Saturday, 30 June 2012

Martin Brasier: Is Efficiency Fatal?

Are Golden Ages to be welcomed? Or are they disasters in waiting? Should we yearn for stability? Or relish changes when they come? Could prolonged periods of stability always prove fatal to heirarchies, such as economies and ecosystems? Or should we carry on regardless?

How can ever we hope to find answers here? Historical records barely go back far enough to give us the rules. So might two billion years of fossil record speak out about strange happenings in the past? Or about great dangers that lie ahead? My hunch is that fossils are now speaking out to us loud and clear. And that microscopic fossils have the very darkest stories to tell. The ways of the world can be read within a grain of sand.

The 18th century poet William Blake once teased about seeing 'a world in a grain of sand. He was not alone, of course. Indeed, you may well share some skepticism about such a dream. How could one hope to divine the laws of the universe, or the deeper meaning of life, just by squinting through a glass lens at tiny fossils? One hunch is that Blake was sneering in part at country parsons, who had gleefully followed the example of old Robert Hooke. The latter had the ill luck of working and writing at the time of the Great Plague in London in 1665. And it is with such a scene that my arguments within my new book Secret Chambers begin.

When Hooke sat down to look through his new microscope, what he saw and reported then truly astonished the world. He revealed that a humble flea -- grand vector of bubonic plague -- was truly dressed to kill, provided with armour plates and quills. He then turned aside to make the first ever report of 'cells' within living tissue -- from a wine bottle cork -- estimating some twelve hundred million box-like cells in the microscopic scene before him. But best of all, he dredged miniscule shells from the muds of the River Thames, each no bigger than a grain of sand. His drawings were so carefully rendered that we can even identify the species -- it was a tiny protozoan shell called Ammonia beccarii that now thrives in estuaries across the world, from Port Said to the Potomac. That is fascinating because such tiny shells -- which I have studied all my life -- seem to hold valuable clues to the manner in which complex cells of plants and animals first evolved from bacterial slime. Hooke had stumbled on the clues to life's biggest mystery. Perhaps the most curious and difficult transition in the whole history of evolution -- the formation of the complex modern cell.

All manner of fascinating people have played their part in this great quest, including a spy for the Emperor August who reported the first symbiotic fossils -- akin to Ammonia -- while travelling through war-torn Egypt. Charles Darwin later stumbled on a puzzle in coral polyps while climbing high in the Andes. Then his wife Emma helped to bring clues together during a dinner party in London. We then meet with a precocious Chicagoan girl called Lyn Margulis who wouldn't take 'no' for an answer. She was to revolutionize our thinking, battling for evolution's most beautiful idea... And we bump into a humble Minnesota geologist who kept pestering an esteemed Harvard Professor. Lastly, we meet with an Apollo Missionary who couldn't quite stop talking about the Australian outback.

When woven together, something rather strange emerges from these stories. Over the last 400 million years, we find that reef ecosystems have flirted dangerously with algae, at first cultivating them like house plants, then like arable farmers, and then like symbioholics. But when we inspect the fossil record, we find that every 20-30 million years or so, these complex and highly efficient ecosystems have collapsed completely, taking symbioses down to the bottom again.

But when we travel back in time to between one and two billion years ago, within the interval that I once foolishly dubbed 'the Boring Billion', nothing like this seems to have happened. In fact, we see the reverse. Bacterial guests got so entwined with tprotozoan hosts that they fused into a single, new kind of cell -- the eukaryote cell. Both mitochondria and chloroplasts are vestiges of this great marriage.

Nothing so big has happened in the last 400 million years or so. Symbioses have either stayed rather loose, or they have formed and then dissolved again completely, in the so-called mass extinction events.

My suggestion is that symbioses were able to go much further in the distant past because there were no major collapses of ecosystem. Yes, there were huge meteorite impacts. But nothing quite like the end of the dinosaurs. Just a billion years of networking.

This reveals the alarming nature of our current predicament. In a world like ours, carrying animals locked into complex food chains, symbioses have been obliged to operate within a hierarchical system prone to specialisation, and to boom and bust. So symbiotic associations have been unable to rise again to great heights. Yes, symbioses have explored huge efficiencies, leading to giant, algae-cultivating factories of the kind that now comprise the famous Sphinx. But those symbioses always proved fatal whenever the system flipped to a new state of equilibrium. Which it always did. And maybe always will.

It seems that efficiencies within a system typically prove fatal in the longer term. Redundancy can be a boon. Without slack in the system, any complex structure will always be destined for collapse.

Have we humans seen all this before? Well, yes, I think we have: in the collapse of civilizations around the Mediterranean about 1190 BC. And in the collapse of the Classical world in c. 410 AD. And to a lesser extent, in the collapse of 1929. And in the collapse of our modern banking system too.

Those little fossils are crying out that our bankers have been taking efficiency too far. If so, let this be a warning. Stop such short-term behaviour at once!

?

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/martin-brasier/is-efficiency-fatal_b_1639369.html

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Capone's Art-House Round-Up with Woody Allen's TO ROME WITH LOVE, LAST RIDE starring Hugo Weaving, Kirby Dick's INVISIBLE WAR, and PAUL WILLIAMS STILL ALIVE!!!

TO ROME WITH LOVE
Woody Allen is still a machine, and instead of making just one film set in this stunning, borderline idealized version of Rome, he's made four short films that I'm pretty sure don't connect in any way. And like any film with multiple storylines, each features their own set of characters, you'll likely love certain ones and tolerate the others (none of them are worthy of hating at least).

My two favorite threads in TO ROME WITH LOVE are one involving Alec Baldwin as a celebrated architect revisiting his youthful haunts with young architect (Jesse Eisenberg). What's fascinating is that as the segment goes on, we realize something about Eisenberg's character and the love triangle (with Ellen Page and Greta Gerwig) he's involved in. Baldwin takes on the role as unseen (to everyone but Eisenberg) advisor in a very PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM manner that I liked.

The other enjoyable story stars Allen himself as a former music industry executive who specialized in staging operas, who comes to visit his recently engaged daughter (Alison Pill). Her soon-to-be father-in-law, a mortician (real-life tenor Fabio Armiliato), turns out to have an exceptional voice?but only under very specific circumstances, which Allen tries to recreate on stage. It's old-school absurdist Allen, and having him back in the front of the camera provides for some old-school one-liners that had me rolling.

The two other stories didn't quite connect for me in the same way. I appreciated Robert Benigni's low-key performance as an ordinary man who suddenly becomes the most famous man in Rome, but the surreal way the plot plays out seemed obvious, forced and dated. And the scenario involving a stunning Penelope Cruz as a prostitute who gets thrown in with a recently married man's life just falls flat, and I'm not even sure what the moral of that particular story was meant to be. Either way, the thread was kind of unpleasant. But overall, TO ROME WITH LOVE has more to like than dislike, and as a fan of Allen's work in general, I'm just thrilled he didn't take a nose dive after the transcendent MIDNIGHT IN PARIS.

LAST RIDE
The details of this 2009 Australian feature that is just now making its way stateside courtesy of Music Box Films are sketchy, and that's exactly how director Glendyn Ivin wants them. There's a man (Hugo Weaving of THE MATRIX and THE LORD OF THE RINGS trilogies) and his young son Chook (Tom Russell) on the run from the authorities; there's been a violent act that has resulted in someone getting either seriously hurt or killed, and we're pretty sure Weaving committed the act. He's a sketchy looking guy with a temper and no patience. The two do a fugitive's drive of the outback's least desirable tourist spots, and as they travel, we get small bits and pieces of information about their history, where the boy's mother is, and what exactly transpired that led to the violence that put them on this path.

LAST RIDE is a measured work whose sole propulsive element is a savage performance by Weaving, who character wants so desperately to be a good father that he allows his son to essentially take over and make the decisions for them even if it means him getting captured (obviously, that's not his first choice). Weaving is so invested in this man's struggle that you simply can't take his eyes off him, and you're in a constant state of anxiety about what's going to happen to and between them. LAST RIDE is a film loaded with tension, even at moments I don't think it's meant to be there. Weaving just drags it along with him wherever he goes, and it elevates the film beyond simply telling a story to a place where every scene is fraught with emotional weight.

And I haven't even mentioned how unconventionally gorgeous the movie looks (the director of photography is Greig Fraser, whose exceptional work can be seen in SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN). In its own small way, LAST RIDE is perfect and flawed in the most interesting and unnerving ways, and that's why it rattled me into loving it.

INVISIBLE WAR
The statistics alone should be enough to keep any woman considering a career in the military to think about another line of work. The one that was most disturbing to me was that a woman in the U.S. military is more likely to be raped by a male soldier than shot by an enemy combatant. What's perhaps even more shocking is example after example of how these women are treated by the investigators and chain of command after the incident(s) in question. This and so much more is the subject of director Kirby (SICK, THIS FILM IS NOT YET RATED, OUTRAGE) Dick's latest documentary INVISIBLE WAR, a film that is guaranteed to make you angrier than you've ever been in your life.

And as horrifying as the statistics may be (16,150 service members sexually assaulted in 2009), the thing that drives this unacceptable epidemic home is the testimony that Dick has compiled, most of which spares no detail or emotionally wrenching moment in the telling. The subjects break our hearts one after another, but the rage emerges when they describe the kind of organized coverup that results in nearly all attackers going free and unpunished. At the time of these incidents, there was no system of justice in place that took the decisions about what cases were investigated and brought to trial out of the hands of people who had a stake in the outcome. Many of the women were accused of adultery (because the rapist was married, not the victim), fraternizing with a superior officer, or conduct unbecoming.

An Audience Award Winner at Sundance this year, INVISIBLE WAR is exactly the kind of public embarrassment required for changes to happen (and they already have since Sundance), but when we see one young former soldier with permanent jaw injury (courtesy of her attacker) get refused medical treatment coverage from the military because she wasn't in service long enough to qualify, that shows us how far things still need to change. As much as I'm sure many of you will avoid this film with every fiber of your being, you owe it to yourself to take a good hard look at this movie. If you're going to support the troops, make certain you support these troops as well.

PAUL WILLIAMS STILL ALIVE
One of the true joys of this year's SXSW Film Festival was the strange and wonderful documentary PAUL WILLIAMS STILL ALIVE, about the unavoidable presence of the singer-songwriter-actor-personality-game show contestant-"Love Boat" passenger-talk show guest host Paul Williams, a bizarre little man who could write a hit song with the bets of them ("Evergreen," "Rainbow Connection," "We've Only Just Begun"), and then show up on "The Tonight Show" either as a guest or guest host, and then pop up in a movie like BATTLE FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES or PHANTOM OF THE PARADISE or SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT or THE MUPPET MOVIE. The man's accomplishments are well documented in history and this movie.

But what makes PAUL WILLIAMS STILL ALIVE fascinating as a lover of great music documentaries is that we actually see a process that I've never seen depicted on film before. Clearly a longtime fan, director Stephen Kessler began his desire to make the definitive biopic on Williams only after thinking the man was dead. So when he finally approached Williams, who saw his career take a downturn after the 1970s thanks to a healthy combination of drugs, alcohol and an inflated ego. Although Williams agrees to have Kessler follow him, he is clearly a reluctant subject for the beginning of the movie.

And as the film goes on, we see the gradual process of Williams warming up to the director, and the two slowly but surely become friends. Some might complain that there's too much of the director's voice in the movie, but I don't think it takes away from Williams' story at all. And as a fan, Kessler actually heightens the experience in many way.

It's often moving, sad, thrilling to watch Williams at work and play today. He might only sell a couple hundred seats at a U.S. nightclub, but when he travels to The Philippines, thousands of people come to greet him, and he's clearly in his element. Kessler also does a fine job contextualizing the time in which Williams became popular, perhaps in an effort to explain how this odd-looking, extremely charming guy became a superstar. This is a great look at a real talent.

In Chicago, the film plays for a weeklong engagement at the Gene Siskel Film Center. Paul Williams will be present for a post-screening Q&A at the Saturday, 7:45pm show, with me moderating the discussion. Director Stephen Kessler will be present at the Friday, 8pm and Saturday screenings.

-- Steve Prokopy
"Capone"
capone@aintitcool.com
Follow Me On Twitter

Source: http://www.aintitcool.com/node/56711

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WikiLeaks says it's releasing a music CD

(AP) ? They have a show. They have a social network. Now comes WikiLeaks ? the album.

WikiLeaks is branching out into the entertainment industry, announcing a "Beat the Blockade" CD intended to raise money to keep the online transparency advocates afloat.

The group said in a statement late Thursday that the CD would feature 12 songs including "Where There Are No Secrets," ''The Ballad of Julian Assange," and "B Manning."

It's the latest foray outside the secret-busting business for WikiLeaks, which has spawned a TV show called "The World Tomorrow" and started its own social network, called Friends of WikiLeaks.

WikiLeaks chief Julian Assange says his website, which once featured an anonymous electronic drop box for secret documents, has been effectively mothballed by a U.S. financial blockade.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-06-29-WikiLeaks/id-94a1bc39535b4a63b2f1ad9171379e95

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Friday, 29 June 2012

This post is not about exercise, fitness, health or spirituality | Jo ...

Photo by Tony George used under Creative Commons license

I practice yoga. And it occurred to me recently that yoga really influences how I work with clients.

Your post-Enlightenment self has probably put yoga in a box with running, weight training, pilates, and aerobics. And I suspect some yoga classes are like that.

I?ve been fortunate to have taken yoga classes with folks who don?t really see it that way ? Karen Smereka at Yoga Connection, Havi Brooks at The Fluent Self (unless I?m mistaken, pretty well everything Havi does is yoga), Louise who taught an ante-natal yoga and active birth class in Birmingham back when I was pregnant (forgive me, my kid is about to turn 15)

Here?s some of what I?ve learned

Meet yourself where you are

Your aim is [fill in the blank]. You probably won?t get there but it?s good to have that in mind.

Asana = home: you might be working hard but you should be comfortable

If it hurts come out of the pose

It?s up to you to make the modifications and use the props that you need

What you resist persists

Remember to breathe

Even just thinking about your body doing the pose is beneficial

Advanced practice is not being able to get into some complicated pose; it?s about how you stand in line at the post-office.

That probably makes no sense to you at all.

Don?t worry. I?m going to post about each of those things and ramble on a bit about how they make a difference.

If you don?t want to miss any, subscribe to my weekly blog post round up, or like?my Facebook page.

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U.S. consumer spending, exports cloud growth outlook

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Wednesday, 27 June 2012

Big Ben to be renamed after Queen

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Zynga Plans Game Launches, Shares A Minute Of Vanity Metrics First: 64k Words, 140k Total Turns, Etc.

photo (6)We're here at Zynga's big press event today at the company's headquarters in San Francisco. Mark Pincus is on stage, sharing a few new stats about the company -- with more news to come about game launches, he says. But first, this post about the stats. He's not sharing daily active user numbers (which are at 53.3 million today, according to AppData), ARPU, ARPPU or other industry measures.

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Tuesday, 26 June 2012

Floating Balloon Coffee Table Is a Whimsical Way To Get Sued By Disney [Design]

Don't get us wrong. We're completely enamored with Duffy London's new glass-topped coffee table that looks like it's being supported by a cluster of helium balloons. We're just not sure calling it the UP was the best idea. That mouse can be very litigious! More »


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More U.S. teens hide online activity from parents: survey

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Sunday, 24 June 2012

Sears Canada unveils latest concept in Sears Home stores

RBR Staff Writer
Published 22 June 2012

Sear Canada has unveiled its latest concept in Sears Home stores at Pinecrest Shopping Centre. The company said the new 78,000ft? location is the largest Sears Home store in the country.

The new retail store features products and services, including the Major Appliance and Mattress shop of any Sears location.

In addition to stocking a selection of accent furniture, chairs and tables, the multi-channel retailer is introducing Jane by Jane Lockhart, an innovative new line of furniture with eight distinct collections ,

At its new outlet, customers will have the opportunity to design their own custom furniture using the Jane Lockhart selection of colours and fabrics.

Sears Canada president and CEO Calvin McDonald said that the opening of the Sears Home store at Pinecrest is another in a series of transformational milestones for the retailer.

"We work for Canadian families and we believe we have a product offering in this location that presents the best of what Sears has to offer in appliances, mattresses, home furnishings and installed home services," McDonald added.

Sears Home claims to offer all installed home services including custom window coverings, roofing, doors, windows, furnaces and central air conditioners.

The company retail network includes 196 corporate stores, 278 hometown dealer stores, 29 home services showrooms, over 1,500 catalog and online merchandise pick-up locations, 105 Sears Travel offices.

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Negotiators closing in on student loan deal

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Congressional bargainers appeared to be closing in on a compromise that would head off a July 1 doubling of interest rates on federal loans to 7.4 million college students and end an election-year battle between President Barack Obama and Congress.

Senate aides from both parties said Friday the two sides were moving toward a deal on how to pay the measure's $6 billion price tag, the chief source of partisan conflict.

The goal is to push legislation through Congress next week so the current 3.4 percent interest rate on subsidized Stafford loans can be preserved for another year. A 2007 law gradually reduced interest rates on the loans but required them to balloon back to 6.8 percent this July 1 in a cost-saving maneuver.

On another front, the two sides were also close to an agreement to overhaul federal transportation programs, according to House and Senate aides from both parties. Negotiations were expected to continue through the weekend, with votes expected next week on either a major transportation bill or an extension of current programs, said the aides, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss details of the talks.

For weeks, Obama has ridiculed Republicans for not moving quickly to prevent student loan interest rates from doubling, a stance that Democrats have hoped will boost his support among young voters who broadly backed him in the 2008 election. With college costs and student debt growing steadily, the issue ties directly into concerns about the economy and jobs that polls show dominate voters' worries.

Though some rank-and-file GOP lawmakers have opposed letting the government set the rates, Republican presidential challenger Mitt Romney and GOP congressional leaders have backed the one-year extension. The remaining dispute has been over how to pay for it.

Republicans have accused Obama of creating a phony issue and drawing out the battle in an attempt to reap political points. In late May, they proposed several options to pay for the measure, all of which were culled from budget savings Obama himself had proposed in the past, but they said the White House was ignoring them.

"Even though the White House refuses to respond to our bipartisan approach, Senate Democrats are finally working with us, and a solution is within reach ? despite the president's failure to act," said Don Stewart, spokesman for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

The talks have involved aides to McConnell and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. Democrats said the White House has been kept abreast of the talks, while Republicans said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, has been kept informed but hasn't participated in the negotiations.

According to Democratic aides, negotiators are approaching a deal to cover the bill's costs by charging companies more to insure pensions and changing rules so companies take fewer tax deductions for their pension contributions. Reid proposed both of those ideas this month.

They said additional money would come from a list of options McConnell has offered, probably one to limit federal subsidies of undergraduates' loans to six years. The government does not begin charging interest on Stafford loans until after students graduate, which can take longer than six years.

"While we're not there, we're well down the road. I think we can get something done," Reid told reporters Thursday. He said McConnell and Boehner "are compromising just as we are and hope we can get something done."

If allowed to double, the higher 6.8 percent rate would apply only to new subsidized Stafford loans for undergraduates approved starting on July 1 and would not affect existing loans.

According to the Education Department, 7.4 million students are expected to get new Stafford loans in the year beginning July 1, with each borrowing an average $4,226. A doubling of interest rates would add about $1,000 to the costs of the average loan, which students typically pay off over 10 or more years.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said last month that student loan debt grew this year to $904 billion, even as other types of consumer debt were falling.

___

Associated Press writer Joan Lowy contributed to this report.

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Saturday, 23 June 2012

Palestinians push Nativity church as Heritage site

In this Friday, Dec. 24, 2010 file photo, a cross is seen backdropped by the Church of Nativity, traditionally believed by Christians to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ, during a Christmas parade in the West Bank town of Bethlehem. The Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem is becoming the church of contention with an unwelcome bid by the Palestinians to use their muscle as the newest members of the U.N.'s cultural arm and obtain World Heritage status for the iconic Christian site (AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi, File)

In this Friday, Dec. 24, 2010 file photo, a cross is seen backdropped by the Church of Nativity, traditionally believed by Christians to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ, during a Christmas parade in the West Bank town of Bethlehem. The Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem is becoming the church of contention with an unwelcome bid by the Palestinians to use their muscle as the newest members of the U.N.'s cultural arm and obtain World Heritage status for the iconic Christian site (AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi, File)

FILE - In this 1947 file photo the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, Palestine, occupied by British soldiers and mechanized units, is seen fortified with sandbags and trucks, circa 1947. The Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem is becoming the church of contention with an unwelcome bid by the Palestinians to use their muscle as the newest members of the U.N.'s cultural arm and obtain World Heritage status for the iconic Christian site.(AP Photo/James Mills)

FILE - In this Tuesday Dec. 13, 2011 file photo, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas delivers his speech, after the Palestinian flag raising ceremony, at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris. The Palestinian Authority was admitted as a member of the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization in an October vote that prompted the U.S. to cut off funds to the agency. The Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem is becoming the church of contention with an unwelcome bid by the Palestinians to use their muscle as the newest members of the U.N.'s cultural arm and obtain World Heritage status for the iconic Christian site.(AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere, File)

(AP) ? The Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem is becoming the church of contention, with a bid by the Palestinians to use their position as the newest members of the U.N.'s cultural arm to obtain World Heritage status for the iconic Christian site ? and perhaps boost their own campaign for legitimacy.

The effort by the Palestinian Authority, like its overall efforts for global recognition for an independent Palestinian state, is drawing resistance. And it may fail at the World Heritage Committee meeting that starts Sunday.

An experts committee has turned down the emergency bid to quickly confer on the Church of the Nativity, and its pilgrimage route, the status as an endangered World Heritage site, saying the application needs more work. Even custodians of the holy site, the Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Armenian churches are opposed, according to a document obtained by The Associated Press.

The church ? which drew some 2 million visitors last year and parts of which are 1,500 years old ? stands above the grotto that Christians believe was the birthplace of Jesus. The Palestinians' application asks for recognition as a site of "outstanding universal value" urgently in need of attention.

There is concern by the United States and others that the Bethlehem holy site and the integrity of the World Heritage process risk falling victim to the politics that for decades have torn the region asunder, with the Palestinians using their foothold in the U.N. system to grab symbolic recognition of their elusive bid for statehood in a long-disputed land.

The World Heritage candidacy of the Church of the Nativity and the pilgrimage route is one way for the Palestinians to prove they are responsible stewards of the site which draws tourists the world over. Above all, it is part of a broader attempt by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to seek international recognition for a state of Palestine after its controversial backdoor entry into the U.N. system.

Negotiations with Israel on the terms of a Palestinian state have been frozen since 2008, mainly because Abbas and Israel's hardline prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, have failed to reach enough common ground for meaningful talks.

Meantime, Abbas has tried to create new leverage, including with a quest for U.N. membership for a state of Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem, the territories Israel occupied in 1967. The U.N. bid has been stalled for months, but Abbas hopes to garner recognition for Palestine wherever possible, including with a nod from UNESCO for Bethlehem.

Angry at Palestinian membership in UNESCO, the United States pulled its $80 million in annual dues ? 22 percent of the overall budget ? from the Paris-based organization after the October vote that made the Palestinians the 195th member.

Bucking the bad feedback, the Palestinians refused to follow UNESCO custom and withdraw the candidacy ? as the French did with their emergency bid for the Chauvet cave, with its hundreds of prehistoric drawings, when it got a negative recommendation from the experts.

The Palestinians now risk losing face at the World Heritage Committee meeting from Sunday until July 6 in Saint Petersburg, Russia, when 33 sites from around the world will be considered for the coveted World Heritage status.

A surprise thumbs up could feed rancor and rivalries in a volatile region, within the church itself and perhaps at the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.

Already, the Palestinian ambassador to UNESCO, Elias Sanbar, has denounced a "persistent campaign of rumors" at the organization.

Protecting the cultures of the world is among UNESCO's core missions and there is little doubt the Church of the Nativity ? with a longstanding problem of leaks from the roof ? is in need of repair. A program administered by the Palestinians is already in progress.

Located in the Israeli-controlled West Bank, it is managed by three churches, each jealous of its role as custodian of the site, defined under an agreement dating back to the Ottoman Empire.

With a big measure of diplomacy, the leaders of the Greek Orthodox, Catholic and Armenian churches rebuffed the Palestinian proposal, politely reserving judgment on its reasons.

"In our opinion, we do not think it opportune to deal with this request that the Basilica and its entire complex be included in the list of World Heritage sites, due to different considerations," read a letter to Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas signed by the three leaders. A copy of the letter was obtained by The Associated Press.

Among other things, a World Heritage designation raises fears that the delicate arrangement of custodianship might be disturbed. Fights among priests using broomsticks have been known to break out in the past over a perception that boundaries are being overstepped.

"When it comes to the Church of the Nativity, no one can interfere," said Yousef Daher of the World Council of Churches in Jerusalem. "They (the Palestinian Authority) figured it wrong." He called the Palestinian bid a "surprising request."

"A church is a church, it shouldn't become a world heritage. It's a sacred place and its ownership is not for anyone," Daher said.

The Palestinian emergency application cites lack of regular restoration on the church due to the political situation since 1967 when Israel occupied the territories and difficulties procuring equipment because of lack of free movement imposed by Israeli forces.

Though Israel captured the West Bank, it turned much of Bethlehem over to the Palestinian Authority in the 1990s.

The U.S. State Department did not hide its disapproval of the Palestinians' emergency bid.

"We are disappointed by the Palestinians' intention to push through an emergency inscription against the recommendation of UNESCO's own experts and without thoroughly consulting all stakeholders," a statement said. It made clear that Washington's objection stems from the rush job that an emergency candidacy implies and which prevents a full review including by those with a stake in the outcome.

"We hope the Committee will act responsibly as good stewards of the World Heritage Convention, rather than allowing yet another U.N. forum to become a victim of politicization," the U.S. statement said. "The site is sacred to all Christians."

An experts report, conducted for UNESCO by the Rome-based International Council on Monuments and Sites, which reviews all applications, concluded that the Palestinians failed to show that damage or dangers to the Church of the Nativity "make its condition an emergency that needs to be addressed ... for immediate action necessary for the survival of the property."

It suggests the application be resubmitted under normal procedures with fuller detail. That takes about 18 months, meaning it could be re-nominated in 2014.

"Palestinians are continuing with their bid, and they are still hopeful and optimistic that they will succeed," said Palestinian government spokesman Ghassan Khatib. He declined to elaborate.

The Palestinian delegation to UNESCO refused any comment until after the Saint Petersburg meeting. However, a letter circulating among delegations suggested a plot was afoot.

In a letter, Ambassador Sanbar denounced a campaign of pressure against the bid from "those who do not want to see Palestine exercise its legitimate rights."

The June 11 letter, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press, included what is purported to be a statement of support for Palestinian leader Abbas signed in type by the Roman Catholic and Greek Orthodox leaders, noting the Armenian was absent.

That letter "gave some delegations the impression that the churches had changed their opinion and were no longer opposed to the inscription," said one UNESCO official. "Was it designed for that purpose? I don't know."

The official asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity surrounding the Palestinian bid.

Despite fears by some that Palestinian backers on the committee will win the church the emergency designation as an endangered World Heritage site, others say it would be highly unusual for the voting committee to ignore the experts' negative recommendation.

"The committee is a sovereign body. Experts are there to give expert advice that is usually taken on board," said UNESCO spokeswoman Sue Williams.

Win or lose, the Palestinians are looking to putting their mark on other sites under their purview, including historic Bethlehem.

That gets a green light from the custodial churches at the Nativity ? as long as the church itself stays off limits.

___

Dalia Nammari in Jerusalem and Karin Laub in Ramallah, West Bank contributed to this report.

Associated Press

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?The Ultimate Fighter? makes changes, but will it be enough?

Usually, in the months before the UFC starts taping a season of "The Ultimate Fighter," the show holds open tryouts. Fighters from all over the country flock to hotel ballrooms to try to win the favor of the UFC execs watching their every move.

As the show heads into its 16th season, there were no tryouts. Instead, the UFC asked managers to bring welterweights to Las Vegas for auditions and personal interviews.

"I've never seen them skip the tryout process and fly guys straight in," one manager told MMAjunkie.com.

This isn't the only change coming to the UFC's long-running reality show. As Kevin Iole reported, the UFC is going back to a taped format after the 15th season aired fights live. FX has also decided to keep the show on Friday nights.

Though ratings are up for FX on Friday nights, the ratings for the show are down compared to previous seasons. Attendance and gate from the show's finale were also down.

TUF is first a television show, and two rules have always remained true about the modern television landscape. First, it's hard to keep any show fresh for 16 seasons. Secondly, Friday nights are where ratings go to die. There is not much the UFC can do to get around those truisms.

What other changes should "The Ultimate Fighter" make to get you to tune in? Tell us in the comments, on Facebook or Twitter.

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Thursday, 21 June 2012

Asymmetry may provide clue to superconductivity

ScienceDaily (June 20, 2012) ? Japanese and U.S. physicists are offering new details this week in the journal Nature regarding intriguing similarities between the quirky electronic properties of a new iron-based high-temperature superconductor (HTS) and its copper-based cousins.

While investigating a recently discovered iron-based HTS, the researchers found that its electronic properties were different in the horizontal and vertical directions. This electronic asymmetry was measured across a wide range of temperatures, including those where the material is a superconductor. The asymmetry was also found in materials that were "doped" differently. Doping is a process of chemical substitution that allows both copper- and iron-based HTS materials to become superconductors.

"The robustness of the reported asymmetric order across a wide range of chemical substitutions and temperatures is an indication that this asymmetry is an example of collective electronic behavior caused by quantum correlation between electrons," said study co-author Andriy Nevidomskyy, assistant professor of physics at Rice University in Houston.

The study by Nevidomskyy and colleagues from Kyoto University in Kyoto, Japan, and the Japan Synchrotron Radiation Research Institute (JASRI) in Hyogo offers new clues to scientists studying the mystery of high-temperature superconductivity, one of physics' greatest unsolved mysteries.

Superconductivity occurs when electrons form a quantum state that allows them to flow freely through a material without electrical resistance. The phenomenon only occurs at extremely cold temperatures, but two families of layered metal compounds -- one based on copper and the other on iron -- perform this mind-bending feat just short of or above the temperature of liquid nitrogen -- negative 321 degrees Fahrenheit -- an important threshold for industrial applications. Despite more than 25 years of research, scientists are still debating what causes high-temperature superconductivity.

Copper-based HTSs were discovered more than 20 years before their iron-based cousins. Both materials are layered, but they are strikingly different in other ways. For example, the undoped parent compounds of copper HTSs are nonmetallic, while their iron-based counterparts are metals. Due to these and other differences, the behavior of the two classes of HTSs are as dissimilar as they are similar -- a fact that has complicated the search for answers about how high-temperature superconductivity arises.

One feature that has been found in both compounds is electronic asymmetry -- properties like resistance and conductivity are different when measured up and down rather than side to side. This asymmetry, which physicists also call "nematicity," has previously been found in both copper-based and iron-based high-temperature superconductors, and the new study provides the strongest evidence yet of electronic nematicity in HTSs.

In the study, the researchers used the parent compound barium iron arsenide, which can become a superconductor when doped with phosphorus. The temperature at which the material becomes superconducting depends upon how much phosphorus is used. By varying the amount of phosphorus and measuring electronic behavior across a range of temperatures, physicists can probe the causes of high-temperature superconductivity.

Prior studies have shown that as HTS materials are cooled, they pass through a series of intermediate electronic phases before they reach the superconducting phase. To help see these "phase changes" at a glance, physicists like Nevidomskyy often use graphs called "phase diagrams" that show the particular phase an HTS will occupy based on its temperature and chemical doping.

"With this new evidence, it is clear that the nematicity exists all the way into the superconducting region and not just in the vicinity of the magnetic phase, as it had been previously understood," said Nevidomskyy, in reference to the line representing the boundary of the nematic order. "Perhaps the biggest discovery of this study is that this line extends all the way to the superconducting phase."

He said another intriguing result is that the phase diagram for the barium iron arsenide bears a striking resemblance to the phase diagram for copper-based high-temperature superconductors. In particular, the newly mapped region for nematic order in the iron-based material is a close match for a region dubbed the "pseudogap" in copper-based HTSs.

"Physicists have long debated the origins and importance of the pseudogap as a possible precursor of high-temperature superconductivity," Nevidomskyy said. "The new results offer the first hint of a potential analog for the pseudogap in an iron-based high-temperature superconductor."

The nematic order in the barium iron arsenide was revealed during a set of experiments at Kyoto University that measured the rotational torque of HTS samples in a strong magnetic field. These findings were further corroborated by the results of X-ray diffraction performed at JASRI and aided by Nevidomskyy's theoretical analysis. Nevidomskyy and his collaborators believe that their results could help physicists determine whether electronic nematicity is essential for HTS.

Nevidomskyy said he expects similar experiments to be conducted on other varieties of iron-based HTS. He said additional experiments are also needed to determine whether the nematic order arises from correlated electron behavior.

Nevidomskyy, a theoretical physicist, specializes in the study of correlated electron effects, which occur when electrons lose their individuality and behave collectively.

"One way of thinking about this is to envision a crowded stadium of football fans who stand up in unison to create a traveling 'wave,'" he said. "If you observe just one person, you don't see 'the wave.' You only see the wave if you look at the entire stadium, and that is a good analogy for the phenomena we observe in correlated electron systems."

Nevidomskyy joined the research team on the new study after meeting the lead investigator, Yuji Matsuda, at the Center for Physics in Aspen, Colo., in 2011. Nevidomskyy said Matsuda's data offers intriguing hints about a possible connection between nematicity and high-temperature superconductivity.

"It could just be serendipity that nematicity happens in both the superconducting and the nonsuperconducting states of these materials," Nevidomskyy said. "On the other hand, it could be that superconductivity is like a ship riding on a wave, and that wave is created by electrons in the nematic collective state."

The research was funded by the Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science, the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, and the collaboration was made possible by the Aspen Center for Physics.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Rice University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. S. Kasahara, H. J. Shi, K. Hashimoto, S. Tonegawa, Y. Mizukami, T. Shibauchi, K. Sugimoto, T. Fukuda, T. Terashima, Andriy H. Nevidomskyy, Y. Matsuda. Electronic nematicity above the structural and superconducting transition in BaFe2(As1?xPx)2. Nature, 2012; 486 (7403): 382 DOI: 10.1038/nature11178

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

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Tamara McClintock Greenberg: Should We Listen to Our Doctors?

Many of us worry about our health. The culture of medicine and the way technology has shaped our relationships with physicians has given us a powerful message: If you are nervous about your health, see a doctor and she or he will perform a test or prescribe a medicine so that you don't need to worry anymore. As consumers of medicine, it can be tough to know when and if we should listen to our doctors.

We have all been cautioned lately about the rush to get certain medical tests. A recent New York Times article points out that even some physicians think we are being over-tested. It's not just medical tests that are under scrutiny. There have been recent challenges regarding certain medications that presumably lower risk of death. There have also been questions about the real story blood tests tell about the meaning of what is going on inside of our bodies. For example, remember the notion that high-density lipoprotein levels (HDL) reduce risk of developing heart disease? This assumption is one of many that are currently being questioned.

Many factors contribute to our being over-tested and over-medicated. There is some data that American doctors might be more in the habit of prescribing medications instead of counseling patients on behaviors that might reduce the need for medication in the first place. And though there are many other familiar suspects we can blame regarding excesses in health care -- such as pharmaceutical companies, the influence of medical device corporations, and even the greed of some physicians -- what is missing from the discussion is how some patients are anxious, deeply anxious, about their overall health.

Erik Rifkin, Ph.D. and Edward Bouwer, Ph.D. are no strangers to the ways that all of us can get confused and nervous about whether or not we should follow advice from physicians and the medical establishment. As authors of the 2007 book, The Illusion of Certainty: Health Benefits and Risks, they offer an appraisal of medical research and break down the truth about what the data says and does not say about medical assumptions. Dr. Rifkin confers with the idea that the "worried well" can feel confused about what to do regarding medical recommendations. He stated in an email interview, "Individuals who are not obviously ill or in danger, but aging, reading articles about medical interventions in newspapers and magazines, perhaps with a few aches and pains, maybe lost a friend or two through cancer or a heart attack, are uncertain about what, if anything, they should be doing."

Our fear does seem to be a major component of what drives us to seek help. Yet, it is one thing to conceptualize medical worries as being due to anxiety and another to tell people to avoid certain tests or medications. One example of this is related to findings regarding cholesterol. Millions of us are told that we are at risk for heart disease due to high levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL). Yet, Rifkin and Bouwer report, using data from the MRFIT study, that "In a group of 1,000 individuals with elevated cholesterol, there will be approximately one additional death from coronary heart disease annually when compared to 1,000 individuals with normal cholesterol."

In light of this sobering statistic, I asked Dr. Rifkin what he thought about the millions of us who take statins. Dr. Rifkin made it clear that he could not offer medical advice. Yet, his thoughts were illuminating. Regarding statins, he said, "For individuals without a history of heart disease, the benefits are very low. Taking statins can result in serious contraindications. So, once again, patients need to obtain the information necessary to make a decision regarding the use of statins." The cost of cholesterol monitoring and statin use is high. When patients take statins, they need additional monitoring due to a myriad of side effects, including effects of statins on the liver. Rifkin added, "Estimates of the cost of screening adults without heart disease for high cholesterol include follow-up drug therapy as well as the screening test, and range from about $10 billion to more than $60 billion per year, depending on the drug used."

However, not everyone agrees with Rifkin's and Bouwer's conclusions of the MRFIT study.

Many of us simply just don't know what to do (or what the data means) in regards to taking care of our bodies. What should we trust?

For many of us, anxiety motivates us to take action. In the case of medical worries, we often expect our physicians to act in ways that will help soothe our anxiety. Not all patients want tests or drugs, but many do. Through this lens, physicians may be acting, at least partially, based on patient demands. Physician actions, whether because of our urging or without, may be costing us. These costs are not only financial, but also physical, given the side effects and complications of many medications and diagnostic tests.

For those who are worried about their health, there may be additional venues to deal with anxiety. Health psychologists can be a great starting point. That said, there are many things that we would like our physicians to reassure us about. This is not unreasonable, but being a consumer in medicine is a bit like buying a car. You don't get ripped off if you do your research ahead of time.

It is difficult for patients to ask questions that challenge physicians' authority, but all of us should do so. And we should seek education from reliable sources. Physicians need to do a more balanced job of explaining the risks and benefits of medical treatments and tests. However, we alone are responsible for our own health. Physicians are guides, but we all need to feel more entitled to direct our medical care. Challenging the authority of physicians and the medical establishment is not only okay, it may be the only way we can assure quality care in this complicated terrain of 21st-century medicine.

For more by Tamara McClintock Greenberg, click here.

For more healthy living health news, click here.

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Windows Phone 8 to start on HTC, Huawei, Nokia and Samsung devices with support for 180 countries

Windows Phone 8 to start on HTC, Huawei, Nokia and Samsung devices with support for 180 countries

When Windows Phone 8 arrives in the fall, it will have a relatively narrow slice of hardware makers: HTC, Huawei, Nokia and Samsung will represent the first wave. That's excluding some significant partners that have surfaced even over the past year, including ZTE. When they do ship, though, all of them will be using new Qualcomm processors; we have a hunch that's code for Snapdragon S4 variants. There certainly won't be any shortage of regional support with apps available over 180 countries and 50 languages accounted for -- more than Apple mentioned as attached to iOS 6, Microsoft is keen to add. While the number of hardware launches isn't likely to come that close anytime soon, it does mean that phone designers will have considerable more flexibility as to where they launch.

To check out the latest updates from Microsoft's Windows Phone event, visit our liveblog!

Update: Not to miss a good opportunity, Huawei has issued a press release to announce that its Ascend Windows Phone 8 handset will launch first in the US, Europe and China, with other countries to follow. You'll find the full spiel after the break.

Continue reading Windows Phone 8 to start on HTC, Huawei, Nokia and Samsung devices with support for 180 countries

Windows Phone 8 to start on HTC, Huawei, Nokia and Samsung devices with support for 180 countries originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 14:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Incoming Big 12 commish against paying athletes

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) ? Bob Bowlsby will have his hands full the next couple of months.

The incoming Big 12 commissioner is finishing up his tenure as athletic director at Stanford, hopping on a plane after wrapping up a series of meetings with his new league in Kansas City on Friday so that he could attend the Pac-12's annual spring meetings.

He will officially take over at the Big 12 on June 15, and get in about a month of work before flying to London, where he'll have responsibilities as a member of the U.S. Olympic Committee.

"Let it suffice to say that a trip to London is not going to be most convenient," he said.

Especially with so many pressing issues facing the conference.

There are questions about the future of college football's playoff structure, and whether the bowl system will be dismantled. Television negotiations will be front and center, and Bowlsby has yet to meet much of the Big 12 staff or visit the conference's 10 current schools.

"I expect I'll get to every campus within 30 to 60 days," he said.

Sounds like an ambitious schedule.

There was little news out of the final day of the Big 12 meetings, though Oklahoma State president Burns Hargis announced that approximately $19 million will be distributed to each member for the 2011-12 year from media rights deals, the aggregate representing an all-time high.

That figure includes the withdrawal fees for Texas A&M and Missouri, which join the Southeastern Conference on July 1. Part of the exit fee money was also used to finance a $10 million loan to West Virginia, which is leaving the Big East to join TCU as new members of the Big 12.

Otherwise, Bowlsby mostly reiterated the stance of presidents and athletic directors.

He said that the Big 12 supports a four-team playoff consisting of the highest-ranked teams to determine college football's national champion, rather than a plus-one model that has new legs after the Big 12 and SEC announced the formation of the so-called Champions Bowl.

There is also a four-team model in which conference champions play an integral part, which has been supported by Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott and others.

"I suppose that I have been back and forth a bit, relative to conference champions versus highest-ranked four," Bowlsby said. "For the Big 12, the highest-ranked four is a good thing. It's a good example of where I think there needs to be compromise moving forward."

Another area where compromise will be needed is the selection criteria.

While the current BCS standings, which combine computer ratings with human polls, are almost universally panned, there are some leagues such as the Big 12 that favor a selection committee to determine the four best teams. Others favor a combination of different formulas.

"I don't think the idea of a four-team playoff is hard to comprehend. The details come into site selection, team selection and how you develop the ranking system," acting Big 12 commissioner Chuck Neinas said. "There has to be transparency so the public feels they're somehow involved, and that helps to create interest.

"The one thing we want to underscore again is the importance of the regular season. That's been foremost in our minds," he added. "There has not been a eureka idea that we've found the perfect ranking system. That is a work in progress, and there are a number of ideas."

Bowlsby also agreed with Big 12 presidents and ADs who voiced their support this week for a 10-team league in which football and basketball teams play a true round-robin schedule, though he acknowledged that there is always the chance for future expansion.

"When it's right, we'll know it's right," Bowlsby said, "and in the meantime, there's not a thing wrong with the 10 we have."

The other significant issue Bowlsby addressed was stipends. He was steadfastly against proposals that have been floated for paying up to $4,000 per year to student-athletes, pointing out that there are other avenues in which aspiring athletes can play for pay.

"We should never do anything to establish an employee-employer relationship," Bowlsby said. "There are places you can go and play for money, but colleges and universities are not among them. This is an educational undertaking."

Hargis, the chairman of the league's board of directors, was even more forceful in his opposition to stipends, even for athletes in revenue-producing sports such as football.

"I don't think it's a good idea," Hargis said. "These student-athletes are provided scholarships in many cases, and they're eligible for other assistance. You get into all this kind of stipend stuff and it affects the amateurism, I think it affects recruiting. I just think it's introducing an idea that's not necessary."

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