Friday, December 30, 2011

Jeff Walton to help lead Sailors baseball in new direction

Photo by Matt Stensland

Jeff Walton is the new assistant baseball coach with Steamboat Springs High School. He had a storied collegiate career at Lower Columbia College and Lander University.

? Lonely spring evenings spent inside a gymnasium fielding ground balls and hitting inside a batting cage won?t be anything new to Jeff Walton.

Walton, who moved to Steamboat Springs in May and is the new assistant Steamboat Springs High School baseball coach, is a veteran of inclement weather. He grew up in Oak Harbor, Wash., where 300-plus days of rain per year were the norm.

It meant Walton spent many days in a gym playing baseball ? something that?s quite normal for a Sailors program looking for its first winning season in more than five years.

?It?s definitely difficult,? said Walton, who works at Wells Fargo Bank. ?Just playing in the gym, you don?t get to see how the ball is going to carry. It?s a little bit more difficult, but that?s where the mechanics come into play.?

Walton comes to a Steamboat baseball program in the midst of plenty of turnover.

New coach Robert Fitzhugh took over the program earlier this summer and is trying to breathe life into a team that traditionally has struggled.

Walton also brings with him a pretty impressive baseball background. After high school, he attended Lower Columbia College in Longview, Wash. The Red Devils consistently play in one of the top junior college conferences in the country and have won 10 Northwest Athletic Association of Community College championships. While at Lower Columbia College, Walton was selected as the Male Student Athlete of the Year and named to the NWAAC Western Division All Star Team.

He then accepted a scholarship to Lander University in South Carolina.

His first year there, in 2004, he set single-season records for batting average, doubles and hits. He also was chosen as the Male Student Athlete of the Year.

In his final year in South Carolina, he reset all of his own records, this time hitting .406 with a school-record 96 hits.

?We both believe in a contact-first approach to hitting,? Fitzhugh said. ?We both believe in pitchers attacking the strike zone. Working with someone who looks at the game the same way will make it that much easier to get the players on the same page and believing in one approach to winning baseball.?

Walton?s coaching past consists of clinics he helped run at both colleges he attended as well as coaching Babe Ruth League teams.

He understands the challenges of baseball in Steamboat and said he looks forward to trying to turn the program around.

?Baseball has been a part of my life since I was hitting it off a tee,? he said. ?It?s good to still be around the game even when you?re up in the mountains.?

To reach Luke Graham, call 970-871-4229 or email lgraham@SteamboatToday.com

Source: http://www2.steamboatpilot.com/news/2011/dec/27/jeff-walton-help-lead-sailors-baseball-new-directi/

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Jones-Drew: Suits fuel NFL's concussion crackdown (AP)

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. ? Jacksonville Jaguars running back Maurice Jones-Drew wonders how much of the NFL's efforts to prevent or properly treat concussions have to do with lawsuits brought by former players against the league and its teams.

The NFL's leading rusher spoke out about the issue again Wednesday, nearly a week after telling The Associated Press he would hide a possible head injury so he could stay in a game.

"I've had concussions before, and it wasn't this big deal about concussions," Jones-Drew said. "The only reason they're making a big deal about concussions right now is because the league is getting sued over it. Before this, you never heard about it. A couple of years ago, you didn't hear anything about it."

After NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell was grilled about his sport's concussion policies at a congressional hearing in October 2009, the league made several significant changes. Those moves have continued, including this month's addition of certified athletic trainers sitting in booths during games to keep an eye out for possible head injuries and alert teams' medical staffs.

Starting this summer, at least eight lawsuits have been filed against the NFL by dozens of retired players who say they have medical problems related to brain injuries from their time in professional football. The NFL's stance, in part, is that players knew there were risks of injury, and there was no misconduct or liability on the league's part.

Jones-Drew called the possibility of serious injury in football an "occupational hazard."

He was one of 44 players the AP interviewed recently about concussions. Slightly more than half ? 23 ? said they would try to hide a concussion and stay in a game rather than pull themselves out.

Players generally indicated they are more aware now of the possible long-term effects of jarring hits to the helmet. Five said that while they would have tried to conceal a concussion during a game in 2009, now they would seek help.

Players also said they should be better protected from their own instincts: More than two-thirds of the group the AP talked to would like to have independent neurologists on sidelines during games.

"You know playing football you're going to get hurt, right?" Jones-Drew said Wednesday. "In the back of your mind, you've got to know that the worst that can happen is you can break your neck and be paralyzed for the rest of your life, right? You have to go into every game knowing that could be what happens. Any given play that could happen to you, right? So there it is. When you sign these deals, you know in the back of your mind, that's what can happen.

"Now basketball, on the other hand, it's a different sport. Race car driving, you know that when you get in that car, there can be an opportunity for that thing to flip over and catch on fire. You see what I'm saying? It's an occupational hazard, simple as that, and you have to be willing to accept it, and I am."

Jones-Drew reiterated that he takes the risk because of his family and said he strongly believes NFL teams would be hesitant to sign players with a history of concussions. So he would hide a concussion to stay in a game, even if it meant increased potential for long-term health issues.

"I would do anything for my kids," he said. "If they're happy, I'm happy. I think they would appreciate it. As long as my kids' kids would be happy with what I did, that's what this life is about: sacrifice. It's not about you anymore, you know?"

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_sp_fo_ne/fbn_jones_drew_concussions

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Botnet Lair in Ukraine Demonstrates Dangers of Infection (NewsFactor)

A recently discovered server in Ukraine demonstrates the danger -- and volume -- of industrial-level identity theft. The server, located by the United Kingdom-based security firm Prevx, was a storage site for data stolen from 160,000 computers that had been infected by viruses.

The server remained online for a month after the Internet service provider, and legal authorities, were alerted to its presence. During that time, it continued to steal data from about 5,000 computers daily, which were harvested through the use of viruses that collect and transmit data. A network of such infected computers is known as a botnet.

'Keys to the Castle'

The stolen data found in the server included e-mails, Facebook passwords, Social Security numbers and log-on info for banks. Prevx was able to find and probe the server because of its poor security protection.

Some of the data came from the infected computer of a U.S. community bank, Metro City Bank in Doraville, Ga., which apparently was not well protected. Such lax protection, said Prevx's director of malware research Jacques Erasmus, is like "giving criminals the keys to the castle." Metro City Bank has said that it is notifying customers and looking into the security breach.

Erasmus told news media that getting into a system may not initially result in "the biggest data heist ever," but this is how hackers get into a network, where they can increase their haul. An entry point through a lightly protected computer serves as a beachhead to launch a full-blown invasion.

In addition to relaying data, the botnets can also capture a stream of user activity. For instance, according to the Associated Press, the server in Ukraine had continuing information on a 22-year-old in Southern California, including registration of a domain name with GoDaddy.com, changing of a Yahoo e-mail password, and ordering from Pizza Hut -- along with data used for those transactions, such as his credit card number, birthdate, phone number and other confidential information.

Checking Net Usage

Prevx, which makes anti-botnet protective software, said thousands of PCs are infected every day and become part of botnets -- including computers protected by respected anti-virus and other security suites.

The security firm said that signs of infection include slow performance when doing some minor task, such as checking e-mail or surfing the Web. On a PC, the company recommends, open Task Manager by simultaneously pressing CTRL, ALT, and Delete keys, and then select Network. If the Internet network connection is more than a few percent usage, this could be a sign that extra transmission is going on.

Prevx suggests that the user then obtain a security product from a maker other than your current security suite, since it is obviously not doing a complete job. In addition to its own Prevx Edge, the company suggests products from AVG, Kaspersky, Panda or Sophos. In some cases, professional services may be required to remove the infection.

Security firm Symantec recommends that security software be configured to update automatically, since viruses change frequently. For Windows users, the company suggests that the most recent operating system update be installed, and that browser security settings by increased.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/enterprise/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nf/20111206/bs_nf/81265

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Dan Walters: California's high-speed train losing public support (Sacramento Bee)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/170407933?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Anatomy of a Stradivarius

World-famous classical violinist Joshua Bell ? perennial uber-cute Cyber crush of Jen-Luc Piquant ? travels all over the world performing, and his instrument of choice is a 300-year-old Stradivarius violin called Gibson ex Huberman. The violin dates back to 1713, when the famed Cremona violin-maker Antonio Stradivari was at the height of his prowess. It is valued at just under $4 million.

Intrepid acousticians all over the globe are still hot on the trail of ?Stradivari?s Secret?: a.k.a., just what is it about a Stradivarius violin that makes it sound so much better than your average, run-of-the-mill instrument? It?s been a topic of feverish investigation and much hot debate for over a decade, at least, and the latest offering comes from a Minnesota radiologist named Steven Sirr, who decided to run a 1704 Stradivarius violin known as ?Betts? through a series of CT scans. The US Library of Congress helpfully loaned him the instrument for the experiment.

Why a CT scan? ?CT is useful in measuring wood density, size and shapes, thickness graduation and volume measurements,? according to Sirr, not to mention providing ?detailed analysis of damage and repair.?

A CT scan is simply a 3D version of your typical x-ray machine. Instead of just zapping an object with a single x-ray beam and recording the shadow image on special film, a CT scan features an X-ray beam that moves all around the object, taking a series of images from hundreds of different angles. A computer then compiles all those images into a single 3D image that enables an analyst to closely examine individual slices, one at a time.

That?s what Sirr did with the Betts violin, collecting over a thousand ?slices? (individual images from many different angles) and then compiling them into a 3D reproduction of the instrument. This gave him a sneak peek into the violin?s inner workings. As Sirr explained:

?I assumed the instrument was merely a wooden shell surrounding air. I was totally wrong. There was a lot of anatomy inside the violin. Just like human beings, there is a wide range of normal variation among violins. When you are looking at an instrument that is hundreds of years old, you will see worm holes and cracks that have been repaired, as well as damage from being exposed to all kinds of conditions, from floods to wars.?

Ah, but Sirr didn?t stop there! He collaborated with two professional violin makers (luthiers) to recreate the perfect replica of Stradivari?s exquisite instrument. It started back in 1989, when Sirr showed his first scans to luthier John Waddle. They spent the next 20 years scanning over 100 violins ? some common, others very rare and valuable ? as well as other stringed instruments to gain a better understanding of how they were made.

For the Betts scan, Sirr converted the CT images into stereolithographic files and fed them into something called a CNC machine. It?s used for wood-working, among other applications, since it can use those files to carve out a real-world version of the imaged object. That?s what Waddle and his partner, Steve Rossow did: they carved the front and back plates and scroll for the replica Betts violin, then assembled and varnished the new instrument by hand.

In Search of Stradivari?s Secret

Ah, but the good Dr. Sirr is not the first to use CT scanning to study Stradivarius violins. Back in 2008, at a meeting of the Acoustics Society of America, Berend Stoel from the Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC) described his collaboration with a renowned luthier named Terry Borman. The two men put several Strads (and some modern instruments, for control purposes) into a CT scanner to study the materials properties of the wood out of which the violins had been made.

Why focus on the wood? Well, several theories about why Strads sound so good rest upon the notion that it?s all about the wood used to make the instruments. For instance, some theorize that Stradivari used Alpine spruce that grew during a period of uncommonly cold weather, which caused the annual growth rings to be closer together, so the wood was abnormally dense.

The problem is that no two pieces of wood are exactly alike, so sculpting the wood ? delicately shaving the top and the back to get the best acoustical properties ? is critical during the violin-making process. A team of researchers from Mid Sweden University has been investigating computer models of violins for years, attempting to match in simulation that telltale Stradivari sound ? including simulating that sculpting process.

Another prevailing theory has to do with the varnish: namely, that Stradivari used an ingenious cocktail of honey, egg whites, and gum arabic from sub-Saharan trees, or perhaps salts or other chemicals. Joseph Nagyvary, a professor emeritus of biochemistry at Texas A&M University, made headlines in November 2006 when he claimed it was the chemicals used to treat the wood ? not necessarily the wood itself ? that was responsible for the unique sound of a Stradivarius violin.

Those chemicals included salts of copper, iron and chromium, all of which are excellent wood preservers but may also have altered the acoustical properties. He based his findings on studies using infrared and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to study the chemical properties of the backboards of several violins. (The backboard is the instrument?s largest resonant component.)

So Stoel decided to study the wood yet again, using the CT scan. See, it?s tough to study those woody properties without risking damage to this multimillion-dollar instruments. Stoel developed a computer program that non-invasively calculates lung densities in people suffering from emphysema, and adapted it to study wood densities from CT scans.

He found that while the average wood density of the classical and modern violins ?did not differ significantly,? according to the accompanying press release, ?the differences in wood density between early and late growth were were significantly lower in the ancient violins. Since differentials in wood density impact vibrational efficiency and thereby the production of sound, it is possible that this discovery may explain the superiority of these violins.?

Back in 2007, I sat down for a nice long chat with George Bissinger, a physicist at East Carolina University who also studies violin acoustics. Bissinger had the big Stradivari announcement in 2007 when he presented the results from his own investigations.

Using a 3D scanning laser, he achieved what he said were the most detailed and quantitative measurements to date of the acoustic properties of the Strad violins featured in the study as they vibrate ? essentially mapping out how they vibrate to produce those heavenly tones. The measurements are so quantitative, in fact, that it?s possible to reconstruct the stiffness properties of the wood used to make the Strads, perhaps finally making it possible for modern instrument makers to replicate those unique acoustical attributes.

Bissinger is tall, slim, with cropped salt-and-pepper hair, and glasses, and while perfectly amiable, he?s not really one for casual chitchat; he?s more the quiet, deep-thinking sort. He doesn?t exactly stand out in a room full of scientists ? until you get him talking about violin acoustics. Then he positively vibrates with intensity and becomes the most loquacious conversationalist on the planet.

That level of passion seems to be present in many who study Strad violins, never mind those who play them, like Joshua Bell (although a delusional Jen-Luc Piquant swears his passion for her trumps even his love for his Strad). The Cremona craftsman would no doubt find this quite gratifying.

Conducting this sort of experiment with bona fide Strads is a major logistics undertaking; Bissinger says it took him several years of careful ?networking.? First, he had to borrow two of the world-class instruments from private collectors ? no doubt having to pry the cases from the owners? panicked fingers on the train platform. Yes, I said ?train platform,? as in, Amtrak.? The instruments were brought to the lab by train in plain cases. Sometimes being inconspicuous is the best security in the world.

A violin organization generously footed the bill to insure the instruments for the 2-1/2 days of the experiment ? you know, just in case the scientists dropped one or accidentally destroyed their tonal purity. Bissinger also brought in three other, lesser violins of varying quality for comparison purposes.

For the experiment, he hung each of the five violins by elastic bands, then struck the wood of the top plate with a little hammer, recording and measuring the vibrational modes with the 3D laser scanner. Bissinger specifically wanted to measure the in-plane and out-plane motion: the in-plane motion is the source of much of the sound energy, and this converts into out-plane motion, which produces the rich tonal sounds we associate with fine violins.

In addition, he hired a world-class violinist to play each of the violins used in the study for an hour so, to get the feel of the instruments, and then offer his subjective ratings for each one. The musician?s subjective analysis was then compared to the objective acoustical data.

The Psycho in the Acoustics

Not surprisingly, Bissinger had a lot to say on the topic of what makes a Stradivarius violin so acoustically superior. ?The big secret about Stradivari is that there is no one secret,? he insisted ? no elusive key or magical formula that, once discovered, will magically make it possible to reproduce the sound quality of a Stradivarius instrument over and over again on a mass scale.

Bissinger believes it can never be reduced to blind routine, because there are so many different factors that go into making a world-class instrument. It?s as much an art as it is science,? he told me. ?You wouldn?t ask Leonardo da Vinci to reproduce the Mona Lisa en masse, perfectly, every time.? For Bissinger, an instrument maker is just as much of an artist as da Vinci: ?He is the bridge between the artist and the scientist, both of whom speak very different languages and have different concerns. The maker has to speak to both.?

Certainly Stradivari was more than a simple craftsman: ?He had some kind of conceptual understanding of the science behind what he was doing, even though physics technically wasn?t around yet,? said Bissinger. But he knew that doing one particular thing would have a desired effect, and he built on accumulated knowledge: each instrument was an improvement on the last, at least through Stradivari?s Golden Period.

But while Stradivari?s emphasis on geometry gave us the signature shape of a violin, Bissinger says there is? little evidence this has anything to do with the famous ?Stradivari sound.? After all, Guarveri also produced exceptional instruments and wasn?t nearly as fascinated by geometry.

Not every Stradivarius sounds alike, and frankly, says Bissinger, even a genuine Stradivarius violin isn?t all it?s cracked up to be sometimes. The passage of time can exact a devastating toll. Many of Stradivari?s surviving instruments have deteriorated to the point where they are primarily collector?s items. Play a violin too frequently, and the parts wear down and must be replaced, altering the sound; play it too little, and the sound deteriorates, too.

Most of the Strads still played today do not have all their original parts, although Joshua Bell prides himself on the fact that his Strad still boasts the original varnish. Still, even Bell adapts his playing to his instrument to get the sound he desires. Bissinger claims there is no ?perfect? instrument, and Stradivari ? who devoted his life to the quest for perfection ? would probably agree.

As for the claimed acoustical superiority of the instruments, yes, they do sound lovely. However, ?There?s way too much psycho in the acoustics,? according to Bissinger, referring to a subfield known as psychoacoustics. Basically, the very name Stradivari instills respect and awe, and this can?t help but influence how people subjectively evaluate and/or respond to the instrument. ?The truth is, there are many very fine world-class instrument makers today, producing violins that can hold their own against the Strads, but their names don?t evoke the same awed reverence, and thus the perception is that they are not as good,? Bissinger told me. In fact, more professional violinists play Guarveris than Strads, which have only become fashionable fairy recently.

Really, who wants mass-produced Stradivarius instruments, anyway? It?s always been all about the craftsmanship.

Ironically, while he was still alive, Stradivari ? while hugely successful at his craft ? was not considered the best violin-maker in the world, although he certainly dominated the industry along with Amati and Guerneri. They were the Holy Triumvirate of the Golden Age of Violins, and after they died, the instrument entered into something of a acoustical Dark Age. Later instrument makers didn?t share that all-consuming passion for improving the process to create ever-more-superior instruments: they just cranked out instruments the way it had always been done, with predictably pedestrian results.

Way back in 1819, physicist Felix Savard observed, ?It is to be presumed that we have arrived at a time when the efforts of scientists and those of artists are going to unite to bring to perfection an art which for so long has been limited to blind routine.? Here we are, almost 200 years later, still trying to map out all the details, still chasing down an elusive secret that might not even exist. Perhaps that ability to capture our imagination 300 years later is the true magic of Stradivari.

NOTE: Portions of this post first appeared on the old archived blog in July 2008.

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Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=5b5342dcc78957d4d28389d2233765fa

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Taylor Swift 'Ours': Her Top 5 Most Romantic Music Videos


We'll admit it: Taylor Swift's new music video for 'Ours' -- her fifth single off her multiplatinum-selling album 'Speak Now' -- might be our favorite yet. Starring Zach Gilford (of Friday Night Lights fame), it follows Taylor as a regular working girl at a very, very boring office job, daydreaming about the special moments her and her hunky boyfriend have shared. Of course, they have a surprise, misty-eyed reunion at the end. Aw, shucks.

Unsurprisingly, super romantic music videos seem to be a staple for Swift, and 'Ours' definitely reminds us of a few other swoon-worthy videos she's released from previous albums. Check out the below slideshow to watch 'Ours' and see our picks for Taylor's top 5 most romantic music videos ever.

Quick Poll

What Is The Most Romantic TSwift Music Vid?

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/04/taylor-swift-ours-her-top_n_1128480.html

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Anonymous' 'Robin Hood' attacks may benefit banks

Jacob Aron, technology reporter

Hacktivist group Anonymous have joined up with another group known as TeaMp0isoN to hit back at banks in support of the Occupy movement by using stolen credit cards to donate to charities. But "Operation Robin Hood" could actually leave ordinary people and and charitable organisations out of pocket while boosting bank profits.

It is all down to the way credit card chargebacks work. Those who have their credit card details stolen and notice fraudulent charges will complain to their card provider, who will in turn contact the merchant that accepted the stolen card payment to initiate a chargeback. If the merchants haven't followed proper procedure, they could be liable for the entire payment and may even be fined by the credit card company if chargebacks exceed a certain level.

Of course, anyone unlucky enough to have their credit card details stolen and without noticing the charges will be liable for the full fee. If that wasn't enough, banks also make a profit on every credit card purchase, thanks to transaction fees.

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Is Child Sexual Abuse on the Rise? (LiveScience.com)

With the stream of accusations of child sexual abuse not losing any gusto lately, from the ever-growing charges against former Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky to allegations of such behaviors by assistant basketball coach Bernie Fine, it'd be easy to assume a real upsurge in such abuse.

But that may not be the case.?

First, Sandusky was accused of sexually molesting at least eight boys over the past 15 years; he has pleaded not guilty to the more than 40 charges against him.

Then last week Fine of Syracuse University was fired amid accusations of sexual abuse. So far three men, including two former Syracuse ball-boys, have come forward stating that Fine molested them as minors.

Neither Sandusky nor Fine has been found guilty of any crime, but these are only the latest in what seems to be a year filled with news reports about sexual harassment and sexual abuse. Earlier this year an ABC News investigation revealed that USA Swimming (the governing body for the sport up to and including the U.S. Olympic team) has banned for life nearly 40 swimming coaches over the last decade because of sexual misconduct. [Child Abuse: Why People Look the Other Way]

So what's going on?

According to the nation's top experts, children are actually safer from physical and sexual abuse than they have been for decades. A National Incidence Study of Child Abuse and Neglect issued by the Department of Health and Human Services found that both physical and sexual abuse of children have dropped significantly over the past 20 years: From 2005 to 2006, an estimated 553,000 children suffered physical, sexual or emotional abuse, down 26 percent from the estimated 743,200 abuse victims in 1993. And between 1993 and 2005, the number of sexually abused children dropped 38 percent, while number of children who experienced physical abuse fell by 15 percent and those who were emotionally abused declined by 27 percent.

In fact, incidence of sexual abuse of children began to drop two decades ago, according to Dr. David Finkelhor, director of the Crimes Against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire.

In his book "Childhood Victimization: Violence, Crime and Abuse in the Lives of Young People" (Oxford 2008), Dr. Finkelhor notes, "The child victimization declines of the 1990s were something new, and not simply the extension of trend lines from the past. For example, available data on child abuse show strong increases in all forms of maltreatment from the mid-1970s into the 1990s. After a short plateau, the sexual abuse decline seemed to start in 1992, and the physical abuse decline gained momentum after 1996. Many analysts did not interpret the earlier rise as necessarily indicative of a real increase in child maltreatment but rather as the result of a new public and professional mobilization to identify and report cases. But some data suggested real increases in the 1980s."

Overall, Dr. Finkelhor told LiveScience.com, "There is very little evidence that child sexual abuse is on the rise in the U.S., and considerable evidence that it is declining, including data from law enforcement, child protection and surveys of victims themselves." He added that though the prevalence of child sexual abuse worldwide is hard to assess, "there are some indicators of decline in other countries such as Canada and the United Kingdom."

Many of the recent accusations of sexual abuse date back many years; just because the public is hearing more about it now doesn't mean that it's on the increase. Thus while the barrage of news reports about sexual abuse of children may make parents fearful, the reality is that kids today are safer than ever.

Causes of the drop in child sexual abuse are complex and not completely understood. Some experts point out that the overall crime rate dropped significantly during the same time, and that child abuse rates fell along with murder and assault rates. Other analyses credit the economic prosperity of the 1980s and 1990s as improving overall social conditions, while still others note that tougher penalties for sex crimes led to higher numbers of offenders being jailed. It's also likely that greater social awareness of child abuse through television news (and even Hollywood films such as "Mystic River") resulted in parents taking more precautions for their children's safety. Like most social problems, there's no simple answer.

Benjamin Radford is deputy editor of Skeptical Inquirer science magazine and author of Media Mythmakers: How Journalists, Activists, and Advertisers Mislead Us. His Web site is www.BenjaminRadford.com.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20111203/sc_livescience/ischildsexualabuseontherise

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Kids of All Weights Benefit From Car Seats (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Dec. 2 (HealthDay News) -- Child safety and booster seats protect children of all weights, including those on the heavy side.

That's the finding of a new study that looked at nearly 1,000 children, aged 1 to 8 years, who were involved in crashes. All of the children were properly restrained in the correct child safety or booster seat for their height and weight, according to the report published online and in the December print issue of the journal Pediatrics.

"Given that nearly 32 percent of children in the United States are categorized as overweight or obese, and motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death and injury for all children, we wanted to better understand how these two threats to children's health interact," lead author Dr. Mark Zonfrillo, an attending emergency physician at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, said in a hospital news release.

"This research should reassure parents that their only concern when it comes to car seat safety should be to follow the most recent guidelines set by the American Academy of Pediatrics," he added.

Those guidelines, revised earlier this year, outline the use of car safety and booster seats based on a child's height, weight and age.

"A good time to re-evaluate child safety seat needs is during your child's routine medical visits. Compare your child's weight and height measurements to the manufacturer's acceptable ranges on the seat's labels or instructions," Zonfrillo recommended.

"There's no 'one-size-fits-all.' If your older child moved to a booster seat at age 5, don't necessarily assume it will be the same for his or her younger siblings," he said.

He and his colleagues also said pediatricians and family doctors should advise parents to check their child's height and weight measurements against their safety seat specifications.

More information

Here's where you can find the American Academy of Pediatrics' car safety seat guidelines.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111202/hl_hsn/kidsofallweightsbenefitfromcarseats

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Make Your Own Spray Paint Can for Affordable and Refillable Painting [Video]

Make Your Own Spray Paint Can for Affordable and Refillable Painting Spray paint is an expensive tool that doesn't offer a lot of customization options for people looking to make their own mixes, but Instructables Community Manager mikeasaurus has put together a guide to make your own can and paint.

You don't need much to do this yourself, the can itself is made from a bicycle inner tube, Sugru, an empty plastic bottle, an empty spray can, and paint. The best part is besides the bare-bones part list, you don't need much for tools either, just a knife, drill, hacksaw, and a bike pump to create the pressure. Once you make the can, you can mix the paints however you see fit to create custom colors and refill it when needed. Find the full guide to building it yourself on Instructables.

DIY Spray Paint | Instructables

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/wFD2jg2-fl0/make-your-own-spray-paint-can-for-affordable-and-refillable-painting

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Congo opposition wants vote annulled, alleging fraud (Reuters)

KINSHASA (Reuters) ? Four opposition challengers to Democratic Republic of Congo's President Joseph Kabila called on Tuesday for election results to be rejected, accusing authorities of systematic fraud.

Candidate Vital Kamerhe, a former government minister, said ballots had been marked ahead of the poll in favor of Kabila, and some voters prevented from entering polling stations during Monday's chaotic presidential and parliamentary elections.

Three other candidates also urged the Congolese not to accept any results from the vote, saying technical problems and fraud meant they would not be credible. However Kabila's top rival, Etienne Tshisekedi, did not join their call and his party said it was confident he would win.

"There can be no doubt as to the scale of the fraud, deliberately planned by those in power with the connivance of the national election commission," Kamerhe wrote in a letter to Kabila, the election commission and international bodies.

"Police chased witnesses from polling stations before counting could start," he said, citing reports by international observers and others that security forces took control of voting stations in Kinshasa.

"These elections must quite simply be annulled."

At least eight people have been killed in violence linked to Monday's elections, the second since the end of Congo's 1998-2003 civil war. Authorities went ahead with the polls despite international concerns about a lack of preparation.

"We have no faith in the results which will come out of these elections," presidential candidates Kengo wa Dondo, Antipas Mbusa Nyamwisi and Adam Bombole said in a statement.

Veteran opposition leader Tshisekedi did not join the calls for an annulment, and an official from his UDPS party said he was poised to win despite the irregularities.

"According to our estimations, Mr Kabila's fraud has not worked and we are ahead so we are not calling for a cancellation," UDPS secretary general Jacquemain Shabani said.

The national election commission has repeatedly denied accusations of bias and said it was confident that preparations for the election were largely in place.

"A LESSON"

Kabila, 40, has been widely viewed as the favorite in the single-round vote against 10 challengers. About 18,500 people are also running for 500 seats in parliament.

Some polling stations were burned down or attacked on Monday as frustrated Congolese tried to find out where they should vote or were prevented from doing so by a lack of voting equipment.

Election commission spokesman Matthieu Mpita said about 800 polling stations that either experienced problems during voting or did not open at all had either been allowed to vote on Tuesday or would finish the process on Wednesday.

But he said at least 130 polling stations in the southern Kasai provinces, which are opposition strongholds, would not see any extension to voting until enquiries had been carried out, adding that the trouble had been fomented by local politicians.

"We are going to give them a lesson," he said.

Anaclet Tshimbalanga, the president of TDH, a human rights group in West Kasai province, said at least 12 polling stations were torched in the provincial capital, Kananga, after residents said they found ballots already marked in favor of Kabila.

Mounoubai Madnodje, spokesman for the U.N. mission in Congo, said the United Nations was still delivering electoral materials on Tuesday to some areas which had yet to vote, including the central province of Bandundu.

"We've offered our helicopters to transport materials, so yes, we're still continuing to help," he said, adding the country was generally calm.

(Writing by Mark John; Editing by Janet Lawrence and Andrew Heavens)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111129/wl_nm/us_congo_democratic_election

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