Thursday, February 28, 2013

Owner: Dog may have been poisoned at Westminster

US-ANIMALS-WESTMINSTER-DOG SHOWAFP/Getty Images

A row of Samoyeds are groomed at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show on Feb. 12, 2013 in New York.

updated 6:23 p.m. ET Feb. 28, 2013

NEW YORK - A dog owner says she thinks there's a chance her prized pet was deliberately poisoned while competing at the Westminster Kennel Club show, causing it to die several days later.

"It is in the realm of possibility," Lynette Blue told The Associated Press on Thursday.

Blue co-owns a 3-year-old Samoyed named Cruz, and said he probably swallowed poison at Westminster earlier this month. Four days after competing, the dog died, on Feb. 16, while at a show in Colorado.

Blue has worked since the 1970s with Samoyeds, a sturdy, medium-sized breed. She said that while there was no evidence foul play was involved, certain symptoms were consistent with dogs who ingest rat or mouse poison. That was the reason she said she decided against a necropsy - an autopsy for animals.

"The timeline adds up. There's no other scenario we can come up with other than poison," she said.

Asked if she thought it was intentional, she said: "I don't think we'll ever know."

The dog's death was first reported by The New York Times.

Cruz's handler, Robert Chaffin, told the Times he thought extreme animal rights activists may have been to blame. Members of some animal groups have criticized shows featuring purebred dogs in the past.

In 2010, two members of the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals stood in the middle of the Westminster best-in-show ring at Madison Square Garden and held protest signs.

But PETA co-founder and president Ingrid Newkirk said "it makes no sense whatsoever" that an animal rights activist would harm an animal.

"It's a fantasy, it's a fallacy," she told the AP by phone Thursday night. "How dare you point a finger and cast aspersions when you haven't a clue."

The veterinarian who treated Cruz, Molly Comiskey, told the Times: "Dogs are dogs. It's not anyone's fault. They eat stuff; they get into things; they make bad decisions."

The 137th Westminster drew 2,721 purebred entries. Cruz, one of 33 Samoyeds list in the show, did not win any ribbons in the best of breed judging.

"We have never, to our knowledge, had an incident at our show where a dog has become ill or was harmed as a result of being poisoned," the kennel club said in a statement.

"After conversation with the co-owner of the dog in question, it was established that the dog left Georgia on Monday and flew to New York, he was exhibited at our show on Tuesday, and flew to Denver on Wednesday morning where he subsequently became ill on Saturday. Unfortunately, no autopsy was performed, so there are a lot of unanswered questions," the statement said.

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/50997445/ns/sports-westminster_dog_show/

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Letters to the Editor: Prager, vocational skills, BDS movement ...

February 27, 2013


Prager and Self-Esteem

In a recent article, Dennis Prager wrote an oversimplified and sweeping criticism of self-esteem (?Behavior Matters Most,? Feb. 15). He claims that self-esteem promotes the idea that feelings are more important than actions.

True self-esteem comes from a personal recognition of a job well done, of a life well lived. It brings to the individual constant, reliable internal support when storm clouds arrive. I believe that constructive action generates self-esteem, and this aim of doing good works is the goal and that this positive action generates self-esteem, not as the goal but as a byproduct of doing good works. This is true for adults in their actions and equally true for children whose self-esteem can be boosted by reaching appropriate goals, supported and aided by aware parents, teachers and even peers.

I have known Prager for many years and he has an ample supply of self-esteem. Does he believe that his feelings of self-esteem are more important than his actions? No way.

I agree that a false sense of self-importance can come from an effort to meet unfulfilled needs.?But to condemn self-esteem with such a broad brush seems totally inconsistent with Prager?s persistent claims of objectivity.

Richard Gunther
Los Angeles

Editor?s note: For a response to this letter, please read Dennis Prager?s column here.


Bring Back Vocational Training?in Jewish Education

This is a very important development for Jewish education (?Empowering Our Children With Vocational Skills,? Feb. 22). Although vocational training was an integral part of Jewish education at the turn of the last century and is still integrated in European Jewish schools, it has dropped out of the North American Jewish day school curriculum. Notwithstanding Zionism?s dignity of labor, we need to address the vocational and manual skills of children as part of a holistic and spiritually creative learning environment.

Michael Shire
via jewishjournal.com


Men of Distinction

Roberto Loiederman?s article captured the essence of the Brandeis Men?s Group (?Old Jewish Men and a Place to Call Home,? Feb. 22). He showed how men who had led useful, active lives are able to continue doing so after they retire.?

Our members range in age from the mid-60s and up. They were judges, doctors, lawyers, salesmen, educators and businessmen. Many were distinguished.? They include Walter Graf, a pioneer of paramedicine in the United States; Harold Savinar, the founder and owner of one of the largest luggage stores west of the Mississippi;?and Gerry Sallus, one of the leaders of the General Motors team that built Sunraycer, the vehicle that won the first Australia solar-powered race.

The enthusiasm of our membership for our many activities each month and for helping Brandeis University grow its scholarship program and its scientific research centers makes the Brandeis Men?s Group a great organization.

Thank you for the excellent article.

Richard S. Harmetz, co-chair
Brandeis Men?s Group


Pushing Back Against BDS

Thanks, Jewish Journal and?Jonah Lowenfeld, for an update on our Israel bashers from the Boycott-Divest-Sanctions (BDS) movement (?BDS Call Pushes California Pension Funds,? Feb. 22). Readers can Google Anna Baltzer, Estee Chandler and Shakeel Syed, executive director at the Islamic Shura Council of Southern California, to see all the local mishegoss. You would be surprised to see what lengths they are going to in order to disparage the Jewish state.

But don?t despair. Find ways to help Jewish students on campus, send Jewish and Muslim students to Israel, and connect Israeli universities with their counterparts here. That?s what?s happening with Orange County Jewish Federation & Family Services under the auspices of their president, Shalom Elcott. Let?s turn a negative into a positive.

Richard Bernstein
Los Angeles


What?s in a (Spacecraft) Name?

I wish the Jewish people and the State of Israel success in embarking upon the exciting but challenging venture to the surface of the moon by 2015 (?One Giant Leap for the Jewish State,? Feb. 22). I think it would be a splendid idea if SpaceIL renamed the craft ?Ramon? as its final designation in honor and memory of Israeli astronaut Ilan Ramon, who perished in the Columbia shuttle disaster.

Alexander Harold Hersh
via jewishjournal.com


Seeking Memories

Did you go to Louis B. Silver Religious School at Pasadena Jewish Temple & Center in the last 26 years? Our much loved school director, Debby Singer, is retiring. We are looking for letters, photos, and your special memories for a tribute book. Please contact executivedirector@pjtc.net for information.

Stacy Miller
via e-mail

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Source: http://www.jewishjournal.com/letters_to_the_editor/article/letters_to_the_editor_prager_vocational_skills_bds_movement_spaceil

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Gas prices fall amid plentiful supply

LONDON (Reuters) - Wholesale gas prices fell on Wednesday as imports increased through a Belgium pipeline and flows from Norway hit their highest for a year, while demand is set to decline as temperatures rise, traders said.

Gas prices for delivery on Thursday were trading at 70.50 pence per therm at 10.15 a.m. British Time, down 0.7 pence from prices paid for Wednesday delivery, while gas for within-day delivery traded at 70.25 pence a therm, down 0.75.

"We've seen flows increase through continental pipelines as the spreads with continental gas have made it attractive to withdraw from Dutch and German storage and send it to the UK," said one gas trader.

"The weather is getting milder but with UK storage levels low, an unplanned outage has the potential to prompt prices to rise again," the trader added.

Wednesday's gas demand was expected to be 353.8 million cubic metres (mcm), 18 percent above the seasonal norm, data from National Grid showed.

Imports through the IUK pipeline that runs from continental Europe rose to 43 mcm/day, up 7 mcm/d up from Tuesday.

Gas deliveries from Norway to Britain rose by 1.8 mcm to 134.2 mcm, the highest level in more than a year.

Analysts forecast demand would fall in the coming days as temperatures are forecast by the Met Office to rise to 9 degrees Celsius by Thursday, up from a maximum of around 4 degrees earlier in the week.

Britain's gas storage sites were filled to an average of 24.2 percent on Tuesday evening, down 1.7 percent from the day before, data from Gas Infrastructure Europe showed, and down from 57 percent at the beginning of February.

Withdrawal capacity at Rough, the UK's largest storage site, will be reduced by 50 percent between 0000 and 1200 GMT on Thursday, according to operator Centrica, and again on 3 March.

Traders said the planned outage had already been priced in while analysts expect storage levels to rise because of expected lower demand.

"A bullish risk factor for the day-ahead is the current low storage stock levels, which means prompt prices could suddenly turn very bullish if additional flexibility is required during the day," analysts at Reuters Point Carbon said in a daily report.

Further along the curve, the March contract was priced at 67.75, down 0.4 pence, amid expectations by some forecasters that Britain will see temperatures close to or above the seasonal norm next week.

Gas for summer delivery traded up 0.25 pence to 64.80 pence as Brent crude oil prices rose around 40 cents to $113.13/barrel.

British power prices for day ahead delivery traded at 53.75 pounds a megawatt-hour, down 3.25 pounds from Tuesday's close.

(Reporting by John McGarrity; Editing by Helen Massy-Beresford)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gas-prices-fall-amid-plentiful-supply-112134935.html

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

SES New York Keynote Speaker Says Internet is TV's Best Friend ...

mike-proulx-laughThe Internet didn?t kill TV! According to Mike Proulx, the Internet has become TV?s best friend. Proulx will be the opening keynote speaker at SES New York 2013. The leading event for experienced marketing and advertising professionals will take place March 25-28, 2013, at the New York Marriott Marquis.

Proulx is a Senior Vice President and the Director of Social Media at Hill Holliday, a renowned advertising agency based in Boston, where he leads a team with a focus on cross-channel integration, emerging and social media. He has spent the last 17 years working at various interactive, high-tech, and new media companies on the agency-side, client-side, and as an entrepreneur. He has spoken at dozens of events and has been widely featured in the press including The New York Times, Fast Company, TV Guide, Forbes, BusinessWeek, Mashable, BuzzFeed, and NPR.

Proulx conceived, produced, directed, and co-host the TVnext summit, which took place in early 2011 and 2012. He is the co-author of Social TV, a best-selling book from Wiley publishing that launched in February of 2012. He is also the host of the social TV web series, ?The Pulse on Lost Remote?. He holds a Master?s degree in Computer Information Systems from Bentley University and in 2012 was named the Ad Club?s Media All Star.

His opening keynote is titled, ?Social TV: How Marketers Can Reach and Engage Audiences by Connecting Television to the Web, Social Media, and Mobile.?

Search Engine Watch (SEW) asked Mike Proulx (MP) five questions about his upcoming keynote. Here are his answers:

SEW: How does the convergence of television with the web, social media, and mobile change our behaviors and shake up our long standing beliefs about TV?

MP: There are those who believe that television is a traditional medium with an impending death. The web, social media, and mobile have evolved TV into a multi-screen experience that transcends devices. Not only are we watching more television than ever before, we?re interacting with programming on the ?second screen? in ways that enrich storylines and bring us together to virtually co-view. The modern era of television is a new media that?s more social, more connected, and more portable?and because of this TV is more alive than it?s ever been.

SEW: How has social media created a new and powerful "backchannel" and why does this fuel the renaissance of live broadcasts?

MP: There are a ton of posts happening in social media about any given TV show as it airs. Since Twitter is open and public, it acts as television?s backchannel filled with real-time commentary and conversation ? And it?s not just about TV series but also TV commercials giving producers and marketers instant feedback about their content. Live television events are seeing some of the highest ratings in years and social media brings a level of community and connection to TV watching the likes of which the medium has never before experienced.

SEW: Can you give us some examples of how mobile devices allow us to watch and interact with television whenever and wherever we want?

MP: Tablets, smartphones, and laptops enable television?s portability but it?s apps like HBO Go, ABC Player, Xfinity Remote, and CNN that deliver ?TV? content via those devices. And in the 4G world of mobile, we can watch TV in places once inconceivable. My favorite spot? Laying out on the roof deck on a warm summer night with my iPad in hand streaming HBO?s The Newsroom.

SEW: Why would ?connected TVs? blend web and television content into a unified big screen experience that will bring us back into our living rooms?

MP: Apple TV, Roku, Boxee TV, Google TV, Samsung Smart TVs, etc. stream online video (that was once relegated to our computer screens) onto the ?big screen? of our living rooms. HD YouTube clips suddenly come to life in ways that are far more impactful and dynamic than tiny smartphone screens further blurring the lines of what?s ?TV.? While the notion of TV everywhere lets us watch TV at will regardless of our physical location, the increasingly seamless ability to channel streaming video through the TV set makes the living room that much more compelling.

SEW: With the television landscape changing, why should brands approach the medium once labeled ?traditional? as new media?

MP: TV has become mashed up with the Web, social media, and mobile. Television networks, providers, brands, and agencies must continue to unshackle themselves from dated business and advertising models and rediscover television as a new medium. This means planning television and digital together to tell stories across devices and engage viewers with TV experiences not just TV shows. The speed, scale, and degree of change that has and is happening create enormous opportunity for those brands who have the courage to innovate.

SES New York 2013 offers a variety of conference passes and on-site training. If you register by Thursday, March 7, 2013, you can save up to $600 on Platinum or All Access passes.

For more information, click on Rates and Registration Details. Group discounts for 4 or more pass holders from the same company are also available by contacting [email?protected] and are the best value for the lowest price possible.

I should disclose that SES New York is a client of my agency. But, trust me, TV is not dead yet.


SES New York

Become an Expert Digital Marketer at SES New York
March 25-28, 2013: With dozens of sessions on Search, Social, Local and Mobile, you'll leave SES with everything and everyone you need to know. Hurry, early bird rates expire February 21. Register today!

Source: http://searchenginewatch.com/article/2250850/SES-New-York-Keynote-Speaker-Says-Internet-is-TVs-Best-Friend

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3 dead in Swiss workplace shooting

Police stand in front of a wood-processing company in Menznau, central Switzerland, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013, where several people were killed in a shooting. Police in Lucerne canton (state) said in a statement that the shooting occurred shortly after 9 a.m. at the premises of Kronospan, a company in the small town west of Lucerne. They said there were ?several dead and several seriously injured people? and that rescue services were deployed and the scene sealed off. (AP Photo/Keystone, Urs Flueeler)

Police stand in front of a wood-processing company in Menznau, central Switzerland, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013, where several people were killed in a shooting. Police in Lucerne canton (state) said in a statement that the shooting occurred shortly after 9 a.m. at the premises of Kronospan, a company in the small town west of Lucerne. They said there were ?several dead and several seriously injured people? and that rescue services were deployed and the scene sealed off. (AP Photo/Keystone, Urs Flueeler)

Police stand in front of a wood-processing company in Menznau, central Switzerland, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013, where several people were killed in a shooting. Police in Lucerne canton (state) said in a statement that the shooting occurred shortly after 9 a.m. at the premises of Kronospan, a company in the small town west of Lucerne. They said there were ?several dead and several seriously injured people? and that rescue services were deployed and the scene sealed off. (AP Photo/Keystone, Urs Flueeler)

Police stand in front of a wood-processing company in Menznau, central Switzerland, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013, where several people were killed in a shooting. Police in Lucerne canton (state) said in a statement that the shooting occurred shortly after 9 a.m. at the premises of Kronospan, a company in the small town west of Lucerne. They said there were ?several dead and several seriously injured people? and that rescue services were deployed and the scene sealed off. (AP Photo/Keystone, Urs Flueeler)

A police stands in front of a wood-processing company in Menznau, central Switzerland, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013, where several people were killed in a shooting. Police in Lucerne canton (state) said in a statement that the shooting occurred shortly after 9 a.m. at the premises of Kronospan, a company in the small town west of Lucerne. They said there were ?several dead and several seriously injured people? and that rescue services were deployed and the scene sealed off. (AP Photo/Keystone, Urs Flueeler)

(AP) ? A longtime employee opened fire at a wood-processing company in central Switzerland on Wednesday, leaving three people dead, including the assailant, in the country's second multiple-fatality shooting in two months, police said.

Seven other people were wounded, six of them seriously, in the shooting at the premises of the company Kronospan, in the small town of Menznau, Lucerne criminal police chief Daniel Bussmann told reporters.

The incident occurred as the Swiss parliament prepares to consider tightening some aspects of the country's famously lax gun legislation.

The assailant, a 42-year-old Swiss male, arrived at the premises shortly after 9 a.m., drew a pistol and started firing. Police spokesman Kurt Graf said the shootings took place in the building's canteen area.

Officials didn't immediately have further details on the weapon or how the assailant acquired it. They also did not know how the assailant was killed.

"A lot of things are unclear at this stage," said Ida Glanzmann-Hunkeler, a Christian Democrat lawmaker who lives near the scene of the shooting.

Glanzmann-Hunkeler said a proposal will be put before parliament in the coming weeks that would require greater exchange of information between the gun registries kept by Switzerland's 26 cantons. Authorities would also record whether a person is considered mentally fit to own a gun, and increase officials' powers to confiscate weapons if they aren't.

But the shooting is unlikely to immediately revive calls for ex-soldiers to store their military-issued firearms in secure army depot. The country has a long-standing tradition for men to keep their military rifles after completing compulsory military service.

This partly accounts for the high rate of gun ownership in the country, where some 2.3 million firearms are owned by a population of about 8 million.

A referendum to tighten the laws was defeated at the ballot box in 2011. At the time, opponents pointed to Switzerland's relatively low rate of gun crime, with just 24 gun killings in 2009, which works out to a rate of about 0.3 per 100,000 inhabitants. The U.S. rate that year was about 11 times higher.

Still, there have been several high-profile incidents over the years, including the killing of 14 people at a city council meeting in Zug, not far from Lucerne, in 2001. And in early January, a 33-year-old man killed three women and wounded two men in a southern Swiss village.

Critics and advocates of gun rights doubted the latest shooting would lead to drastic law changes beyond the proposal now before parliament.

"If we demanded another referendum now, many people would say we already dealt with this two years ago," said Tobias Estermann, a member of the anti-weapons group Switzerland Without an Army.

Peter Schilliger, a Lucerne lawmaker, said the popularity of shooting clubs in Switzerland means there is strong grassroots support for gun ownership.

"And anyway, it will always be possible to come by a weapon somehow," he said.

Kronospan Chief Executive Mauro Capozzo said that the suspected assailant had been "with us for more than 10 years ? a quiet man, no other incidents involving him are known." Graf said the man was still with the company at the time of the shooting.

According to the local town council, Kronospan has some 450 employees. There was no immediate word on a possible motive; Capozzo said the company hasn't laid anyone off recently.

___

Moulson reported from Berlin. Frank Jordans in Berlin also contributed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-27-Switzerland-Shooting/id-51bfaa55371b4331b01f87f53cfa368b

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

UFC 157?s Three Stars: Ronda Rousey, Robbie Lawler and Dennis Bermudez shine

UFC 157 completed the rare trick of living up to its intense hype. Who stood out as stars?

No. 1 star ? Ronda Rousey: Is there any better word to describe Rousey than star? After months of Rousey appearing on television, in magazines and on every site on the internet, she showed she's more than a media darling. Rousey not only escaped a submission attempt by Liz Carmouche, but also finished the fight with just 11 seconds to go in the first round. That's a star.

No. 2 star ? Robbie Lawler: Looking at this fight card, would you ever have guessed that Lawler would emerge as a star? Before returning to the UFC on Saturday, he lost three of his last five bouts. He was up against Josh Koscheck, who was eager to get a big win after losing to Johny Hendricks. But the power in Lawler's hands knocked Koscheck out in the first round, and earned Lawler a $50,000 Knockout of the Night bonus.

No. 3 star ? Dennis Bermudez: When the preliminary fights started, the Honda Center wasn't even half full. The UFC's tailgate was still going strong in the parking lot. But as Bermudez's bout with Matt Grice wore on, I noticed the stands filling up. Perhaps they heard about the Fight of the Year candidate happening inside, with Bermudez throwing everything he had at Grice, and Grice not only withstanding the punches but coming back with big punches of his own. They each took home a $50,000 Fight of the Night bonus.

Who were your three stars from the night? Tell in the comments, on Facebook or on Twitter.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/ufc-157-three-stars-ronda-rousey-robbie-lawler-143258534--mma.html

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Residential Finance Corporation Names Sonya Gray Director of ...

COLUMBUS, Ohio, Feb. 25, 2013 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Residential Finance Corporation, an award-winning nationwide mortgage lender, has hired Sonya Gray as the director of organizational development. In that role, she will lead the company's employee performance and development efforts, including the management of new hire training, mentoring and leadership programs, and succession planning.

Gray has extensive experience as a learning and development strategist in the financial services industry. Prior to joining Residential Finance, Gray served as senior manager, employee learning for Discover Home Loans, Inc., a subsidiary of Discover Financial Services, where she led the training of mortgage staff and the development and design of the company's training programs. Previously, Gray held similar duties as employee learning director for LendingTree, LLC, where she managed training staff at all company locations nationwide. Gray also served as director of training and development for Baker & Taylor, Inc. a Fortune 250 global information and entertainment services distribution company.

Gray will work closely with Residential Finance's management to design and implement training and development programs. "With Residential Finance's aggressive multi-channel growth plans, Sonya is the perfect choice for this role," said Mark Fowler, chief revenue officer and vice president of production. "In particular, Sonya's experience and expertise developing training programs for high-profile lending organizations will be a huge asset as we move forward with our expansion."

"I'm excited to join Residential Finance, a company with a solid growth plan and future," Gray said. "The leadership at Residential Finance is committed to the professional development of employees, which makes the company a great place to work and ultimately leads to greater customer satisfaction."

Gray received a bachelor's of science degree in physical education from Gardner-Webb University and a master's degree in exercise physiology/cardiac rehabilitation from the University of Georgia.

About Residential Finance Corp. (RFC)

Founded in 1997, Residential Finance Corporation (www.ResidentialFinance.com) offers homeowners and homebuyers nationwide a wide range of home mortgage loan options, including special lower-rate government-insured FHA and VA loans, jumbo mortgage loans, and reverse mortgages. The company's highly-trained staff delivers mortgage expertise and customer service excellence, winning the company many awards, including Columbus Business First Corporate Caring Award, Columbus Business Journal Best Place to Work, Florida Trends Best Company in Florida, American Business Award Sales Department of the Year, Inc Magazine INC5000 Fastest Growing Company, and American Society of Training and Development Excellence in Practice. Headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, Residential Finance has branches throughout the country, and is seeking loan officers and branch managers to join their network of branches. For more information about these positions, please visit MyRFCCareers.com or email Jobs@MyRFC.com. NMLS#1652. Equal Housing Lender. Equal Opportunity Employer.

The Residential Finance Corporation logo is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=17313

Press Contact Mary McGarity Strategic Vantage Mortgage Public Relations  203-513-2721

Source: http://globenewswire.com/news-release/2013/02/25/526042/10022995/en/Residential-Finance-Corporation-Names-Sonya-Gray-Director-of-Organizational-Development.html

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MacGyver Challenge Winner: Build a Better Mouse Trap with LEGO

MacGyver Challenge Winner: Build a Better Mouse Trap with LEGOIn this week's MacGyver Challenge, we asked you to hack something cool with LEGO pieces. We received some great entries, but the winning hack shows us how to build a better mouse trap.

Check out the description of the winning entry below and read about some of our other favorite entries.


MacGyver Challenge Winner: Build a Better Mouse Trap with LEGO

Winner: Build a Better Mouse Trap with LEGO

Peter recently had a mouse in his flat. Sure, he could have gone out and purchased a simple no-kill mouse trap or he could have made one using a jar and nickle. But where's the style in that? Instead, Peter and his son build a mouse trap using LEGO pieces. It has a tricky swing door so the mouse can enter but not leave and a detachable roof for easy release. It worked like a charm.


Honorable Mentions

We got a lot of great entries and we'd be remiss if we didn't share some of our favorites. Here are some of the entries that really impressed us.

MacGyver Challenge Winner: Build a Better Mouse Trap with LEGO

Create a LEGO Desk Organizer

Zach created this clever little desk organizer to hold pens, pencils, and other supplies close at hand. He also included a display stand for his business cards. When his coworkers find his LEGO creation amusing, Zach just tells them "Hey, I'm an engineer. LEGOs are how I started my career."


MacGyver Challenge Winner: Build a Better Mouse Trap with LEGO

Organize Your Silverware With LEGO

Sean has a silverware drawer that is only seven inches wide. He had trouble finding a five-piece silverware holder that fit a drawer that narrow, so he decided make one himself. Using LEGO pieces gave him exactly the customizability he needed to get the job done. Plus, it was a good chance to play with his collection.


Build a Rotisserie Refrigerator

MacGyver Challenge Winner: Build a Better Mouse Trap with LEGO The BBombers are out to make all us older folk feel just a little bit lazy. They are a 5th grade Lego League team (where were those when I was a kid) that has created a working prototype of an easy-access rotisserie refrigerator. Check out the video and let them explain it themselves.


Make a LEGO Laptop Stand

MacGyver Challenge Winner: Build a Better Mouse Trap with LEGOWeston's project falls into that category of sure, I could go out and buy it but, you know, LEGOs! He has created a rather cool-looking laptop stand, which turns out is actually very stable.


LEGO Docks Hold Any Smartphone You Can Imagine

We got several LEGO smartphone (or tablet) docks that we also wanted to share. Just hit up the gallery below to check them out.


A big thanks to everyone who took the time to send us entries! Be sure to check back every week for a new challenge.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/v35jkKDUTek/macgyver-challenge-winner-build-a-better-mouse-trap-with-lego

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Monday, February 25, 2013

People worldwide hang out with astronauts on Google+

Via?Twitter, Google+ and YouTube, people from over the world joined the first-ever live online video conference with three astronauts aboard the International Space Station.

By Miriam Kramer,?SPACE.com / February 22, 2013

Astronauts (L to R) Marshburn, Ford and Hadfield float free aboard the International Space Station at the conclusion of the Google+ Hangout on Friday.

NASA

Enlarge

Thousands of space fans young and old got a taste of what life in space is like Friday (Feb. 22) during NASA's first-ever Google+ Hangout with astronauts on the International Space Station.

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The live online video conference connected three members of the space station's crew with chat participants from around the world and came just days after the $100 billion space laboratory?briefly lost communications?with NASA Mission Control.

"The space station is a robust, tough space ship," Canadian Space Agency?astronaut Chris Hadfield?said when asked about the communications malfunction. "We worked together as a crew following the procedures as we're trained to do. After just a couple orbits, we had the computers talking to the antennas properly so we could talk to the ground. We were working together as a team."

Expedition 34 commander Kevin Ford and flight engineer Tom Marshburn, both of NASA, joined Hadfield in answering questions from their online audience, which peppered the crew with questions via Twitter, Google+ and YouTube. The questions ranged from what books the astronauts read to how a cat might deal with life in zero gravity. [Take a video tour inside the space station]

Two students from Union High School in Iowa asked the astronauts to explain why space agencies around the world have people living in space.

"The whole point of having a space station is to have some place in space where people can take their ideas," Ford responded. "We have a huge power supply up here. We have a lot of rack space, and we have a lot of scientists on the ground with a lot of ideas of things to do in space."

Other questions focused on the health of the astronauts.

Space station astronauts are expected to monitor their health very closely to see how the body changes when exposed to microgravity. Hadfield was in the middle of one of those health experiments today.

Marshburn ? a medical doctor ? explained that two non-invasive temperature probes attached to Hadfield's head and chest allow the scientists see how his natural body cycles have changed since being in orbit.

Because the space station experiences 16 sunsets and as many sunrises in any given day, the circadian rhythms of station astronauts tend to change a great deal while in orbit, the astronauts said. Hadfield's temperature-monitoring probe will help doctors keep track of just how much those change.

The space station residents have contingency plans for medical emergencies too.

A group of students from the Neil Armstrong Institute in Monterrey, Mexico asked the spaceflyers what would happen if one of their colleagues fell ill while in space.

Marshburn explained that there are always two medical officers as part of the six person crew. The designated residents are trained to perform medical procedures that will stabilize the injured spaceflyer until he or she can be sent back to Earth using the Russian Soyuz capsule that brought them to the station.?

The question and answer session with the space station lasted about 20 minutes, but NASA astronauts on the ground Nicole Stott and Ron Garan fielded questions from the audience for the other 40 minutes.

Hadfield, Ford and Marshburn make up half of the Expedition 34 crew currently living on the?International Space Station. Three Russian cosmonauts round out the crew.

The International Space Station is the largest structure ever built in space. It is the size of a football field and was constructed by 15 different countries working under five space agencies representing the United States, Russia, Europe, Canada and Japan.

Construction of the space station began in 1998 and it has been continuously staffed by international astronaut crews working on a rotating mission schedule since 2000.

NASA also provides?live video from the International Space Station?via Ustream, as well as?live audio from the space station.

Follow Miriam Kramer on Twitter?@mirikramer?or SPACE.com?@Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.?

Copyright 2013?SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/u37dssUrlZw/People-worldwide-hang-out-with-astronauts-on-Google

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Exit polls show center-left leading national vote

ROME (AP) ? Exit polls show Pier Luigi Bersani's center left coalition leading a national vote that is testing Italians' resolve to stay the course of painful economic reform.

Sky Italia says Bersani's coalition has taken 35.5 percent of the vote for the lower house of parliament, ahead of the center-right coalition under former Premier Silvio Berlusconi with 29 percent.

The poll by Tecne' has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percent.

A political movement founded by comic-turned-political agitator Beppe Grillo is projected to take 19 percent of the vote, while outgoing Premier Mario Monti's centrist coalition has 9.5 percent.

Polls closed at 1400 GMT, ending two days of voting. The first projections based on partial vote counts are expected in coming hours.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exit-polls-show-center-left-leading-national-vote-141937198--finance.html

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A simple Facebook message from a heartbroken friend of one of the tenants who lo...

A simple Facebook... | Facebook Sign Up
  • A simple Facebook message from a heartbroken friend of one of the tenants who lost almost everything three weeks ago in a deadly fire at Huntley?s Woodcreek Apartments has snowballed into a communitywide effort. http://shawurl.com/iu2

Source: http://www.facebook.com/nwherald/posts/10151587146382573

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Hill-Murray football coach Mauer arrested in Fridley prostitution sting

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Hill-Murray High School football coach Mark Mauer was arrested Tuesday evening by Fridley police during a prostitution sting.

Mauer, 54, of Woodbury, was one of 19 men and four women arrested in a two-day sting at the LivINN Hotel on Central Avenue NE., officials said. The women are charged with prostitution and the men with soliciting.

The suspects, none of whom live in Fridley, were booked Friday at the Anoka County jail.

Mauer, a member of a St. Paul clan well-known for its athletic success ? Minnesota Twins catcher Joe Mauer is his cousin ? was named coach at Hill-Murray last year and served as a major-gifts officer at the Catholic school in Maplewood.

According to the police report, Mauer arrived at the hotel Tuesday evening after making a date on the phone with an undercover officer, in response to an escort ad placed on an adult website. He agreed to pay her $100 for sexual intercourse, then left the room to get the money and was arrested.

Mauer told police that he was just ?messing around,? that it was ?stupid? to have gone there and that he had not intended to return when he left the room. Police said he was carrying Viagra pills.

In Mauer?s first season last year at Hill-Murray, he coached the Pioneers to an 8-3 record and the state tournament, where they lost a Class 4A quarterfinal to Holy Family.

He was head coach at Concordia University in St. Paul from 2004 to 2010 and compiled 40 victories, the most in the school?s history. Under Mauer, the team won its conference championship in 2005 and made two minor bowl appearances.

For a very brief time, Mauer was a St. Paul City Council member. After working as an aide to Council Member Dino Guerin, a childhood friend, Mauer was named to the council in 1997 when Guerin resigned to join the Ramsey County Board. But he canceled plans to run for the seat when, only a month later, he was offered a job as an assistant coach at North Dakota State University.

Mauer was a star quarterback at Harding High School in St. Paul and played football and baseball at the University of Nebraska. He has also worked as an assistant football coach at the University of Wisconsin and New Mexico State University.

This is the third time in recent years that a Hill-Murray employee has been accused of illegal sexual conduct. In 2010, former school president Joseph Peschges pleaded guilty to indecent conduct in connection with a police sting in a St. Paul park. Matthew Ricker, a former assistant boys basketball coach at Hill-Murray, pleaded guilty in 2007 to harassment for sending explicit messages to three players.

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Source: http://www.startribune.com/local/east/192569251.html

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Switched On: Moving forward with leaning back

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

DNP Switched On Moving forward with leaning back

Just a few months have passed between the introduction of the Droid DNA and the new HTC One, but it seems that HTC has been turned upside down in that time. While the Droid DNA was introduced in conjunction with Verizon and can't be a wholly representative picture of how HTC might have introduced the device otherwise, it was a spec- and design-driven product -- a 5-inch, 1080p display with a 440-ppi density that appeared to spill over onto sides that included a microperforation.

In contrast, little was said about the HTC One hardware itself until later in the device's introduction, surprising because the HTC One is not only the most attractive handset the company has ever built, but also certainly one of the most attractive on the market. While it is an Android device, the casing builds upon the tapered, Windows Phone-inspired 8X, substituting aluminum for polycarbonate. That said, there is also the spillover glass effect found on the Droid DNA. The HTC One retains the 1080p display found in the Droid DNA. However, since the screen is smaller, the pixel density is even higher (468 ppi) than in that record-breaking device.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/24/moving-forward-with-leaning-back/

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

'A Good Day To Die Hard' Tops Box Office ... Barely

Fifth entry in Bruce Willis action series takes the #1 spot from Melissa McCarthy's 'Identity Thief.'
By Ryan J. Downey


Bruce Willis in "A Good Day to Die Hard"
Photo: Fox

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1702172/a-good-day-to-die-hard-box-office.jhtml

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Engineering control theory helps create dynamic brain models

Feb. 19, 2013 ? Models of the human brain, patterned on engineering control theory, may some day help researchers control such neurological diseases as epilepsy, Parkinson's and migraines, according to a Penn State researcher who is using mathematical models of neuron networks from which more complex brain models emerge.

"The dual concepts of observability and controlability have been considered one of the most important developments in mathematics of the 20th century," said Steven J. Schiff, the Brush Chair Professor of Engineering and director of the Penn State Center for Neural Engineering. "Observability and controlability theorems essentially state that if you can observe and reconstruct a system's variables, you may be able to optimally control it. Incredibly, these theoretical concepts have been largely absent in the observation and control of complex biological systems."

Those engineering concepts were originally designed for simple linear phenomena, but were later revised to apply to non-linear systems. Such things as robotic navigation, automated aircraft landings, climate models and the human brain all require non-linear models and methods.

"If you want to observe anything that is at all complicated -- having more than one part -- in nature, you typically only observe one of the parts or a small subset of the many parts," said Schiff, who is also professor of neurosurgery, engineering science and mechanics, and physics, and a faculty member of the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences. "The best way of doing that is make a model. Not a replica, but a mathematical representation that uses strategies to reconstruct from measurements of one part to the many that we cannot observe."

This type of model-based observability makes it possible today to create weather predictions of unprecedented accuracy and to automatically land an airliner without pilot intervention.

"Brains are much harder than the weather," said Schiff. "In comparison, the weather is a breeze."

There are seven equations that govern weather, but the number of equations for the brain is uncountable, according to Schiff. One of the problems with modeling the brain is that neural networks in the brain are not connected from neighbor to neighbor. Too many pathways exist.

"We make and we have been making models of the brain's networks for 60 years," Schiff said at the recent annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Boston. "We do that for small pieces of the brain. How retina takes in an image and how the brain decodes that image, or how we generate simple movements are examples of how we try now to embody the equations of motion of those limited pieces. But we never used the control engineer's trick of fusing those models with our measurements from the brain. This is the key -- a good model will synchronize with the system it is coupled to."

Schiff is looking for the models that represent the parts of the brain he is studying. He looks at the model to see if it can simulate what he observed and if he can fuse the model with the real system. He and his colleagues, with support from the National Institutes of Health, are exploring a wide range of control strategies for epilepsy, Parkinson's disease and migraines.

To do this with brain networks, researchers often have to measure from only one or a few nodes of the system and seek to reconstruct the rest.

"We need to simplify, and then ask, how far into that network can we reconstruct?" asks Schiff. "How far can we control?"

Using group theory, Schiff is trying to answer these questions. Group theory tests whether the inputs onto these nodes can be swapped. If a regular swap of the nodes ends up with the same network, then this is a symmetry of the network. Such symmetries underlie powerful ways to simplify models that represent the underlying structure within brain networks. The brain is full of such symmetries as neurons hook themselves up in rings and star patterns.

"But 10 billion neurons produce a number of possible networks that no one wants to think about," said Schiff. "Luckily, in the brain, internet or power grid we can begin to take symmetries into account. We don't need to go and specify all the particulars about how things are connected, but take advantage of the underlying symmetries in those networks and produce representative networks."

In essence, complicated networks can be boiled down to the simpler networks that represent what the complicated ones do. Brain symmetry permits synchrony to arise, and this is critical since synchronies are so important to both the normal and abnormal function of brain networks.

Recording from just one electrode from the brain is very limiting. Researchers and clinicians now use arrays of 100 or more electrodes to study epilepsy, but technology will soon provide the capability of deploying a 1,000 or more electrodes that, when fused with models, will enable us to reconstruct activity more deeply into the nervous system. "The pathologies of epilepsy or Parkinson's disease, we think are very 'simple,' compared with many more complex activities we perform in our brains, " said Schiff. "If they have more synchrony than normal they might produce really good reconstructions when fused with models."

These simplified models are important not just for these specific diseases, but because a fidelity model of the brain, one that models everything in detail, would be impossible to create. In addition, such large-scale models would be very inaccurate if used in such a control-engineering framework. If Parkinson's disease, epilepsy or migraines can be modeled more simply and still be accurate, then other brain pathologies or functions might also be modeled and controlled with simplified models.

The mechanism underneath migraine headaches is a very slow wave that propagates through the brain cortex. Schiff is using these engineering principles to model this wave. He and his colleagues are using these principles to do real time control of this wave phenomenon in brain.

"It is a very exciting time as we see the results of fusing these engineering and mathematical principles with observing and treating the brain," said Schiff who is the author of Neural Control Engineering: The Emerging Intersection between Control Theory and Neuroscience (MIT Press, 2012).

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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/top_news/top_health/~3/qP_8tiNmoZI/130219161257.htm

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

'Djesus Uncrossed' Finishes Tarantino Trilogy In The Best Way Possible

This past weekend, Christoph Waltz hosted "Saturday Night Live." Yes, he's not the first person you imagine when you think of sketch comedy, but having him lead the show opened the door to one fantastic "Django Unchained" parody. In the tradition of "Inglourious Basterds" and "Django Unchained," Quentin Tarantino's next movie, as "SNL" surmises, is [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/02/19/djesus-uncrossed-snl/

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What's in it for the horse, asks scientist - Features - Horsetalk.co.nz

unhappy-horseAre we justified in asking a horse to do something it doesn?t enjoy? The question has been posed by the chief scientist with the RSPCA in Australia, Dr Bidda Jones.

Dr Jones, in a presentation to the fifth Equitation Science Annual Conference at the University of Sydney, pondered whether riders had ever stopped to wonder whether horses shared their rider?s enjoyment of sporting and recreational activities.

Dr Jones argued that much more objective measures of welfare were needed and much more sophisticated ethical framework than current laws or codes provide.

?Horses are the basis of a multibillion-dollar industry. In Australia, their use in racing alone generates around $A4 billion a year and is inextricably linked with gambling and through taxation revenue to government funding. What other sport commands its own Ministerial portfolio?

?But ultimately, with the possible exception of police work, the things we make horses do ? racing, eventing, pony club, show jumping, trail riding, polocrosse, rodeo, endurance riding, reining and driving ? are all carried out for the same reason.

?Horse riding is not a productive, educational, scientific, or useful activity. It is something people do, directly or indirectly, for entertainment, pleasure, or fun.

?It could be argued that leaving the FEI to set rules for horse welfare is like putting the fox in charge of the hen house.?

?There are some obvious benefits to horses from their domestication and use by humans: the provision of food and shelter, protection from predators, disease prevention and care during illness and injury.

?But there is little evidence that horses benefit in any other significant way from our use of them, despite what we might like to think in our more romantic moments.

?Doing something for pleasure or fun is not an inherently bad thing, but it doesn?t provide much moral justification for an activity.

?That wouldn?t matter, if it wasn?t for the fact that the horse has to share the experience,? she said.

?So if that experience is not a good one, it raises the question of whether we should be making them do it at all.?

Dr Jones said if elite competition was to be ethically sustainable, it required clear action to ensure that welfare impacts were minimised.?

? Animals Australia

Public concern over the use of horses often focused on their performance in competitive events, she said, especially when there was a catastrophe in which horses were injured, died or had to be killed in front of an audience, citing?jumps racing?as an example.

?Death as an end-point is the most extreme example of ?what is in it for the horse?, when it comes to equitation. But there are other, non-lethal, activities that also attract public concern ? the use of whips in racing currently being the most prominent.?

However, most horse use in Australia was much less visible than racing, she said.

?Given that around 1% of the Australian population are horse owners, yet there are no restrictions on experience, age or training for recreational horse ownership, the potential for poor welfare due to ignorance or neglect is huge.

?But when horses are properly cared for, recreational horses that are left to their own devices for most of the time, may be the best off of all. From a behavioral and physiological perspective, it may be the elite, high performance horses that should attract more concern.

?Many of the activities embedded in traditional training, riding or competing can have serious adverse impacts on horse welfare.?

Issues raised with the RSPCA included:

Rollkur, from the book Tug of War by Gerd Heuschmann.

Rollkur, from the book Tug of War by Gerd Heuschmann.

  • Unnecessary invasive interventions.
  • Training and riding techniques that involve punishment or extreme control.
  • Use of specific types of tack that have a high potential to cause pain or distress, including double bridles, lever bits and cranked nosebands.
  • Use of artificial aids, such as spurs and whips.
  • Extreme challenges in competition which cause acute or chronic injury.
  • Repeated transport, long-distance transport.
  • Housing in single stalls, inappropriate feeding.
  • Lack of long-term responsibility for horses, leading to multiple ownership and wastage.

?Many of these issues are not about physical injury or exertion, but about the mental state of the horse. They can?t all be solved merely by having a vet present.?

Some of the issues raised were specific to a particular discipline, she said.

?For instance, in the outwardly sedate sport of dressage ? or what I call ballet for horses ? elite international competition rules, which set the stage for all lower levels, require the use of double bridles and spurs.

?These rules also encourage activities such as riding deep (through hyperflexion) or using tight nosebands to prevent the mouth gaping during competition.

?All of this in the quest for the outward appearance of precise control over the horse.

?Other issues cut across riding disciplines, such as housing horses in single stalls,? she said.

?Given that there are clear indications that when we use horses, the experience for the horse can be a very poor one, it is worth investigating what the legal protections are which might help prevent this from happening.

?I am often asked how it is that horses can be subjected to a sport like?jumps racingwhere there is a high risk of being killed, or are allowed to be?repeatedly struck with a whip? Surely the RSPCA can do something?

?Well, no, we can?t.

?There is currently no specific legislation to protect the welfare of horses in Australia apart from the general provisions of animal welfare laws, which contain only one or two specific references to horses. The situation is little different in other countries.

?Animal welfare legislation makes it possible to prosecute people who carry out acts that are considered to be cruel to animals ? but it doesn?t make it a legal requirement that all animals have good welfare.?

Determining whether an activity is cruel relies on the test of what is ?reasonable? or ?acceptable?, she said. ?If a traditional practice is not specifically banned it is generally considered to be ?reasonable?.

?It?s this interpretation that means whipping a thoroughbred up to 30 times as it closes in on the last stages of a race is considered legally ?reasonable?. It happens on a daily basis.

?And, although Australia is in the last stages of developing national animal welfare standards and guidelines for horses, it is unlikely that much will change in terms of what is currently regarded as ?reasonable?.?

Dr Jones raised the issue of industry codes, where in a particular discipline, be it show jumping or racing, competitors had to abide by specific rules or codes.

?For the most part these fail to acknowledge the welfare impacts of the discipline itself, and can actually reinforce practices that have adverse impacts by requiring them in competition.


?The FEI does have a Code of Conduct for the Welfare of the Horse ? but this is a two and a half page document containing very brief motherhood statements about the need to acknowledge and accept that at all times ?the welfare of the horse is paramount?.

?Hyperflexion in dressage is the only event-specific welfare issue so far addressed by the FEI, and even an entire workshop dedicated to this one topic failed to recommend any changes.

?In reality, it is human interest that is paramount when it comes to setting the rules of riding. It could be argued that leaving the FEI to set rules for horse welfare is like putting the fox in charge of the hen house.

?Legislation, codes and guidelines, then, are clearly not enough to protect horses from bad outcomes.

?Public concern for horses is likely to remain focused on the most visible issues such as serious injury and death.

?Frankly, the media are unlikely to get excited about the intricacies of dressage. But these details ARE important to the welfare of the horse ? and they are becoming increasingly important to many people on the inside of the sport ? and in many cases you have to be on the inside to know what the issues are.

?So what approach should be taken to determine what is acceptable to do to a horse for ?fun??

?We need objective measures of welfare and a much more sophisticated ethical framework than legislation or codes currently provide.?

Dr Jones said different uses of animals had different ethical justifications and attracted different levels of concern. ?What society considers ?acceptable? to do to animals varies according to the reason, or the justification for doing it.?

?We are also capable of holding conflicting views about how we should treat different sentient animals when the justification is the same.

?For example, our society accepts that pest animals, such as foxes and cane toads can be killed because they cause serious damage to agricultural and environmental assets, but the view is often different if the pest animal is a feral horse.?

Dr Jones cited a 1994 model developed by David Mellor and colleagues from New Zealand?s Massey University that translated into five domains of welfare impact:

  • Thirst, hunger and malnutrition
  • Environmental challenge
  • Disease, injury, functional impairment
  • Restriction of behaviour or social interaction

These four measures, she said, fed into the fifth domain which represented the overall mental state of the animal.

The model uses an ?impact scale? against each of these domains, which ranges from no impact to the most severe impact.

The score from each domain feeds into the score for domain five (since the mental state of the animal is affected by the status of the other domains), producing an overall impact grade.

?Applying this kind of ethical framework to the use of horses can help us establish exactly ?what?s in it for the horse?. It would provide an objective means of assessing the relative impact of different activities, identify ways to improve welfare, and help to draw the line between what is acceptable and unacceptable,? Dr Jones said.

However, objective data that measured the impact of a given horse activity would be needed, she said.

?Some of this information is already available, but there is a need for continuing research on the impact of different training and riding activities.

?The idea of minimising welfare impacts or costs sounds like a good approach, until it comes to considering equestrian competitions.

?Competition is the area where there is the most difficulty in applying the principles of utilitarian ethics, because the nature of competition is to increase the level of challenge or difficulty, which comes into direct conflict with the concept of minimising suffering.

?But the one advantage of competition over many other aspects of horse use, is that competition requires rules ? and with sufficient motivation, rules can be changed to reduce or avoid adverse impacts on horses.

?We need to ensure that increasing competition difficulty doesn?t mean increasing impact.

?The challenge is to keep up level of difficulty without compromising the welfare of the horse ? for example, relying more on the skill of the trainer and rider than making it harder for the horse.?

This, she said, required changing both the way in which people train and ride as well as the way in which events are judged.

?And,? she added, ?closing the door on those activities that, despite repeated attempts to reduce welfare risk, have proved too challenging.

?With the emergence of equitation science, we are understanding more and more about the impact of our activities on horses, so it should become easier for us to act to reduce these impacts.?

Dr Jones said major equestrian bodies needed to take an active role in promoting horse welfare, adopting improved techniques, and setting clear limits on what is acceptable and what is not.

?If elite competition is to be ethical and sustainable then it needs to be demonstrated that impacts are being recognised, and minimised.?

To do this they need to:

  • Ensure that the costs and benefits of the activities in the discipline are assessed.
  • Support and monitor the results of equitation science and other horse welfare research and ensure that new findings are fed into the assessment process.
  • Act to ensure the most humane approach is being used: which means changing competition rules to remove requirements that have poor welfare outcomes and ensuring increased competition doesn?t mean increased welfare challenge.

Riders and trainers also have a crucial role in improving welfare, bases around two key principles:

  • Users of horses are ethically responsible for all the activities and actions they conduct on horses. ?It is not enough to assume because others do it, it is acceptable, or because the law allows it, it is acceptable ? as a trainer or rider, you have to understand the impact of your actions and be prepared to justify them yourself.?
  • They are ethically bound to minimise the impact on horses of their activities. ?This involves taking active steps to modify activities to reduce their impact ? or finding a better way to do something. It should also include avoiding activities that are known to have a serious adverse impact.?

?We need always to bear in mind that it?s the tractability of horses that makes them a pleasure for us to work with ? but it also makes them especially vulnerable to abuse.

?We must not take horses for granted and must strive to understand better our impacts on them, and continually strive to reduce them. Which means reassessing what?s good, what?s normal, and what?s plain bad.?
More on Rollkur

First published on Horsetalk.co.nz in July, 2009.

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Source: http://horsetalk.co.nz/2013/02/19/whats-in-it-for-the-horse-asks-scientist/

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College Recommends Professor Who Made Her Students ?Pledge? To Vote For Obama Be Fired

Florida?s Brevard Community College professor Sharon Sweet made headlines in September, 2012, when she made her students sign a pledge to vote for President Barack Obama in the upcoming election. Over the weekend, a college review board investigating the incident recommended that Sweet, on leave since her infraction became a national scandal, be permanently dismissed.

RELATED: Professor Bans Students From Using Fox News As A Source: It ?Makes Me Cringe?

?I pledge to vote for President Obama and Democrats up and down the ticket,? read the pledge that Sweet, a professor of mathematics, asked her students to sign. Sweet was immediately put on leave after college officials determined that she had violated the institution?s code of conduct.

After an investigation, a review board determined that Sweet both attempted to influence her students? vote and misrepresented her intentions:

?Professor Sweet strongly encouraged or mandated that students from several classes sign a pledge card that stated, ?I pledge to vote for President Obama and Democrats up and down the ticket.? She also misrepresented her intentions to multiple students, indicating at various times that she was conducting voter registration for the college, that the pledge cards were non-partisan voter registration forms, and that the pledge was a ?statistical analysis.??

The board determined that Sweet?s actions, which ?constitute harassment, incompetence, misconduct and unprofessional behavior in the workplace,? should result in her termination.

h/t The Daily Caller

> >Follow Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) on Twitter

Source: http://www.mediaite.com/online/college-recommends-professor-who-made-her-students-pledge-to-vote-for-obama-be-fired/

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Monday, February 18, 2013

NFL Draft 2013: Aptitude testing reportedly added to Scouting Combine

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