Sunday, November 11, 2012

Alt-week 11.10.12: the contagious smell of fear, finding Bigfoot, and the theory of everything

Alt-week takes a look at the best science and alternative tech stories from the last seven days.

Altweek 111012 the contagious smell of fear, finding Bigfoot, and the theory of everything

There are some questions that have puzzled the human race more or less since the dawn of time. Why are we here? What is the meaning of life? You know the sort of thing. While we might not have the answers to these just yet, thanks to science, we're getting there. In this week's instalment we discover that you can, in fact, smell fear. Meanwhile, one scientist pledges to launch an ambitious hunt for Bigfoot, and we get an early hint at what could be the start of an explanation for life, the universe and everything. This is alt-week.

Continue reading Alt-week 11.10.12: the contagious smell of fear, finding Bigfoot, and the theory of everything

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Alt-week 11.10.12: the contagious smell of fear, finding Bigfoot, and the theory of everything originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 10 Nov 2012 17:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/10/alt-week-11-10-12-the-contagious-smell-of-fear-finding-bigfoot/

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Saturday, November 10, 2012

Alice Korngold: For Business Executives: Serving on Nonprofit ...

A business owner has been rebuked by many for coercing his employees to vote for a particular presidential candidate. Most of us are hold very dear the right and privilege to vote for the candidates of our choice, and we feel fortunate to live free in the United States. This company head crossed a line that is inviolate.

To the contrary, however, there is a way that business leaders can play a positive role in helping to create a better informed and more deeply engaged electorate. By role modeling and encouraging their executives and professionals to serve on nonprofit boards, corporate leaders can help to advance democracy.

When people serve on nonprofit boards where they can add value in forwarding a mission that is personally meaningful, they also learn about vital community and global challenges, government and private funding, and the perspectives of people from diverse backgrounds. Board members' site visits and meetings with clients open their eyes to the lives of others as well as new possibilities and solutions for the future.

Through service on nonprofit boards, business people learn about workforce development, housing, education, healthcare, arts and culture, renewable natural resources, climate change, and the relationship between these issues, commerce, public policy, and their own communities and neighborhoods. Imagine the vibrant exchange of learning and ideas that happens among people in a company where many serve on vast array of nonprofit boards -- not only in informal conversations but also in richer and more highly informed strategy meetings.

Nonprofit board service is the ultimate experience in leadership, ethics, accountability, group dynamics, crisis management and communications. Business leaders who want to advance democracy will encourage and support people at their companies to engage in service, including nonprofit board service. What better way to ensure a better informed and engaged electorate... and a better world.

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Follow Alice Korngold on Twitter: www.twitter.com/alicekorngold

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alice-korngold/corporate-leaders-non-profits-_b_2109314.html

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Argentine crew prevents Ghana from moving ship

(AP) ? Sailors aboard an Argentina navy sailing ship seized in a billion-dollar international debt controversy brandished weapons to block Ghanaian officials from moving the vessel to a less busy dock, an official of the Ghana Ports and Harbors Authority said Saturday.

Crewmen on the ARA Libertad showed their rifles to deter Ghanaian officials from boarding the South American ship Thursday, Kumi Adjei-Sam, the corporate affairs manager of the ports authority, told The Associated Press.

Ghana's government has not commented on the show of force against officials of this African nation.

Ghanaian judge Richard Agyei-Frimpong ruled last week that the Libertad should be moved from its current position while Argentina fights a court order to hold the ship against payment of $1.3 billion to a group holding bonds on which Argentina defaulted in 2002.

Ports officials say the ship's current location prevents other vessels from berthing, costing the agency tens of thousands of dollars a day in lost fees.

Argentina's Defense Ministry issued a statement Friday saying the ship will not budge while the detention order is being appealed.

It said the ship's crew, under orders from Buenos Aires, pulled up the gangplank to prevent Ghanaian authorities from boarding. In response, Ghana shut off water and electricity and brought a crane to lift officials onto the ship to move it.

"An order was for the crew to show up on the deck, with its regular weapons, with the purpose of dissuading any attempt to board it," the Argentine ministry said.

The ministry said the Ghanaians should stop "illegal measures such as forcing us to move and cutting off basic supplies, which represent a violation on our sovereignty and an act of hostility."

Ghanaian courts ordered the ship detained Oct. 2 in response to U.S. court decisions in favor of investors holding bonds on which Argentina defaulted.

Argentina's problems grew larger Friday, when U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa warned Argentine President Cristina Fernandez not to "defy and evade" his orders on how much Latin America's third-largest economy will have to pay bondholders.

Griesa will decide the amount Dec. 1, a day before Argentina is due to make the first of three payments of more than $3 billion to bondholders who accepted restructuring of their debt at a loss.

Some of the money will go to NML Capital Ltd. and other holdout plaintiffs who are seeking about $1.33 billion in unpaid principal and interest, Griesa said.

Fernandez has refused to post $20 million with a court in Ghana to release the Libertad and insists Argentina will not pay a single centavo to what she calls "vulture funds" that held or bought up the defaulted bonds that remained after other holders agreed to restructure more than 90 percent of the debt in 2005 and 2010. Many received as little as 25 cents on the dollar.

Argentina lost its long battle against bond holdouts in the U.S. courts last month, when an appellate panel rejected every argument Fernandez's government made against paying $1.33 billion in principle and interest to investors holding the original bonds.

The ruling effectively gave Argentina a stark choice: Either pay all of its bondholders equally, or pay none of them at all.

Argentina argued that forcing it to pay the holdouts could provoke another severe economic crisis, but the U.S. appellate court said "nothing in the record supports Argentina's blanket assertion." It agreed with Griesa, who ruled that with more than $40 billion in foreign reserves, Argentina has the ability to pay.

Fernandez said Friday that U.S. courts are harming those who showed faith in Argentina during the bond restructuring.

"Those who believed in Argentina, who put their trust in Argentina, they restructured the debt and we're paying it religiously, one after the other," Fernandez said.

But judges said last month that Argentina must keep promises it made when it issued the original debt in the 1990s and that performing debt does not take priority over defaulted debt.

"Argentina has the duty to pay with the judicial resolutions of the United States in the bond cases," Griesa said Friday. "Our courts are not helpless."

The judge's new warning dented the price of Argentine global bonds due in 2017, which fell more than 6 percent Friday and have plunged about 12 percent since the court order last month.

Enrique Dentice, an economic analyst for Universidad de San Martin in Buenos Aires, said Griesa's order "will greatly harm those who joined the swap at the time" and respected Argentine law.

He said Argentine rules forbid the reopening of debt restructuring even as U.S. law requires honoring the original clauses of bonds issued there.

___

Associated Press writers Luis Andres Henao in Santiago, Chile, and Michael Warren from Mexico City contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-10-Argentina-Seized%20Ship/id-ee1c7f95d26c4c089272a9e20a37fb67

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

Home Learning Family Going Sane: A little storm won't bring us ...

Home Learning Family Going Sane: A little storm won't bring us down, but it will bring us together!

A little storm won't bring us down, but it will bring us together!


We live in New England so are very prone to wild and crazy weather and we would never let a little something like the recent "Superstorm" Sandy get in our way! We are fortunate to not have been in any of the devastation near the coastline and having grown up here I know what to do to get ready for things like this because you never know when mother nature is going to call your bluff.?

We took some time on Saturday and Sunday to get the yard prepared and I baked some treats to hold us over. I always have KM's lessons prepared ahead of time, so when we lost power on Monday afternoon I felt pretty okay with it. She had put off her morning routine to get a few things done on the computer before the internet was gone - a very difficult blow for any teenager!!! - so she got to work on her chemistry and applying algebra while I got the last minute things together before it got dark.?About an hour and a half in it started to get chilly so we built a fire and nestled up with?Hakim's A History of US?Book 7, which KM still likes me to read aloud to her. It was so nice to just snuggle up with the book and learn about the reconstruction of our nation after the devastating civil war.?

When we were finished with that KM decided to play some solitaire, she has been quite addicted to the computer version lately, but she busted out the real cards this time. After a winning a few hands in a row, she asked if I wanted to play something. Generally we play Go Fish or War, as she has never really had the patience to learn other card games - too many rules that I have to keep on her about because I can't always remember them all -, but I decided to push my luck and see if she wanted to learn to play rummy. Four games in and she had the hang of it and didn't want to stop playing!?

At about 7p we decided to get the generator going so that we could get the fridge on, make something for dinner and watch a movie or two. I had picked up The Lost Boys & Lost Boys The Tribe to watch on Halloween, but since we had watched every other movie in the house about a billion times we decided to bump these up a bit. CJ and I had a hard time not giving away the storyline in The Lost Boys, but KM has gotten used to that with pretty much every 80s movie we watch - along with giving up on the hope that CJ won't start belting out the lyrics to each and every song! We had a great time and the evening flew by until still without power we shut everything down and headed to bed sometime around midnight.

I awoke in the morning to the hum of generators throughout the neighbor and realized that we still didn't have power...well this is a new experience, I hadn't been without power for more than 8 hours since Hurricane Gloria in 1985 when it was out for 4 days - I was only 7 and remember more from stories that others told than actually remembering it myself. I started the day with getting the generator running and making pancakes on the electric griddle. Shortly after KM got up I realized that we had some ground beef in the fridge that needed to be cooked ASAP, so we discussed what we could make with it. CJ piped up that he really would love american chop suey....UGGH OK, but we have no stove...KM suggested the crock pot, but with no internet access I had no idea how to get that one done right....HMMM what to do, what to do. We put our minds together and realized we could cook the noodles and ground beef using the side burner on the grill and then throw the veggies, sauce, and everything into the crockpot to get it to meld together nicely. KM and I worked our magic and ?about an hour later had everything done - sometimes you just need to use some problem solving skills and team work!!!?

The rest of our day went along pretty normally, with KM doing her lessons and adjusting where needed - like swapping her chemistry experiment and videos out to work on her cosmetology. She dropped what she was doing to help with whatever was needed and was really great about it. After lunch we were all getting a little stir crazy and feeling a bit electronically deprived, so we decided to take a ride to library to collect our emails and maybe see if we could find some movies to watch if the power was out much longer. While there we ran into a few of KM's friends from around town - two home ed buddies who had met up to play Pokemon on their DSs and one of her bowling league teammates who was catching up on some schoolwork - schools were closed for the second day - they chatted and discussed their own highlights and disappointments with the storm.

I also ran into some acquaintances who were discussing their experiences over the past 24 hours and I was shocked at many of the comments, scenarios and complaints that I heard. I often don't allow myself to get sucked into these types of discussions as they never turn out well. I heard the usual myriad - "Oh I HOPE school is back on tomorrow!", "[child's name] is driving me CRAZY!", "All [child's name] has been doing is complaining", "[child's name] won't do anything I ask them to," and "I had to pay [child's name] to get the yard ready for the storm and now I have to pay them again to clean up from it." I tried to politely nod and stay out of it, but?I was standing in line to check out our items so I couldn't avoid it.When I was asked how things had gone for us in the storm, I smiled and said "No real problems. KM helped me make dinner, we hung out and had some really great family time together." The other people just stared at me for a second, as if they were waiting for the punch line, but there was none. That is all that happened. No arguments, no bribing, no hassle, no real inconvenience at all on our end.?

I try very hard to not have the so common elitist/better than?"homeschool" family?mentality, but there are just some situations that make me so very, VERY grateful that we choose this path. We have an incredible family, we are connected in a way that was not there 5 years ago before we regained control of our lives. We can adapt, solve problems and deal with whatever comes our way TOGETHER. My daughter knows that being part of this family means that we work as a team - none of us is more valuable or less valued than the other and we all need to do whatever it takes to make OUR lives content and comfortable.

On our ride home, I relayed the conversation to KM to see what her take would be. She had heard the same types of things from a number of her friends that she had been texting with throughout the storm. I asked what her biggest drawback had been with the storm and she said "It would have to be that I only beat you once at rummy!"?

Source: http://fairiemom78.blogspot.com/2012/10/a-little-storm-wont-bring-us-down-but.html

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