Sunday, December 30, 2012

Video shows woman pushing man in front of NYC subway train

NEW YORK (AP) ? A surveillance video of the woman suspected of pushing a man to his death in front of an oncoming subway train was released Friday by the New York Police Department.

It shows the woman running from the elevated platform in the Queens section of New York City Thursday night.

Witnesses told police she had been following the man closely and mumbling to herself. She got up from a nearby bench and shoved him as the train pulled into the platform.

It did not appear the man noticed her before he was shoved onto the tracks, police said, adding that the condition of the man's body was making it difficult to identify him.

The woman fled, and police were searching for her. She was described as Hispanic, in her 20s, heavyset and about 5-foot-5, wearing a blue, white and gray ski jacket and Nike sneakers with gray on top and red on the bottom.

It was unclear if the man and the woman knew each other or if anyone tried to help the man up before he was struck by the train and killed at the station on Queens Boulevard in the Sunnyside neighborhood.

It was the second time this month someone has been shoved to their death on subway tracks.

On Dec. 3, 58-year-old Ki-Suck Han was pushed in front of a train in Times Square. A photograph of him on the tracks a split second before he was killed was published on the front of the New York Post the next day, causing an uproar and debate over whether the photographer, who had been waiting for a train, should have tried to help him and whether the newspaper should have run the image. Apparently no one else tried to help up Han, either.

A homeless man, 30-year-old Naeem Davis, was charged with murder in Han's death and was ordered held without bail. He has pleaded not guilty and has said that Han was the aggressor and had attacked him first. The two men hadn't met before.

Being pushed onto the train tracks is a silent fear for many of the commuters who ride the city's subway a total of more than 5.2 million times on an average weekday, but deaths are rare. Among the more high-profile cases was the January 1999 death of aspiring screenwriter Kendra Webdale, who was shoved by a former mental patient. After that, the state Legislature passed Kendra's Law, which lets mental health authorities supervise patients who live outside institutions to make sure they are taking their medications and aren't threats to safety.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/video-released-nyc-suspect-fatal-subway-push-112847851.html

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

Kinder children are more popular

Performing deliberate acts of kindness makes pre-teen children more popular with their peers, say scientists.

A team led by researchers at the University of California, Riverside, "assigned" children three acts of kindness each week for four weeks.

After the four weeks, children were happier and more liked by classmates.

The researchers say than encouraging such simple "positive acts" could help children to get along with classmates and even prevent instances of bullying.

The findings are published in the open access journal Plos One.

Cuddling and cleaning

Working with 400 school children aged between nine and 11, the team assigned whole classrooms either to perform and note down three kind acts per week or - as a control group - to keep a diary of three locations they visited each week.

The kind acts were not necessarily directed towards their classmates. Some examples of the things children reported were: "Gave my mom a hug when she was stressed by her job", "gave someone some of my lunch," and "vacuumed the floor".

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

I was surprised that a simple activity could change the dynamics of a well-established classroom?

End Quote Kristin Layous UC Riverside

"Before the four weeks, we had each student circle [the names] of students from their classroom who they would like to be in school activities with," explained the lead researcher, Kristin Layous from UC Riverside's department of psychology.

The children were asked to repeat this same "nomination process" at the end of four weeks.

"Both conditions - kindness and comparison - received more nominations from their classmates after the four weeks were over," explained Dr Layous, but students in the kindness [group] gained significantly more nominations than the [other group].

"The most interesting finding to me is that a simple positive activity can promote positive relationships among peers," said Dr Layous.

She suggested that by reinforcing social connections between children in this simple way, schools could help to combat bullying.

"I was not completely surprised that students increased in happiness, because we have found the same effects in adults," said the researcher.

"[But] I was surprised that a simple activity could change the dynamics of a well-established classroom.

"This study was conducted in the spring, so students had already known each other all year. For them to nominate more peers at the end of a four-week activity period is promising."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20851434#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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U.S. clears way for wider in-flight Internet deployment

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Communications Commission has cleared the way for wider adoption of in-flight Internet services, aiming to cut by as much as 50 percent the time needed for regulatory approval.

Newly adopted rules should boost competition in this part of the U.S. mobile telecommunications market and promote "the widespread availability of Internet access to aircraft passengers," the FCC said in a statement Friday.

Since 2001, the commission has cleared companies on an ad hoc basis to market in-flight broadband services via a satellite antenna fixed to an aircraft's exterior.

Under a newly adopted framework, the licensing procedures will be simpler, the commission said.

Airlines will be able to test systems that meet the commission's standards, establish that they do not interfere with aircraft systems and then get approval of the Federal Aviation Administration, the FCC statement said.

The FAA, a Labor Department arm responsible for operating the nation's air traffic control system, said in response that the FCC's effort to establish standards "will help to streamline the process" for airlines to install Internet hookups on planes.

The goal is to speed the processing of applications by up to 50 percent, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said in a separate statement.

The FCC drive to promote broadband aboard planes does not change a ban on the in-flight use of cell phones, which is tied to concerns about interference with ground stations.

Genachowski earlier this month urged the Federal Aviation Administration to allow more electronics on aircraft.

The FAA announced in August that it was forming a government-industry group to study aircraft operators' policies to determine when portable electronic devices may be used safely during flight.

(Reporting By Jim Wolf; Editing by Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-clears-way-wider-flight-internet-deployment-210139197.html

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MF Global trustee: Some clients may be made whole

NEW YORK (AP) ? Some customers of the failed brokerage MF Global could get back all the money they lost, according to the trustee working to recover those funds.

In a statement Friday the Securities Investor Protection Corp. said there would "likely" be full restoration for securities customers who made "accepted" claims to get their money back. There should also be "significant additional distributions" to return some money to commodities customers.

The outlook for repayments follows an agreement reached late last week. James Giddens, the bankruptcy trustee overseeing the liquidation of MF Global's main brokerage unit, and Richard Heis, who is overseeing the liquidation of the company's United Kingdom operations, agreed to resolve all claims between the two corporate entities.

That agreement could result in an extra $500 million to $600 million eventually being freed up for the main brokerage unit to return to customers. The agreement still has to be approved by U.S. bankruptcy court.

The Securities Investor Protection Corp. was created by Congress and acts as trustee when a brokerage fails, meaning it helps customers try to get their money back. Giddens, working on behalf of the organization, has been combing through the accounts of MF Global to try to find funds to return to customers.

MF Global was headed by former New Jersey Governor and U.S. Senator Jon Corzine. It collapsed in Oct. 2011 after making a disastrous bet on European debt.

Regulators have been investigating whether MF Global tapped money from clients' accounts as its financial condition worsened. That would violate securities laws because brokerages are required to keep customer money separate from the firm's money.

Much of the money that went missing belonged to farmers, ranchers and other business owners who used MF Global to reduce their risks from fluctuating prices of commodities like corn and wheat.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-12-28-MF%20Global-Settlement/id-6ddbe477e61242d2a6340fb695b5048f

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Dwyane Wade Suspended For Kicking Ramon Sessions' Balls

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/12/dwyane-wade-suspended-for-kicking-ramon-sessions-balls/

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Mental Illness & Violence: We Need to Step Up | World of Psychology

Mental Illness & Violence: We Need to Step UpIt?s impossible to write a blog post about mental illness without confronting the violence that has descended on this country all too often. Too many innocent victims have fallen at the hands of too many offenders to set the issue aside.

My heart bleeds for the victims lost and the loved ones remaining. Nothing written can take away the pain of the survivors. But a call to action may help to prevent such crimes from continuing.

The offenders in these incidents are often troubled and plagued by recurrent mental illness. The tragedy begins when our mental health system fails these individuals and their families as they seek help that is sometimes unavailable.

It layers as so many people who do not have direct experience with mental illness find their only exposure to people with serious mental illness in these stories. This adds to an already daunting stigma against those with psychiatric disease, and too many of those who need help avoid it for fear of being labeled or ostracized.

Every incidence of violence leaves me heartbroken, and waiting for the inevitable story about someone with mental illness gone wrong.

The result of a broken mental health system and the stigma that drives people with serious mental illness into the shadows is fewer people getting treated than need treatment. Some people (a very small percentage of the population with mental illness, but a disturbingly real number) with untreated mental illness act out and sometimes violence occurs. In addition to the senseless tragedy that results, this adds to the stigma placed on those with psychiatric challenges as the general population hears the stories of mentally ill offenders who were ?off their meds,? refusing treatment, or being refused treatment.

In truth, even though sensationalized in the media, very few people know anyone with mental illness and violent tendencies. However, almost everyone knows someone with mental illness who is managing life well. Yet because of the stigma, more often than not few know that those managing well have a mental illness at all. There is so much to risk in stepping from the shadows and saying ?I have bipolar disorder, or schizophrenia, or anxiety disorder, or major depression or?? Jobs and relationships could become tenuous.

Still, until those of us who have a mental illness and do cope well stand up and act as role models for those who are not currently able to deal with disease, the stigma will hold, people will avoid treatment, and society will view the mentally ill as disturbed, demented, or violent. Those of us who do well owe it to those who are suffering to light a path toward recovery. Only we can testify that treatment often works, and only we can tell our stories and reveal to the larger population that those with mental illness are not miscreants, vagrants, and criminals. We are your teachers, your accountants, your child?s playdate?s parents, your boss, your mechanic, your kid?s soccer coach, your favorite musician, actor, or writer, your doctor, your councilperson.

Treatment is difficult and access is often limited. But there is no denying that even when treatment is readily available, many refuse it for fear of the stigma. These same people often get worse. Some do stupid or reprehensible things. This can be avoided if we can chip away at the stigma. And we can chip away at the stigma by taking a stand and showing our neighbors that mental illness does not mean maladaptation. There is much pain in knowing that in all of these incidents of violence we could not be there to intervene or help.

But we can help avoid the next one by testifying to the very ill that: ?I did it. I overcame this. You can, too, and I can help show you how.?

If more of us act as responsible role models the stigma will erode. As the stigma falls away, more people will seek help. Examples of people who have been successfully treated may open up access to treatment for others, as policymakers see that dollars spent on psychiatric care are well spent. As more people seek and receive care, fewer incidences of mindless violence will occur.

It?s our responsibility to let society know that those with mental illness can lead peaceful, productive, creative, and meaningful lives. We are examples of this. The stigma against people with mental illness is one factor that leads to so many bad outcomes. We owe it to those who have lost loved ones, and to those suffering from illness as we surely once did, to stand up and be seen as examples of how things can turn out well.

George Hofmann is a mindfulness meditation instructor teaching people with mental illness how to manage stress. He also has bipolar disorder 1. He writes about these topics at http://practicingmentalllness.blogspot.com.

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Catch up on other posts by George Hofmann (or subscribe to their feed).



????Last reviewed: By John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on 27 Dec 2012
????Published on PsychCentral.com. All rights reserved.

APA Reference
Hofmann, G. (2012). Mental Illness & Violence: We Need to Step Up. Psych Central. Retrieved on December 28, 2012, from http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2012/12/27/mental-illness-violence-we-need-to-step-up/

?

Source: http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2012/12/27/mental-illness-violence-we-need-to-step-up/

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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Spade named district sales manager | Business People

Amy Spade was named district sales manager for Cincinnati, Dayton, and Northern Kentucky at Paylocity. Spade brings 20 years of extensive payroll management expertise to Paylocity?s sales force. Paylocity services thousands of businesses in the mid-market nationwide, within diverse industries requiring online payroll services.

Posted in: New hires

Tags: Paylocity

Source: http://cincinnati.com/blogs/businesspeople/2012/12/25/spade-named-district-sales-manager/

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Last full moon of 2012 rises Friday

The last full moon of 2012 will rise into the night sky this week in a year-ending lunar treat.

The full moon is actually an instantaneous event when the moon is exactly opposite the sun in the Earth's sky, and this month that occurs on Friday morning, Dec. 28, at 5:21 a.m. EST (1021 GMT). But, to the naked eye, the moon "looks" full for a couple of days on either side of that time, so the exact date doesn't matter.

  1. Space news from NBCNews.com

    1. Grasshopper rocket takes 12-story-high hop for SpaceX

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: SpaceX's prototype Grasshopper rocket takes one giant leap, rising to a 12-story height and settling back down safely with a dummy cowboy riding along.

    2. Updated 109 minutes ago 12/26/2012 7:25:07 PM +00:00 Last full moon of 2012 rises Friday
    3. Telescope-toting balloon lifts off from Antarctica
    4. 'Star of Wonder' leaves lots to wonder about

Many owners of new telescopes are disappointed when they look at the planets. At its largest, the planet Venus is just barely one arc minute in diameter, about 1/30th of the diameter of the sun or the moon, and all the other planets appear smaller than that.

Telescope owners complain that the planets don't look any larger with a telescope than they do with the naked eye. That isn't true of course, because any telescope will magnify everything dozens or hundreds of times. But when something is as small as a planet, even a lot of magnification won't make it look very big.

[ Amazing Moon Photos of 2012 ]

Moon size comparison
The reason why the sun appears 30 times bigger than Venus is because the sun is very large. Its true diameter is more than 100 times that of Venus, or of Earth, for that matter, since Venus and Earth are about the same size. The moon appears 30 times bigger than Venus not because it is large, but because it is very close to us. The moon is 2,159 miles in diameter (3,475 kilometers), as compared to the Earth's 7,926 miles (12,756 km) and Venus' 7,521 miles (12,104 km).

In other words, the moon is just slightly more than a quarter of the diameter of the Earth or Venus. Mercury is the planet closest in size to the moon at 3,032 miles in diameter (4,879 km), about 40 percent larger than our moon. One of the reasons that Pluto was demoted to "dwarf planet" status was its small diameter of only 1,485 miles (2,390 km), two-thirds of the diameter of our moon.

Our moon is very large in proportion to its planet, Earth, more than any other moons in the solar system except for Pluto's moon Charon. But because other planets are much larger than Earth, several of their moons are much larger than ours, including three of Jupiter's moons (Io, Ganymede, and Callisto) and one of Saturn's (Titan). Of these, Ganymede is the largest at 3,270 miles (5,262 km), slightly larger than the planet Mercury.

The moon as a planet
Even if you don't own a telescope, looking at the moon with the naked eye can show you the challenges faced by planetary observers.

Earlier this week we saw Jupiter shining brightly alongside the moon. It would take a telescope magnifying about 40 times to make Jupiter appear as big as the moon does with the naked eye. When Mars was closest to Earth in 2003, it took a telescope magnifying 75 times to make Mars appear as big as the moon with the naked eye. At present Mars on the far side of the sun, and requires a telescope magnifying 430 times to make it appear as big as the moon does with the naked eye.

So, if you want an observing challenge similar to trying to spot Jupiter's Great Red Spot or Mars' polar cap, try observing detail on the moon with your naked eye.

The man in the moon
What most people see when they look at the moon is " the man in the moon." This is a pattern of light and dark caused by the albedo markings on the moon. ?Albedo? is a measure of how much light gets reflected by an area on a planet.

Darker areas on the moon's surface, which the early astronomers called "seas," although we now know that they are dry and airless, form the face of a man, in our mind?s eye. Or, they may form a woman, or a rabbit, depending on your culture. These are very similar to the dusky markings which astronomers observe with telescopes on Mars and Mercury, also called albedo markings.

If you try to sketch the markings you see on the moon, you will find, as experienced planetary observers do, that you can see much finer detail than the man in the moon. You should be able to see some of the smaller seas, such as the Mare Crisium, on the eastern limb of the moon, and one or two of the brighter craters, such as Tycho towards the southern limb.

Once you have tried to sketch the moon with your naked eye, try observing it with a small binocular. You will be amazed at how much more detail you can see, and will begin to experience the wonder Galileo must have felt when he first turned his primitive telescopes on the moon. There really is another world out there.

If you snap an amazing photo of the year's final full moon on Friday and would like to share it with SPACE.com for a potential story or gallery, submit photos and comments, including your name and location to spacephotos@space.com.

This article was provided to SPACE.com by Starry Night Education , the leader in space science curriculum solutions. Follow Starry Night on Twitter @StarryNightEdu .

? 2012 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50297762/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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For Obama's second inauguration, a subdued, less crowded Washington (reuters)

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Iran says it fended off cyber attack on industrial sites

11 hrs.

DUBAI (Reuters) - An Internet virus attacked computers at industrial sites in southern Iran, in an apparent extension of a covert cyber war that initially targeted the country's nuclear facilities, an Iranian official said.?

Iran, the world's No. 5 oil exporter, has tightened online security since its uranium enrichment centrifuges were hit in 2010 by the Stuxnet computer worm, which Tehran believes was planted by arch-adversaries Israel or the United States.?

The unit tasked with fighting cyber attacks, the Passive Defence Organisation, said a virus had infected several sites in Hormozgan province in recent months but was neutralised.?

"Enemies are constantly attacking Iran's industrial units through Internet networks in order to create disruptions," Ali Akbar Akhavan, head of the Hormozgan branch of the organisation, was quoted as saying by the Iranian Students' News Agency on Tuesday.?

"This virus has even penetrated some manufacturing industries in Hormozgan province, but with timely measures and the cooperation of skilled hackers in the province, the progress of this virus was halted," Akhavan said.?

"As an example, the Bandar Abbas Tavanir Co., a producer of electricity in the province and even adjacent provinces, has been the target of Internet attacks in recent months," he said.?

Bandar Abbas is the capital of Hormozgan province on Iran's southern coast and home to an oil refinery and container port.?

Israeli officials have threatened military action against Iranian nuclear facilities if Western sanctions on Tehran's banking and oil sectors do not persuade the Islamic Republic to shelve its disputed atomic program.?

Western powers suspect Iran is trying to develop the means to produce nuclear weapons. Tehran says it is enriching uranium only for civilian energy.?

Iranian authorities said in April that a computer virus was detected inside the control systems of Kharg Island - which handles the vast majority of Iran's crude oil exports - but the terminal had remained operational.?

Cyber attackers also slowed Iran's Internet and attacked its offshore oil and gas platforms this year, Iranian officials have said.

(c) Copyright ThomsonReuters 2012. Check for restrictions at:?http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/iran-says-it-fended-cyber-attack-industrial-sites-1C7662775

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Have You Included Your Pet in Your Disaster Preparedness ...

2232532588 6bb2b8e6c3 z Have You Included Your Pet in Your Disaster Preparedness Planning?

Whether an emergency keeps you away from home for a day, or a week or more, you?ll need essential supplies and an emergency plan for your pets and large animals.

Have a Plan
Know where you and your pets will be going after an emergency. Have at least two pre-planned boarding locations for your animals in case you are sick, injured or must evacuate during a disaster. These facilities should be located away from your home and far apart from each other to reduce the likelihood that they will be affected by the disaster.

Grab-and-Go Kits for Your Small Pets
Assemble emergency kits for your pets and place them in a spot where they are handy to grab. Duffel bags, covered trash containers, or buckets with securely fitting lids make great containers for your pet?s kit. Items to include are:

? Wire cage or carrier with good air circulation along with a cover for sun, rain, ash, etc.
? Sturdy leashes, harnesses and collars with a ground mounting device for tying up pets temporarily
? Food and water for several days
? Your pet?s medications
? Pet beds and toys
? Current photos of you with your pets in case you are separated
? Name and contact information of your veterinarian

Be sure that all dogs, cats and small pets are always wearing collars with securely fastened identification. Identification microchips are highly recommended for all pets.

Horses and Large Animals
Emergency preparedness is important for all animals, but preparedness for horses and other large animals is critical because of their size and special transportation needs.

Horses and large animals should be evacuated as soon as an evacuation warning is issued. Do not wait for an evacuation order. If you?re unprepared or wait until the last minute, you may need to leave your animals behind.

Network with your neighbors prior to an emergency. Work together with those who do not have horse trailers or who may be away during an emergency.

Risks after a Disaster
After the crisis has passed, it may be some time before you can return to your home. Even if your house is intact and you are allowed to return, the area may not be safe for your pets.

Risks to animals after a disaster include:
? Cut paws or feet
? Burns if there has been a fire
? Eating or inhaling toxic substances or residues
? Escaping because of downed fences or other damage
? Loss of shelter and shade
? Lack of water, power, or other services

Keep in mind that when animals return to a changed landscape, they will be upset, disoriented, and easily stressed. Try to be calm and follow normal routines whenever possible.


Interesting news:

Related posts:

  1. Saving Animals During Flood and Disaster
  2. How Pet First Aid Kits And CPR Classes Can Help Keep Every Family Member Safe And Sound
  3. Do You Have a Rescue Plan For Your Pet For Natural Disasters?
  4. New Book From PlayMore Publishing Offers Insight For Planning Holiday Parties with Your Dog
  5. A Guide for Those Planning To Buy a Dog House

Source: http://www.123classifieds.us/news/have-you-included-your-pet-in-your-disaster-preparedness-planning/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=have-you-included-your-pet-in-your-disaster-preparedness-planning

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Tuesday, December 25, 2012

How excess holiday eating disturbs your 'food clock'

Dec. 21, 2012 ? If the sinful excess of holiday eating sends your system into butter-slathered, brandy-soaked overload, you are not alone: People who are jet-lagged, people who work graveyard shifts and plain-old late-night snackers know just how you feel.

All these activities upset the body's "food clock," a collection of interacting genes and molecules known technically as the food-entrainable oscillator, which keeps the human body on a metabolic even keel. A new study by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) is helping to reveal how this clock works on a molecular level.

Published this month in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the UCSF team has shown that a protein called PKC? is critical in resetting the food clock if our eating habits change.

The study showed that normal laboratory mice given food only during their regular sleeping hours will adjust their food clock over time and begin to wake up from their slumber, and run around in anticipation of their new mealtime. But mice lacking the PKC? gene are not able to respond to changes in their meal time -- instead sleeping right through it.

The work has implications for understanding the molecular basis of diabetes, obesity and other metabolic syndromes because a desynchronized food clock may serve as part of the pathology underlying these disorders, said Louis Ptacek, MD, the John C. Coleman Distinguished Professor of Neurology at UCSF and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator.

It may also help explain why night owls are more likely to be obese than morning larks, Ptacek said.

"Understanding the molecular mechanism of how eating at the "wrong" time of the day desynchronizes the clocks in our body can facilitate the development of better treatments for disorders associated with night-eating syndrome, shift work and jet lag," he added.

Resetting the Food Clock

Look behind the face of a mechanical clock and you will see a dizzying array of cogs, flywheels, reciprocating counterbalances and other moving parts. Biological clocks are equally complex, composed of multiple interacting genes that turn on or off in an orchestrated way to keep time during the day.

In most organisms, biological clockworks are governed by a master clock, referred to as the "circadian oscillator," which keeps track of time and coordinates our biological processes with the rhythm of a 24-hour cycle of day and night.

Life forms as diverse as humans, mice and mustard greens all possess such master clocks. And in the last decade or so, scientists have uncovered many of their inner workings, uncovering many of the genes whose cycles are tied to the clock and discovering how in mammals it is controlled by a tiny spot in the brain known as the "superchiasmatic nucleus."

Scientists also know that in addition to the master clock, our bodies have other clocks operating in parallel throughout the day. One of these is the food clock, which is not tied to one specific spot in the brain but rather multiple sites throughout the body.

The food clock is there to help our bodies make the most of our nutritional intake. It controls genes that help in everything from the absorption of nutrients in our digestive tract to their dispersal through the bloodstream, and it is designed to anticipate our eating patterns. Even before we eat a meal, our bodies begin to turn on some of these genes and turn off others, preparing for the burst of sustenance -- which is why we feel the pangs of hunger just as the lunch hour arrives.

Scientist have known that the food clock can be reset over time if an organism changes its eating patterns, eating to excess or at odd times, since the timing of the food clock is pegged to feeding during the prime foraging and hunting hours in the day. But until now, very little was known about how the food clock works on a genetic level.

What Ptacek and his colleagues discovered is the molecular basis for this phenomenon: the PKC? protein binds to another molecule called BMAL and stabilizes it, which shifts the clock in time.

The article, "PKC? participates in food entrainment by regulating BMAL1" is authored by Luoying Zhang, Diya Abrahama, Shu-Ting Lin, Henrik Oster, Gregor Eichele, Ying-Hui Fu, and Louis J. Pt?cek and appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

In addition to UCSF, authors on the study are affiliated with the Max Planck Institute of Biophysical Chemistry in G?ttingen, Germany.

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health via grants #GM079180 and #708 HL059596, the Sandler Neurogenetics Fund, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). The original article was written by Jason Bardi.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. L. Zhang, D. Abraham, S.-T. Lin, H. Oster, G. Eichele, Y.-H. Fu, L. J. Ptacek. PKC? participates in food entrainment by regulating BMAL1. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; 109 (50): 20679 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1218699110

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/H0BRGMVgKxc/121224113351.htm

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Saturday, December 22, 2012

Why You Need Systemized Training In A Home Based Business ...

Why would you need systemized training in a home based business? Well let's face it, whenever you start a new job you usually get training, but we're not just talking about initial training, what we are also talking about is duplication. Meaning, you're ability to not only learn the training to be effective in your own business, but also to the point in which you can teach others the same training quickly and easily so they too can be effective with their own business. Sounds pretty simple, right? But it's not quite as simple as one might think and I'll explain... This entry was posted in WORK FROM HOME TIPS. Bookmark the permalink.

Posted on February 25, 2011 by American Diversified Publications

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Source: http://www.easywork-greatpay.com/blog/why-you-need-systemized-training-in-a-home-based-business/

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Why Fiscal Cliff Is Such a Powerful Metaphor

Listen to Lexicon Valley Episode No. 23: Good Is Up

In the weeks since the presidential election, economic news has been dominated by talk of the catastrophic-sounding ?fiscal cliff,? metaphorical shorthand for a series of spending cuts and tax increases that are set to automatically begin at the turn of the calendar year. Many in the punditocracy, however, agree that cliff is a flawed coinage and have suggested words like slope or hill to conjure a more gradual decline, all to no avail. Listen to Bob Garfield and me discussing the ubiquity and unique power of spatial metaphors, and why assumptions like ?up is good? and ?down is bad? make more ominous, if erroneous, imagery more attractive.

You can also read the transcript of this episode below.

You'll find every Lexicon Valley episode at slate.com/lexiconvalley, or in the player below:

Send your thoughts about the show to slatelexiconvalley@gmail.com.

BOB: From Washington, D.C. this is Lexicon Valley, a podcast about language. I?m Bob Garfield with Mike Vuolo and today, Episode No. 23, titled Good Is Up, wherein we discuss a very powerful metaphor that we've all grown to despise.

MIKE: All right, today's episode. Here in the United States, if you've been paying attention to the news during the past several weeks, there are two words that you've probably heard over and over and over.

BRIAN WILLIAMS of NBC: It?s what they call, for good reason, this fiscal cliff.

JAKE TAPPER of ABC: There will be no deal to avert going over the fiscal cliff.

LLOYD BLANKFEIN of GOLDMAN SACHS: Look, if we go over the fiscal cliff, it will be very bad ? hugely ba? hugely negative.

ED O?KEEFE of the WASHINGTON POST: So what is the fiscal cliff?

MONTGOMERY BURNS: I guess it?s time I explain to these good people the upcoming fiscal cliff.

BOB: [laughing] Yeah, five voices on the fiscal cliff, two of whom were cartoon characters. The last one was Mr. Burns and who was number three?

MIKE: That's Lloyd Blankfein the CEO of

MIKE: Goldman Sachs, yeah.

BOB: He sounds like Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man.

BOB: I can't believe this is the guy who is the sinister kingpin, robber baron, puppet master of Wall Street. He sounds like a character from Top Cat. Anyway, they're all talking about the same thing. The, uh, what do you call it, fiscal cliff.

MIKE: Exactly, and you know we're not going to debate the politics or the economics of the fiscal cliff, but for the benefit of those who either don't live in the U.S. and therefore haven't followed this or just don't know, can you Bob very briefly describe what the phrase "fiscal cliff" is shorthand for?

BOB: Yeah, it is an automatic series of draconian spending cuts and parallel tax increases which automatically go into effect if the Republicans in the House of Representatives and the President cannot come up with a grand bargain or even a petit bargain about spending and taxes in the next few days actually.

MIKE: Yeah, couple weeks. And we should point out that the phrase the "fiscal cliff" was used back in February of this year by Ben Bernanke. He's the Chairman of the Federal Reserve. He used it during testimony in front of the House Financial Services Committee. Here's what he said:

BEN BERNANKE: I think you also have to protect the recovery in the near term. Under current law, on January 1, 2013, there's going to be a massive fiscal cliff of large spending cuts and tax increases.

MIKE: Now, Bernanke didn't coin the phrase. It's actually been around for years and a lot of people have misreported that. But it was his invoking of it this year, in connection with this particular set of circumstances, that pushed it into common use in the media and since the election ended it's pretty much all we hear. Something you hear almost as often is the qualification that it's not really a "cliff." For example:

SPEAKER 1: What if the fiscal cliff turns out to be more of a fiscal speed bump?

STEVE KORNACKI: The reality is that the cliff is really more of a slope.

EZRA KLEIN: Is it a cliff, a curb, a slope? Uh, EPI wants to call it an obstacle course.

MIKE: So here's the question. If it's widely agreed that a "cliff" is not the right metaphor, why do we like it so much? But wait. Don't actually answer that question. First, I want you to forget about the fiscal cliff.

BOB: Okay, wait a second. It's forgo... no, no.

MIKE: [laughing] Don't think about elephants.

BOB: What were we talking about. I've forgotten.

MIKE: We're not talking about the fiscal cliff right now. We're talking about metaphor. There has been research that suggests we use metaphors in our speech about once every 20 to 25 words, which averages out to about five or six a minute. I spoke recently with James Geary. He's the author of a great book that came out last year called I Is an Other: The Secret Life of Metaphor and How It Shapes the Way We See the World. He told me that based on his casual analysis of things like newscasts and political speeches and even ordinary conversations that we, as he put it, "woefully underestimate" just how prevalent metaphor is. Here's Geary:

JAMES GEARY: I would venture to guess that there?s probably two or three metaphors for every ten words that we use, so that gives you an indication of just how pervasive metaphor is. And it?s pervasive because whenever we talk about anything abstract ? our feelings or concepts, ideas, intuitions, anything that?s not literal ? we have to use a metaphor to describe it.

BOB: Now when he's talking about metaphor, he's not really talking about literary metaphor per se, you know when you're really self-conscious about it: "I wandered lonely as a cloud/ That floats on high o'er vales and hills." He's talking about just colorful language which makes an abstract idea more accessible.

MIKE: Yeah, the sort of literary metaphor that you're talking about is something like "All the world's a stage,/ And men and women merely players." That would stand out as metaphor?as a kind of poetic equating of two relatively disparate things?during any conversation. What he's talking about here, though, is something so imbedded in our language that we don't even notice it as metaphor. Here again is Geary:

JAMES GEARY: So, when I say ?I see what you mean,? I see, literally, absolutely nothing. But in every culture, in every language around the world, seeing ? actually visually perceiving something ? is equated with intellectually knowing something. And the similar expression is ?I hear what you?re saying.? I see what you mean, I hear what you?re saying ? psychologically, emotionally, you?re conveying to the other person that you understand them. And we never stop and think, hey, that?s a metaphor. And it?s actually one of the most ancient, most primal and most powerful metaphors that we have.

MIKE to JAMES GEARY: And it?s not hard to imagine how one might make the leap from physically seeing something or hearing it ? absorbing it with your senses ? to then correlating that with something more abstract like understanding.

JAMES GEARY: Exactly, and you just used another physical metaphor in what you just said, because you said ?It?s not hard to make the leap.? [laughing] We have ?flashes? of insight, which is another visual metaphor, and the psychological theory that explains this, or purports to explain it, is called ?scaffolding.? Even simple expressions like ?She?s hot? or ?He leaves me cold? are metaphorical uses of very powerful physical experiences. And the theory of scaffolding posits that we use these physical experiences that every human being, every animal, shares, and we added on ? we scaffolded on ? to those physical experiences these metaphorical layers which are really the only way that we can communicate these abstract emotional, psychological states.

MIKE to JAMES GEARY: I guess unless you?re a Vulcan and you do a mind meld.

JAMES GEARY: [laughing] Exactly. Mind meld ? you can?t talk about a mind meld without using a metaphor.

MIKE: Now, the seminal academic treatise, you could say, on this subject is called Metaphors We Live By by the linguists George Lakoff and Mark Johnson. It was written more than 30 years ago. In that work, which is as much a work of philosophy really as it is of linguistics, they showed that many of these metaphors that we have hiding in plain sight in our language are what they call "systematic."

Let's take the ?understanding is seeing? metaphor that Geary mentioned. It's not just the expression "I see what you're saying" that accounts for that metaphor. It's a whole "system" of words and expressions in our language. I'll paraphrase from Lakoff and Johnson's book. They mention examples like "It looks different from my point of view"; "What is your outlook on that?"; "I've got the whole picture"; "Let me point something out to you." You're not actually pointing anything out.

BOB: And the structure's all based on the metaphor of using visualization to stand in for the idea of conceptualization.

MIKE: Yeah, exactly. Somebody's being "clear" or not being "clear." They're being "transparent." They're being "opaque." All of this language is metaphorical and it all participates in building the metaphor ?understanding is seeing.?

BOB: So, again, these are not self-conscious metaphors. If you say to mean that you're gonna get in trouble that something's gonna "jump up and bite me," that is an intentional metaphor. If you say "I see what you mean," you aren't even aware that you're using a figure of speech.

MIKE: Yeah, and often these abstract concepts - let's take another example: Time. It doesn't get any more abstract than that.

BOB: "Time, you old gipsy man, / Will you not stay, / Pull up your caravan / Just for one day?" That's from a poem by Ralph Hodgson, an early 20th-century British poet. I learned it when I was ten.

MIKE: Time. "Ticking away the moments / That make up a dull day / Fritter and waste the hours / In an off-hand way." That's from the 20th-century poet Roger Waters of the band Pink Floyd.

BOB: [laughing] Okay, you win. I am a nerd loser.

MIKE: So time is so bewildering and abstruse that we've constructed a number of metaphors to help us talk about different qualities, different aspects of time. Now, in our culture, certainly, we think of our own time?in our daily lives and in life even more broadly?as a finite entity. It will eventually, for all of us, "run out" as we say. And so we have the metaphor, as Lakoff and Johnson describe it, ?time is a limited resource.? And you see this reflected, given expression, in our language.

BOB: Well, not to push the point or anything but that poem I was reciting from childhood memory is on exactly that subject. It's about someone who is facing his twilight years (metaphor) and was wishing that he could somehow put the brakes on it. "Time, you old gipsy man, / Will you not stay, / Pull up your caravan / Just for one day?" See what I mean?

BOB: I guess he doesn't wanna die is what it comes down to.

MIKE: Selfish of him. And you know we talk also about how we can't "spare" the time. Or we "use up" our time. We "put aside" time to do things. We "waste" time and we "save" time. This is all linguistic scaffolding, as James Geary would say, on the ?time is a limited resource? metaphor. Now, there's a related metaphor that?s a kind of more distilled, more specific version of this. I'll talk about it in just a second, but first I wanna take a break to mention our sponsor Audible.com.

BOB: Nice work Mike. Now, at the risk of doing something precipitous, you were gonna get us back to "fiscal cliff"?

MIKE: We're still far from the cliff. I mentioned that there's another more distilled version of the ?time is a limited resource? metaphor and that of course is ?time is money.?

BOB: Oh, like there's an expression "time is money."

MIKE: [laughing] Yeah, and there are a whole host of phrases, again, in our language that help to sort of build this metaphor. Right, we "spend" our time well or poorly. We "budget" our time. There may be something unforeseen that "costs" you time. We talk about "borrowed" time and about "investing" our time in someone else. If you've noticed, these systematic metaphors take the form of X is Y, where X is the relatively abstract idea of concept and Y is the more physical, visceral experience or idea that is the basis of the metaphor. ?Understanding is seeing.? ?Time is money.?

BOB: ?Economy is topography!?

MIKE: [laughing] You really wanna get to the fiscal cliff, don't you?

BOB: I just thought maybe eventually. No, no, just go ahead.

MIKE: So we talked about ?time is a limited resource? and ?time is money.? There's still another metaphor that gets at a somewhat different quality of time. And I'll give you a hint. This is a quote by Virgil, the Roman poet. An English translation of a quote by Virgil. "But meanwhile it flees: time flees irretrievably, while we wander around, prisoners of our love of detail." It's a great quote. I love that quote. But you see what I'm getting at, right? Tempus fugit.

BOB: C'mon, Mike. I know I'm slow but I see no reason for you to swear at me.

MIKE: The Romans may have said "time flees." We say "time flies." The metaphor is ?time is motion.? Here again is James Geary:

JAMES GEARY: We can see the effects of aging, for example, and we can see a piece of fruit rotting but we can?t actually, physically describe the passage of time. And so we use a spatial metaphor to refer to a chronological event. Forwards, or what is in front of us, is the future and the more distant future is further ahead of us. We can?t see ?over the horizon,? for example. Time is like a river and it flows on by and as it flows on by the past goes behind us. So for something that?s very abstract and very difficult to comprehend like the passage of time we resort to some of the most simple physical experiences that we have.

MIKE: Now, as Geary point out, if we had different physical experiences - different bodies, different senses, a different planet - then many of our metaphors would be totally different.

JAMES GEARY: So crabs, for example, they walk sideways. If crabs could talk they would describe progress in difficult negotiations perhaps as ?sidling? towards agreement. And they would find that they?re best days might still be beside them rather than ahead. So you see how our physical experience of the world really deeply, deeply informs not just the way we talk about our experiences but the actual way we interpret our experiences. And I think that?s the sort of hidden power of metaphor. It?s not just the kind of clever or flowery way of describing what we feel, but metaphors really shape what we feel. They frame what we feel. They frame what we think.

BOB: So if Virgil were a crustacean, he might have said, "Time is lateral, just always so, you know, lateral."

MIKE: I think he was more eloquent than that [laughing].

BOB: Well, you know when you eat crabs you're also drinking beer and he, you know he's ...

MIKE: He was a little drunk. He's just like, "Time is sooo lateral" [mock drunk voice].

BOB: [laughing] You know the way Virge is.

MIKE: All right, so I just wanna recap with what I think is a really helpful structure in thinking about this. We have hundreds of these conceptual metaphors that are reflected in our language. There's a subcategory of them for which the Y component of the X is Y equation is very tied to our experience as human beings living on this planet with gravity and other physical laws and all of the various limitations and possibilities of our bodies. These are referred to as "primal metaphors." ?Understanding is seeing? is a good example of this. A further subcategory of these primal metaphors is what are called "spatial" or "orientational" metaphors. Up/down, forward/back, things like that. These spatial metaphors are particularly powerful for us, particularly old and profoundly influential on the way we think and interact with the world.

BOB: What leaps to mind is what's good is up, what's bad is down.

MIKE: Exactly. And think about all of the ways that we incorporate the metaphors ?good is up? and ?bad is down? into our language. As Lakoff and Johnson point out ?happy is up, sad is down.? Right, I'm feeling "up." That "boosted" my spirits. We talk about people being in "high" spirits of something giving them a "lift." ?Conscious is up, unconscious is down.? We get "up." We wake "up." We "fall" asleep. We "drop off" to sleep. ?Health is up, sickness is down.? We're at the "peak" of health. We "fall" ill. We talk about health as "declining" if we're getting sick. ?High status is up, low status is down.? We're in a "lofty" position if we have high status. We "rise" to the "top." We're at the "peak" of our career. We "climb" the ladder. We talk about "upward" mobility. ?Virtue is up, depravity is down.? Things are "high-minded." We take the "high road." We take the "low road." We have "high standards." We talk about people being "upright" or "underhanded." These are all a product of our bodies existing in physical space with gravity.

BOB: Angels fall, the Dow Jones Industrial average falls and, [sigh] at last, there is nothing that falls more precipitously than a drop from a cliff.

MIKE: Yes. We're there. We're at the cliff. First though, I think it's worth pointing out that the phrase "fiscal cliff" has some things going for it that are not metaphor-related. It's very pleasing phonetically. "Fiscal" begins with an "f" sound, then it has a short "i" and it ends with a hard "c" and and "l" sound. "Cliff" is exactly the opposite. It begins with the hard "c" and the "l" sound, then has the short "i" and ends with the "f" sound. It's aurally symmetrical. It also is rife with opportunity for wordplay.

BOB: Cliffhanger, cliff diving, cliff ... uh ...

MIKE: Yeah, exactly. Media loves that sort of stuff and they've taken advantage of it. But underneath all of that is a series of very powerful spatial metaphors that conjure up for us, unconsciously really, a kind of line drawing that moves along horizontally and then drops precipitously down. Now, feeding this image, as George Lakoff pointed out recently, is the metaphor that the economy, like time, is motion. Slope, hill, speed bump, all of these alternatives to cliff that were mentioned in that montage that we played earlier, still contain the notion that the economy is moving.

Then we have the metaphors ?the past is left? and ?the future is right,? which Lakoff says explain "why the diagram goes from left to right when the economy is conceptualized as moving 'forward.'" Then of course we have ?good is up? and ?bad is down,? or a more refined version of that: ?Success is rising? and ?failing is falling.? Lakoff believes these primal, spatial metaphors form what he calls a "neural cascade" that he says is "so tightly integrated and so natural that we barely notice them, if we notice them at all." James Geary takes it, you might say, one step further. Here he is:

JAMES GEARY: So when you think about stock prices, when they?re described as rising they?re always described as soaring or leaping or climbing ? all action verbs that imply, they?re metaphors, that imply a living thing. But when we talk about house prices dropping like a stone or plummeting they?re all metaphors of dead things. Down is equated with death. Dead things fall down. They drop dead, literally. That?s not even a metaphor. And we emotionally equate that with sort of economic death or financial death. So while the ?fiscal cliff? metaphor may be misinformed in terms of its pure economics, the fact that it grabs people?s attention is, hopefully, a good thing.

MIKE to JAMES GEARY: So will there be a compromise?

JAMES GEARY: [lauging] Nope.

MIKE to JAMES GEARY: [laughing] You don?t think so?

JAMES GEARY: I think it?ll just be another fudge that?ll, you know, kick the ball ? see you can?t even talk about this stuff. Every other word is a metaphor.

MIKE to JAMES GEARY: [laughing]

BOB: Well, actually he's got the metaphor wrong. I think they say kick the "can" down the road, not kick the "ball" down the road.

MIKE: Well I think either one would suffice. But you know imagine if we were some kind of alien species that lived in zero gravity.

MIKE: The idea of "up" and "down" wouldn't really have the same kind of cultural cachet that it has for us.

BOB: Yeah, yeah. And I'll tell you something. Google Maps would be pretty much useless.

MIKE: [laughing] Yeah, then it would be like the maps app that Apple made.

MIKE: [laughing] All right, I guess Apple's never gonna wanna be a sponsor of this podcast.

BOB: No, I hope Audible stays with us 'cause we've just crossed one off the list.

MIKE: All right, if you wanna contact us, metaphorically or otherwise, please write to us at slatelexiconvalley@gmail.com.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=c6c0d4bf727460ae3def594d1b06688d

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Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Video: Encouraging News on 'Cliff': Meyer

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50223186/

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Cops to trolls: Sharing misinformation about school shooting is a crime

9 hrs.

On Sunday,?when addressing the media on the?Sandy Hook massacre, Lt. Paul Vance of the Connecticut State Police warned that?anyone posting "misinformation" on the case was committing a crime, and would be investigated "statewide and federally, and prosecution will take place."?While it's easy to understand his anger and frustration, any legal action against Internet trolls is unlikely to hold up under the U.S. Constitution, experts say.?

When asked the specifics of this misinformation, Lt. Vance said,?"I?m not a social media expert," but?cited everything from?erroneous?assumptions?to information "deemed as threatening," homing in on what seems to be the most egregious, fake accounts and "quotes by people who are posing as the shooter."

True enough, a survey of the social media landscape revealed profiles in the guise of the shooter law enforcement?knew to be dead. Even before the full story surrounding Friday's horrific shooting in Newtown, Conn., reached the public, Internet lowlifes had?inserted themselves into the narrative.?

On Facebook, at least a dozen fan pages appeared ? first using the name of the alleged shooter?s brother, initially misidentified by officials, and following the clarification, under the deceased?shooter's name, "Adam Lanza."?

FULL COVERAGE: Tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary

On Twitter, similar accounts appeared using variations of Lanza?s name, at least one posting offensive tweets about the shooting, baiting a shocked and grieving public to respond.?The appearance of these faux accounts following any national tragedy is?inarguably?offensive, and unfortunately all too?common. While they certainly violate both Facebook and Twitter's Terms of Service, they'd be unlikely to?draw a?conviction under either state or federal law.?

To be clear, threats???even those made in jest???to mimic a violent crime making national news, will very likely get you arrested, as several careless Facebook users?learned over the weekend.?Any resulting charges may not stick, but it?certainly will make your life miserable for a while.

Outrageous, and even false speech may very well be protected in the United States by the First?Amendment, notes Jeff Hermes, director of the Digital Media Law Project,?Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University. What matters is whether that speech is part of legitimate public discussion.

"Clearly the circumstances in Connecticut are matter of grave public concern right now," Hermes told NBC News. "We have to be careful that commentary, discussion and reaction can take many different forms, not only news coverage and public discussion."

Most would?agree free speech doesn't get more obnoxious or offensive than that of the Westboro Baptist Church, known for picketing funerals of soldiers ??and now?threatening to picket the funerals of those killed at Sandy Hook Elementary. In 2011, the Supreme Court upheld?the Westboro Baptist Church's right to picket the funeral of Matthew?Snyder, a U.S. Marine who was killed in Iraq. The SCOUTUS judgement deemed the church not liable for causing?emotional distress, even if the speech was found to be "outrageous."?It was Snyder's father who filed the lawsuit.

As for "misinformation" allegedly interfering in the investigation, it's unlikely any such cases would hold up in the Supreme Court. Just this year, in the case of the U.S. v. Alvarez, the Supreme Court ruled that even false statements ? in this case, lying about military medals ??are protected by the First Amendment.?

Certainly, law enforcement isn't fooled by social media accounts claiming to belong to someone who is no longer alive. As Lt. Vance emphasized to the media on Sunday, "social media websites that contain information relative to this case are not being posted by the Connecticut state police, are not being posted by the Newtown police, are not being posted by any authorities in this case."?

Though likely?protected by the First Amendment, those who post offensive content could face, under Connecticut law, a civil claim for the infliction of emotional distress, the Berkman Center's?Hermes said, adding that there have been some lower court rulings on such cases.

That is, if the social networks themselves don't shut down the activity first.?

While neither confirmed with NBC News, both Facebook and Twitter seem to have the fake Adam Lanza accounts under control. Those which popped up on Friday seem to have disappeared by Monday. No courts required.

You can't blame Lt. Vance for trotting out the prosecution threats, especially if he's trying to chill out the nastiest of?trolls. As with an increasing number of?major news events,?law enforcement is having a hard time hearing the signal through all of the Internet noise.

FULL COVERAGE: Tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary

Helen A.S. Popkin?writes about Internet culture. You?can find her on?Twitter?and/or?Facebook.?Also,?Google+.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/cops-trolls-sharing-misinformation-about-school-shooting-crime-1C7648194

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YOUTH LEAGUES
BOWL O DROME

Bumper (2-4); Madison Zimmerman 94; Kassidy Kavanagh 92; Mackenzie Zimmerman 85; Trista Singles 79; Genna Singles 70; Clara Bellman 49; Lauren Bellman 47

Other: Tyler Fields 669(247); Kenny Herbert 610(226); Matthew Tetreau 573(231); Dalton Beidler 568(193); Katie Hodgins 436(171); Lindsay Klein 405(159)

BLUE WATER BOWL

Kidets: Alex Huot 330(131); Jackson Oles 245(119); Seth Lozaro 231(96)

Bumbroos: Buddha Schindler 163(88); Tyler Stoutmeyer 80; Cameron Thompson 80; Emma Rhadigan 79

?BLUE WATER BOWL
Blue Water Mixers

Jeff Van Hoesen 772(259); Steve Watson 694(279); Greg Marshall 689(247); Tony Paulus 672; Arnold Hinojosa 666(258); Becky Van Hoesen 567(225); Annette Paradis 538(195); Anita Hubbard 504

Dan Wilkinson Memorial

Alicia Schroeder 641(228); Joddy Swoffer 556(204); Jamie Yeager 605(247); Jeff Morrison 715(256); Ryan Kowalski 665(264); Ray Randall 656(243); Steve Jakubowski 649; Ron McCulloch 649(247); Frank Mitchell 640

Don McIvor Memorial

Mike Schindler 738(270); Paul Collins 729(262); Terry Thompson 735(276); Mike Raleigh 707(244); Rick St. Onge 690(256); Gary Goddard 684(237); Dave Brown 678(235); Brad Ashton 692(242); Jim Stoutmeyer 672(235); Mike Bennett 645(278)

Friday Night Wanna Bees

Doug Thompson 681(258); Terry Thompson 665(278); Louis Hinojosa 662(256); Don Cooper, Jr. 652(267)

Mixed Singles

Becky Bauman 522(179); Sandy Baker 495; Marty Nichols 688(236); Jeff Dettloff 676(236); Rick Sosa 649(256)

Mon PM Adult Bowling

Bev Cummings 519(200); Jean Delacy 180; Eleanor Hasting 171; Tim Sassanella 609(244); Tom Trisch 530(189); Jerry Bailey 512(181); Carol Doubles 453(186)

Mueller Retirees

Gerry Sedich 527(183); Bev Cummings 535(183); Juanita Peter 211; Geri Wise 181; Vic Gregowski 706(268); Tm Sassanella 644(243); Ron Dunlap 621(246)

Port Huron Hospital

Anita Hubbard 540(199); Erica Johnson 535(221); Heather Politowicz 509(201)

Viking Three Man

Mike Raleigh 744(279); Steve Jakubowski 731(279); Ron Fowler 686(249); Mark Chesney 625(225); Jamie K. 648(236)

BOWL O DROME
Beverage

Ron Parmann 693(279); Anthony LaGruth 673(267); Carl Schott 649(267); Doug Campbell 708(258); Marty Jackson 664(253); Chris Seigel 634(247); John Santo 669(244)

BOD Sunday Men?s

Chad Jeroue 680(255); Johnnie Angerbrandt, Jr. 704(267); Rick Johnston 693(279); Doug Fowler 685(289); Cliff Crawford 707

Friday Doubles

Trish Defrain 544(202); Charlie Collins 654; Bill Randazzo 559(247)

Original Sunday Funtimers

Catherine Pulliam 596(212); Jane Morris 540(203); Sherry Middleton 199; Judy Tidwell 518(202); Jesse Diaz, Jr. 666(226); Rick Sosa 648(280); Chuck Middleton 647(224); Tom Morris 634(216); Jason Diaz 237; Tom Almendarez 235; Scott Quant 229

Port Huron Hospital AM

Margaret Nelson 624(218); Jerry Grzech 715(268); Pete Lapka 620(268); Nadine LaGruth 550(237); Michelle Carlson 549

Zebraettes

Sherry Mitchell 504(201); Tara Barnes 503(186); Linda Brennan 497; Lori Schreiber 489; Patti Lindgren 197; Stephanie Delano 186

PORT HURON LANES
Adult Activities-Mon AM

Suzanne McCoy 452(173); Jane Angles 436(174); Maxine Brown 424; Dawn Dunsmore 424; Ron Messer 603(236); Bernie McCoy 563(213); Bob Hall 552; John Szczygiel 231

Cowboys & Indians

Melissa Legault 721(257); Olivia Brown 652(245); Dara Sinclair 592(221); Scott Badley 693(279); Mike Gossman 705(269); Jesse Hojnacki 759(269); Dave Klaas 716(256); Matt Langolf 722(259)

Friday Morning Industrial

Steve Jakubowski 677; Mike Schindler 647; Rich Wolfe 645; Dom Cocco 677; Gary Weiss 248; Chuck Fogarty 235; Gordon Harvey 269

Friday AM Seniors

Robyn Rossow 502(193); Phoebe Frizzle 498(183); Elmer Gamble 620(236); Bob Crorey 612(232)

Friday PM Seniors

Carmen Aguinaga 497(184); Delores Masters 498; Gary Phetteplace 614(230); Elmer Gamble 620; Dan Healy 633(246); Tim Sassanella 629(247)

Hamilton Classic

Jerry Sherbutt 587(235); Jack Helwig 608(226); Brad Frost 550(213); Cheryl Howe 562(190); Shellie Ross 185; Noel Frost 182

Inter City Ladies

Kristie Lashbrook 594(212); Ann Nichols 582(200); Michelle Jones 207; Kathy Kapa 204; Amanda Long 204; Jenny Delor 203; Kathleen Smith 200

Masters

Jerry Hendrick 708(256); Steve Lucas 664(224); Jeff Krauss 654(257); Chris Flathau 651(237); Kevin Kavanagh 643(256)

People of Faith

Don Thiede 705(258); Mark Kincer 640(244); Dave Cox 586; Tom Tenyer 224; Hayley Cox 577(198); Linda Crane 442(184); Connie Elsey 427; Rhonda Reynolds 165

PHL Early Four Man

Tom Schef 758(256A); Nick Conard 741(268); Matt Langolf 734(267); Chuck Ouellette, Jr. 731(257); Rick St. Onge 699(266); Tim Elsholz 694(268)

Saturday Nite Bridge

Kimmie Symon 662(245); Shannon Willey 206; Sandra Reagin 206; Wendy Tetreau 580(204); Jennifer Reynolds 538; Joe Tetreau 262; Ron Caldwell 697(259); Tim Donnenworth 711(258); Brad Andrews 681

Sunday Outcast

Cindy Badley 522(231); Deb Turck 469(184); Pm Reid 468; Kaitlyn Kirkendall 184; Bob Pihaylic 686; Dylan Jacobs 662(266); Andre Guyette 648(258); Ric Lepine 643(242)

Tuesday AM Adult

Marvel Holbrook 452(184); Phoebe Frizzle 506(183); Elmer Gamble 658(269); Paul Fleckenstein 603; Bob Hall 238

Tuesday Early Ladies

Sue Zuege 522(212); Marie Belkiewicz 483; Maxine Brown 179

Tuesday Mixed

Lee Van Beek 676(278); Steve Erwin 634(240); Greg Allen 621(242); Angie Allen 478(189); Rose Ichenberg 432(159); Misty Adair 425(148); Robyn Wilson 421(154)

Wednesday Night Ladies

Michelle Rowell 544; Judy Hawley 508(203); Jackie Karl 502; Eileen Moore 513(200); Michelle Kidder 500; Noel Frost 569(232); Laurie Lamont 524; Sharon Soyko 529; Karen Benner 534; Stacy Grant 503(241)

?ST. CLAIR RIVER LANES
Blue Water Men?s

Steve McCoy 809(300); Jeff Crowl 696(24); Ed Martin 703(239); Dirt Smith 667(254)

Kendeigh Seniors

Gary Nizza 657(290); Rose Hintze 431(166)

Ladies City League

Kristen Herbert 634(215); Joann Suisse 527(194); Melissa Simons 506(186); Anne Distelrath 502(185); Rose Tenyer 212

Monday Big 12

Jeff Meldrum 765(300); Wayne Leppek 708(266); Don Lumley 708(246); Rob Roberts 700(256); C.J. Oles 695(258); Mark Schoeneweg 695(248)

River Queens

Anita Hubbard 518(189); Karen McCoy 487(189); Sue Pope 477(181); Helen Gilbert 455(176); Darcy Patterson 190; Sandy McMullen 174

River Rats

Jim Gallaher 662(237); Lisa Meldrum 533(191); Kelli Simons 214; Jaclyn Meldrum 576(234); Matt Osterbech 747(279)

STRIKERS ENT CENTER
Monday Night Mixed

Dan Napier 645(259); Bruce Puhle 610(245); Jon Hartway 601(232); Jessie Calamita 530(200); Ruth Bauman 503(179); Kim Ludwig 489; Robin Sager 180

Thursday 50 Plus

Ron Messer 621(237); Bubba Van Burden 606(233); Dave Clay 571; Bill Carl 222; Sandra Eyon 502(191); Janet Hope 493(181); Janet Riedel 448(171)

Thursday Ridge Runners

Larry Essenmacher 782(300); Keith Matchel 738; John Essenmacher III 709(279); Justin Essenmacher 279

Tuesday Night Classic

Ken Tyson 698(278); Nick Bakeman 698; John Muczynski 691; Mike Job 296; Andy Schultz 267

Tuesday Richmond Seniors

Mike Fields 577(236); Don Bushbaker 530(202); Marvin Schade 527; Bubba Van Burden 204; Peg Vanantwerp 560(194); Janet Hope 478(184); Cecelia Plass 445; Norma Schwark 173

Women?s Wednesday Night

Vicki Vandevelde 589(226); Dot Morgan 563; Jessie Calamita 541; Linda Darling 211; Cheryl Riedel 206

Honor Roll

BLUE WATER BOWL
Women?s High Series

Alicia Schroeder 641
Jamie Yeager 605
Becky Van Hoesen 567
Joddy Swoffer 556
Anita Hubbard 540

Women?s High Game

Jamie Yeager 247
Alicia Schroeder 228
Becky Van Hoesen 225
Erica Johnson 221
Juanita Peter 211

Men?s High Series

Jeff Van Hoesen 772
Mike Raleigh 744
Mike Schindler 738
Terry Thompson 735
Steve Jakubowski 731

Men?s High Game

Mike Raleigh 279
Steve Jakubowski 279
Steve Watson 279
Terry Thompson 278
Mike Bennett 278

?BOWL O DROME
Women?s High Series

Margaret Nelson 624
Catherine Pulliam 596
Nadine LaGruth 550
Michelle Carlson 549
Trish Defrain 544

Women?s High Game

Nadine LaGruth 237
Margaret Nelson 218
Catherine Pulliam 212
Carissa Schott 204
Jane Morris 203

Men?s High Series

Jerry Grzech 715
Doug Campbell 708
Cliff Crawford 707
Johnnie Angerbrandt, Jr. 704
Rick Johnston 693
Ron Parmann 693

Men?s High Game

Doug Fowler 289
Rick Sosa 280
Ron Parmann 279
Rick Johnston 279
Jerry Grzech 268
Pete Lapka 268

?PORT HURON LANES
Women?s High Series

Melissa Legault 721
Kimmie Symon 662
Olivia Brown 652
Kristie Lashbrook 594
Dara Sinclair 592

Women?s High Game

Melissa Legault 257
Olivia Brown 245
Kimmie Symon 245
Stacy Grant 241
Noel Frost 232

Men?s High Series

Jesse Hojnacki 759
Tom Schef 758
Nick Conard 741
Matt Langolf 734
Chuck Ouellette, Jr. 731

Men?s High Game

Scott Badley 279
Lee Van Beek 278
Gordon Harvey 269
Mike Gossman 269
Jesse Hojnacki 269

?ST. CLAIR RIVER LANES
Women?s High Series

Kristen Herbert 634
Jaclyn Meldrum 576
Lisa Meldrum 533
Joann Suisse 527
Melissa Simons 506

Women?s High Game

Jaclyn Meldrum 234
Kristen Herbert 215
Kelli Simons 214
Rose Tenyer 212
Joann Suisse 194

Men?s High Series

Steve McCoy 809
Jeff Meldrum 765
Wayne Leppek 708
Don Lumley 708
Ed Martin 703

Men?s High Game

Jeff Meldrum 300
Steve McCoy 300
Gary Nizza 290
Matt Osterbech 279
Wayne Leppek 266

?STRIKERS ENT CENTER
Women?s High Series

Vicki Vandevelde 589
Dot Morgan 563
Peg Vanantwerp 560
Jessie Calamita 541
Ruth Bauman 503

Women?s High Game

Vicki Vandevelde 226
Linda Darling 211
Cheryl Riedel 206
Jessie Calamita 200
Peg Vanantwerp 194

Men?s High Series

Larry Essenmacher 782
Keith Matchel 738
John Essenmacher, III 709
Ken Tyson 698
Nick Bakeman 698

Men?s High Game

Mike Job 296
Justin Essenmacher 279
Ken Tyson 278
Andy Schultz 267
John Essenmacher, Jr. 258

Source: http://bluewatersportsnetwork.com/2012/12/recreation-bowling-scoreboard/

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