Thursday, March 22, 2012

No Goal Jogging, Gain More


People are not born to work, but people naturally love sports. Several millions years ago, we run on the grassland. Early morning dew, rising sun, soft grass, gorgeous flowers, all of our partners, we witness the story. We get food by running, enjoy lives by running. We grow in the running, also running in the reproduction, harvest of love and fragrance.
When we were young, sit up as long as we want to go, as long as can go, we wanted to run. We wanted to run. We playing, chasing, touching novel of all. Those unconscious sports make out brains developed and get involution.
Movement of human nature is human nature running and instinctive! Human naturedly loves sports.
However, an adult, why do we think the sport has become very difficult to do? Every movement, from the psychological and physiological fought a major battle as the same?
Because our education, so that we are affected.

Passion of Jesus on the cross, then the redemption of mankind. This also means that happiness is from hard try, and the liberation is from pain. We also have a tendency to succeed, always from the will and persistence, from the defeat of pain. So we accept the attitude, we always thought that exercise is painful, movement is to insist, exercise is fatigue, muscle movement is torture, sport harvest of happiness is a reward for us to suffer. Like this, no positive feedback, not a happy reward, only to bear the pain and pressure on the persistence. How can we can start to exercise and continue? Then we get two excuses and then give up sporting. From beginning to end is happy, without pain, and need we insist that our body relaxation, entertainment, our spirit, stretch our limbs, our natural brilliance with Shining like the sun and the moon, was changed. We see the kids wanted to run and run, want to play and play, have no requirement of how fast to run, win or with no pressure. If you can take charge of the conversion of happiness and little pain, do not really want to achieve anything, do not do excessive, just do sports with no pressure, no goals, you always have happiness, you will harvest a human self. The original target set, but one stepping stone only. We are happy from the movement of naturally occurring, rather than from the movement to find pain. To exercise if you want to exercise, the pace of all full with you, no forced, not painful, endless delight.
Sports are human nature, their homes, this should be our sports and entertainment field. However, more and more playgrounds are replaced by numerous parking stations. But today, it is a hard thing to get a free feel place for sports. But Sunset of the field running; warm Japan-China Soccer Street has gone. And problems come when thinking about where to start, who will play with. How can we find that we are really there and find out nature being features by sporting?

Source: http://leisure.ezinemark.com/no-goal-jogging-gain-more-7d34e756d3b3.html

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Generali targets 5 billion euro operating profit after weak 2011

MILAN (Reuters) - Generali , Europe's No.3 insurer, is targeting operating profit of more than 5 billion euros ($6.6 billion) in the mid term as it sees no repeat of the dramatic market shocks that prompted big writedowns in the past year.

Italy's top insurer said on Wednesday it believes the worst is over after detecting signs of recovery in the early months of 2012, having reported a 50 percent drop in yearly net profit to 856 million euros and a dividend cut late the previous session.

"I am hopeful that we have reached the bottom and now the way is up," Generali Chief Executive Giovanni Perissinotto told analysts during a conference call, adding he expected "strong growth" in profit this year.

Yet investors punished Generali shares, which were down 3.2 percent by 1212 GMT on the back of the weak earnings and reduced dividend. The company also set an operating profit target for its large life business slightly below the target set for last year.

Generali shares underperformed a 0.3 percent fall in the European insurance sector <.SXIP> as a whole.

Generali had been hit hard by the deepening of the euro zone crisis due to its Greek bond holdings and its exposure to the Italian market. Its 2011 results were hit by impairment losses worth 1 billion euros on Greek bonds and other holdings.

The insurer's operating result of 3.9 billion euros in 2011 was below the bottom of its target range. It set a new 2012 target at 3.9 to 4.5 billion euros.

MEAGRE DIVIDEND

Weak 2011 net profit forced Generali, the last major European player to report 2011 results, to cut its dividend to 0.20 euro per share from 0.45 euro for 2010.

This contrasts with a decision by French rival Axa and German peer Allianz to keep dividends stable. At 1.52 percent, Generali's dividend yield is now well below a sector average of 4.7 percent, analysts said.

"The big surprise, in our view, was the larger-than-expected cut in the dividend," said analysts at Nomura.

European insurers' 2011 dividends have been under close scrutiny amid investor worries that writedowns on sovereign debt, near-record catastrophe claims and dwindling investment returns might crimp their ability to pay while maintaining healthy capital reserves.

Generali's Solvency I ratio - a measure of financial strength - held up better than expected in the final quarter of 2011, when yields on Italian government bonds rose to euro-era highs amid an intensification of the euro zone crisis.

The ratio, reported under conservative Italian solvency rules, had rebounded to 132 percent by March 1, 2012 and will get a small additional boost from the announced sale of Israeli unit Midgal. Chief Financial Officer Raffaele Agrusti told analysts Generali was targeting 140 percent in 2014.

The insurer said on Wednesday it was considering further sales of assets it considers non-core.

Generali, which reported a 38 percent rise in 2011 non-life results to 1.56 billion euros, said on Wednesday it had a 2012 target range of 1.5 to 1.9 billion euros, above last year's goal.

In the life sector, where the insurer saw a 16 percent fall in 2011, this year's target was set at 2.4 to 2.8 billion euros, below the 2.7-3.2 billion euro target set for last year.

Generali's effort to expand its footprint in high-growth emerging markets is making it a more attractive player than some rivals, although the outlook for Europe's life market remains uncertain as the crisis eats into household savings.

($1 = 0.7564 euro)

(Additional reporting by Stephen Jewkes and London stock market team; Editing by Dan Lalor and David Holmes)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/generali-targets-6-6-billion-operating-profit-082711057.html

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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

In Defense of Boredom and Boring Movies | Film School Rejects

Culture Warrior

What exactly do we mean when we find a movie to be boring? Does boring mean redundant? Monotonous? Tedious? Wearisome? Frustrating? Tiring? Uninteresting? Not challenging? The proposed definitions here are far from a collection of synonymous effects on what constitutes a ?boring? work. The above terms can often be associated with boredom, but when parsed apart these can denote very different, even oppositional, experiences. For instance, tedium and frustration, which imply an active and engaged (though not positive) form of viewership, do not necessarily describe the same experience as something that feels monotonous or tiring, which by contrast suggests a passive viewer.

However, the boredom critique deserves to be severed from its associations with ?uninteresting? and ?unchallenging? cinema, and ?monotony? and ?tedium? need not always be negative experiences when watching films. Boring cinema can instead be the most challenging and revelatory of all.

In 2009, I wrote a piece titled Slow Isn?t Boring in which I defended the type of deliberately-paced cinema Dan Kois later expressed his frustration with, arguing that slow cinema has the capacity to give viewers a unique and hypnotic experience of time that you can?t find in other entertainment media. Thus, with the films of slow filmmakers like Andrei Tarkovsky, Apichatpong Weerasethakhul, and Carlos Reygadas, I find myself the furthest from a state accurately described as ?bored?; in fact, I experience the reverse: total immersion.

The intent, at least, of these filmmakers is not to bore you, and I for one find welcome respite in films like Solaris, Uncle Boonmee, and Silent Light against an impatient, hyperkinetic, instant-karma daily reality of smart phones, Adderall, and highway traffic.

Most critiques of a film as ?boring? are based on the assumption of cinema as an entertainment medium. But there is also value in cinematic boredom.

Boredom and Danger

American composer Dick Higgins wrote the following about boredom in 1968:

??in the context of a work that attempts to involve the spectator, boredom often serves a useful function: as an opposite to excitement and as a means of bringing emphasis to what it interrupts, causing us to view both elements freshly. It is a necessary station on the way to other experiences??

Higgins, in this excerpt from his essay ?Boredom and Danger,? was referring specifically to deliberately boring avant-garde music, but his argument can easily be extended to movies. Higgins goes on to state, as the title suggests, that the boring artistic experience involves a significant factor of danger, both on behalf of the spectator and the artist. The danger lies in the element of risk and alienation.

For Higgins, the valuable experience of boredom is one in which boredom is merely an initial state, and provides a bridge to deeper understanding ? not necessarily the immersive experience that some ?slow filmmakers? offer, but an opportunity for boredom to illuminate, deconstruct, and reveal what we accept by its opposition to be ?normal.? Boredom is thus the beginning of the experience, not the end of the conversation.

If we experience a cultural product as boring, the question to then ask is, ??and then what?? The ?and then? can be a quite challenging and revelatory experience.

The Practice of Boredom

Boredom as aesthetic practice has been something of a regular mode of operation for avant-garde cinema. Andy Warhol?s notorious Empire (1964) featured a single sustained shot of The Empire State Building for eight straight hours. And Warhol?s similar Sleep (1963) captured over five hours of a man sleeping. Are these films provocations? Sure. Are they practical jokes that critique avant-garde audiences, or are these the most challenging of aesthetic experiences? Are we meant to leave the theater in frustration after tolerating only so much, or are we meant to challenge ourselves to endure these films until their anti-climactic end? For many viewers of these films (I admit I have sat through neither), the experience can be completely different and unique. Boredom in these cases can be an initial sensation leading to an almost meditative and otherwordly experience of stasis. This is where there are stories of audiences gasping when the ?protagonist? of Sleep rolls over several hours in. The initial frustration of monotony is only the beginning.

A richer example, I think, is Michael Snow?s Wavelength, a 45-minute film in which a camera slowly zooms in from one corner of a room to another while the wavelength of a sustained noise slowly escalates. Experiencing the film from beginning to end, one?s ears and eyes slowly become tricked: is the camera actually zooming and the noise actually escalating, or is the endurance of monotony creating only an illusion of such a sensation?

But the challenges of cinematic boredom are also available in narrative cinema. Last month, Hungarian auteur Bela Tarr?s proposed final film, The Turin Horse, was released in the US. The film?s central ?story? is predicated on Friedrich Nietzsche?s famous late-life encounter with a cab horse being beaten in 1889. But this inciting incident is never actually shown.

The Turin Horse instead concerns itself with the impoverished daily life of the cab driver and his daughter. The cab driver seems to not be at all effected by the Nietzsche encounter, and the audience sits through sit arduous and monotonous days with these two solitary characters as their resources slowly diminish during a seemingly never-ending windstorm. We as viewers experience the repetitive nature of their daily lives ? eating boiled potatoes, fetching well water, watching in hopes of the storm diminishing ? with increased frustration as no ?out? is ever made available for the viewer, just as it is for the characters.

Through the ?boring? experience of The Turin Horse, the audience experiences the most terrifying and threatening type of boredom, one that knows no Hollywood-style respite. Boredom, then, reveals closure and release in storytelling to be a manufactured and false illusion, one that has rarely existed in a long history in which most humans? lives have been characterized by soul-deadening boredom as a given.

In boring cinema, the power balance between filmmaker and audience is reversed. Rather than providing the distraction audiences demand, boring films challenge audiences by holding them captive, and in this way provide an experience that is completely unique precisely because it would otherwise be avoided.

Boredom in a Distracted Culture

There is nothing that we as a culture currently fear more than boredom. We simply do not enjoy an experience of time as dictated by someone else. Is there a lull in your conversation with friends? Pull out a smart phone. Don?t want to wait until a movie?s release date or the airing of a new television episode to find out what happens? Seek out some spoilers. Making dinner by yourself? Have the television on or listen to a podcast in the background. No time for a movie? Watch some YouTube videos.

I am not blankedly criticizing an impatient society here, but revealing myself as part of and complicit in it. And movies and television are equally complicit, for one can make a case that boredom as we understand it today is precisely a product of the entertainment media that we seek to eradicate it with.

This is why boredom is not only an increasingly rare experience, but one that should be valued specifically because it is feared. Boredom of value simply asks us to experience time. Ironically, boredom (or the idea that we are ?wasting time?) actually reveals the ways in which we associate time and value it, which is, of course, based on our understanding that our time is limited. To embrace boredom, then, is to acknowledge mortality. There is indeed danger in boredom.

But deliberately boring movies arguably provide the least dangerous kind of boredom because they do, eventually, promise to end. Empire, Sleep, Wavelength, and The Turin Horse do not so much provide the actual lived experience of boredom, but create a sensation of boredom that is just as fabricated as experiences entertainment/distraction in conventional Hollywood cinema (let?s call it a ?simulacrum of boredom?). These films can then teach us to navigate boredom rather than actually live it, and to even see it as an initial experience rather than a dauntingly apocalyptic dead-end experience. And where?s the danger in that?

For More Boredom, Continue Reading Culture Warrior

Source: http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/features/in-defense-of-boring-movies-lpalm.php

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Study: Teens texting more than ever, making calls and hanging out in person less

Teens are more likely to send a text than make a call... or even hang out in person

For those of you with?teens of your own, this may not seem like news: According to a new?Pew Internet & American Life Project report, teenagers are texting more than ever before at the expense of most other forms of communication.

The average teen in the study sent 60 texts a day, up about 20% from three years ago. Teens aged 14 to 17 sent an average of 100 texts a day, up about 67%. A full 75% of teens actively text, and 77% have smartphones.

Predictably, if teens are texting more, the study shows that they're calling less. Only 39% of teenagers said they make mobile calls daily and 14% talk daily on landlines, as compared to 63% who text daily.

Pew via?Mashable

Image source:?RFM II

This article was written by Fox Van Allen and originally appeared on Tecca

More from Tecca:

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/technology-blog/study-teens-texting-more-ever-making-calls-hanging-015311136.html

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Thursday, March 8, 2012

GOP contenders, Obama differ on energy stance

If the picture being painted by Republicans running for the White House is true, West Virginia politicians could get an important ally in the battle for coal and against the Environmental Protection Agency.

West Virginia Republicans have ?been quick to blast President Barack Obama's administration on environmental and energy policy, but West Virginia Democrats have been nearly as quick to come to the defense of coal and, recently, natural gas.

Obama and each of the presidential contenders have plans for the nation's energy mix, but what would those plans mean in West Virginia?

Obama would favor gas over coal

President Barack Obama touted renewable energy and reducing foreign oil reliance since coming into office. He often leaves coal out of energy discussions, but his "blueprint" for achieving energy independence included coal technologies.

In his state of the union speech early this year, Obama called for an "all-of-the-above-energy" policy. While he was still light on references to coal, he did speak favorably to an industry that is becoming increasingly more productive in West Virginia ? natural gas from shale gas formations.

"We have a supply of natural gas that can last America nearly 100 years," Obama said. " ? America will develop this resource without putting the health and safety of our citizens at risk."

Obama's energy blueprint basically highlights a three prong approach to energy ? developing domestic supplies, providing energy-saving choices to consumers and sparking innovation to lead toward a "clean energy" future.

While Obama has been reluctant to mention coal lately, actions of his administration may be an indicator of the environmental and energy future of West Virginia.

Since Obama took office, there has been increased scrutiny on the permitting process of mountaintop removal, stricter emissions laws and other actions that have sparked controversy in the coalfields.

Romney won't be Obama

GOP contender Mitt Romney's energy plan is essentially to do the opposite of what the Obama administration has done.

Most of his "Believe in America" plan for jobs and economic growth document is dedicated to digging at what Romney sees as Obama failures.

"Unfortunately, the first three years of the Obama administration have witnessed energy and environmental policies that have stifled the domestic energy sector," Romney's plan states. "In thrall to the environmentalist lobby and its dogmas, the president and the regulatory bodies under his control have taken measures to limit energy exploration and restrict development in ways that sap economic performance, curtail growth, and kill jobs."

While the crux of Romney's plan involves offshore oil drilling and opening the Keystone XL pipeline, he also shows strong support of coal and other traditional fuels.

"The Obama administration's diversion of resources into green?energy?has occurred at a time when the traditional?energy?sector ? oil, gas, coal, and nuclear ? holds remarkable job-creating potential," Romney's plan states. "These are all labor-intensive industries that generate good-paying opportunities for workers, affordable energy for consumers, and billions of dollars of revenue for government."

Romney specifically says he intends to streamline regulations affecting coal power plants in a way that avoids plant closures, but still protects the environment. Romney said he would remove carbon dioxide from the purview of the Clean Air Act, hindering the Environmental Protection Agency from regulating its emission.

Santorum wants less regulation

Rick Santorum's energy plan, headlined "Unleashing America's Domestic Energy" would remove energy subsidies from all energy sources, allowing market forces to decide which technologies were most viable.

"This will prevent the federal government from picking winners and losers in our effort to unleash all of America's domestic energy sources," Santorum's website states.

Santorum says he also would lift onshore and offshore drilling bans, continue promoting drilling techniques for natural gas and approve of the Keystone XL oil pipeline.

Santorum also said he would work to repeal the EPA greenhouse gas regulations, reclassification of coal ash and the utility maximum achievable control technology rule. Both have been blamed for coal plant closures in West Virginia and elsewhere and drawn the ire of West Virginia politicians.

"We must employ a policy that makes energy more affordable, makes our nation more secure by lessening dependence on unreliable or adversarial foreign sources, and increases conservation through efficient use and diverse energy sources," Santorum's plan states.

Santorum, from Pennsylvania, also frequently praises the shale gas energy for increasing jobs and domestic energy sources. The Marcellus shale he often touts lies under West Virginia as well as Pennsylvania.

Gingrich would eliminate the EPA

Newt Gingrich has a six-point plan for energy if he takes the White House that would remove "bureaucratic and legal obstacles" to oil and gas development; finance clean energy research with oil and gas royalties; removing the ban on shale oil development and eliminating the EPA.

Gingrich said that he would replace the EPA with an Environmental Solutions Agency that would use incentives to improve the environment without impacting jobs or increasing the cost of energies.

In contrast to Santorum, Gingrich has said he supports subsidies for all energy sources, because it enables the nation to reach energy independence sooner.

"Contrary to popular belief, America has more energy than any nation on earth," Gingrich said in press materials. "All that's keeping us from becoming energy independent is a lack of political will to do so."

Gingrich was once a supporter of cap-and-trade legislation and appeared in commercials recognizing global warming as a problem. He has since changed his stance on global warming.

On his website, Gingrich also promotes use of "clean-coal" technology alongside of the nation's oil, natural gas, wind, biofuels and nuclear resources.

Paul would leave it to the market

Ron Paul says it's the free market, not the government that determine the winners and losers of America's energy pursuit.

"Unfortunately, decades of misguided federal action have helped lead to skyrocketing fuel prices, making it even more difficult for hardworking families to make ends meet," Paul said. "Washington's bureaucratic regulations, corporate subsidies, and excessive taxation have distorted the market and resulted in government bureaucrats picking winners and losers."

Paul said he would also remove drilling restrictions and eliminate the EPA. He says polluters should answer to property owners in court, "not to Washington."

Paul would also "lift government roadblocks to the use of coal" and nuclear power.

"It's time for a President that recognizes the free market's power and innovative spirit by unleashing its full potential to produce affordable, environmentally sound, and reliable energy," Paul said.

?

Source: http://www.statejournal.com/story/17103189/gop-contenders-obama-differ-on-energy-stance

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Insight: Public schools sell empty classroom seats abroad

REVILLO, South Dakota (Reuters) - There are just seven pairs of boots lined up outside the kindergarten classroom in this fading farm town. Just eight crayon drawings are taped to the wall outside second grade.

Enrollment is dropping at the Grant-Deuel School, as at so many rural schools. Fewer students means less state funding and a slow extinction.

But Superintendent Grant Vander Vorst has an improbable plan to save his little school on the prairie - by turning it into a magnet for wealthy foreign students. This year, 11 students from China, Thailand, Germany and elsewhere account for nearly 20% of high school enrollment, bringing cash and a welcome splash of diversity to an isolated patch of the Great Plains.

Grant-Deuel is not alone. Across the United States, public high schools in struggling small towns are putting their empty classroom seats up for sale.

In Sharpsville, Pennsylvania, and Lake Placid, New York, in Lavaca, Arkansas, and Millinocket, Maine, administrators are aggressively recruiting international students.

They're wooing well-off families in China, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Russia and dozens of other countries, seeking teenagers who speak decent English, have a sense of adventure - and are willing to pay as much as $30,000 for a year in an American public school.

The end goal for foreign students: Admission to a U.S. college.

In an age of tenuous public funding, school districts "can't expect to sit back and survive, because the money is not going to be there. The taxpayers are not going to provide it," said Kenneth Smith, the superintendent in Millinocket, a remote town of 5,000 in central Maine.

IMAGINATIVE

Smith has three foreigners in his high school now, each paying $15,000 in tuition plus $11,000 to bunk with a local family. He hopes to bring in many more. "You've got to be imaginative," he said.

American colleges have long seen international students as a rich source of revenue. Nearly 725,000 foreign students enrolled at U.S. universities last year, a record high. Private boarding schools have also targeted wealthy foreigners for some time.

But few public school principals ever dreamed of charging tuition for Algebra I, U.S. History and the like - until states began making deep cuts to education budgets and plunging property values eroded local funding for schools.

Success in the international market is far from assured. Just 1,135 foreign students are currently paying tuition to attend a public high school. Still, that's a huge jump from the 309 enrolled five years ago, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

More than 1,000 public high schools have completed the federal certification process, including a site visit, that allows them to bring in tuition-paying foreigners.

In small schools with just 10 or 15 students per class, the marginal cost of adding a few more bodies is slim, notes Randy Richards, the superintendent in Lake Placid, New York.

"We're paying for the teachers already. We're paying for the electricity already," he said. So he considers the foreigners' tuition checks pure profit. Even just a handful of overseas students, paying $18,000 each, could bring in enough money to pay a few salaries or upgrade technology. "That's a lot of money for us," Richards said.

SCHOOL CULTURE

The rush to recruit abroad has raised some alarms.

"We've heard a lot of questions - how will it change our school culture?" said Shane Murray, superintendent of Jamestown Area School District in western Pennsylvania. He says some local parents fear their children will lose spots on sports teams or seats in honors classes to foreign students.

Murray is undaunted. He hopes to bring 40 foreign students, each paying $10,000 tuition, into the high school, which has a local enrollment of 270. That would make up for the $400,000 cut in state funding the district absorbed last year. It would save teacher jobs.

And, Murray says, it will build character in local kids, as they learn to work with, and compete against, students from other cultures. "Competition is good," he said.

Susan Flaccus, who sits on a school board for an impoverished swath of rural Massachusetts, has heard those arguments. But she opposes her district's effort to recruit international students to Mohawk Trail Regional High School.

"I don't like the feeling that our schools are for sale," Flaccus said. "It just doesn't feel right to me."

She fears districts that become dependent on foreign tuition will lose sight of their obligation as public schools to serve local kids first and foremost.

FOOLING FOREIGNERS?

Flaccus frets, too, that small, rural public schools - many with only mediocre academic records - have no business charging such hefty tuition. "We may be fooling foreigners into thinking they are getting something that they are not," she said. "That doesn't seem honorable to me."

Some overseas recruiters acknowledge that foreign families know little about public high schools. "Asians have no clue where they're sending all their kids," said David Ho, who recruits students from across Asia for rural public schools in Pennsylvania.

Nonetheless, student visas are fairly easy to get; the United States does not impose any caps or quotas. And recruiters say public schools appeal to foreign families because they're often far cheaper than private boarding schools.

A year abroad, recruiters say, is not so much about the academics. It's seen as a chance to master English and build ties with American teachers who can serve as personal references on college applications.

Many American universities have had problems with foreign students who arrive ill-prepared and with only rudimentary English. But on the high school level, superintendents say they're largely getting qualified students.

"I've had 43 international students here in five years, and I've never once had a disciplinary or academic issue," said Skip Hults, the superintendent in the Adirondacks village of Newcomb, New York, and one of the first public school administrators to recruit abroad.

Foreign recruiters say they typically charge students $1,000 to $3,000 to place them in an American public school.

Some, like Educatius International, which is based in Sweden but employs recruiters worldwide, offer a fat catalog of schools to choose from. Founder Tom Ericsson says most kids focus on the more glamorous coastal destinations; schools in Florida and California are top picks.

Other recruiters tout rural districts -- some so remote they lack cell phone service -- as the best bet for students who want to immerse themselves in local culture. "I tell them it's a real American experience," said Suzanne Fox, who recruits Chinese students for public schools, mostly in rural New England.

Here in Revillo, where a sign generously pegs the population at 152, Superintendent Vander Vorst started small three years ago, welcoming two foreign students to his school on the far northeast hem of South Dakota. The next year, he brought in seven. He now has 11.

Grant-Deuel doesn't charge tuition but since the school gets about $5,000 in state funding for every child enrolled - whether they're from a local farm or Seoul, South Korea - the foreign students have boosted the school's revenue considerably. With the extra money, the district hired its first art teacher in years. There are plans to hire a business teacher next year.

The arrangement disturbs some taxpayer advocates outside the Grant-Deuel district. "We're already strapped for education funding, and now the state is paying to educate foreign students who come here just for that benefit?" said Dawn Pence, vice president of the South Dakota Tea Party Alliance in Rapid City, part of the loosely organized conservative Tea Party movement. "I have a real problem with that. It shortchanges our citizen students."

Like other superintendents who welcome foreign students, Vander Vorst says it's not all about the money.

As in many small Midwest communities, the population here is nearly all white; few people have traveled overseas. The foreign students have broadened horizons. Flags from their home nations line the high-school hall. One memorable night, they each cooked a favorite dish for the community. "Most of the foods you can't pronounce, but they sure do taste good," said Vander Vorst.

DIET STRUGGLES

For the students, landing in such an isolated place was a shock. "I was kind of sad," said Pedro Moreno Martinez, a 16-year-old from Madrid.

Diet has been a challenge; the Asian students have struggled to get used to all the fried meats and local favorites like sour-cream-and-raisin pie. "I miss rice," moaned Davy Lin, 18, from Taiwan.

Still, the students have found their way. They jump right into the discussion of "The Red Badge of Courage" in English class. On a recent night, Oh Sawatpoon, from Thailand, and Joy Cheng, from Taiwan, both played forward for the junior varsity girls basketball team. Then they rushed to change into flouncy skirts and joined the cheerleading squad for the boys' game.

"They just fit in after a while," said Barrett Loehrer, 17, a local student.

Superintendent Vander Vorst is so pleased, he's raising the stakes. His guidance counselor heads to China this month to begin recruiting students who will pay tuition, perhaps $18,000 a year.

Some locals worry that bringing in too many foreigners will strain the community. The students need local mentors who can help them with homework and drive them to football games and take them shopping at Wal-Mart.

"Sometimes, you just want to sit on the couch," said Garry Harstad, who is hosting an international student and finds it both rewarding and wearying.

Yet others see no alternative to keep the school afloat.

Plus, they say, they take a quiet pride in recognizing that their frozen patch of South Dakota has something to offer all these bright, ambitious, worldly kids from far-off places.

"Our culture, our openness, our family time -- whatever it is, we have something they like," said Barb Hoyles, who connects the foreign students with host families. "We've got something to sell, and that's huge for us."

(Reporting by Stephanie Simon; Editing by Jonathan Weber, Martin Howell and Sandra Maler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-public-schools-sell-empty-classroom-seats-abroad-050332684.html

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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Satellite Tv ? Best 10 Satellite TV Live Softwares For PC Reviews ...

Satellite Tv

Here is some facts about satellite Tv.

Satellite television or satellite Television is television delivered by way of orbiting communications satellites situated 37,000 km above the earth?s surface.

The very first satellite Tv signal was relayed from Europe to the Telstar satellite more than North America in 1962. The very first domestic North American satellite to carry tv was Canada?s Anik 1, which was launched in 1973.

Satellite Tv, like other communications relayed by satellite, starts with a transmitting satellite antenna situated at an uplink facility. Uplink satellite dishes are directed toward the satellite that its signals will be transmitted to, and are extremely significant, as significantly as 9 to 12 meters (30 to 40 feet) in diameter. The larger the satellite dish, the more accurate positioning and improved signal reception at the satellite. The satellite Tv signals is transmitted to devices situated on-board the satellite referred to as transponders, which retransmit the satellite signal back towards the Earth at a distinct frequency.

The satellite signal, really weak following traveling by means of space, is collected by a parabolic receiving dish, which reflects the weak signal to the dish?s focal point and is received, down-converted to a lower frequency band and amplified by a device known as a low-noise block down converter, or LNB.

A new form of satellite antenna, which does not use a directed parabolic dish and can be utilized on a mobile platform such as a vehicle, was recently announced by the University of Waterloo. On generally known as vehicle satellite program.

The satellite Television signal, now amplified, travels to a satellite Tv receiver box via coaxial cable (RG-6 or RG-10 can not be standard RG-59) and is converted by a local oscillator to the L-band range of frequencies (roughly). Special on-board electronics in the receiver box aid tune the signal and then convert it to a frequency that a regular television can use.

As you known, satellite Tv enterprise in United States are primarily dominated by two corporations, Dish Network and DirecTV. If you would like to have a satellite Television in your home, your options are mostly limited to the cost-free satellite Television packages that provided by either 1 Dish Network or DirecTV.

Here?s a rapid view on United States satellite Tv business: Hughes?s DirecTV, the initially high-powered DBS method, went online in 1994 and was the first North American DBS service. In 1996, Echostar?s Dish Network went on the net in the United States and has gone on to comparable achievement.

Teddy Low

Webmaster

http://www.satellitetvissue.com

Please read our another article:Top 10 Satellite Tv Software Reviews.

Source: http://www.satellitetvsoftwares.com/2012/03/06/satellite-tv/

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Friday, March 2, 2012

States Crack Down On Animal Welfare Activists And Their Undercover Videos

Breeding sows in crates at a subsidiary of Smithfield Foods in 2010. The photo was shot by the Humane Society as part of an undercover investigation. Humane Society/Associated Press

Breeding sows in crates at a subsidiary of Smithfield Foods in 2010. The photo was shot by the Humane Society as part of an undercover investigation.

Some states are stiffening the punishment for activists who want to use undercover videos to expose conditions inside farms.

Just this week, the Iowa legislature passed a bill that would make it a crime to use false pretenses to gain access to a livestock operation to engage in activities not authorized by the owner.

If the governor signs the bill into law, Iowa will join Montana, North Dakota and Kansas in enacting what activists call "ag gag" laws, which criminalize undercover photography or video inside animal farms.

Several other states ? including Illinois, Missouri, Utah, New York, Nebraska, Indiana and Minnesota ? are considering similar legislation. That's a sure sign that farmers around the country feel that the steady stream of undercover videos released in the last few years has hurt the industry's image.

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Some videos show farmworkers violently treating or neglecting hurt animals ? behavior that constitutes illegal abuse. Many others simply depict everyday, accepted practices. Industry groups say they need protection from possible incursions by activists whose principal motivation may be to hurt the farmers' business, not report abuse.

"We have a number of activists that want to gain access to farms ... to take some films and make it look as dramatic as they possibly can, to affect the public," Craig Hill, president of the Iowa Farm Bureau, told the agriculture news site Brownfield. His group supports the Iowa bill. "It could be they're there to damage the operation. We just need to keep those people out, and honest, responsible people in."

But animal welfare groups like Mercy for Animals and Compassion Over Killing, which have paid activists to go undercover to film in a variety of plants, say that animal producers who outlaw filming inside their plants do so because they have something to hide.

"We do undercover investigations to open up the doors, to shine a spotlight on a hidden world," Erica Meier, executive director of COK, tells The Salt. "Clearly, with these laws, the industry is trying to prevent people from seeing the realities. When they see them, they are shocked that animals are allowed to be treated this way."

In a recent video, Meier's group documented Iowa farm workers castrating baby male pigs without painkillers, and adult sows confined inside gestation and farrowing crates. "We're not arguing that these practices are abusive; they're standard," says Meier. "But just because it's standard doesn't mean it's humane."

The industry accepts that some standard practices may have to change to assuage the public's concerns. Just last month, Nancy Shute reported that McDonald's said it would require its U.S. pork suppliers to phase out the use of gestational crates for pregnant sows. Smithfield, the nation's largest hog producer, says it's in the process of moving pregnant sows on company farms from individual gestation stalls into group housing arrangements for the animals' welfare.

And as Dan Charles reported, the Humane Society has teamed up with the United Egg Producers to draft a law around more humane cages for chickens. Under the proposed guidelines, the chickens would get twice as much space, plus perches and "nest boxes" where they could lay their eggs.

While the anti-undercover video legislation has the support of many state farm bureaus and animal producer councils, some national groups say the legislation may be counter-productive.

"We are big fans of more transparency. And we understand that farmers are concerned [about the videos]. But we are concerned that passing legislation to ban cameras really is not the right approach," says Charlie Arnot, president of the Center for Food Integrity, whose members include many livestock industry groups.

Arnot noted that one way farmers make their operations more transparent is by opening up their barns, either with farm tours or live video feeds, like this one on the website of JS West, an egg producer in California.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2012/02/29/147651002/states-crack-down-on-animal-welfare-activists-and-their-undercover-videos?ft=1&f=1007

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Thursday, March 1, 2012

Infested? Act Now [Guest Post] ? UK Home Improvement

Call Pest Control

An infestation problem is many peoples greatest fear in the home or at a place of work. The common saying: ?they?re more scared of you than you are of them? doesn?t immediately come to mind when you see a mouse or rat running along your living room floor or a cockroach in a kitchen cupboard.

Pest problems are not only in the home, wildlife such as foxes and rabbits are now becoming more common in residential areas, venturing away from the natural habitat in search of food. The best way to solve a pest problem is not to deal with it yourself but to call a professional pest control company.

Insects, rodents and wildlife are riddled with germs and a bite from a rat or mouse can lead to serious infection and illness; aside from this, many of today?s pests have grown immune to the ?off the shelf? products used to deter problems.

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Benefits of Seeking Help From a Pest Control Company

RatHiring a professional pest control service will provide you with a range of benefits; the biggest and most obvious of these is the expertise. A well-established exterminator will be familiar with all kinds of pests and know what is needed to remove and prevent the problem. Pest controllers are also able to provide the equipment needed to carry out an extermination and use chemicals that will not damage the interior or exterior of a building in any way, nor affect any of the surrounding environment and wildlife. Through knowledge and experience an expert will be able to identify the cause of the problem and pick up on possible points of entry, often places unknown to the client.

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Considerations When Choosing a ?Pest Control Company

If you have noticed that you may have a pest problem it is important to act fast to avoid the problem escalating into an infestation. There will be a number of considerations to take into account when choosing a company. The first of these is the price.

Pest control can be very pricey and will depend upon the extent of the problem, size of the building, type of pest, types and number of treatments needed as well as the number of men and the number of hours the extermination will take. Price may also differ depending on which area of the country you live in.

Some pest control companies are able to offer free quotes, this will allow you to contact a number of different services and decide on which is best for you. The option of a free home survey is also worth looking out for; this will provide you with information on how to prevent future problems. On the theme of cost, pest exterminating companies with a free call-out charge will save you a great deal of money, especially if the there are multiple visits needed. Emergency call-out operations will also be of benefit especially in the commercial sector where a pest problem can lead to substantial loss of business.

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This post is brought to you by?NBC Bird and Pest Solutions, a leading independent pest and bird control services provider in UK. The company is renowned for their specialist bird proofing and scaring services.

Source: http://www.ukhomeimprovement.co.uk/infested-act-now-guest-post/

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GammaTech - GammaTech Set to Offer Embedded Solutions

Specific-Task Technology Helps Reduce Product Size and Costs, While Increasing Reliability and Efficiency

Fremont, CA, February 28, 2012 ? GammaTech Computer Corp., a major international manufacturer and supplier of innovative notebook and tablet computers, announces that it is set to offer embedded solutions as an addition to its line of rugged, hardened Durabook products. GammaTech embedded solutions help maximize product efficiency by reducing the size and cost of the product, while increasing its reliability and performance.

?GammaTech continues to be at the forefront of technology advancement with the introduction of embedded solutions to our line of rugged notebook and tablet computers,? stated Jen Chen, GammaTech president. ?Embedded solutions are rapidly becoming a viable, affordable choice. Our embedded capabilities, including design, purchasing, integration, and reverse logistics, is further assurance that in choosing GammaTech, users are selecting the right product at a cost that makes sense.?

As opposed to a general, all-purpose computer that is designed for a wide-range of purposes, embedded technology is meant to perform one function within a device. The technology is commonly found today in applications from as small as digital watches and mp3 devices to larger items such as automobiles, traffic signals, air-traffic control systems, and power plants.

GammaTech embedded solutions help maximize product efficiency by reducing the size and cost of the product while increasing its reliability and performance. Ruggedized, Intel x86-based GammaTech computers are a perfect fit for this technology.

The growth of embedded solutions is aided by the continued backing of the Intel Embedded Alliance and its efforts to provide the necessary technology and assistance that allows manufacturers, such as GammaTech, to fully engineer and test products quicker and bring them to market faster. Additionally, the environment to support a variety of embedded solutions is growing and will continue to expand.

For more than 25 years, GammaTech has been one of the world?s largest suppliers of innovative notebooks. It was the first manufacturer to bring ruggedized notebooks to the mass consumer market. Its Durabook line of rugged notebooks and tablet PC's are built tough and built to last. The Durabook?s magnesium alloy construction and its protection against drop, shock and spill make it a reliable choice for all mission critical applications.

The company has consistently produced award-winning products. It has been recognized in the Best Rugged Computers category of the Government Security News (GSN) Homeland Security Awards two years running.

For more information on how GammaTech embedded solutions can help solve your specific needs, visit www.gammatechusa.com or e-mail .

Source: http://www.widepr.com/press_release/34568/gammatech_set_to_offer_embedded_solutions.html

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