is a thing that is strengthening the judicial system,? White House Counsel Kathryn Ruemmler said. ?It enhances the bench and the performance of the bench and the quality of the discussion . . . to have different perspectives, different life experiences, different professional experiences, coming from a different station in life, if you will.?
But Obama?s biggest obstacle is the Senate, where Republicans have frequently blocked judicial confirmation votes for months or, in some cases, years. Obama has 35 nominees currently awaiting votes by the Senate ? including several holdovers from 2012 who have been renominated this year ? and there are more than 50 additional vacancies awaiting nominees, according to the Federal Judicial Center.
Some conservatives are skeptical of the push to name more women and minorities to the bench, arguing that it amounts to unjustified affirmative action. Curt Levey, an outspoken Obama critic who runs the advocacy group Committee for Justice, said the White House may be ?lowering their standards? to nominate more nonwhite judges.
?If they?re talking about achieving [diversity] through aggressive identification of minority candidates, then that?s their prerogative,? Levey said. ?If they?re talking about doing it through preferences, having a lower threshold of qualifications for minorities, then I don?t approve. And it?s hard to know which they?re doing. Unlike a college admissions system, where it?s easy to quantify, this is difficult.?
During Obama?s first term, judicial nominations often fell by the wayside in the face of the economic crisis and other policy priorities at the White House. Many liberal allies complained that the president did little to champion nominees once they were named.
?Republicans will throw up every roadblock they can,? said Nan Aron, president of the liberal Alliance for Justice. ?We?re counting on the White House and Senate leadership to be more assertive in getting nominees confirmed.?
The White House said it intends to aggressively push for more judicial nominees during Obama?s second term and is hopeful that changes in filibuster rules will help speed up the process. The Senate decided in January to limit debate for district court nominees from 30 hours to two hours, although the restrictions do not apply to nominees for the Supreme Court or federal appeals courts.
Obama has already broken more barriers with his judicial appointments than any other president, aides said. At the circuit court level, four states now have their first female justices, five have their first black justices and two have their first Hispanics. Sonia Sotomayor also became the first Hispanic to serve on the Supreme Court.
?There?s a leveling-the-playing-field goal that is kind of a frame that overrides the whole endeavor,? Ruemmler, who oversees the nominating process, said in an interview.
Obama, a former constitutional law professor, has long argued for a broad set of criteria in selecting judges. When he picked Sotomayor in 2009, Obama said ?experience being tested by obstacles and barriers, by hardship and misfortune? was an important qualification for any jurist because it imparts a sense of compassion for ordinary citizens.
The diversity of Obama?s judicial nominees stands in contrast to staff selections at the start of his second term that have been dominated by white men, including White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough, Secretary of State John Kerry, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Treasury Secretary Jack Lew.
By contrast, 17 of the 35 pending judicial nominees are women, 15 are ethnic minorities and five are openly gay, according to White House statistics. Six are straight white men.
During Obama?s first term, 37 percent of his confirmed judges were nonwhites, compared with 19 percent for President George W. Bush and 27 percent for President Bill Clinton. The trend is similar on gender: 42 percent of Obama?s first-term judges were women, compared with 21 percent for Bush and 30 percent for Clinton.
Of the 874 federal judgeships, 39 percent are held by women and 37 percent are held by non-whites, according to data kept by the Federal Judicial Center.
?It?s very, very important that these courts reflect the diversity of what?s coming in terms of demographics,? said Nancy Zirkin of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, an advocacy group. ?It will be his most long-lasting legacy. . . . Obama, by putting on a diverse number of judges, we believe will shape the courts for years to come.?
Obama nominated Mary Murguia for a seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. Murguia?s parents emigrated from Mexico to Kansas, where she was born.
Others include the first Haitian-American, Afro-Caribbean, Vietnamese-American and Korean-American judges nominated to their respective positions.
One senior Republican Senate aide, who requested anonymity in order to discuss the nomination process, said, ?We are going to continue to insist on a level of quality? among nominees.
?We?re not advocating or opposing his diversity goals,? the aide said. ?But that should not override the substantive qualifications of the nominees, which are professional competence, judicial temperament, respect for the law, understanding the Constitution.?
Liberal groups have been pressuring the White House to look for diversity not just in race, gender or sexual orientation, but also in professional experience. They want fewer corporate lawyers from white-shoe firms and more public defenders and lawyers from outside what is sometimes called the ?judicial monastery.?
?That?s a completely different view than somebody who has only represented General Motors,? Zirkin said.
The Obama judges, many of them in their 40s, also establish a diverse bench of progressives whom Obama or future presidents could tap for Supreme Court vacancies.
One such nominee was Goodwin Liu, Obama?s pick in February 2010 for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. As a Taiwanese-American, Liu was an historic selection. But Republicans stalled his nomination for 15 months, saying that his past writings showing a broad interpretation of the Constitution and his sharp criticism of conservative Supreme Court justices John Roberts and Samuel Alito were so liberal that he did not deserve an up-or-down vote.
?Goodwin Liu should run for elected office, not serve as a judge,? Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said in a May 2011 statement. ?Ideologues have their place, just not on the bench.?
Later that month, Liu withdrew.
According to the White House, Obama?s first-term nominees took an average of 225 days to be confirmed, compared with 175 days for Bush and 98 days for Clinton.
Ruemmler said that there has been ?very, very little substantive opposition to any of the president?s judicial nominees.? She pointed to the case of Robert Bacharach, a district court judge from Oklahoma whom Obama nominated last year for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit.
Bacharach?s home-state senators, Tom Coburn and James Inhofe, both Republicans, supported him. ?I like the guy,? Inhofe told the Oklahoman. ?I told him that it?s not very often the White House and I agree on anything.?
Still, Senate Republicans filibustered Bacharach?s nomination. They gave no specific reason other than a vow to block all of Obama?s circuit court nominees because 2012 was a presidential election year. In 2004 and 2008, Senate Democrats did much the same to Bush?s election-year nominees.
After 263 days of waiting, Bacharach?s nomination came to the floor for a vote on Feb. 25. It passed, 93 to 0.
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FRANKFURT (Reuters) - A German travel agency is selling tickets for a flight to give 88 astronomy buffs a close-up view of one of two rare comets expected to pass Earth this year.
Eclipse Travel, based in Bonn, has joined charter agency Air Partner and airline Air Berlin to organise flight AB1000 on March 16 as comet Pan-STARRS passes through the solar system, 100 million miles from Earth.
The last comet to dazzle Earth's night-time skies was Comet Hale-Bopp, which visited in 1997. Comet 17P/Holmes made a brief appearance in 2007.
The Boeing 737-700 flight will zig-zag at 11,000 metres (36,089 feet) altitude for the viewing with an Air Berlin spokesman saying only 88 of 144 seats on board filled to ensure all travellers are close to a window.
"If the weather is very good and the air is clear you can certainly see the comet from Earth," Air Berlin's Karsten von dem Hagen, Teamleader Sales Ad Hoc Flights, said in an e-mail to Reuters on Tuesday.
"But at an altitude of 11,000 metres you are most likely above the clouds. The air there is thinner, clearer and cleaner, which enables better observation of the comet."
An astronomy expert will be on board to explain the comet that NASA described as a new comet that should be visible by the naked eye and about as bright as the stars of the Big Dipper as it passes through the solar system this month.
NASA scientists said the comet could send an amazing tail of gas and dust into the night sky but the cosmic show could be less than dazzling if the comet falls apart under the heat and gravitational pull of its plunge toward the sun.
The comet Pan-STARRS, discovered by astronomers in Hawaii in 2011, is the first of two comets expected to pass Earth this year.
The second is ISON, which is forecast to be one of the brightest comets ever seen and could even outshine the moon when it flies by in late November.
Eclipse Travel is selling tickets for the two-hour flight for between 309 pounds and 438 pounds, according to its website.
(Reporting by Maria Sheahan, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/german-flight-set-off-comet-tourists-152619392--sector.html
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When Mark Hunt knocked out Stefan Struve at UFC on Fuel 8 over the weekend, Hunt did more than post his fourth straight win. He also earned a $50,000 Knockout of the Night bonus and broke Struve's jaw.
Struve tweeted about the injury and how he wanted to fight on.
Thanks for the support everybody, I wanted Herb to take the tooth out of my cheek and continue but then it turned out my jaw was broken..
? Stefan Struve (@StefanStruve) March 3, 2013
Wired my jaw in the hospital here and flying back tomorrow to get surgery as soon as we land monday in Holland, thnx for the great care @ufc
? Stefan Struve (@StefanStruve) March 3, 2013
I ment to say, look at that jaw! Painkillers are having me tripping lol twitter.com/StefanStruve/s?
? Stefan Struve (@StefanStruve) March 3, 2013
Yep, it doesn't take medical school to see the clean break in Struve's jaw. He joked that his face is so swollen for the flight home that it will keep him warm. That's truly seeing the glass as half-full.
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PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) ? Michael Thompson won his first PGA Tour event Sunday at the Honda Classic to earn another trip to the Masters.
Thompson seized control with a 50-foot eagle putt on the third hole. He stayed in control with superb par saves early on the back nine at PGA National. He made birdie from the bunker on the last hole for a 1-under 69, giving him a two-shot victory over Geoff Ogilvy.
The win earns the 27-year-old Thompson a spot in the Masters. He last played at Augusta National in 2008 as the U.S. Amateur runner-up.
Ogilvy birdied two of his last three holes for a 69 to finish alone in second, which moves him into the top 50 and gets him into the World Golf Championship next week at Doral.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/thompson-wins-honda-earns-spot-masters-231152834--spt.html
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Jimmy Fallon Taking Over Jay Leno’s “Tonight Show”?
There are rumors swirling that Jay Leno may be losing his late night gig on NBC to Jimmy Fallon. An insider revealed that NBC is expected to announce that Fallon will be replacing Leno on the late night talk show in May. NBC is denying the rumor but “two high-level industry sources” say it is ...
Jimmy Fallon Taking Over Jay Leno’s “Tonight Show”? Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News
Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/03/jimmy-fallon-taking-over-jay-lenos-tonight-show/
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