Thursday, February 28, 2013

Movies make technology

Live from TED2013

A sci-fi film with a $2 million budget: Martin Villeneuve at TED2013A sci-fi film with a $2 million budget: Martin Villeneuve at?TED2013

Martin Villeneuve?s?Mars et Avril is a luscious?sci-fi film, set in Montreal 50 years in future, where the subway line takes you straight to Mars. It?s a dreamy love story in which the acting is top-notch, the shots are stunning and the visual effects unreal. And Villeneuve?made it all?for $2.3 million. To put that in perspective, ...

film

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?Movies have proved to be the ultimate medium for magic,? says Don Levy in today?s talk. A member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and former senior vice president of marketing and communications at Sony Pictures, Levy has always been fascinated by the sleights of hand that filmmakers use to create illusions. ...

Source: http://blog.ted.com/2013/02/28/how-movies-can-influence-technology/

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The New Normal: Placenta-Eating Celebrities

Former Girls Next Door star Holly Madison isn't exactly the crunchy-hippie type -- but that's not going to stop her from eating her placenta. The mom-to-be, who's due any day now, announced on her blog that she'll be having her placenta -- a.k.a. the organ that nourishes the baby in the womb, or the "afterbirth" -- turned into pills after her daughter is born. "I heard it helps women recover faster and I want to recover as quickly as I can!" she explained.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/placenta-eating-celebrities-are-new-normal/1-a-524630?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Aplacenta-eating-celebrities-are-new-normal-524630

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Pope recalls 'joy' of papacy, and difficulties

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Pope Benedict XVI basked in an emotional sendoff Wednesday from a massive crowd at his final general audience in St. Peter's Square, recalling moments of "joy and light" during his papacy but also times of difficulty when "it seemed like the Lord was sleeping."

An estimated 150,000 people, many toting banners saying "Grazie!" ("Thank you!"), jammed the piazza to bid Benedict farewell and hear his final speech as pontiff. In this appointment ? which he has kept each week for eight years to teach the world about the Catholic faith ? Benedict gave deep thanks to his flock for respecting his decision to retire.

Benedict clearly enjoyed the crowds, taking a long victory lap around the square in an open-sided car and stopping to kiss and bless half a dozen children handed to him by his secretary. A total of 70 cardinals, some tearful, sat in solemn attendance.

But Benedict made a quick exit, foregoing the typical meet-and-greet session that follows the audience; the Vatican has said there were simply too many people who would have wanted to say goodbye.

Given the historic moment, Benedict also changed course and didn't produce his typical professorial Wednesday catechism lesson. Rather, he made his final public appearance in St. Peter's a personal one, explaining once again why he was becoming the first pope in 600 years to resign and urging the faithful to pray for his successor.

"To love the church means also to have the courage to take difficult, painful decisions, always keeping the good of the church in mind, not oneself," Benedict said to thundering applause.

He noted that a pope has no privacy: "He belongs always and forever to everyone, to the whole church." But the pope promised that in retirement he would not be returning to private life ? instead taking on a new experience of service to the church through prayer.

He recalled that when he was elected pope on April 19, 2005, he questioned if God truly wanted it. "It's a great burden that you've placed on my shoulders," he recalled telling God.

During his eight years as pope, Benedict said, "I have had moments of joy and light, but also moments that haven't been easy ... moments of turbulent seas and rough winds, as has occurred in the history of the church when it seemed like the Lord was sleeping."

But he said he never felt alone, that God always guided him, and he thanked his cardinals and colleagues for their support and for "understanding and respecting this important decision."

Under a bright sun and blue skies, the square was overflowing with pilgrims and curiosity-seekers. Those who couldn't get in picked spots along the main boulevard leading to the square to watch the event on giant TV screens. Some 50,000 tickets were requested for Benedict's final master class. In the end, the Vatican estimated that 150,000 people flocked to the farewell.

"It's difficult ? the emotion is so big," said Jan Marie, a 53-year-old Roman in his first years as a seminarian. "We came to support the pope's decision."

With chants of "Benedetto!" erupting often, the mood was far more buoyant than during the pope's final Sunday blessing. It recalled the jubilant turnouts that often accompanied him at World Youth Days and events involving his predecessor, Pope John Paul II.

Benedict has said he decided to retire after realizing that, at 85, he simply didn't have the "strength of mind or body" to carry on.

"I have taken this step with the full understanding of the seriousness and also novelty of the decision, but with a profound serenity in my soul," Benedict told the crowd Wednesday.

Benedict will meet Thursday morning with cardinals for a final time, then fly by helicopter to the papal residence at Castel Gandolfo south of Rome.

There, at 8 p.m., the doors of the palazzo will close and the Swiss Guards in attendance will go off duty, their service protecting the head of the Catholic Church over ? for now.

Many of the cardinals who will choose Benedict's successor were in St. Peter's Square for his final audience. Those included retired Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony, the object of a grass-roots campaign in the U.S. to persuade him to recuse himself for having covered up for sexually abusive priests. Mahony has said he will be among the 115 cardinals voting on who the next pope should be.

Also in attendance Wednesday were cardinals over 80, who can't participate in the conclave but will participate in meetings next week to discuss the problems facing the church and the qualities needed in a new pope.

"I am joining the entire church in praying that the cardinal electors will have the help of the Holy Spirit," said Spanish Cardinal Julian Herranz, 82.

Herranz has been authorized by the pope to brief voting-age cardinals on his investigation into the leaks of papal documents that exposed corruption in the Vatican administration.

Vatican officials say cardinals will begin meeting Monday to decide when to set the date for the conclave.

But the rank-and-file faithful in the crowd Wednesday weren't so concerned with the future; they wanted to savor the final moments with the pope they have known for years.

"I came to thank him for the testimony that he has given the church," said Maria Cristina Chiarini, a 52-year-old homemaker who traveled by train from Lugo in central Italy with some 60 members of her parish. "There's nostalgia, human nostalgia, but also comfort, because as a Christian we have hope. The Lord won't leave us without a guide."

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-recalls-joy-papacy-difficulties-102915336.html

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Pakistani leader visits Iran to discuss gas deal

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) ? Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari on Wednesday visited Tehran where he worked to finalize a gas pipeline deal with Iran that is being opposed by the United States.

The U.S. is against the project because it wants to isolate Iran economically over fears that the country might ultimately be able to develop a nuclear weapon. Tehran denies the charge, saying its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.

Pakistani leaders have vowed to press ahead with the pipeline despite U.S. opposition, saying it is vital for the supply of gas to the energy-starved country. Iranian media say Tehran has agreed to provide a $500 million loan to help finance construction of the pipeline on the Pakistani side.

Iran's state TV said Zardari was greeted at Tehran's Mehrabad airport by Rostam Ghasemi, oil minister in Iran.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pakistani-leader-visits-iran-discuss-gas-deal-132304965.html

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Ex-Surgeon General Koop Dies in NH

Dr. C. Everett Koop has long been regarded as the nation's doctor? even though it has been nearly a quarter-century since he was surgeon general.

Koop, who died Monday at his home in Hanover, N.H., at age 96, was by far the best known and most influential person to carry that title. Koop, a 6-foot-1 evangelical Presbyterian with a biblical prophet's beard, donned a public health uniform in the early 1980s and became an enduring, science-based national spokesman on health issues.

He served for eight years during the Reagan administration and was a breed apart from his political bosses. He thundered about the evils of tobacco companies during a multiyear campaign to drive down smoking rates, and he became the government's spokesman on AIDS when it was still considered a "gay disease" by much of the public.

"He really changed the national conversation, and he showed real courage in pursuing the duties of his job," said Chris Collins, a vice president of amfAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research.

Even before that, he had been a leading figure in medicine. He was one of the first U.S. doctors to specialize in pediatric surgery at a time when children with complicated conditions were often simply written off as untreatable. In the 1950s, he drew national headlines for innovative surgeries such as separating conjoined twins.

His medical heroics are well noted, but he may be better remembered for transforming from a pariah in the eyes of the public health community into a remarkable servant who elevated the influence of the surgeon general ? if only temporarily.

"He set the bar high for all who followed in his footsteps," said Dr. Richard Carmona, who served as surgeon general a decade later under President George W. Bush.

Koop's religious beliefs grew after the 1968 death of his son David in a mountain-climbing accident, and he became an outspoken opponent of abortion. His activism is what brought him to the attention of the administration of President Ronald Reagan, who decided to nominate him for surgeon general in 1981. Though once a position with real power, surgeon generals had been stripped of most of their responsibilities in the 1960s.

By the time Koop got the job, the position was kind of a glorified health educator.

But Koop ran with it. One of his early steps involved the admiral's uniform that is bestowed to the surgeon general but that Koop's predecessors had worn only on ceremonial occasions. In his first year in the post, Koop stopped wearing his trademark bowties and suit jackets and instead began wearing the uniform, seeing it as a way to raise the visual prestige of the office.

In those military suits, he surprised the officials who had appointed him by setting aside his religious beliefs and feelings about abortion and instead waging a series of science-based public health crusades.

He was arguably most effective on smoking. He issued a series of reports that detailed the dangers of tobacco smoke, and in speeches began calling for a smoke-free society by the year 2000. He didn't get his wish, but smoking rates did drop from 38 percent to 27 percent while he was in office ? a huge decline.

Koop led other groundbreaking initiatives, but perhaps none is better remembered than his work on AIDS.

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory/everett-koop-surgeon-general-dies-nh-18592170

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BACKWOODS SURVIVAL BLOG: MOVIE REVIEW: "Knowing" (2009)

This week's regular Tuesday afternoon Doomer Fiction film review centers on "Knowing" (2009) [Blu-ray] (DVD version).

It follows a Professor of Astrophysics at MIT (played by Nicolas Cage), struggling to try to raise his son alone, having lost his wife in a freak accident a year or so prior.? Then, one day, he finds himself presented with a number sequence-based puzzle that emerged from a fifty-year-old time capsule and, inexplicably, seems to predict the exact date, location, and number of victims killed in every major global disaster going back to when the numbers were written.? As a scientist, he is a natural skeptic (in fact, he's estranged from his Preacher father as part of his issues with Faith); so, needless to say, the whole concept throws his already shaky world into an even worse state of disarray.

Meanwhile, the sun is in a period of increased activity, causing unusually high temperatures and record-setting droughts as solar flare activity ramps-up.? Needless to say, this will play a larger role in the narrative as the movie goes on.

This is an interesting film, because it defies typical Doomer Fiction stereotypes.? It could, obviously, be considered a disaster movie as well as apocalyptic -- but it also strays into themes that could represent science-fiction and/or Christianity and other forms of spirituality, depending on how the viewer chooses to interpret what they see.? Without giving away too much, expect to see allusions to what may or may not be Angels, Extraterrestrials, the Tree of Life, and Adam and Eve; as well as the vision seen by Ezekiel in 1:4-6 of the Old Testament, which some have interpreted as a description of an encounter with an alien spacecraft as seen through the eyes of a Bronze Age prophet with no frame of reference to help him explain what he was seeing.? Best of all, I think, the film makes no hamfisted attempts to tell you what you're seeing; the viewer is free to interpret it however they see fit, and the film's final moments speak a great deal about Faith, forgiveness, new beginnings, and letting go.

Critics hated this movie, but, then again, half of the movies I've ever loved were ones that the critics hated.? To be honest with you, I feel like this is a film that will be appreciated more by intelligent people and those who have a leaning toward being spiritual, in a general sense -- critics called it cliche, but I was rather moved by it.? At the price this film is going for in both Bluray and DVD formats, I'd feel confident recommending it to any fan of the Doomer Fiction genre.? If you haven't yet given it a chance, do so.? It isn't the best, or even one of the best films you'll ever see, but the odds are you'll come to the finish feeling as though you more than got your money's worth.

Source: http://www.backwoodssurvivalblog.com/2013/02/movie-review-knowing-2009.html

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Deal of the Day ? Dell Inspiron 15R 3rd Gen Core i7 Dual-core laptop with 8GB RAM and 1TB Hard Drive

LogicBUY’s Deal for Tuesday is the configurable?15.6″ Dell Inspiron 15R 5521 Core i7 Ivy Bridge laptop for $649.99. ?Features: 3rd-gen Core i7 Ivy Bridge CPU 8GB RAM 1TB 5400RPM hard drive, 8X DVD burner, 8-in-1 card reader Intel HD 4000 graphics Four USB 3.0 ports, HDMI v1.4a output 1MP webcam with mic Waves MaxxAudio?4 15-months [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/02/26/deal-of-the-day-dell-inspiron-15r-3rd-gen-core-i7-dual-core-laptop-with-8gb-ram-and-1tb-hard-drive/

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Google+ Photos app for Chromebooks revealed in more detail, thanks to new screenshots

Google+ Photos app for Chromebooks revealed in more detail, thanks to new screenshots

Chances are, you've been gawking at that gorgeous new Pixel Chromebook, but aren't planning on, you know, buying it. No matter. For those of you who enjoy software porn, we've got a few more shots of the Pixel's forthcoming Photos application, which will eventually make its way to other Chromebooks, too. A developer on Google+ named François Beaufort has uploaded a series of screenshots, giving us a more detailed look -- good news since we only had three screens to show you when the software was first announced. Included in Beaufort's gallery is the settings page, which confirms that automatic photo uploads from SD cards are actually optional. The one thing you won't see in those pics? A full illustration of the intelligent photo selector, which is supposedly smart enough to weed out your blurry and poorly exposed shots. Hopefully all you Pixel owners out there will see for yourselves soon enough.

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Via: Android Central

Source: Google+ (Francois Beaufort)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/1-zB8TnjPlg/

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Novel combination therapy shuts down escape route, killing glioblastoma tumor cells

Novel combination therapy shuts down escape route, killing glioblastoma tumor cells

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Glioblastoma, the most common and lethal form of brain tumor in adults, is challenging to treat because the tumors rapidly become resistant to therapy. As cancer researchers are learning more about the causes of tumor cell growth and drug resistance, they are discovering molecular pathways that might lead to new targeted therapies to potentially treat this deadly cancer.

Scientists at the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research in San Diego worked collaboratively across the laboratories of Drs. Paul Mischel, Web Cavenee and Frank Furnari to investigate one such molecular pathway called the mammalian target of rapamycin or mTOR. This signaling pathway is hyperactivated in close to 90 percent of glioblastomas and plays a critical role in regulating tumor growth and survival. Therapies that inhibit mTOR signaling are under investigation as drug development targets, but results to date have been disappointing: mTOR inhibitors halt the growth but fail to kill the tumor cells.

A study published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences uncovers an unexpected but important molecular mechanism of mTOR inhibitor resistance and identifies a novel drug combination that reverses this resistance.

The story begins with a closer look at a gene-encoded protein called promyleocytic leukemia gene or PML. The study investigators explored the role of PML in causing resistance to mTOR inhibitor treatment. They found that when glioblastoma patients are treated with drugs that target the mTOR pathway, the levels of PML rise dramatically. Further, they showed that PML upregulation made the tumor cells resistant to mTOR inhibitors, and that if they suppressed the ability of the tumor cells to upregulate the PML protein, the tumor cells died in response to the mTOR inhibitor therapy.

"When we looked at cells in in vivo models and patients treated in the clinic, it became clear that the glioblastoma cells massively regulated PML enabling them to escape the effects of mTOR inhibitor therapy," reported senior author Paul Mischel, MD, Ludwig Institute member based at the University of California at San Diego.

"Our team hypothesized that if we could use a pharmacological approach to get rid of PML and combine it with an mTOR inhibitor, it could change the response from halting growth to cell death. The question was how?" added Mischel.

Previous research had shown that the use of low-dose arsenic could cause degradation of the PML protein in patients with leukemia. The team hypothesized that if arsenic could degrade PML, it may reverse resistance to mTOR inhibitors. The combination of mTOR and low-dose arsenic in mice indeed showed a synergistic effect, with massive tumor cell death along with very significant shrinkage of the tumor in mice with no ill side effects.

"Current therapy upregulates PML, turning off the mTOR signaling pathway. The tumor cells hide, waiting for the target signal to return," said Mischel. "When low-dose arsenic is added, not only does it stop the cell from returning, it shuts down the escape route killing the tumor cell."

These results present the first clinical evidence that mTOR inhibition promotes PML upregulation in mice and patients, and that it mediates drug resistance. The clinical relevance was confirmed when researchers looked at before- and after-treatment tissue samples from patients treated with mTOR inhibitors, confirming that PML goes up significantly in post treatment of mTOR inhibitors.

"These data suggest a new approach for potential treatment of glioblastoma," said Mischel. "We are moving forward to test that possibility in people."

Post-doctoral students Akio Iwanami and Beatrice Gini from the Mischel lab as well as Ciro Zanca from the Furnari/Cavenee lab, also contributed significantly to this paper.

###

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research: http://www.licr.org

Thanks to Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127038/Novel_combination_therapy_shuts_down_escape_route__killing_glioblastoma_tumor_cells

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P90x workout plan Arrange And A Brief Advantages | Buy Box Sets ...

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Source: http://www.zabibu.org/2013/02/p90x-workout-plan-arrange-and-a-brief-advantages/

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Utah liquor bill aims to take down 'Zion curtains'

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) ? Wine spritzers are a favorite at Rovali's near Salt Lake City. Behind the bar, in full view of patrons, waiters siphon soda and syrup into glasses of ice ? then they duck behind a fake olive tree and a barricade to add the chardonnay.

Utah's famously strict liquor laws forbid the restaurant from pouring alcohol in front of customers. The ban is based on the idea that the state should shield the mixing of cocktails and pouring of drinks from children. "Zion curtains" went up around the state as part of a compromise after lawmakers lifted a mandate in 2010 requiring bars to operate as members-only social clubs.

But this year, the curtains may be coming down.

Utah lawmakers are considering whether to repeal the requirement, a move that would ease restrictions and encourage new business. Right now, the requirement applies to restaurants that are less than 3 years old.

Doing away with the curtain would mark yet another small step by the state to relax its liquor laws.

Lawmakers have introduced a handful of pending bills this year that would ease Utah liquor regulations, including a measure allowing customers to order a drink before they order food and another to make more liquor licenses available to restaurants.

They are scheduled to discuss whether to do away with the curtains Wednesday; the measure has not yet been voted on by either chamber.

The so-called Zion curtains have a long history in the state. The nickname nods to Utah's legacy as home to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The barriers first went up decades ago in the social clubs that existed before bars were legalized in 2009, unmistakable glass walls separating customers from bartenders.

Those who oppose today's Zion curtains say the law forces restaurant owners to waste money and space on configurations to keep bartenders out of sight of patrons using barriers or strategically positioned service bars. Curtain opponents also say the law hinders tourism by annoying outsiders and reinforcing their perception of Utah as staunchly sober.

Rovali's, an Italian restaurant in Ogden, opened in 2010. When waiters there explain the state's befuddling liquor laws to out-of-towners, Montanez said, "You see the eye roll."

"That kind of stifles guests," he said. "They're a little rankled by these weird laws."

Some lawmakers warn that removing the mandate could encourage underage drinking and influence customers to drink too much.

The majority of Utah legislators and residents belong to the Mormon church, which teaches its members to abstain from alcohol.

"Alcohol is a drug," said Sen. John Valentine, R-Orem, who opposes the law. "It has social costs. We have DUIs. We have underage drinkers. We have problems that are caused by drinking."

Valentine said he would consider supporting the proposal if the state promised trade-offs such as bulking up police presence around restaurants and nearby roads, or a measure keeping children from entering restaurants serving liquor.

For restaurant owners moving into existing spaces, the law presents a nightmare, said Rep. Ryan Wilcox, R-Ogden. Restaurants sometimes have to cut into floor space, he said, where more tables should be.

"It really just hampers the new guys, the little guys," Wilcox said. "A lot of these guys, too, they're not large operators. They've got one shop: 'This is my restaurant. My lifelong dream. I've invested everything into this.'"

At Rovali's, Montanez plays sommelier for guests who order wine service, setting off a presentation that underscores the patchwork nature of current laws. Montanez opens the wine at the table and invites guests to sniff the cork. If they purchase the bottle, he can pour and serve the bottle. If they order by the glass, however, he must slip away to pour the drink behind a partition.

"Everything we do is show," Montanez said, likening the visible pouring of drinks to a dessert cart.

The display of pastries and sweets bolsters dessert sales at the restaurant by about 15 percent, he said. And Montanez estimates that taking the curtain down would boost wine sales by a similar margin.

"You can't get creative, that's for sure," he said of the partition. "You have to stick with the rules."

Melva Sine, president of the Utah Restaurant Association, said the curtain mandate confuses diners and raises eyebrows. Utah should impose one set of rules for all restaurants, regardless of their start date, Sine said.

"It lessens consumer confidence: What's the reason that you're doing this in the back room?" she said.

Sine rejects the notion that the visible flow of liquor would tempt youngsters to drink.

"We have got to stop feeling like everyone who drinks alcohol is doing something wrong," she said. "We all want people to go out and enjoy themselves and be responsible."

___

Associated Press writer Michelle L. Price contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/utah-liquor-bill-aims-down-zion-curtains-190453770.html

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Yoga for Eyes ? Incredible Health Benefits of Yoga - Food Fitness ...

Posted by Jitesh Manaktala on Feb 26, 2013 in Featured, Health & Fitness, YogaGoogle+

The modern age of computers and digital applications is unhealthy for eyes. Since most of us do not maintain a special care routine for eyes and work all the time, the eyes are always under constant strain. The only time we give rest to our eyes is when we are asleep.

But this is not enough. You need to take out time to maintain a special routine for eyes. Focus on strengthening your vision.

Yoga is the best way you can take care of your eyes. There are many Yogic eye exercises that you can practise to maintain good health for your eyes. These exercises are easy to do. Most of these exercises can be easily performed at any time of the day regardless of where you are! Here are some effective Yoga exercises to help you take good care of eyes:

1. Close your eyes as tight as possible. Hold on for around 5 seconds. Open them, and close them again. repeat the exercise about six times.

2. In case, you sit in front of the computer screen for long hours, it is important that you get up every half an hour and move around a bit. Fetch yourself a glass of water. The idea is to give your eyes some break. A 2 minute break is enough to refresh the eyes.

3. Shut your eyes. Now roll your eyeballs around for a minute. Repeat.

4. Rub your palms together. Now gently cup them over your closed eyes for around a minute. This is an effective exercise and often referred to as palming. The exercise is extremely beneficial for the eyes. Understand that eyes need darkness to rejuvenate themselves. Palming is the best way to ensure adequate darkness to eyes.

5. Imagine that there is a huge clock in front of you. Now look at the number 12 for around 10 seconds. Gradually move your gaze down to 6. Repeat the exercise for around 10 times, rapidly. Now move your eyes horizontally, in the 3-9 position. Also the eyes diagonally in 2-7 and 10-4 positions respectively.

6. Sambhavi mudra is known to be the best exercise for eyes. You need to look up to the position in the middle of your eyebrows. Make sure you hold on for a few seconds and then move your gaze downwards, towards your nose.

7. Blink is important to lubricate the eyes. So make a conscious effort to blink more.

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Tags: eye exercises in yoga, eyes yoga exercises, health benefits of yoga, yoga asanas for eyes, yoga exercise for eyes, yoga eye exercises, yoga for eyes, yoga for good health, yoga for the eyes

Source: http://www.foodfitnesslifelove.com/yoga/yoga-for-eyes-incredible-health-benefits-of-yoga/

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Washington braces for whirlwind week

By Michael O'Brien, Political Reporter, NBC News

?

A vote on President Barack Obama's nominee to lead the Defense Department, Supreme Court arguments about the future of a key provision of the Voting Rights Act and?the expected onset of automatic spending cuts known as the "sequester" mean the nation's capital is bracing for a politically consequential week ahead.

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood discusses how the looming spending cuts will affect air travel and calls on Congress to act.

After a weeklong recess, Congress returns to Washington with a full agenda of business that needs handling. Topping that list is an item which lawmakers are arguably unlikely to resolve over the course of the week: the sequester, about $85 billion in automatic spending cuts set to begin taking effect on Friday, the first day of March.

Lawmakers left town before the President's Day holiday no closer to resolving the sequester, the second part of the so-called "fiscal cliff," which was delayed for two months by the New Year's Day deal on taxes.

Last week's recess was more full of posturing and blame-placing by Obama and Republicans in Congress ? who each blame the other for the sequester's creation ??than any substantive progress toward a deal to address the cuts, which both sides agree would be perilous.

"So now Republicans in Congress face a simple choice: Are they willing to compromise to protect vital investments in education and health care and national security and all the jobs that depend on them?" Obama said last Tuesday at the White House. "Or would they rather put hundreds of thousands of jobs and our entire economy at risk just to protect a few special-interest tax loopholes that benefit only the wealthiest Americans and biggest corporations? That's the choice."

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, responded in the pages of the 'Wall Street Journal': "The president's sequester is the wrong way to reduce the deficit, but it is here to stay until Washington Democrats get serious about cutting spending."?

The administration has been warning of the potential consequences to the spending cuts, including military readiness and even delays and inconveniences in air travel.

Related:?Why Obama has the PR upper hand in sequestration battle

"We're not making this up in order to put pain on the American people," outgoing Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press." "We are required to cut a billion dollars and we are going to do that unless Congress gets together and works together and compromises on this."?

Former Democratic Congressman Harold Ford Jr.; Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan; Host of NPR's Morning Edition, Steve Inskeep; CNBC's Maria Bartiromo and Jim Cramer weigh in on how the looming budget cuts could be avoided with better leadership.

With both sides still so far apart, an agreement to delay or soften the blow of the automatic cuts before Friday seems unlikely.

That legislative showdown would normally suffice to consume all the political oxygen in Washington. But this week also features several other major events worth noting.

One such item is another holdover from before recess. The Senate is set to vote Tuesday on final confirmation for former Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., to become the next defense secretary. The vote follows tenacious efforts by some Republican senators to block their former colleague from joining the Obama administration.

Senate Democrats had hoped to formally vote to confirm Hagel before last week's recess, but Senate Republicans ??even some GOP senators who said they'll support final confirmation for Hagel ??joined together to sustain a filibuster, and delay the confirmation vote until this week. For their part, Democrats decried the filibuster as unprecedented against a Pentagon chief's nomination.

Former Democratic Congressman Harold Ford Jr.; Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan; Host of NPR's Morning Edition, Steve Inskeep; CNBC's Maria Bartiromo and Jim Cramer discuss what happens if Washington can't agree on an alternative plan.

Still, Hagel appears to be headed toward confirmation. Some of his most vociferous critics?? Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., among them ? said they would support moving toward a final vote on confirmation, which would only require a simple majority of the Senate's support. Even still, several GOP senators have said they intend to support Hagel, which only boosts his prospects for confirmation, barring some sort of development.

Hagel isn't the only member of Obama's prospective national security team left hanging over the recess.

After facing a grilling earlier this month before the Senate Intelligence Committee, John O. Brennan's nomination to become the next director of the Central Intelligence Agency faces an uncertain future. Senators are looking for more information about the Obama administration's secretive drone strikes program ??and Brennan's role in crafting that strategy ??before moving forward with his nomination.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., has threatened to filibuster Brennan's nomination before the whole Senate until he's received a satisfactory answer. The concerns about Brennan aren't isolated to Republicans, either; Democrats like Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon have voiced similar misgivings about the secretive use of drone strikes to target suspected terrorists and the process behind them.

Joshua Roberts / Reuters file photo

Capitol Hill in Washington, DC

Also this week, the Supreme Court will hear potentially consequential oral arguments challenging a section of the historic Voting Right Acts. The justices will hear a challenge to a section of the law requiring nine states with a history of racial discrimination to seek Justice Department approval for any change in their voting procedures before those changes can take effect.

Obama, speaking Thursday in a radio interview, sought to calm fears that African American or other minority voters would face greater challenges to voting if the Supreme Court were to strike down that section of the law.

"I know in the past some folks have worried that if the Supreme Court strikes down Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, they're going to lose their right to vote. That?s not the case," Obama said on "The Black Eagle" radio show. "People will still have the same rights not to be discriminated against when it comes to voting, you just won't have this mechanism, this tool, that allows you to kind of stay ahead of certain practices."

Source: http://nbcpolitics.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/25/17058501-from-sequester-to-hagel-and-voting-rights-washington-braces-for-whirlwind-week?lite

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Amid mounting pressures, some see potential for new Palestinian uprising

Thousands turned out for the funeral today of a Palestinian who died in an Israeli jail. Some see a new intifadah as the only way to fight back as tensions rise, but many say that could hurt the Palestinian cause.

By Christa Case Bryant,?Staff writer / February 25, 2013

Palestinians attend the funeral of Arafat Jaradat in the West Bank village of Sair outside Hebron Monday. People filled every rooftop, balcony, and open patch of grass surrounding the village square as Jaradat?s coffin was carried through the crowd, sparking fierce whistling and a few gunshots.

Darren Whiteside/Reuters

Enlarge

Sair and Ramallah, West Bank

Less than a month before President Obama is to visit Jerusalem and Ramallah, raising hopes he will help bring Israelis and Palestinians back to the peace table, some see the West Bank heading in a very different direction.

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Many Palestinians say the accumulating pressures of Israeli occupation, an economic crisis, expanding Israeli settlements, and now the death of a Palestinian prisoner in an Israeli jail over the weekend could turn pockets of unrest into a widespread uprising.

?The issue of the prisoners is only one point that created this eruption,? said Sheikh Issa Jaradat, the former mayor of Sair, at the funeral for deceased prisoner Arafat Jaradat. People filled every rooftop, balcony, and open patch of grass surrounding the village square as Jaradat?s coffin was carried through the crowd, sparking fierce whistling and a few gunshots.

?The fact that so many people are here shows that this is not just about the suffering of Sair. The whole West Bank is suffering,? says the sheikh. ?This could easily be the beginning of an intifada.?

Palestinians have blamed Jaradat?s death on Israeli torture, citing evidence from the autopsy, although Israel denies this and the final medical analysis has yet to be released.

But even before his death on Feb. 23, momentum had grown around the prisoner issue, with four prisoners on a hunger strike. On Saturday, clashes erupted between Palestinian villagers and settlers in the village of Qusra, near Nablus, and Palestinians clashed with Israeli soldiers in Hebron the following day, sparking a flurry of Israeli media reports about a brewing intifada. Some 4,500 prisoners launched a 24-hour hunger strike yesterday in solidarity with Jaradat.

A new intifada will hurt us: poll

Some Palestinians see a third uprising as the only way to fight back against an Israeli military occupation and grab the attention of the international community, which many feel has largely forgotten Palestinians since they committed to finding a peaceful solution.

Some 32 percent of Palestinians support an intifada, according to a poll by Arab World for Research & Development published Feb. 21, before Jaradat?s death. A strong majority of 65 percent oppose a new intifada, however, with 41 percent of respondents saying it will hurt the Palestinian cause.?

Indeed, such an uprising could work against Palestinian interests in several ways. It could bolster Israel?s argument that it has no partner for peace, enabling it to continue expanding settlements in the West Bank unfettered by negotiations. It could also provide Israeli justification for maintaining or increasing checkpoints, arrests, and administrative detention in the name of security.

That has led some to surmise that Israel may be intentionally stirring up unrest rather than trying to contain it ??although Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday transferred $100 million in tax revenues to the Palestinian Authority in what some saw as an attempt to ease the situation.

?I don?t believe Israeli is worried. I believe they would like another confrontation,? says Qadura Fares, head of the Palestinian Prisoners Club and a prominent Fatah member, who is skeptical of the potential for a full-blown intifada before Fatah and Hamas reconcile. ?But if we have reconciliation and we begin planning our steps together, then maybe Netanyahu will be worried about any Palestinian reaction or a new intifada.?

A house divided cannot protest?

The prisoner issue, which resonates with all Palestinians, could provide the common cause needed to bring Fatah and Hamas back together. Mr. Fares says that?both Fatah and Hamas are united in wanting to save the life of the four prisoners on a hunger strike ??one of whom, Samer Issawi, is said to be in critical condition after an on-off strike that began more than 200 days ago. He is one of a number of Palestinian prisoners released in exchange for captured soldier Gilad Shalit, only to be rearrested in what Palestinians say is a violation of the deal.

Umm Abdullah, a Hamas supporter in Ramallah whose husband, Jamil Tawil, was jailed last month for the 14th ?time, says she and other Hamas supporters would like to join demonstrations over the prisoner issue but are afraid that Palestinian Authority (PA) intelligence sources will report them to the Israelis. She describes the PA as ?spies to the enemy? ? Israel. Both she and her daughter have also spent time in jail and don't want to give the Israelis any reason to rearrest them.

?We are being scrutinized, we are being watched in every sense,? she says, sitting by a portrait of her nephew, who carried out a suicide bombing in Jerusalem in 2001. ?Therefore, reconciliation can?t take place without confidence-building measures.?

?This is a strong message to Obama?

At the funeral today for Jaradat in Sair, just outside of Hebron, supporters of the Fatah-affiliated Al-Aqsa Brigades chanted, ?Let the olive branch fall and let the weapon always lead to victory?. Let Tel Aviv be set on fire.?

Even as a rival cluster of Hamas supporters tried to out-chant the group, others insisted Palestinians were united in their fight against Israel.

?Besides Fatah, besides Hamas, we the people of Palestine are all united in challenging the occupation,? said Rami Hijjah, a business student and student council member at Polytechnic University in Hebron who says he hopes ?we all will follow [Jaradat] as martyrs.?

?Palestine will not be liberated until we all sacrifice and feed its soil with our blood,? he said, surrounded by fellow student council members. ?We have to continue this escalation of our protest?. My generation will not stay quiet.?

Few protesters interviewed expressed any hope that Obama would be willing or able to improve the situation when he visits next month. One referred to Israel as America?s ?spoiled child.? But at least some felt they were conveying an important message to him and other world leaders.

?The whole world has given us a deaf ear instead of an open ear and an open eye,? says Sheikh Jaradat. ?I feel this is a strong message to Obama and all the world: Look, we do not accept this miserable situation ? and the injustices committed against our people.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/J3XZ4sOgpd0/Amid-mounting-pressures-some-see-potential-for-new-Palestinian-uprising

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Nokia to Share Entire Navigation Suite With Other Windows Phones

Nokia has announced that it is to share its Drive, Maps and Transit apps with other Windows Phone handsets. Under the new name Here, users of non-Nokia handsets will finally be able to use the Finns' excellent navigation software. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/wJgshg50KGs/nokia-to-share-entire-navigation-suite-with-other-windows-phones

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ZTE announces Grand Memo: first Android smartphone with 1.5GHz Snapdragon 800 processor

Image

Today marks the third time we've come across ZTE's Grand Memo. Except now, the Chinese OEM's unveiling it as the first to feature Qualcomm's Snapdragon 800 processor. The Grand Memo's 5.7-inch display size has remained the same, but the screen on this new 8.5mm thick LTE variant will now pack a 1080p resolution -- a handy spec given its usability as a multimedia point of consumption. The audio experience on this tabletphone will also get a suitable premium bump with the inclusion of Dolby Digital Surround. Apart from all that, there's still a 13-megapixel camera module on back and healthy 3,200mAh battery inside its plastic shell. No specifics regarding pricing and regional availability were given, but we can expect to see it launch sometime "this year."

Update: ZTE's confirmed that the Grand Memo will initially launch in China and then Europe soon after. As for its US destiny, all we were told is that the company's exploring its options.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/z4_EZc-YmwE/

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Meet the cross-subsidy, an increasingly painful way to pay for ...

This is the third in a series of articles addressing a largely hidden crisis: A decade of social-service cuts and rising poverty have left Minnesota schools ?which turn no child away ?struggling to serve a growing number of students whose severe mental-health issues and cognitive disabilities aren't being addressed anywhere else.

The scrimping, finessing and begging that Keith Lester has done during the eight years he has been superintendent of Brooklyn Center Schools would be comical if it didn?t involve the fates of children and the livelihood of teachers.

His three schools are attractive, so much so that 40 percent of the district?s 2,600 students are open-enrolled from other communities. Lured by a holistic approach to supporting kids and International Baccalaureate programming, they bring precious state tuition dollars.

Test scores are on the rise, in no small part because of his efforts to get outsiders to provide a full array of in-school supports including medical, dental and mental-health care and all-day preschool.

Still, his budget does nothing but shrink. In a good year he has to find about $1 million to cut. In the bad years ? most of them since state financing began shrinking a decade ago ? it?s more like $2 million.

Lester spends a lot of time thinking out of the box. The first five years he was there, there were no librarians in his three schools. In 2010 he got a grant to hire one ?for a single academic year.

In 2008, he lost a teacher budget line but got a grant to hire a teacher. The grant was for arts instruction, though, so even though he hired a dance teacher he had to lay off an English teacher.

Painful cuts, impoverished students

In 2011, he had to cut all 11 of the teachers who coached the district?s struggling elementary pupils in math and reading. Their intensive work had been paying off with rising test scores.

The district has been in statutory operating debt ? a bureaucratic way of saying financial life support ? since 2000. He gets $2,000 a head less state aid for his 1,700 pupils than Minneapolis and St. Paul, even though his student body is just as impoverished.

And Brooklyn Center?s property tax base is modest, to put it kindly. Lester had to go to voters nine times to get his last levy ? the lowest in the metro area ? renewed.

When he started in 2005, about 12 percent of Lester?s students needed special education services. Meeting their needs typically costs about twice as much as general ed students, but it can be much, much more.

Even if it were a place where Lester thought to cut, he couldn?t. Disabled children can be convenient political targets, so the law is set up to protect their rights. All are entitled to a free and appropriate education, no matter its cost.

Many chose his school for its supports

Many of the families that have chosen Lester?s schools in part because they need the health-care and other supports they can find literally just down the hall from their child?s classroom are particularly needy. Special-ed students now make up more than 20 percent of the district?s population.

Never mind that the special-education services are mandated by law, neither the state nor the federal government has ever reimbursed schools anything approaching the true expense.

And so to meet the needs of his most vulnerable kids, Lester has always had to shift money from the state aid he gets for all students. Because of the rest of the budgetary landscape, over the last 10 years the amount he?s had to divert has risen 163 percent to about $1,000 per pupil.

In fact, the amount Lester has to shift from general ed to special ed is typically more than his overall budget deficit. In 2011, he needed to make up a $2 million shortfall. The gap in special-ed reimbursement that year was $2.233 million.

If the state filled the gap ...

Expressed another way, if the state of Minnesota began paying full freight the district could get back in the black for the first time in 15 years. Lester could hire a librarian, recall the laid-off English teacher and bring back the literacy coaches.

Lester is retiring at the end of the year. The payback of this most hidden of school funding shifts would mean he could hand his successor a school system poised to become the envy of its wealthier neighbors.

* * *

Barring some budget-healing magic, Minnesota schools this year are poised to skitter off a fiscal cliff few people know exists. Between rising need and lagging state aid, the amount of funding they will be forced to divert to pay for special education will reach an average of $834 per student.

Even schools that are far wealthier than Brooklyn Center?s will have no choice but to use, on average, 16 percent of the $5,224 per pupil the state gives them to make up for a shortfall that is projected to keep growing. That?s money that cannot be used to prevent teacher layoffs, reduce class sizes or restore disappearing ?extras? like art and music.

Brooklyn Center is not the only community where the subsidy has topped $1,000 per pupil for several years. A $147-a-head increase is expected this year alone. By 2015, the shortfall is anticipated to have mushroomed to $2 billion per budget cycle.

A primary reason for continuing funding challenges

Known in education circles as the cross-subsidy, the special-education funding deficit is the primary reason Minnesota school districts face funding challenges year after year, public-school advocates say. Eliminating the cross-subsidy would do more to put schools back in the black than repaying 2011?s budget-balancing shift, putting more money into the general fund or passing operating levies.

How has a problem ? and potential solution ? of this magnitude largely stayed hidden from public view for years? The short answer is because it is a terrifically complicated, politically expedient place to hide the true extent to which funding for Minnesota schools has been cut over the last decade.

Gov. Mark Dayton?s proposed budget would put $125 million toward closing the funding gap as well as a number of structural changes that will help direct the 13 percent boost to the districts with the most need.

It?s a welcome start, said Scott Croonquist, the executive director of the Association of Metropolitan School Districts and the person who is best able to describe the cross-subsidy?s many wrinkles. Policymakers should adopt the budget, but they should also begin to address problems that have plagued special ed since its inception.

A look back

Until 1975, most of the country?s then 4 million children with disabilities were either warehoused in ?classrooms? where little education took place, or in institutions where it wasn?t even paid lip service.

Most of these kids had profound and obvious disabilities like Down syndrome. Most children who would now be diagnosed with autism or a mental illness were simply written off as difficult or badly behaved.

In the wake of the civil rights movement, federal courts decreed that all students ? including those in a coma and those considered uneducable ? were entitled to an education, and in the least restrictive environment. The laws that were subsequently written took pains to protect disabled children.

Administrators could not decide that meeting a particular student?s needs was too costly and, to eliminate any incentive to rid their budgets of red ink by chopping spending on the vulnerable, they must maintain their overall special-ed budget.

A sweeping mandate, but few federal dollars

In short, the federal government created a sweeping mandate ? one that most people approved of ? but it has never paid more than a fraction of the cost. Initially the U.S. Congress set a goal of paying for 40 percent of the cost of the new programming, but only once in the ensuing four decades have reimbursement levels topped 20 percent.

Flush with new education funding from the 1971 Minnesota Miracle, Minnesota already served disabled kids. The state?s commitment makes it responsible for 68 percent of special-ed teacher salaries and 50 percent of the main services as well as hefty chunks of costs like transportation.

It should have been enough. But like Congress, the Legislature has never appropriated enough money to reimburse schools. Instead, it budgets a fixed amount that?s pro-rated by districts? enrollment, rather than the number of special-ed students served or the complexity of their disabilities.

This has always created two funding shortfalls: A gap between the state?s legal commitment and the amount of aid the Legislature appropriates for distribution; and a larger gap between what districts are obligated to spend and the global funding available.

An uneven burden, with disincentives

Adding to the pain, the burden is uneven and disincentives abound. Some districts have disproportionate concentrations of needy kids. They may serve an impoverished, fragile population, they may serve as a sort of regional hub for kids with complex issues or a reputation for getting good outcomes may have made them a magnet for families in search of help. But the separate pot of ?excess cost? aid that was supposed to smooth the iniquities also has been underfunded.

Until 2003, the gap between the true cost and federal and state aid hovered around $350 million. High though the budget hit was, it at least held fairly steady. That year, however, a combination of structural changes to Minnesota?s tax system crafted by former Gov. Jesse Ventura and subsequent cost-cutting by then-Gov. Tim Pawlenty started the cross-subsidy?s upward spiral.

An attorney with expertise in education finance, Jerry von Korff serves on the St. Cloud Area School Board. Because the district was one of the aforementioned regional magnets for kids needing specialized services, its cross-subsidy was the largest of any of the state?s districts of substantial size.

In 2004, St. Cloud was forced to divert $569 per student to make up a total special-ed deficit of more than $5 million. The district immediately started looking for ways to freeze expenditures, and von Korff began talking to lawmakers and other education policy types.

An expedient place to obscure the extent of defunding

Legislators listened, said retired Sen. Mindy Greiling, the Roseville DFLer with perhaps the best institutional memory of recent school funding issues ?and mostly shrugged. The cross-subsidy, she said, became the most expedient place to obscure the extent of the defunding.

Mindy Greiling

Mindy Greiling

Even as class sizes were mushrooming and teachers disappearing, legislators frequently voted in small increases in general education funding. Back in their home districts after each session, they would tout any small upticks ? the last two were $50 a head?as proof that education remained a priority, without mentioning that the hundreds of dollars their community was spending on its cross-subsidy.

?Lawmakers quickly learn there?s no political profit in addressing the cross-subsidy,? she said. ?It leaves you less to put on the formula.? The formula being the bottom-line, annual minimum dollar amount the state reimburses districts for every student.

Nor were school administrators ready to acknowledge to a frustrated public that the bare-bones cutting was because up to 20 percent of each child?s funding was being spent on a small number of intensely needy kids.

'School districts can't talk about this'

?School districts can?t talk about this,? said Greiling. ?If you say there?s plenty of money for the schools but for the cross-subsidy, then you set up a dynamic of ?why should they get a class size of 12 while my kid is in this overstuffed classroom???

Over the last decade, the before-inflation special-ed shortfall has eaten all but half a percent of increases in overall state school funding, according to von Korff?s research. During that time, the cross-subsidy has almost doubled, rising to $600 million in 2011. (For purposes of simplicity, these numbers correspond to calendar years. State reports often use fiscal years, and educators often account for costs according to academic years.)

And arguably that figure is artificially low. In 2007, the Legislature provided some temporary relief. And in 2011, an influx of federal stimulus aid ? again, one-time money ? offset the shortfall by almost $150 per pupil.

Even with the federal aid on board, in 2011 St. Paul Public Schools had the largest cross-subsidy at $36 million, or $838 per student, compared to $505 in 2004. The Anoka-Hennepin?s $31 million gap required a shift of $697 a head, vs. $446 in 2004.

Minneapolis Public Schools? $34 million diverted $904 per student, up from $533. Rosemount-Apple Valley Eagan?s $23 million shortfall created a cross-subsidy of $720, compared to $440 in 2004.

Columbia Heights had highest shift in metro

As a per-pupil deficit, Columbia Heights had the highest shift in the metro area at nearly $1,100 per student, more than three times the $334 it diverted in 2004.

Among the several Greater Minnesota districts with eye-popping shortfalls, Red Lake stands out. In 2004, its cross-subsidy was $352. By 2011, the amount had risen to $1,144.

All told, 11 Minnesota districts shifted more than $900 per student into the cross-subsidy and 22 more than $800. With the stimulus dollars gone and Dayton?s proposed relief theoretically arriving in the second year of the next budget, those shortfalls are guaranteed to skyrocket.

* * *

At the moment, the accepted answer to spiraling costs and funding shortfalls is to do more with less. And the hardest part of the cross-subsidy conversation education advocates are attempting to start at the Capitol this year is explaining that in recent years educators have found lots of efficiencies ? and costs have still mushroomed.

When the laws mandating special-education services were written, the majority of the institutionalized students who were to be welcomed into schools had developmental disabilities. Little was known about brain disorders like autism, and legions of kids with challenging behavior were perceived as disciplinary cases, not students struggling with mental illness.

Hand-in-glove with the cross-subsidy, caseloads have shot up in recent years. Between 2001 and 2011 the number of Minnesota children with autism spectrum disorders, which can present some of the thorniest neurobiological challenges, rose from 3,800 to almost 15,000.

Nearly 125,000 children now qualify

Overall, the special-ed student population has risen from 13 percent to 15 percent of the state?s student body over the last decade. Nearly 125,000 children now qualify for services.

The percentage of students who qualify for special education services is on the rise.

During the same period, cuts to social services and health care mean schools are also scrambling to meet the needs of a mushrooming number of kids with severe mental illnesses. Many of them have special-education diagnoses.

?We can?t do more with less because we?re getting better at identifying kids [with unmet needs] and at serving them,? said Greiling. Nor is eliminating the ?maintenance of effort? laws (which is fraught with small caveats) that require districts to maintain spending levels the answer.

Which is not to say that costs cannot be addressed. St. Cloud?s systematic efforts to hold costs steady, for example, has gone from having one of the worst cross-subsidy problems in the state to a fairly commonplace one. Still, its relatively modest 41 percent increase means it must shift $801 per pupil.

* * *

The first Friday after New Year?s, Jason Backes got a new student. An autism specialist in a program where he works for kids with severe disabilities and mental-health needs, Backes had been prepping for Thomas? arrival for some time.

When the bus arrived, the boy was so agitated he tried to hit, kick and bite anyone who got near him. Backes climbed on board, armed with an iPad.

The staff ?innovation coach? at a program for students with multiple, intense challenges, Backes had spent some time getting to know Thomas (who has been given a pseudonym) on paper. He had a plan for delivering the teacher a relatively settled, teachable kid.

According to the information supplied by Thomas? home school district, which couldn?t meet his needs, he needed visual and not verbal cues, and was calmed only by physical activity. So Backes made him a movie.

Costs are astonishingly high

The exact details of Thomas? situation would identify him, but for the sake of illustration assume that like many of his classmates he has a long ride on a bus where he is the only student and that he has both a driver and an aide to keep him safe, a teacher who works exclusively with him?and perhaps another aide ? and a dedicated, specially equipped classroom.

The free and appropriate education Thomas is rightfully entitled to under U.S. law is astonishingly expensive. All that one-on-one staffing can cost upwards of $100,000 a year. Other kids who can be transported together and can work in small-group classrooms may require an outlay of $40,000-$50,000.

In generations past, kids with such intense needs didn?t go to school. They were institutionalized ? warehoused is a more honest way of putting it ? at a cost to taxpayers that was every bit as steep. Meanwhile, the human cost was incalculable.

In the past, educators have protectively shied away from talking publicly about kids like Thomas. They are vulnerable, and rhetorical support for their right to be included as full members of society has always outpaced the willingness to confront the scope of the need.

Frightful though the cost of these specialized interventions is, there are ways, such as clustering kids with ?low-incidence? diagnoses in specialized programs, to simultaneously hold down costs and provide services that are effective.

Intermediate District 287
MinnPost photo by Bill KelleyNorth Education Center in New Hope, where a consortium of west metro school districts operates the Students with Unique Needs program.

Backes? movie showed what it?s like to go to school at the North Education Center in New Hope, where a consortium of west metro school districts operates the Students with Unique Needs program. Its pupils typically have more than one neurobiological issue or mental illness, including profound autism, fetal alcohol syndrome, anxiety, obsessive-compulsive and bipolar disorders and schizophrenia.

Other programs operated by Intermediate District 287 serve children who have a complex mix of cognitive disabilities and mental illnesses. The brand-new North Education Center is the crown jewel of its facilities.

It has innovative features like walls that can be reconfigured at a moment's notice to accommodate a constantly changing population. There are spaces that can be made soothing to kids who have sensory challenges. There is state-of-the-art security, shatter-proof glass and doors that can?t be slammed.

Concentrated expertise

Most important, there?s concentrated expertise. The sooner a student?s needs are identified and addressed, they greater the chance they can be returned to ?regular? school and the higher the likelihood they will earn a high school diploma and enter the work force.

While a very few kids always will need intensive support, in his seven years with District 287, Backes has graduated numerous Thomases back into less restrictive, less costly programs.

Backes filmed the doors Thomas would walk through and the hallway on the other side, where colored strips of carpeting delineate paths for students who need hyper-structured routines. His trip would end in a room where a swing hangs from the ceiling. Unlike a conventional desk, the setup would allow him the constant movement that keeps him calm enough to work.

Backes had sent the video to Thomas? family, so the boy already had seen it when he arrived at school. As Backes screened it again ? and again, and again ? on the iPad on the bus in front of the doors in question, Thomas slowly stopped lashing out.

?Once he got involved in some physical activity, once he got into the classroom and into the swing, he was able to calm himself,? said Backes. ?After half an hour, he was comfortable and ready to try school.?

What Thomas and his teachers need most is a paradigm shift among policymakers. Unless they are willing to confront the true cost of educating Minnesota?s most fragile students, they say, the unmet need will swamp public education.

Source: http://www.minnpost.com/learning-curve/2013/02/meet-cross-subsidy-increasingly-painful-way-pay-special-ed

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Exclusive: Goldman to begin fresh round of job cuts - sources

(Reuters) - Goldman Sachs Group Inc plans to begin a fresh round of job cuts as early as this week, sources familiar with the matter said on Monday, with its equities business bracing for bigger cuts than fixed-income trading.

The cuts come at the time of year in which the Wall Street bank typically gets rid of its weakest 5 percent of employees across the entire firm. But as the trading business continues to suffer from weak volumes and earnings, the losses are expected to be deeper in some businesses.

Equities trading will likely see cuts bigger than 5 percent, while fixed-income trading, which took big hits last year and has had better volumes, will likely see cuts of less than 5 percent the sources said.

Goldman's latest round of dismissals follows the bank's layoffs of 3,300 employees, or 9 percent of its workforce, over the past two years.

(Reporting By Lauren Tara LaCapra and Katya Wachtel; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-goldman-begin-fresh-round-job-cuts-sources-171448704--sector.html

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