Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Cocktail of multiple pressures combine to threaten the world's pollinating insects

Cocktail of multiple pressures combine to threaten the world's pollinating insects [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Apr-2013
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Contact: Barnaby Smith
bpgs@ceh.ac.uk
44-079-202-95384
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology

A new review of insect pollinators of crops and wild plants has concluded they are under threat globally from a cocktail of multiple pressures, and their decline or loss could have profound environmental, human health and economic consequences.

Globally, insects provide pollination services to about 75% of crop species and enable reproduction in up to 94% of wild flowering plants. Pollination services provided by insects each year worldwide are valued at over US$200 billion.

The review, published today (22 April 2013) in the scientific journal 'Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment', was carried out by an international team of 40 scientists from 27 institutions involved in the UK's Insect Pollinators Initiative (IPI), a 10M research programme investigating the causes and consequences of pollinator decline.

Dr Adam Vanbergen from the UK's Centre for Ecology & Hydrology and science coordinator of the IPI led the review. He said, "There is no single smoking gun behind pollinator declines, instead there is a cocktail of multiple pressures that can combine to threaten these insects. For example, the loss of food resources in intensively-farmed landscapes, pesticides and diseases are individually important threats, but are also likely to combine and exacerbate the negative impacts on pollinators."

The review concluded that:

  • Pollinator populations are declining in many regions, threatening human food supplies and ecosystem functions
  • A suite of interacting pressures are having an impact on pollinator health, abundance, and diversity. These include land-use intensification, climate change, and the spread of alien species and diseases
  • A complex interplay between pressures (e.g. lack of food sources, diseases, and pesticides) and biological processes (e.g. species dispersal and interactions) at a range of scales (from genes to ecosystems) underpins the general decline in insect-pollinator populations
  • Interdisciplinary research and stakeholder collaboration are needed to help unravel how these multiple pressures affect different pollinators and will provide evidence-based solutions
  • Current options to alleviate the pressure on pollinators include establishment of effective habitat networks, broadening of pesticide risk assessments, and the development and introduction of innovative disease therapies

Co-author Professor Simon Potts from the University of Reading said, "Pollinators are the unsung heroes of the insect world and ensure our crops are properly pollinated so we have a secure supply of nutritious food in our shops. The costs of taking action now to tackle the multiple threats to pollinators is much smaller than the long-term costs to our food security and ecosystem stability. Failure by governments to take decisive steps now only sets us up for bigger problems in the future."

Co-author Professor Graham Stone at Edinburgh University's Institute of Evolutionary Biology said, "A major challenge is going to be understanding the whole ecosystem effects of the specific threats faced by specific pollinators. Complicated as this is, this is nevertheless what we need to do if we want to predict overall impacts on pollination services."

###

The Insect Pollinators Initiative (IPI) is funded jointly by the BBSRC, Defra, NERC, the Scottish Government and the Wellcome Trust, under the auspices of the Living with Environmental Change programme.


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Cocktail of multiple pressures combine to threaten the world's pollinating insects [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Barnaby Smith
bpgs@ceh.ac.uk
44-079-202-95384
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology

A new review of insect pollinators of crops and wild plants has concluded they are under threat globally from a cocktail of multiple pressures, and their decline or loss could have profound environmental, human health and economic consequences.

Globally, insects provide pollination services to about 75% of crop species and enable reproduction in up to 94% of wild flowering plants. Pollination services provided by insects each year worldwide are valued at over US$200 billion.

The review, published today (22 April 2013) in the scientific journal 'Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment', was carried out by an international team of 40 scientists from 27 institutions involved in the UK's Insect Pollinators Initiative (IPI), a 10M research programme investigating the causes and consequences of pollinator decline.

Dr Adam Vanbergen from the UK's Centre for Ecology & Hydrology and science coordinator of the IPI led the review. He said, "There is no single smoking gun behind pollinator declines, instead there is a cocktail of multiple pressures that can combine to threaten these insects. For example, the loss of food resources in intensively-farmed landscapes, pesticides and diseases are individually important threats, but are also likely to combine and exacerbate the negative impacts on pollinators."

The review concluded that:

  • Pollinator populations are declining in many regions, threatening human food supplies and ecosystem functions
  • A suite of interacting pressures are having an impact on pollinator health, abundance, and diversity. These include land-use intensification, climate change, and the spread of alien species and diseases
  • A complex interplay between pressures (e.g. lack of food sources, diseases, and pesticides) and biological processes (e.g. species dispersal and interactions) at a range of scales (from genes to ecosystems) underpins the general decline in insect-pollinator populations
  • Interdisciplinary research and stakeholder collaboration are needed to help unravel how these multiple pressures affect different pollinators and will provide evidence-based solutions
  • Current options to alleviate the pressure on pollinators include establishment of effective habitat networks, broadening of pesticide risk assessments, and the development and introduction of innovative disease therapies

Co-author Professor Simon Potts from the University of Reading said, "Pollinators are the unsung heroes of the insect world and ensure our crops are properly pollinated so we have a secure supply of nutritious food in our shops. The costs of taking action now to tackle the multiple threats to pollinators is much smaller than the long-term costs to our food security and ecosystem stability. Failure by governments to take decisive steps now only sets us up for bigger problems in the future."

Co-author Professor Graham Stone at Edinburgh University's Institute of Evolutionary Biology said, "A major challenge is going to be understanding the whole ecosystem effects of the specific threats faced by specific pollinators. Complicated as this is, this is nevertheless what we need to do if we want to predict overall impacts on pollination services."

###

The Insect Pollinators Initiative (IPI) is funded jointly by the BBSRC, Defra, NERC, the Scottish Government and the Wellcome Trust, under the auspices of the Living with Environmental Change programme.


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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/2013-04/cfe-com041913.php

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Monday, April 22, 2013

Digital Designer- Mobile Focus | B&T

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Who's it with:
Work for a Global online business that embraces innovation, encourages creativity and is always ahead of the game!
?
What you'll be doing:
This business embraces mobile and you will have the rewarding role of watching ideas move from concept through to implementation. You will define ?the company's mobile presence across various platforms, and will be hands on in the execution and ?see your ideas come to life!?

This is a rare?"in-house" opportunity?where you'll be expected to come up with ideas and inspire those around you. Best of all you will be heard! ?You will spend your time "doing" rather than educating people internally to get buy in!

?
What you'll need:

  • Mobile Skills?- Strong experience in Mobile/Tablet design (mobile web / apps). You are ahead of the game in the latest mobile technology / techniques / ideas / mobile 3.0 / HTML5 and CSS3
  • Creativity?- You are a creative genius. You can think creatively within the parameters of an established brand (and outside them when necessary) to target a specific audience. Retail advertising exposure is beneficial.
  • CS Savvy?- Your skills within the CS5/6 package will be exceptional, including Photoshop, Illustrator and Dreamweaver.
  • Highly commercial attitude
  • Quick thinking?- you are someone who can generate ideas, lots of them, fast, and has the ability to effectively evaluate these ideas.?
  • Committed to self-improvement?- You are good but know you can always be better.

Why you'll want it:
Opportunity to work for the business that wants you to constantly be at your creative best. You will be encouraged to progress and potential leadership/management opportunities will certainly be on the cards for the right person- should they want it! The culture within the business is second to none and you'll enjoy the dynamic of this amazing work place.

  • Listed by:Xpand
  • Location:Melbourne
  • Position type:Full-time
  • Posted on:22 April 2013
  • Closing date:20 May 2013

You are now leaving B&T.

The content of the web site you are visiting is not controlled by B&T.

Please click on the button below to apply for this job.

Apply

Apply now

Source: http://www.bandt.com.au/jobs/digital-designer-mobile-focus

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Using nitrous oxide for anesthesia doesn't increase -- and may decrease -- complications and death

Using nitrous oxide for anesthesia doesn't increase -- and may decrease -- complications and death [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Apr-2013
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Contact: Lisa Webb
lisa.webb@wolterskluwer.com
215-521-8319
Wolters Kluwer Health

2 studies add new data to debate over safety of N2O as surgical anesthetic

San Francisco, CA. (April 22, 2013) Giving nitrous oxide as part of general anesthesia for noncardiac surgery doesn't increase the rate of complications and deathand might even decrease the risk of such events, according to a pair of studies in the May issue of Anesthesia & Analgesia, official journal of the International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS).

But an accompanying series of editorials points out some important limitations of the two studieswhich can't completely overcome previous concerns about the safety of using nitrous oxide (N2O) as a surgical anesthetic.

Is Nitrous Oxide Safe for Surgical Anesthesia?

Nitrous oxide is the world's oldest general anesthetic, but there's a long history of debate regarding its appropriate role in modern surgical anesthesia. Although nitrous oxide provides effective sedation and pain control, it has known disadvantages and side effects. A previous study, called "ENIGMA-I," reported a small but significant increase in myocardial infarction (heart attack) among patients receiving nitrous oxide as part of anesthesia for noncardiac surgery (procedures other than heart surgery).

The two new studies, based on large patient databases, question the harmful effects of nitrous oxide. Dr Kate Leslie of Royal Melbourne Hospital, Australia, and colleagues analyzed data from a previous study of more than 8,300 patients undergoing surgery. That study was designed to assess the effects of giving one type of blood pressure drug (beta-blockers) during surgery, not the effects of nitrous oxide.

Dr Leslie and colleagues compared the risk of death or serious complications after surgery for patients who versus did not receive nitrous oxide as part of anesthesia. Twenty-nine percent of patients in the study received nitrous oxide.

The results showed comparable rates of adverse outcomes between groups. With or without nitrous oxide, the overall rate of death or serious complications was approximately seven percent, including about a six percent rate of myocardial infarction. Risk of death after surgery was about three percent in both groups.

Outcomes remained similar on "propensity score" analysisa technique accounting for characteristics making patients more or less likely to receive nitrous oxide. Use of nitrous oxide varied widely between the different countries and hospitals participating in the study.

No Increase in Risks with N2OBut 'More Definitive' Studies Needed

Dr Alparslan Turan of the Cleveland Clinic and colleagues outcomes reviewed more than 49,000 patients undergoing noncardiac surgery between 2005 and 2009. In this study, 45 percent of patients received nitrous oxide.

The results suggested a significant reduction in the risk of death after surgery for patients receiving nitrous oxide: about one-third lower than in patients who did not receive nitrous oxide. There was also a significant 17 percent reduction in the combined rate of major complications and death.

Surprisingly, nitrous oxide was specifically associated with a 40 percent reduction in the risk of major lung- and breathing-related complications. However, the authors acknowledge the risk of "selection bias"anesthesiologists may have avoided using nitrous oxide in patients at risk of lung problems. Again, the findings remained significant on propensity score analysis.

In one of three accompanying editorials, Thomas R. Vetter, MD, MPH, and Gerald McGwin, Jr, MS, PhD, of University of Alabama at Birmingham highlight some important limitations of the study data. They note that, although both studies were large, they were not randomized trialsthe strongest type of scientific evidence.

Drs Vetter and McGwin emphasize that even sophisticated techniques like propensity score analysis can't account for all of the differences between groups that may have affected responses to nitrous oxide. They note that a randomized "ENIGMA-II" study is underway, and may provide "additional, perhaps more definitive insight" on the risks and potential benefits of using nitrous oxide as part of general anesthesia.

###

Read the article: "This Wonder-Working Gas"
Read the article: Comparing Apples to Oranges: Just Say No to N2O?
Read the article: Nitrous Oxide and Cardiovascular Outcome: Perspective from the POISE Trial
Read the article: Association Between Nitrous Oxide and Postoperative Mortality and Morbidity After Noncardiac Surgery
Read the article: Nitrous Oxide and Serious Morbidity and Mortality in the POISE Trial

About the IARS

The International Anesthesia Research Society is a nonpolitical, not-for-profit medical society founded in 1922 to advance and support scientific research and education related to anesthesia, and to improve patient care through basic research. The IARS contributes nearly $1 million annually to fund anesthesia research; provides a forum for anesthesiology leaders to share information and ideas; maintains a worldwide membership of more than 15,000 physicians, physician residents, and others with doctoral degrees, as well as health professionals in anesthesia related practice; sponsors the SmartTots initiative in partnership with the FDA; and publishes the monthly journal Anesthesia & Analgesia in print and online.

About Anesthesia & Analgesia

Anesthesia & Analgesia was founded in 1922 and was issued bi-monthly until 1980, when it became a monthly publication. A&A is the leading journal for anesthesia clinicians and researchers and includes more than 500 articles annually in all areas related to anesthesia and analgesia, such as cardiovascular anesthesiology, patient safety, anesthetic pharmacology, and pain management. The journal is published on behalf of the IARS by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (LWW), a division of Wolters Kluwer Health.


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?


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.


Using nitrous oxide for anesthesia doesn't increase -- and may decrease -- complications and death [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Lisa Webb
lisa.webb@wolterskluwer.com
215-521-8319
Wolters Kluwer Health

2 studies add new data to debate over safety of N2O as surgical anesthetic

San Francisco, CA. (April 22, 2013) Giving nitrous oxide as part of general anesthesia for noncardiac surgery doesn't increase the rate of complications and deathand might even decrease the risk of such events, according to a pair of studies in the May issue of Anesthesia & Analgesia, official journal of the International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS).

But an accompanying series of editorials points out some important limitations of the two studieswhich can't completely overcome previous concerns about the safety of using nitrous oxide (N2O) as a surgical anesthetic.

Is Nitrous Oxide Safe for Surgical Anesthesia?

Nitrous oxide is the world's oldest general anesthetic, but there's a long history of debate regarding its appropriate role in modern surgical anesthesia. Although nitrous oxide provides effective sedation and pain control, it has known disadvantages and side effects. A previous study, called "ENIGMA-I," reported a small but significant increase in myocardial infarction (heart attack) among patients receiving nitrous oxide as part of anesthesia for noncardiac surgery (procedures other than heart surgery).

The two new studies, based on large patient databases, question the harmful effects of nitrous oxide. Dr Kate Leslie of Royal Melbourne Hospital, Australia, and colleagues analyzed data from a previous study of more than 8,300 patients undergoing surgery. That study was designed to assess the effects of giving one type of blood pressure drug (beta-blockers) during surgery, not the effects of nitrous oxide.

Dr Leslie and colleagues compared the risk of death or serious complications after surgery for patients who versus did not receive nitrous oxide as part of anesthesia. Twenty-nine percent of patients in the study received nitrous oxide.

The results showed comparable rates of adverse outcomes between groups. With or without nitrous oxide, the overall rate of death or serious complications was approximately seven percent, including about a six percent rate of myocardial infarction. Risk of death after surgery was about three percent in both groups.

Outcomes remained similar on "propensity score" analysisa technique accounting for characteristics making patients more or less likely to receive nitrous oxide. Use of nitrous oxide varied widely between the different countries and hospitals participating in the study.

No Increase in Risks with N2OBut 'More Definitive' Studies Needed

Dr Alparslan Turan of the Cleveland Clinic and colleagues outcomes reviewed more than 49,000 patients undergoing noncardiac surgery between 2005 and 2009. In this study, 45 percent of patients received nitrous oxide.

The results suggested a significant reduction in the risk of death after surgery for patients receiving nitrous oxide: about one-third lower than in patients who did not receive nitrous oxide. There was also a significant 17 percent reduction in the combined rate of major complications and death.

Surprisingly, nitrous oxide was specifically associated with a 40 percent reduction in the risk of major lung- and breathing-related complications. However, the authors acknowledge the risk of "selection bias"anesthesiologists may have avoided using nitrous oxide in patients at risk of lung problems. Again, the findings remained significant on propensity score analysis.

In one of three accompanying editorials, Thomas R. Vetter, MD, MPH, and Gerald McGwin, Jr, MS, PhD, of University of Alabama at Birmingham highlight some important limitations of the study data. They note that, although both studies were large, they were not randomized trialsthe strongest type of scientific evidence.

Drs Vetter and McGwin emphasize that even sophisticated techniques like propensity score analysis can't account for all of the differences between groups that may have affected responses to nitrous oxide. They note that a randomized "ENIGMA-II" study is underway, and may provide "additional, perhaps more definitive insight" on the risks and potential benefits of using nitrous oxide as part of general anesthesia.

###

Read the article: "This Wonder-Working Gas"
Read the article: Comparing Apples to Oranges: Just Say No to N2O?
Read the article: Nitrous Oxide and Cardiovascular Outcome: Perspective from the POISE Trial
Read the article: Association Between Nitrous Oxide and Postoperative Mortality and Morbidity After Noncardiac Surgery
Read the article: Nitrous Oxide and Serious Morbidity and Mortality in the POISE Trial

About the IARS

The International Anesthesia Research Society is a nonpolitical, not-for-profit medical society founded in 1922 to advance and support scientific research and education related to anesthesia, and to improve patient care through basic research. The IARS contributes nearly $1 million annually to fund anesthesia research; provides a forum for anesthesiology leaders to share information and ideas; maintains a worldwide membership of more than 15,000 physicians, physician residents, and others with doctoral degrees, as well as health professionals in anesthesia related practice; sponsors the SmartTots initiative in partnership with the FDA; and publishes the monthly journal Anesthesia & Analgesia in print and online.

About Anesthesia & Analgesia

Anesthesia & Analgesia was founded in 1922 and was issued bi-monthly until 1980, when it became a monthly publication. A&A is the leading journal for anesthesia clinicians and researchers and includes more than 500 articles annually in all areas related to anesthesia and analgesia, such as cardiovascular anesthesiology, patient safety, anesthetic pharmacology, and pain management. The journal is published on behalf of the IARS by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (LWW), a division of Wolters Kluwer Health.


[ 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/2013-04/wkh-uno041913.php

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Quality family time - Workshop Addict


Today was a day that I look to every year for the past three years and this year was extra special. This year was my boy's first time at this event. Yesterday, he wasn't real pumped about it. After we were done today, he said that he had an awesome time and that he wanted to do this again next year for sure.

My daughter has been on board since day one. Every year, we make sure that we take a picture of her and her team leader (one of the MSU players) and has it framed. This year she wants it on her wall. Her team leader today was a great guy. He interacted great with the kids and spent some quality time with my daughter on a few drills.

This year, it was a little different since there was snow on the ground outside. Everything was inside and for one of the rotations, we got to go into the players meeting rooms, weight room, players lounge and all of that good stuff. Man, those players have it good.

Source: http://www.workshopaddict.com/forum/off-topic/2399-quality-family-time.html

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Sunday, April 21, 2013

Immigration senators: Boston no excuse to nix bill (The Arizona Republic)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/300546977?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Feinstein: Don't treat Boston Marathon bombing suspect as enemy combatant (Washington Post)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/300533042?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Bing leads to 5 times more malware than Google? Not so, says Microsoft

Microsoft has finally responded to a study claiming that Bing?s search results delivered five times as much malware than Google?s, and its answer is simple: the study is flawed.

Last week, AV-TEST conducted a malware study that analyzed millions of websites and found that Bing was showing much more malware to users than its more popular rival (see graph below).

But David Felstead, Senior Development Lead at Bing, responded in a blog post Friday, writing that the study made a mistake by using a Bing API instead of examining the searches directly from Bing.com. This method, Bing says, resulted in misleading results because the API results bypassed its warning system and does not show warning labels.

?Bing actually does prevent customers from clicking on malware infected sites by disabling the link on the results page and showing the below message to stop people from going to the site,? he wrote.

But why does Bing even show them at all if they could be infected?

?We don?t explicitly remove malicious sites from the index because most are legitimate sites that normally don?t host malware but have been hacked,? Felstead writes. ?Our research shows that if sites like this remain infected for a long period of time, their ranking will naturally fall because customers won?t click on them.?

While he did say that ?this is a highly complex problem that all engines are constantly working to solve,? Felstead pointed out how a Google search of ?vacation hotline,? doesn?t give a malware warning, but Bing does.

He added that users will see the warning only once per 10,000 searches on Bing.

?In any case, the overall scale of the problem is very small,? Felstead wrote.

Russian search engine company Yanax also questioned the validity of AV-TEST?s study.

The monthly U.S. search stats from comScore came out for March last week and it showed Google with 67.1 percent of the search market share. Microsoft only has 16.9 percent, a number that?s been growing, albeit slowly.

Microsoft, meanwhile, continues to bash Google with its ?Scroogled? campaign, with the latest bombardment focusing on privacy issues with the Google Play Store.

Reach GeekWire staff reporter Taylor Soper at taylor@geekwire.com or on Twitter at @Taylor_Soper.

More from GeekWire:

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2af5ff5a/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Ctechnolog0Cbing0Eleads0E50Etimes0Emore0Emalware0Egoogle0Enot0Eso0Esays0E6C9531586/story01.htm

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Photos Of The Week: April 13 - April 19

Every week, we bring you some of the most fascinating photos from around the world.

This week, we've got celebrations in Israel, a spectacular army parade in Iran and Buddhist prayers in India.

Check them out below and vote for your favorite:

  • Young Buddhist monks pray for the speedy recovery of a 5-year-old girl who was raped and tortured in Delhi, in Bodhgaya, India, Saturday, April 20, 2013. Officials say the child is in serious condition after being raped and tortured by a man who held her in a locked room in India's capital for two days. Police say the girl went missing Monday and was found Wednesday by neighbors who heard her crying in a room in the same New Delhi building where she lives with her parents. (AP Photo/Manish Bhandari)

  • A Bahraini masked young protester poses during clashes with riot police following a protest against the Formula One Grand Prix on April 19, 2013 in the village of Sanabis, west of Manama. ( MOHAMMED AL-SHAIKH/AFP/Getty Images)

  • A village woman reacts after her house was damaged by an earthquake in Lushan county, Ya'an, southwest China's Sichuan province on Saturday, April 20, 2013. The powerful earthquake struck the steep hills of China's southwestern Sichuan province Saturday, nearly five years after a devastating quake wreaked widespread damage across the region. (AP Photo)

  • A young Syrian boy holds a bag as he collects plastic and metal items in a garbage dump in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on April 17, 2013. (DIMITAR DILKOFF/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Taylor Richard, center, of Belmont, Mass., and Alyssa Kohler, 17, of Cambridge, Mass., wrap themselves in the American Flag in Watertown, Mass., Friday, April 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

  • Palestinian youth hurl rocks at Israeli soldiers during clashes following a protest against the expropriation of Palestinian land by Israel in the West Bank village of Silwad, east of Ramallah on April 19, 2013. (ABBAS MOMANI/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Iranian army's special forces march during the Army Day parade in Tehran on April 18, 2013. (BEHROUZ MEHRI/AFP/Getty Images)

  • In this Thursday, April 18, 2013 photo, students at the Mangyongdae Revolutionary School, in Pyongyang, North Korea sit under portraits of the late leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il. The school is run by the military and school administrators say it was originally set up in 1947 for children who had lost their parents during Korea?s fight for liberation from its Japanese occupiers. (AP Photo)

  • A South Korean soldier holding his machine gun runs in front of an advertisement board during an anti-terror drills at Government Complex in Sejong, south of Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, April 17, 2013. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

  • Isrealis look at fireworks in the Mediterranean coastal city of Netanya, on April 15, 2013 during Israel's 65th Independence Day celebrations. Israel's first Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion declared the existence of the State of Israel in Tel Aviv in 1948, ending the British mandate. (JACK GUEZ/AFP/Getty Images)

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/20/photos-of-the-week_n_3122822.html

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I Still Love My Wedding Song Even Though I'm Divorced | xoJane

If you like-like Marci, you can read more of her work at xoVain, where she's the beauty director!

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I have a playlist on my iPhone called "Never Tire Of." It's exactly what it sounds like: songs that I'll never skip over when they come up on shuffle because I just really love them.?

?

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I've been divorced for seven years.

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Voluntarily listening to the song you first danced to as husband and wife when you're no longer husband and wife may seem like wistfulness, or even an admission of not being over him. But for me, at least, that's definitely not the case. I just really love that song.

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In fact, I've loved it for as long as I can remember; I was only two years old when it became a radio hit.

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image

This is what I looked like the year I probably first heard my wedding song. And that's my adorable mom, whose fondness for soft-rock radio stations made that possible.

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Even though it exemplifies the cheesy "yacht rock" of the time, I've always felt that both its instrumentals and lyrics are so damn lovely; I'm a sucker for a pop song with a string section, and the singer just sounds so in love and grateful to have his lady in his life. It made me hopeful that I could be loved and appreciated that way.

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Looking back, I can see that I projected that fantasy onto my relationship with the wasband, Josh -- and very early on.

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We had met through The Onion's online personals in 2002, when online dating had a much bigger stigma than it does now. I was still nervous about the whole idea -- unlike how nowadays I don't know how to meet people any way but the internet -- so when we decided to meet at Arlene's Grocery for Punk Rock Heavy Metal Karaoke's costumed anniversary show, I brought along a friend.

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Josh was the only one in a suit because he'd decided to perform Elvis Costello's "Radio Radio" with the band. Everyone else was dressed punkier and heavy-metal-ier to look like the singers of their chosen songs. (My friend and I were in jeans and sweaters--obvious spectators.)

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It wasn't long after Josh proved he was a great singer that we hit it off as we'd hoped. He called the next day.

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While we were on the phone, the conversation somehow lapsed into a game of Name That Tune, which I happen to be awesome at. When it was my turn to challenge him, I picked "I Love You," not for any silly subconscious reasons (I think), but because I genuinely thought it was obscure and old enough to stump him.

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After just two dreamy keyboard notes -- not even two seconds -- he confidently guessed correctly and told me how much he'd always loved that song.

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Right then and there, my love-hungry, 23-year-old mind decided I was going to marry him and that was going to be our wedding song. A year and a half later, my 24-year-old, doubt-filled mind got what it thought it wanted.

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image

At this point, we were probably talking about how the officiant made an innapropriate joke about murder.

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The song was never about us, the way wedding songs should feel. It was just a song we both happened to really love, and it happened to be about love, and we had a cute moment involving it. That's not the same thing.

?

Just as I loved that song years before I met Josh, I still love it years after divorcing him. I love it like I inexplicably love lots of old songs that are at once corny and beautifully arranged, like Carly Simon's "Nobody Does It Better "-- holy shit, can I please drown in that song's coda? Tingles. Every. Time.

?

I can't explain why "I Love You" barely even qualifies as bittersweet for me. When it plays, I just feel happy, like I do with any other song I love. Perhaps it's because we were together for only three years? But even then, it wasn't an emotionless breakup.?

?

I guess my lifelong love of the song just far outweighs my temporary love for Josh.

?

I fucking hate "Radio Radio," though.?

Source: http://www.xojane.com/relationships/i-still-love-my-wedding-song-even-though-im-divorced

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Saturday, April 20, 2013

Fertilizer Shows Its Deadly Side

Workers at a cooperative farm near Shanghai scatter fertilizer across fields of winter wheat. Image from the May issue of National Geographic magazine.

? Peter Essick/National Geographic

Workers at a cooperative farm near Shanghai scatter fertilizer across fields of winter wheat. Image from the May issue of National Geographic magazine.

? Peter Essick/National Geographic

My first reaction when I heard details of this week's deadly fertilizer explosion in Texas was horror.

My second thought was, "Maybe I shouldn't have pushed to change that headline."

National Geographic magazine just published in its May issue my article about how nitrogen fertilizer has shaped our planet. The article, with Peter Essick's beautiful pictures, describes fertilizer's critical role in providing our food, but also its toll on water, air and wildlife.

When the article went up online, the headline read, at first, "The Curse of Fertilizer." I didn't like it. It seemed only half of the story. I complained, and the headline soon changed to "A Mixed Blessing" ? just as news broke that the West Fertilizer Co. plant had caught fire and exploded, destroying much of the small town of West, Texas. The blast killed at least a dozen people ? including emergency workers who were trying to fight the fire ? and injured more than 100 others.

Investigators can't yet say for sure how the fire started or what exactly caused the later explosion. According to initial news reports, the plant mainly sold a kind of fertilizer called anhydrous ammonia. "Anhydrous," as farmers often call it, is the most concentrated form of nitrogen fertilizer; it's stored under pressure as a liquid, and it's nasty stuff, dangerous to touch or breathe, but it doesn't usually explode.

Other local fertilizer dealers contacted by NPR, however, confirmed that West Fertilizer also sold another form of nitrogen: ammonium nitrate. In fact, the company reportedly told the Texas Department of State Health Services earlier this year that it was storing 270 tons of ammonium nitrate on site.

Ammonium nitrate can explode. In fact, it's been used to make bombs. Timothy McVeigh combined it with fuel oil to blow up federal offices in Oklahoma City in 1995. So at the moment, it's the prime suspect in the West disaster.

Some countries, including Germany and Ireland, have banned the use of this fertilizer unless it's mixed with other materials that make it less explosive. But the U.S. has resisted such steps. Farmers still like it: It's cheap, convenient, and in the small quantities that farmers handle, it's actually a lot less hazardous than anhydrous ammonia. And somehow or other, most farmers do need nitrogen.

This is where we get back to the bigger story, the subject of my National Geographic article. Nitrogen, in whatever form, powers most of agriculture, whether it's in China or Iowa (both of which I visited while researching the article.) Through habit or necessity, we've come to depend on it.

Fertilizer runoff causes toxic algal blooms. This one covered a third of Lake Erie in 2011.

? Peter Essick/National Geographic

Fertilizer runoff causes toxic algal blooms. This one covered a third of Lake Erie in 2011.

? Peter Essick/National Geographic

But there are costs. In the case of the West Fertilizer explosion, the damage is immediate and dramatic, but local. The environmental cost of nitrogen, meanwhile, is spread across entire continents and along hundreds of miles of shoreline. To quote the article: "Runaway nitrogen is suffocating wildlife in lakes and estuaries, contaminating groundwater and even warming the globe's climate."

Is there any alternative? There certainly are ways to reduce the damage: applying fertilizer more effectively, planting vegetation that captures the excess, recycling animal manure and simply using less of the stuff.

A long-running experiment at Michigan State University's W.K. Kellogg Biological Research Station, near Kalamazoo, shows how effective some of these measures can be. Researchers have been monitoring fields of corn, soybeans and wheat for 20 years. Even modest changes in management, says Michigan State's Philip Robertson, resulted in about a 30 percent drop in the amount of nitrogen released from these fields into the environment.

Why don't all farmers do this? Many don't change their practices out of habit or because they don't personally pay for the environmental damage downstream. But farmers also don't want to take risks, especially when a wrong choice could mean losing the farm. Applying too much fertilizer often seems less risky than using too little.

"Being a good steward," says Robertson, "currently has economic consequences that are unfair."

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/04/19/177931488/fertilizer-shows-its-deadly-side?ft=1&f=1007

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Friday, April 19, 2013

Bitter Taste May Battle Asthma

Click here to listen to this podcast

People with asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other breathing disorders need fast relief when their airways tighten up. Unfortunately, the most commonly used medication has obnoxious side effects. But scientists recently discovered that a bitter taste can be a more effective treatment?and now they know why. The work is published in PLoS Biology. [Cheng-Hai Zhang et al., The Cellular and Molecular Basis of Bitter Tastant-Induced Bronchodilation] When an asthma attack hits, the airway shrinks and makes breathing difficult. To keep air flowing, the sufferer must take medication to relax the passage's muscles and open it back up. But a couple years ago, researchers discovered airways contain bitter taste receptors like the ones on the tongue. After exposure to bitter substances, the receptors can expand the airway more quickly and more effectively than the most commonly used treatment. Researchers examined airway tissue to learn why bitterness makes the muscles relax. During an asthma attack, calcium flows into the cells of the airway and contributes to muscle contraction. But bitter substances block the channels that allow calcium into cells, which relaxes the tightened tissue. And that's the opposite of a bitter pill. ?Sophie Bushwick [The above text is a transcript of this podcast.] ? ? Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bitter-taste-may-battle-asthma-020508055.html

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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

NY Times wins 4 Pulitzers; Fla. paper also honored

NEW YORK (AP) ? The New York Times won four Pulitzer Prizes on Monday, including the award for investigative reporting for stories that detailed how Wal-Mart used bribery to expand in Mexico.

The Sun Sentinel in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was awarded the public service Pulitzer for its reporting on off-duty police officers' reckless driving.

The Pulitzer in breaking news photography went to The Associated Press for its coverage of the civil war in Syria.

A New York-based online nonprofit news organization that covers energy, InsideClimate News, won the Pulitzer in national reporting for stories on flawed regulation of the nation's oil pipelines.

The Pulitzers, journalism's highest honor, are given out each year by Columbia University on the recommendation of a board of journalists and others. Each award carries a $10,000 prize except for the public service award, which is a gold medal.

The Times, which has won more Pulitzers than any other news organization, was also honored for international reporting for detailing the wealth of relatives of top officials in China's communist party; for explanatory reporting, for a look at business practices of Apple and other technology companies; and for feature writing, for an account of skiers killed in an avalanche in Washington state that wove in multimedia elements.

The Pulitzer in breaking news reporting went to The Denver Post for its coverage of the shooting a movie theater last summer in Aurora, Colo., that left 12 people dead.

The Star Tribune of Minneapolis won two awards: It was honored in the local reporting category for its coverage of a spike in infant deaths in poorly regulated day care centers, and Steve Sack won for editorial cartooning.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ny-times-wins-4-pulitzers-fla-paper-honored-191251975.html

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Titan's methane: Going, going, soon to be gone?

Apr. 15, 2013 ? By tracking a part of the surface of Saturn's moon Titan over several years, NASA's Cassini mission has found a remarkable longevity to the hydrocarbon lakes on the moon's surface.

A team led by Christophe Sotin of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., fed these results into a model that suggests the supply of the hydrocarbon methane at Titan could be coming to an end soon (on geological timescales). The study of the lakes also led scientists to spot a few new ones in images from Cassini's visual and infrared mapping spectrometer data in June 2010.

Titan is the only other place in the solar system besides Earth that has stable liquid on its surface. Scientists think methane is at the heart of a cycle at Titan that is somewhat similar to the role of water in Earth's hydrological cycle -- causing rain, carving channels and evaporating from lakes. However, the fact that the lakes seem remarkably consistent in size and shape over several years of data from Cassini's visual and infrared mapping spectrometer suggests that the lakes evaporate very slowly. Methane tends to evaporate quickly, so scientists think the lakes must be dominated by methane's sister hydrocarbon ethane, which evaporates more slowly.

The lakes are also not getting filled quickly, and scientists haven't seen more than the occasional outburst of hydrocarbon rain at the moon over the mission's eight-plus years in the Saturn system. This indicates that on Titan, the methane that is constantly being lost by breaking down to form ethane and other heavier molecules is not being replaced by fresh methane from the interior. The team suggests that the current load of methane at Titan may have come from some kind of gigantic outburst from the interior eons ago possibly after a huge impact. They think Titan's methane could run out in tens of millions of years.

For more information on this finding and the lakes, visit http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/cassiniscienceleague/science20130412/ .

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington, D.C. The visual and infrared mapping spectrometer team is based at the University of Arizona, Tucson.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/space_time/nasa/~3/nVDWJF4RnTQ/130415164110.htm

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Monday, April 15, 2013

Forever, For Always, No Matter What : Catholic Adoption & Home ...

Forever, For Always, No Matter What : Catholic Adoption & Home Education Blog: Guest Post :: You Can Homeschool Your Child with Dyslexia

Guest Post :: You Can Homeschool Your Child with Dyslexia


As we go through our investigation of some possible reading challenges with one of our sons, I'm trying to learn all that I can. ?When my friend and fellow blogger Marianne Sunderland released her new e-book, I knew it was on my "must read" list. ?I'm happy that she is here to share more about their Dyslexia journey.




As a parent of a school-aged child, one of the most exciting milestones in their little lives is witnessing them learn to read.? The ability to read opens up a world of amusement, learning, and joy by stimulating the imagination to think and dream about all manner of subjects.?


On the other hand, the inability to read as a young child can be one of the most alarming experiences a parent may face during their young child?s life.? Many parents of struggling readers experience everything from confusion and frustration to exasperation and fear that their child will never learn to read, write or spell well. ?
The tendency for parents is to run to the schools, after all, they are the experts right?? After my experience raising and successfully homeschooling our 6 dyslexic kids over the past 17 years (and counting!) I can safely say that the school is no better equipped to help your child than a well-meaning and well-informed parent. ?
Shocking, you say?? Read on...
All public schools are required by federal law to have a plan in place to ?identify, locate and evaluate? children who may have a disability and need special education.? However, teachers and schools are dealing with large numbers of children with a wide variety of individual needs both physical and academic. Though their heart may be to help kids and the system is set up (legally) to support them, managing each individual with specific needs is going to be necessarily difficult as evidenced by the enormous body of laws surrounding the entire special education process.
The bottom line in all of this is that regular, credentialed schoolroom teachers have had
little to no training on learning disabilities; what the warning signs are or how they are
best treated.
Talk to any parent of a public-schooled child with a learning disability and the story is nearly always the same.? The schools are just not providing the kids of research-based, early intervention that science clearly shows is necessary for overcoming dyslexia. ?
So what about homeschooling?
According to the International Dyslexia Association, ?dyslexic students need direct,
systematic and individual instruction in reading and spelling and traditional schools do
not always provide adequate levels of service?.
Benefits to Homeschooling a Child With Dyslexia
Besides allowing your child the freedom to learn at their own pace and using the
methods best suited to their learning styles, there are other reasons why
homeschooling is a better environment for educating your child who learns differently.
? Allows for the necessary individualized instruction in all subject areas: reading,
spelling, composition and comprehension.
? Allows for kids to focus on areas of interest and for lessons to be planned around
those interests.
? Allows for freedom from being measured against peers, day in and day out, with no
learning difficulties.
? Allows for your child to work at their own pace using resources that
work best with their individual strengths.
? Homeschooling also necessarily avoids the rigid scheduling and standardized testing
{and the practice of teaching to the test} that is required in the public schools.
There is no one who knows, or cares for, your child like you do. The resources are out there. It can be done.
Do you have a child who is bright, yet struggles with reading?? He or she may have dyslexia.? It is estimated that 20% of the population has dyslexia.? Dyslexia is characterized by:
  • slow, inaccurate reading
  • terrible spelling
  • difficulty with penmanship
  • difficulty expressing self
  • inattentiveness, distractibility
  • dreads going to school
For more information on Dyslexia, you may be interested in my ebook Dyslexia 101:? Truths, Myths and What Really Works. ? Chapters Include:
  • What is Dyslexia?
  • How to Know if You or Your Child Has Dyslexia
  • Everything You Need to Know About Testing
  • Reading Instruction That Works
  • Navigating the Public School System
  • Everything you Need to Know to Start Homeschooling Your Dyslexic Child
  • When to Hire an Educational Therapist
  • Dyslexia in High School and College
  • Encouragement for Parents
  • Tips for Teachers
  • Hope for Students
PLUS an exhaustive list of resources, including:
  • books
  • web sites
  • blogs
  • apps
  • compensatory technology
  • links to reputable national and international dyslexia organizations
Available for PDF download or via Amazon Kindle. ?
Marianne Sunderland is a homeschooling mother of eight lively children ages 2 to 21, including adventurous and homeschooled sailors, Zac and Abby Sunderland, known for their world-record setting around the world sailing campaigns. Marianne is passionate about encouraging families to discover and nuture their children?s God-given gifts and talents, in and outside of the classroom. ?Her varied experiences homeschooling through difficult times and with kids who learn differently has taught her much about stepping outside the box in her own homeschool. Marianne?s blog, Abundant Life, provides weekly articles on faith, family and homeschooling that will bless and encourage you:?www.mariannesunderland.com.

Source: http://www.foreverforalwaysnomatterwhat.com/2013/04/guest-post-you-can-homeschool-your.html

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India's Infosys shares slump to lowest since October in earnings aftermath

* Ronaldo scores twice as Real win 3-0 in Bilbao * Weakened Barcelona beat Zaragoza 3-0 * Atletico thrash Granada 5-0 (Recasts after Real game, adds quotes) By Mark Elkington MADRID, April 14 (Reuters) - Cristiano Ronaldo proved too powerful for Athletic Bilbao as he scored with a fizzing free kick and a towering header in Real Madrid's bruising 3-0 victory at San Mames in La Liga on Sunday. The Portugal forward took his league tally for the season to 31 goals, netting in his eighth successive game in all competitions, and set up Gonzalo Higuain for Real's third. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/indias-infosys-shares-slump-lowest-since-october-earnings-055436366--sector.html

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West Virginia native authors book on stocks - Business - The ...

Wall Street has been headed up since November, said author Amy Smith.

Barbara James has a daily morning routine that includes checking a few stock market lists, investors' websites and talking with a trading buddy over the phone, according to a new book written by West Virginia native Amy Smith.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Barbara James has a daily morning routine that includes checking a few stock market lists, investors' websites and talking with a trading buddy over the phone, according to a new book written by West Virginia native Amy Smith.

Surveying stocks regularly hasn't always been a hobby for the former executive secretary, though.

After losing her husband of 30 years to a heart attack and getting laid off from her job in 2004, James started studying the market, charts and more.

"The key is creating a routine that works for you, something you will continue to do on a consistent basis, every day," James told Smith for "How to Make Money in Stocks Success Stories." "I sold real estate and was a secretary, so if I can become a successful investor, anyone can."

Smith, a West Virginia native and 1978 Elkins High School graduate, is a market commentator for Investor's Business Daily. But she said she didn't know anything about the stock market before she attended a free seminar where William O'Neil, chairman and founder of Investor's Business Daily, spoke.

"I'm the proof that anybody can be a successful investor," said Smith, a University of Southern California theater major who worked in fitness training for nearly 20 years before she discovered her passion for investing.

"I won't say the stock market isn't complicated, but when you boil it down, what makes a stock go up? It's always earnings and it's because a company is doing something right."

Stocks in the United States have trended up since November, Smith said.

Starting last week, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index climbed for four straight days. The S&P and the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at new record highs throughout the week.

The Dow average on Friday had dropped 0.08 point, to 14865.06, snapping a three-day streak of all-time closing highs, according to MarketWatch. The S&P lost 4.52 points, or 0.3 percent, to 1588.85, ending a two-day streak of record closing highs.

"The S&P went to new high grounds this week ... and it has everybody excited," Smith said Thursday. "We are just above where we were in 2000 and that is positive. When we hit this before in October 2007, we backed way off of it so we're watching to see if the indexes continue higher."

Casual restaurant chains and fast food restaurants, such as Papa John's, Panera, and Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, have been doing well in the market recently, she said.

Travel and leisure markets, like car rental companies Hertz and Avis, have been on the uptrend, too.

Homeaway, an online vacation rental marketplace, saw its earnings increase 100 percent in the most recent quarter.

US Airways' earnings were up 100 percent, too, in the same period, Smith said.

"When is the last time we thought about investing in airline stocks?" she said.

"If we get good earnings numbers and these companies are doing well, then that bodes well for the economy," Smith said. "If we did get some sort of pullback, it doesn't mean that the market is finished, the market just ebbs and flows and some sort of a pullback would not be a horrible thing, it would be a very normal thing for the market to correct a little bit."

Smith said investors thought the market was going to correct two weeks ago, but it "turned right around and took off again."

When the market does retract, that's time for individual investors to step to the sidelines, she said.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Barbara James has a daily morning routine that includes checking a few stock market lists, investors' websites and talking with a trading buddy over the phone, according to a new book written by West Virginia native Amy Smith.

Surveying stocks regularly hasn't always been a hobby for the former executive secretary, though.

After losing her husband of 30 years to a heart attack and getting laid off from her job in 2004, James started studying the market, charts and more.

"The key is creating a routine that works for you, something you will continue to do on a consistent basis, every day," James told Smith for "How to Make Money in Stocks Success Stories." "I sold real estate and was a secretary, so if I can become a successful investor, anyone can."

Smith, a West Virginia native and 1978 Elkins High School graduate, is a market commentator for Investor's Business Daily. But she said she didn't know anything about the stock market before she attended a free seminar where William O'Neil, chairman and founder of Investor's Business Daily, spoke.

"I'm the proof that anybody can be a successful investor," said Smith, a University of Southern California theater major who worked in fitness training for nearly 20 years before she discovered her passion for investing.

"I won't say the stock market isn't complicated, but when you boil it down, what makes a stock go up? It's always earnings and it's because a company is doing something right."

Stocks in the United States have trended up since November, Smith said.

Starting last week, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index climbed for four straight days. The S&P and the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at new record highs throughout the week.

The Dow average on Friday had dropped 0.08 point, to 14865.06, snapping a three-day streak of all-time closing highs, according to MarketWatch. The S&P lost 4.52 points, or 0.3 percent, to 1588.85, ending a two-day streak of record closing highs.

"The S&P went to new high grounds this week ... and it has everybody excited," Smith said Thursday. "We are just above where we were in 2000 and that is positive. When we hit this before in October 2007, we backed way off of it so we're watching to see if the indexes continue higher."

Casual restaurant chains and fast food restaurants, such as Papa John's, Panera, and Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, have been doing well in the market recently, she said.

Travel and leisure markets, like car rental companies Hertz and Avis, have been on the uptrend, too.

Homeaway, an online vacation rental marketplace, saw its earnings increase 100 percent in the most recent quarter.

US Airways' earnings were up 100 percent, too, in the same period, Smith said.

"When is the last time we thought about investing in airline stocks?" she said.

"If we get good earnings numbers and these companies are doing well, then that bodes well for the economy," Smith said. "If we did get some sort of pullback, it doesn't mean that the market is finished, the market just ebbs and flows and some sort of a pullback would not be a horrible thing, it would be a very normal thing for the market to correct a little bit."

Smith said investors thought the market was going to correct two weeks ago, but it "turned right around and took off again."

When the market does retract, that's time for individual investors to step to the sidelines, she said.

?"You also have to let the overall market trend be your guide as to whether it is a good time to be in stocks or not," James said in "Success Stories."

Smith said investors look for companies selling products with a high demand.

When Apple introduced the iPod, Smith said everyone from children to grandparents wanted the portable music player.

"That's what will cause the investor to go in," Smith said. "When you have a mass market for a product or service, that will really drive the earnings and that's where the professional money put their money."

But Smith warns in her book, "Never buy stocks right before earnings because anything can happen."

If the company continues to report high earnings, then buy their stocks, she said.

In "How to Make Money in Stocks Success Stories," Smith talks about how Barbara James admits to having a "favorite pet stock" with F5 Networks. In April she had sold for a profit of 12 percent and in November for a profit of 22 percent.

But the third time for F5 Networks was not the charm, Smith wrote.

"Barbara broke one of her rules and bought the stock right before earnings," Smith wrote.

F5's earnings disappointed expectations and the stock dropped 26 percent, she wrote.

"A stock can sour on good earnings or dive precipitously on disappointments," Smith said in her book.

There are times within the market when investors should protect their money, go to cash and wait for the market to get healthy again.

Having a few successful stocks in a year will still bring individuals out on top, she said.

"The idea is to keep your losses small and let your winners run and that's how you make money in the big market," Smith said. "With the stock market, you can achieve some outstanding results."

Smith said she wrote the book to share success stories of everyday investors with the public. She outlines the mistakes each person made while explaining -- using charts as tools -- how they ended up on top.

The market expert said she has plans to write a second book after the positive reaction to "How to Make Money in Stocks Success Stories."

Reach Megan Workman at megan.work...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-5113.

?

Source: http://www.wvgazette.com/topStories13/201304120218

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