Sunday, November 27, 2011

Colleges defend humanities amid tight budgets (AP)

HARTFORD, Conn. ? Like many humanities advocates, Abbey Drane was disheartened but not surprised when Florida's governor recently said its tax dollars should bolster science and high-tech studies, not "educate more people who can't get jobs in anthropology."

Drane, a 21-year-old anthropology major at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, has spent years defending her choice to pursue that liberal arts field.

And now, as states tighten their allocations to public universities, many administrators say they're feeling pressure to defend the worth of humanities, too, and shield the genre from budget cuts. One university president has gone as far as donating $100,000 of her own money to offer humanities scholarships at her school.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott's comments last month cut to the heart of the quandary: whether emphasizing science, math and medical fields gives students the best career prospects and a high-tech payback to society, and whether humanities fields are viewed as more of an indulgence than a necessity amid tight budget times.

"You can definitely feel the emphasis on campus, even just based on where the newest buildings go, that there is a drive toward the sciences, engineering and (the) business school," said Drane, a senior from Plymouth, Mass. "I'm constantly asked what job opportunities I'll have in anthropology or what I'm going to do with my degree, and I tell people that it's giving me a skill set and critical thinking you can apply to anything."

Humanities studies peaked in U.S. colleges in the 1960s and started dwindling in the 1970s as more students pursued business and technology and related fields. Today, more than 20 percent of each year's bachelor's degrees are granted in business; in humanities, it's about 8 percent.

Liberal arts colleges, too, have declined. A study published in 2009 by Inside Higher Ed said that of 212 liberal arts colleges identified in 1990, only 137 were still operating by 2009.

At Amherst College in western Massachusetts, a healthy endowment makes closing the doors a remote possibility at best. But its president, Carolyn "Biddy" Martin, experienced the same concerns about the humanities in her previous job as chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and was tapped this year to serve on a commission for the American Academy of Arts & Sciences to review the issue.

Martin said many universities struggle with declining enrollment in those fields, making the classes an easy budget target if their worth is not defended.

"There are more and more people in higher education ? and I hope political leaders ? who are understanding that an over-leaning emphasis on the sciences to the expense of the humanities is not a good thing for the country," she said.

Therein lays the debate for many, though, including Gov. Scott in Florida, who is unapologetic about his push to direct tax dollars toward rapidly growing science, technology, engineering and math fields, known collectively as STEM.

And since state governments control nearly two-thirds of all higher education funding, according to the National Governors Association, their embrace or disregard for humanities can affect the study paths of hundreds of thousands of students.

The governors' organization published recommendations for states this year on how to align their higher education priorities with their labor markets and economic development, citing Minnesota, North Carolina, Ohio and Washington for "bold, comprehensive strategies" in those efforts.

It did not advise state governments to move money from humanities, but said it's "often challenging" to get the universities to participate in economic development, partly because of "their emphasis on broad liberal arts education."

Advocates say STEM fields also provide tangible returns for states, universities and businesses through patent royalties, new products and the prestige of achieving scientific breakthroughs ? paybacks far less evident among, say, new intellectual insights by scholars of Geoffrey Chaucer's literature, devotees of Frederic Chopin's nocturnes or adherents to Jean-Paul Sartre's existentialist views.

"People feel like there are no real careers open for people studying in the liberal arts and I don't think that's true at all," said John Beck, 20, a senior from Newton, Mass., who's majoring in philosophy at the University of Connecticut.

His father and two grandparents are doctors, and his mother and brother are both pharmaceutical scientists. He is double majoring in economics and plans to attend law school, a decision that eased his parents' concerns about his philosophy studies because they see a legal career as a tangible way to support himself.

He sees it as a good use of his philosophy degree, too, though he says he would have been perfectly content to pursue teaching, public service or other fields to which many other philosophy majors gravitate.

To Susan Herbst, students shouldn't have to choose between picking a field they love and one that offers them the best shot at a job. She believes humanities does both, and feels so strongly about it that she and her husband donated $100,000 this year to provide scholarships limited to students in those fields.

"The humanities are where people learn about ethics and values and critical thinking," she said. "The truth is that for all of these students going into the STEM fields or other social sciences or business, if they didn't have the humanities, they don't know why they're doing what they do. The humanities really teach us how we're supposed to live and why what we do matters."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/fossils/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_re_us/us_defending_humanities

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Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Ricki Lake Suffers Ego Bruise on Dancing With the Stars


Thanks to Nancy Grace, Ricki Lake should advance to next week on Dancing With the Stars without a problem. Still, her confidence took a bit of a hit Monday night.

The front-runner didn't fare too well during her instant jive, earning her lowest score from the judges in weeks. Backstage afterward, she was clearly discouraged.

"Right now, my ego," she said when asked what hurt most.

"I'm just covered in bruises, same old, same old. I don't want to complain," she said, adding "[J.R. Martinez] was amazing. My vote would be with him tonight."

Hard to argue with the talk show host there, given that he scored a perfect 60 out of 60, topping Ricki's tied-for-second 52 by quite a considerable margin.

Lake can take solace in the fact that J.R. had an off week last Monday while she shined, though. As long as she survives tonight's results show, it's a new game.

Watch her waltz from earlier in the night after the jump:

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/11/ricki-lake-suffers-bruised-ego-on-dancing-with-the-stars/

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Monday, October 10, 2011

Quick Cleaning Tips for Your Bathroom | Angelo Viola Home ...

Hard Water Stains ?? t?? Tub :? U?? Vinegar ??? Baking Soda t? ??t rid ?f ??? m?rk?. Don?t ??? ?? fibreglass bath tubs, ?t facility a treat ?? cast iron ??? porcelain bath tubs!

Cleaning Chrome ?? ???r bathroom:? U?? t??t left over baby oil t? wipe away t??t entire residue w?t? a ????? cloth ?t facility wonders, nice ??? sparkly once more!

Shower Tray ??t draining accurately : Invest ?? a Vortex shower waste t? reach t?? trap ?? next t? ?? time removing ??? unwanted hair ?? seconds.

Shower Head Cleaning :? T? cure t??? common problem t??? soak t?? head ?? hot vinegar, leaving ?t t? soak f?r 12 ? 14 hours. Afterwards rinse ?t under ??m? hot water giving ?t a thorough ?????.

G?t rid ?f moisture :? A ????????t way ?f ridding ???r bathroom ?f ??? moisture ?? t?? ???? away charcoal ridding ???r home ?f nasty smells ??? odours.

Toilet Cleaning :? Pour white vinegar ??t? t?? pan ??? ????? f?r one hour, ?ft?r give ???r toilet a ????????t wipe ??? flushing away. Simple.

Shower Enclosure Water M?rk? :? A shower blade ??? b? ?? eco ? friendly way t? rid ?f ??? streaks ??? m?rk?. A q???k wipe ??? b? a f??t??t?? alternative t? spending hours scrubbing away.

Avoid Bathroom Mat Mess :? Aft?r ???r? bath time hang ???r mat ?? a dry ??? high ????? t? keep ?t ????? ??? ready f?r t?? next bath time.

Baking Soda :? ?? a f??t??t?? way t? save those pennies ?? expensive cleaning products ??? ??? b? used ?? ??? sorts ?f bathroom items.

G?t everyone involved: W??t better way t? ??t a job done? G?t t?? whole family involved ?? t?? cleaning ?f ???r bathroom, q???k ??? efficient team work t? m?k? ???r bathroom shine!

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Source: http://www.angeloviola.com/bathrooms/quick-cleaning-tips-for-your-bathroom.html

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Thursday, October 6, 2011

Prehistoric cave paintings in peril again

At least 14,000 years ago, artists took to Altamira cave in Spain with charcoal and red pigments, painting bison, deer and their own handprints on the rock walls and ceiling. This prehistoric art gallery is now closed to the public, but plans to reopen it have scientists raising the alarm.

"Altamira cave, although currently closed, is at real risk," a group of Spanish researchers wrote in the Oct. 6 issue of the journal Science.?

The threat, according to the scientists, is that even a limited stream of visitors will spur bacterial and fungal growth on the cave walls, damaging the very paintings tourists long to see.

The artwork already has suffered from exposure to the public, and the cave has been closed to tourists since 2002, when light-loving microorganisms were found living on the paintings.

In August 2010, Spain's Ministry of Culture announced plans to reopen the cave, pending decisions by a panel of experts about how many visitors would be allowed inside each year. But according to the Spanish researchers, reopening could be a death knell for the art.

A history of degradation
The drawings were first discovered in 1879 by the 9-year-old daughter of an amateur archaeologist, Marcelino Sanz de Sautuola. It would take more than two decades for the scientific community to accept the Paleolithic art as genuine, but by 1955, the cave was receiving about 50,000 visitors each year, according to the National Museum of Altamira. In 1973, some 174,000 people tramped through to see the paintings.

With these visitors came carbon dioxide (from exhalations), humidity and microorganisms. In 1977, officials closed the cave to visitors to protect the paintings from degradation. In 1982 the cave reopened, this time with a limited visitation schedule of 8,500 people per year.

Even that was not enough. In 2002, the cave was closed again.

Before tourists started visiting the cave near the coast of northern Spain, it was a nutrient-poor environment, according to the Spanish researchers. There was little water and no light, and very little air was exchanged between the cave and the outside world. (Many microorganisms thrive on light, warmth and humidity.)

Now people were disrupting the cave with body heat, moisture and electrical lighting. The cave seemed at risk of the fate of the Lascaux caves in France, where the paintings were beset by black mold.

A study by the Spanish National Resource Council in the 1990s found that the 1982 visitation schedule would hasten deterioration of the Spanish cave paintings by up to 78 times what would happen naturally.

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      Science editor Alan Boyle's Weblog: Look out, Double Rainbow Guy! You might have a double-double freakout over the first published photograph documenting a quadruple rainbow.

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Open or closed?
"If the cave reopens to the public, continued entry of visitors would cause increases in temperature, humidity and CO2 [carbon dioxide] in Polychrome Hall, reactivating condensation and host-rock corrosion," the researchers wrote in Science. Polychrome Hall is a room in the cave featuring dozens of paintings of bison and deer. Animals were favorite subjects of Paleolithic cave painters.

Even the motion of visitors moving through the caves could prove disruptive, the researchers found, stirring the air and encouraging the release of mostly dormant bacterial and fungal spores. This could lead to new growth of microorganisms that currently seem to be slowing their advance.

The researchers have reported their recommendations to the Ministry of Culture, but the final decision is in political hands, said Cesareo Saiz-Jiminez, who co-authored the Science article. Saiz-Jiminez, a biologist and materials scientist for the Spanish Natural Research Council, told LiveScience that the researchers don't yet know which experts will be appointed to the decision-making panel.

In the meantime, Saiz-Jiminez said, the cave paintings are protected by double doors to keep particles and moisture out.

"All this should work," he said, "if, in addition, the cave remains closed to visits."

You can follow LiveScience senior writer Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience ? and on Facebook.

? 2011 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44808221/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Monday, October 3, 2011

Why you should get your own self improvement video? | cyber ...

Why you should get your own self improvement video?

It cannot be denied that what works for one does not work for another. If what your friends say and what you read does not seem to inspire you to improve yourself, then it is time to consider self improvement videos.

It cannot be denied that some people can better comprehend something when they see it on screen. That is the psychology behind these videos. Getting the focus of the person watching them like no other ways can do.

The need for self improvement is now an issue many people are focusing on. There are already a lot of self improvement articles out there. Not only that, a lot of experts are also lending their talent and expertise in helping people develop themselves.

With the internet came the easiest means of looking for self improvement advice from other people. For those who took pleasure in reading, they turn to articles and other forms of writing. But for those who just likes to sit back, see and listen, self improvement videos are the ones chosen.

There are websites that are capable of providing you with all the self improvement videos that are necessary to get your commitment power out and utilize it to whichever change or improvement you want to make with your own person.

These videos consist of information and exercises. When you start these readings and exercises, you will immediately feel the desired change inside yourself.

And with repetition of the exercises the change or improvements will become automatic. Repetition is the key to a life long improvement of your personality.

These videos are meant to aid in everlasting self-improvement and personal growth in all areas of life.
Some are concentrated on a few areas that many people may feel especially important and hard to improve.

For example, the people behind can help you with your effort for self esteem improvement. Low self-esteem and confidence are the cause of many personal as well as inter-personal difficulties.

Self improvement videos will assist you take command of your career as well as your financial freedom and independence. You can get the career you wish as well as the wealth and prosperity that you decide you deserve.

They can also help with building positive relationships and finally show you how you can apply the tools inherent for you to change habits.

These videos may not come cheap for some who would rather have self improvement tools that come for free. The only advantage in getting self improvement videos is that it will be available anytime you want to watch them.

Videos on self improvement are not the only tools you can use if you are intent on achieving personal improvement. There are also e-books and e-courses available.

Try to also see look at the other self improvement tools offered by these sites. Most of the time, the products offered are well reputed and researched thoroughly for quality and effectivity.

When to get a self improvement video? When it came to the point that the advices you get from family, friends and even on the internet are not getting through your head. This would also be your choice if you need a tool you can use anytime and anywhere to help you on your self improvement.

Chances are, if you have seen these self improvement videos twice or thrice, you have probably memorized all the things it had to say and show.

Source: http://www.it-update.net/self-improvement/why-you-should-get-your-own-self-improvement-video-2

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Sunday, October 2, 2011

Europe set for worst quarter since 2008 (Reuters)

HONG KONG (Reuters) ? European stock index futures fell on Friday, putting shares there firmly on course to post their biggest quarterly decline since the months following the collapse of Lehman Brothers three years ago.

Asian equities also dropped, extending the worst monthly performance since the most volatile days of the global financial crisis in October 2008. Chinese shares racked up sharp losses amid fears of a property market correction.

The euro fell and was on course for the biggest monthly drop in nearly a year, with German parliamentary approvals of new powers for Europe's bailout fund having little lasting impact.

"The euro weakened as strong selling by Japanese exporters emerged but frankly, looking at the recent volatility, a dip like that is still not hugely important," said Teppei Ino, a currency analyst at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ. "The question now is what is the EU's big, long-term solution to save it."

Euro STOXX 50 index futures fell 0.4 percent. Futures for Germany's DAX and France's CAC-40 fell by similar amounts, while financial spreadbetters in London called the FTSE 100 to open down as much as 0.6 percent.

Fears of a spiraling European debt crisis and a slowing global economy that would hit Asian exports caused investors to slash their bets on risky assets in the September quarter.

Markets in Asia, considered by investors to have superior fundamentals compared with developed markets in the West, were not immune, with institutional investors continuing to hedge against further Asian currency weakness, including the yuan.

CHINA BANKS SOLD

Mainland Chinese stocks listed in Hong Kong fell 3.8 percent, underperforming the rest of the region, with investors selling off bank shares on fears over their exposure in the event of a property market slump.

Stocks in Japan, Australia and Korea were flat to slightly lower, with only Hong Kong shares among the major losers, dropping about 2.3 percent, as investors locked in profits.

While window-dressing by fund managers buying some of the quarter's outperforming issues to improve their books has helped support shares this week, further gains may be hard to get as macro concerns remain.

"Window-dressing tends to support the market at the end of quarter, and some relief about Europe's situation after the German vote is also giving buyers more confidence," said Mitsushige Akino, chief fund manager at Ichiyoshi Investment Management Co.

MSCI's index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan fell 1.0 percent after rising for three consecutive days. For the month, it was down more than 13 percent, its biggest monthly drop since October 2008.

U.S. stock futures were down 0.5 percent after ringing up decent gains on Thursday.

BONDS CRACK

In what has been another tough month for money managers with market movements largely dictated by the ebb and flow of headlines from Europe, emerging market bonds have suffered the most as investors cut positions to protect portfolios.

EPFR Global data shows emerging market bond fund outflows gathered pace in the week to September 28. A total of $3.2 billion of net outflows was recorded from emerging market bond funds, compared with the previous week's outflow of $692 million.

Hard currency bond funds saw $1 billion of outflows while local currency bond funds saw $1.6 billion in withdrawals.

In Asia, some of the biggest jumps in bond yields have been in markets where foreign positioning has been the most crowded such as Indonesia and Malaysia, while the bustling international pipeline for bond issuers in Asia has come to a grinding halt.

Currencies have also been hard hit.

As the flight to safety pushed the dollar higher against other currencies, investors such as long-only funds and banks --who bought these bonds on an unhedged basis, betting on more FX gains -- hurried to hedge positions, further exacerbating their drops.

Even a recent drive by Chinese authorities to fix the yuan's midpoint higher has failed to impress markets.

The renminbi is trading at the bottom end of a trading end against the dollar and the offshore yuan is trading at a rare steep discount against the onshore rate.

Elsewhere, the euro hovered above a eight-month low versus the dollar after German Chancellor Angela Merkel's coalition party voted on Thursday to enhance the European Financial Stability Facility's powers.

Having worked through to $1.3679 at one stage, the single currency settled back at $1.3556 with investors worried about the many problems ahead for the euro zone.

"There is still a lot of uncertainty... Economic growth in Europe and the U.S. is not that good and that will put pressure on the euro and give a bid to the dollar," said Joseph Capurso, strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

Worried investors gave the thumbs up to safe-haven bets like gold and Treasuries, with the former extending gains by 0.8 percent to around $1,626 per ounce.

U.S. crude futures rose above $82.50 a barrel in electronic trade on Friday, extending Thursday's gains. Brent crude edged above $104 a barrel, but remained on track for the biggest quarterly drop in 15 months.

For the state of play of Asian stock markets, please click on:

For Reuters Global Investing Blog, click on:

http:/blogs.reuters.com/globalinvesting

For the MacroScope Blog, click on:

http:/blogs.reuters.com/macroscope

For Hedge Fund Blog, click on:

http:/blogs.reuters.com/hedgehub

(Additional reporting by Antoni Slodkowski and Lisa Twaronite in Tokyo, Umesh Desai in Hong Kong, Cecile Lefort in Sydney and Alex Richardson in Singapore; Editing by Richard Borsuk)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110930/bs_nm/us_markets_global

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