Thursday, March 14, 2013

Counteracting obesity | Fitness Center

Obesity is a huge problem among developing countries, especially in the U.S. Maintaining a healthy weight is tough even if you are good 99% of the time and try to eat as well as you can, get the recommended amount of exercise, and follow all of the common sense advice you hear for weight loss. The problem is from the fillers, preservatives, and growth hormones we put in food. Because too many Americans value quantity over quality, we?ve settled for hormone-injected food and fillers, instead of fresh and delicious ingredients, and lots of it.

Staying plexus slim is an uphill battle, especially in the U.S. Even if you do everything by the book, maintaining a healthy and Plexus slim weight is out of reach for most of us. We don?t have easy access to gyms, safe playgrounds, or bike lanes. We spend way too much time sitting?at work, in the car on our hours-long commutes, at home after a long, exhausting day at work. So staying healthy is hard with our out-of-shape, inactive bodies and healthy diets.

If you?re interested in healthy and safe weight loss, the first thing you need to do is talk to your doctor. You?ll need to bring up any health problems you have, like diabetes, heart conditions, or cholesterol problems that she doesn?t already know about. You?ll need to tell her what your dietary intake is like and your normal level of activity. She?ll need to know what you can safely do for exercise and what your day-to-day life is like. There?s no point in adding hours of exercise to your plate if you can?t manage it in your schedule; that just adds more stress and sets you up for failure.

The best weight loss plan is one that invites common-sense lifestyle changes that are manageable, realistic, and easy to adhere too. Trying something too hard too soon is one way to make sure you?ll fail, and biting off more than you can chew is counterproductive. By making healthy and sensible lifestyle changes, you can find a reasonable diet that will help you stay slim and healthy for the rest of your life.

Source: http://fifthletterproductions.com/counteracting-obesity/

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Paraffin encapsulated in beach sand material as a new way to store heat from the sun

Mar. 13, 2013 ? The search for sustainable new materials to store heat captured from the sun for release during the night has led scientists to a high-tech combination of paraffin wax and sand. Their report on the heat-storing capability of this microencapsulated sand appears in ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering.

Benxia Li and colleagues explain the need for better materials that can store and release heat. These so-called "phase-change" materials" (PCMs) are essential, for instance, for storing heat from the sun for use in providing energy at night or during cloudy periods. PCMs absorb, store and release heat when changing "phases" from a solid to a liquid and vice versa. They have applications that range from expanding use of solar energy to heat-regulating greenhouses to clothing that keeps soldiers or campers warm on cold nights outdoors. Existing PCMs have disadvantages, such as the tendency to leak or catch fire, and Li's team set out to find a better material.

They describe a new approach to using paraffin as a PCM. Made from petroleum, paraffin is a waxy material that absorbs heat, melts into a liquid and releases heat as it solidifies. It involves encapsulating paraffin into tiny spheres of silicon dioxide, the stuff of beach sand. The microencapsulated paraffin has several advantages, including a large surface area that can transfer heat, less reactivity with the environment and less likelihood of leaking as it changes phases. Li's team reports successful tests of the material for 30 melting-solidifying cycles with no leaks at a temperature of 158 degrees Fahrenheit. "The high heat storage capability and good thermal stability of the composite enable it to be a potential material to store thermal energy in practical applications," the report concluded.

The authors acknowledge funding from the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the National Basic Research Program of China, and the Young and Middle-aged Backbone Teachers Fund of Anhui University of Science and Technology.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Chemical Society.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Benxia Li, Tongxuan Liu, Luyang Hu, Yanfen Wang, Lina Gao. Fabrication and Properties of Microencapsulated Paraffin@SiO2Phase Change Composite for Thermal Energy Storage. ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering, 2013; 1 (3): 374 DOI: 10.1021/sc300082m

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/WTtwUYkBn-A/130313112435.htm

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Holocaust survivor searches for long-lost twin on Facebook

Menachem B. / Facebook

A Holocaust survivor looking to find twin brother teamed up with a genealogist, who posted these photos to Facebook. On the left is Jolli, pictured in the early 1940s. On the right is what his identical twin Menacehm looks like today.

By Lilit Marcus, TODAY contributor

A Holocaust survivor who was just four years old when he was liberated from Auschwitz has spent the last 67 years wondering what happened to his other half.

Menachem B. (he has asked to keep his last name private)?was able to emigrate to Israel and build a life there after he was released from the Nazi camp in 1945, but he always knew something was missing ? his?twin, Jolli.?Now 72 and retired, Menachem has teamed up with geneaologist Ayana KimRon to find the long-lost brother he barely remembers.

KimRon first learned about Menachem through a geneaology forum she?s a member of, when she came across a post entitled ?Looking for my twin brother.? Written by a friend of Menachem, the post piqued KimRon?s interest. She wrote back.

?When I heard his story I knew right then and there that he lost a portion of his birth identity in Auschwitz,? she told TODAY.com.

It is common for children who were displaced during the Holocaust to have forgotten their original names and hometowns, so KimRon knew it might be a challenge to find Menachem?s long-lost twin. Still, she was up for the task.

?How can I not help a Holocaust survivor who walks through life with such questions and hopes? Wasn't Auschwitz enough of hell for him?? she asked herself.

At first, she tried more conventional approaches to help track down the missing brother, but nothing panned out. Rather than give up, she turned to the Internet.

She created a Facebook page entitled ?A-7734,? the number that the Nazis assigned to Jolli (pronounced ?Yoli?) and tattooed on his arm. She posted a photo of Jolli at age four as well as all the information she had, hoping it would lead her to the missing twin.

?Looking for Jolli - child survivor A7734 from Auschwitz, 4.5 years old at liberation," she wrote. "Born in 1940. Clues lead to possible adoption by a Christian family, then to the USA. Whatever name and location, his tattooed number is A7734. And his brother still hopes to meet him. Please help us by spreading the word.?

She also shared on the Facebook page that Menachem and Jolli were used as guinea pigs in experiments by Nazi doctor Dr. Josef Mengele, though Menachem was so young that he doesn't remember what was done to him.

Soon, KimRon's promise to help a man learn about his past became a viral media sensation.?

She posted the photo of Jolli on March 2, and it has now been shared more than 38,000 times. KimRon says she has gotten supportive emails and Facebook messages from more than 38,000 people in 19 languages, from as far away as South America, Africa, and Australia.

She?s hoping that among those tens of thousands is one person who can solve the puzzle. ?All we need is one grandchild of Jolli on Facebook," she said.

Though she hasn't located him yet, when she is able to track down Jolli ??and Kimron is confident that?s a when, not an if ??she promises to update the Facebook page with the news.?

Source: http://todaynews.today.com/_news/2013/03/12/17286951-holocaust-survivor-searches-for-long-lost-twin-on-facebook?lite

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Google's Android chief Andy Rubin steps down

By Gerry Shih

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The architect of Android, the world's top-selling mobile operating system, Andy Rubin, has decided to step down as Google Inc combines mobile software divisions under one roof, the company said on Wednesday.

Google appointed Sundar Pichai, the executive overseeing its Chrome web browser and applications like Google Drive and Gmail, to take over Rubin's responsibilities, hinting at how the company with the dominant Internet search engine intends to address the rise of mobile devices.

In a blog post, Larry Page, Google's chief executive and co-founder, credited Rubin for evangelizing Android several years ago and building it into a free, open-source platform that runs on nearly three-quarters of the world's smartphones and is used by the world's largest handset manufacturers, from Samsung Electronics Co Ltd to HTC Corp.

"Having exceeded even the crazy ambitious goals we dreamed of for Android ? and with a really strong leadership team in place ? Andy's decided it's time to hand over the reins and start a new chapter at Google," Page wrote. "Andy, more moonshots please!

The merger of the Chrome and Android divisions helps resolve a longstanding tension in the Mountain View, California-based search engine company's corporate strategy, and reflects a convergence of mobile and desktop software.

When Google poured resources into launching the Chrome web browser five years ago, the company laid out a vision of the Internet and an ecosystem of apps based on the Web. Since then, the Android operating system, acquired by Google in 2005, has exploded in popularity, enabling third-party handset makers like Samsung to overtake Apple Inc while also spawning a massive economy of third-party apps that are only loosely affiliated with Google.

"You had this Chrome OS and this Android Group that were building in many overlapping products," said Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at Gartner. "But for Google, it's not about the platform, but the ecosystem. They're more concerned long-term about Google Docs, Google Voice, Google Books, and less about helping Samsung sell more phones."

Chrome, Gartenberg added, "was the purest expression of Google's philosophy."

Page was mum on Rubin's future role. Some analysts speculated that Rubin, an executive with a knack for developing products, could take on one of the company's many budding projects such as its Glass eyewear or the self-driving car.

"If he really has the magic touch perhaps he can create something else within Google," said Colin Gillis, an analyst at BGC Partners, who added that it was better for Google to have a more "cohesive" mobile brand.

Android is now installed on roughly two-thirds of the world's smartphones, supplanting Apple Inc at the pinnacle of the fast-moving mobile arena.

Anrdoid tablets are also expected to overtake Apple's iPad in terms of shipments in 2013, IT research house IDC predicted on Tuesday.

"Going forward, Sundar Pichai will lead Android, in addition to his existing work with Chrome and Apps. Sundar has a talent for creating products that are technically excellent yet easy to use?and he loves a big bet," Page wrote in the blogpost.

Pichai, who began his engineering training in India before moving to the United States, aggressively pushed Google's Chrome browser in 2008, when Microsoft Corp's Explorer lorded over the market. Chrome now commands a roughly 35 percent market share according to Web traffic analyzers StatCounter.

He is also credited with the development of some of the company's more successful apps, such as Calendar and Gmail.

"While Andy's a really hard act to follow, I know Sundar will do a tremendous job doubling down on Android as we work to push the ecosystem forward," Page said.

Google shares slipped 0.2 percent to $825.83 in afternoon trading.

(Reporting by Edwin Chan and Gerry Shih; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Leslie Adler and Andrew Hay)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/googles-pichai-replaces-rubin-androids-helm-171945897--sector.html

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Eva Longoria is busy post-'Desperate Housewives'

In this Thursday, March 7, 2013 photo, chosen as the face of the new SHEBA global campaign "Follow Your Passion," actress and executive producer Eva Longoria poses for a portrait, in New York. Besides showbiz, Longoria's passions include philanthropy and politics. She's committed to encouraging Latin women to further their education and start entrepreneur programs; and also founded Eva's Heroes which is dedicated to children with special needs. (Photo by Dan Hallman/Invision/AP)

In this Thursday, March 7, 2013 photo, chosen as the face of the new SHEBA global campaign "Follow Your Passion," actress and executive producer Eva Longoria poses for a portrait, in New York. Besides showbiz, Longoria's passions include philanthropy and politics. She's committed to encouraging Latin women to further their education and start entrepreneur programs; and also founded Eva's Heroes which is dedicated to children with special needs. (Photo by Dan Hallman/Invision/AP)

In this Thursday, March 7, 2013 photo, chosen as the face of the new SHEBA global campaign "Follow Your Passion," actress and executive producer Eva Longoria poses for a portrait, in New York. She's busy behind-the-camera too as an Executive Producer on two upcoming television shows. The first, a reality dating show called ?Ready for Love,? premieres later this month on NBC. She is also Executive Producer of "Devious Maids," alongside ?Desperate Housewives? creator Mark Cherry. (Photo by Dan Hallman/Invision/AP)

In this Thursday, March 7, 2013 photo, chosen as the face of the new SHEBA global campaign "Follow Your Passion," actress and executive producer Eva Longoria poses for a portrait, in New York. The actress, who just wrapped a movie called ?Frontera? alongside Ed Harris and Michael Pena, is also busy behind-the-camera too as an Executive Producer on two upcoming television shows. (Photo by Dan Hallman/Invision/AP)

(AP) ? Eva Longoria hasn't slowed down since "Desperate Housewives" signed off after eight seasons last year. In fact, the actress says the word "lazy" isn't in her vocabulary.

"There are days when I relax but it won't be a full day. It usually means I'm gonna clean out my closet. That's relaxing for me. Or I'm gonna cook a full meal for my family and friends," Longoria, who will be 38 on Friday, said in a recent interview.

Longoria said she has no problem juggling various projects.

"I always say there's more time in the day than you think. You waste a lot of time that you don't realize," she said. "When I was on 'Desperate Housewives,' I learned two languages. I went back to school for my master's degree, I was married (to San Antonio Spurs point guard Tony Parker) and flying back and forth (between Los Angeles and Texas). You have time."

Her passions also include philanthropy and politics. She's committed to encouraging Latin women to further their education and start entrepreneurial programs. She also founded Eva's Heroes, dedicated to teens and young adults with special needs.

She just wrapped up filming on "Frontera," alongside Ed Harris and Michael Pena, and has endorsement deals with L'Oreal, Frito-Lay and Sheba.

Longoria is also an executive producer on two upcoming TV shows.

On "Ready for Love," a reality dating show that will air on NBC, three matchmakers help three men find love.

Longoria says she handpicked each of the three eligible guys.

They're "not only handsome and successful, but generous, kind and sweet human beings. ... They'll forever be friends in my life," she said.

She's also one of the executive producers of "Devious Maids," alongside "Desperate Housewives" creator Mark Cherry. Based on a Mexican series, it follows four maids who work in Beverly Hills but dream of their own success. The show will air on Lifetime.

While she's enjoying TV production, Longoria said, "I love the medium of television. I'll definitely be back. I'll definitely come back one day."

___

Online:

http://sheba.com/feedyourpassion

http://www.evasheroes.org/

http://www.nbc.com/ready-for-love/

___

Alicia Rancilio covers entertainment for The Associated Press. Follow her online at http://www.twitter.com/aliciar

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-03-13-US-People-Eva-Longoria/id-c000a7b8ee894d9eaf18f9fbb1240d7e

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Elliott files bill to close tuition gap for undocumented students ...

Elliott files bill to close tuition gap for undocumented students

Posted by Lindsey Millar on Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 9:36 AM

As promised, Sen. Joyce Elliott (D-Little Rock) has filed a bill that would allow undocumented students ? many of whom, as David Koon described in a recent cover story, were brought here as small children and know no other country ? an opportunity to receive in-state tuition rates at state colleges. Currently, they're forced to pay much higher out of state rates, a situation that puts extreme financial pressure on the students and their families.

Elliott's bill would allow anyone who attends high school in Arkansas for at least three years and graduates from an Arkansas high school or receives a GED to receive in-state tuition rates at state colleges. An undocumented student would have to file an affidavit with her state college of choice stating that she intends to work towards becoming legal.

Elliott made the case for the bill to David Koon last month:

"What law do we have in place that specifically punishes kids for the actions of their parents?" she said. "It might come about as a byproduct of something parents have done ? parents in prison, for example. But there is not a policy in place that says if your parents go to prison, you won't be allowed to go to school. But in this case, we are holding children accountable by an actual policy for the actions of their parents. And that's unfair."

Co-sponsors include Sen. Johnny Key (R-Mountain Home), Rep. Les Carnine (R-Rogers), Rep. Greg Leding (D-Fayetteville) and Rep. Sheilla Lampkin (D-Monticello). With Republicans Key and Carnine aboard, it's likely got a decent shot at passing.

In an email, Lampkin wrote David Koon explaining why she's supporting the bill.

I do plan to support the DREAM Act because I believe all have the right to an education. As I see it, these students are asking for no scholarships or special privileges other than an opportunity to educate themselves and be a part of a better educated, trained work force and contributor to our society.

I believe in all our children and these are ours too. I have been contacted by youngsters and adults alike who support this and I believe it is the right thing to do.

Tags: Joyce Elliott, Les Carnine, Johnny Key, Sheilla Lampkin, Greg Leding

Speaking of...

  • Undocumented Arkansas students push for college access

    February 21, 2013

    Somewhere in the story of every undocumented student brought to this country as a child, there's a moment of horrible realization: the sudden, painful understanding of why the thought of being stopped by the police sends a shadow of fear skating across their parents' eyes. /more/
  • God, Guns and Fetuses: Now it's the taxpayer-subsidized religious organization bill

    February 14, 2013

    Now comes extremist Republican (but I repeat myself) Rep. Randy Alexander with constitutionally flawed legislation to protect legislators like Rep. Justin Harris who want to promote religion in their state-funded daycare programs. /more/
  • The war on women in Arkansas

    February 6, 2013

    Sen. Jason Rapert and his colleagues attack abortion. /more/
  • The Doom and Gloom Edition

    January 18, 2013

    All sorts of big legal and legislative developments that could dramatically alter public education in the state, gun craziness, terrible bills in the General Assembly and the latest on the U.S. Senate race?all covered on this week's podcast. /more/
  • The end of school districts

    January 17, 2013

    Sen. Johnny Key, who's sponsor of legislation to effectively remove any barriers to student transfers among school districts, posted this Twitter this morning. /more/
  • Big week for school choice

    January 16, 2013

    Arkansas's public school system could be upended by events this week. /more/
  • More ?
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Use Divergent Thinking to Make Big Decisions

Use Divergent Thinking to Make Big Decisions When we make decisions, we often subconsciously narrow down our choices to two options, and then can't see other possibilities later. This convergent thinking can be useful for fact-based problems, but when making less clear-cut choices, it often prevents us from seeing the best solution.

Toni Bernhard at Psychology Today fell into the convergent thinking trap while dealing with a chronic illness. Either she was healthy or she was sick. Either she could go to work, or she was useless. Once she made everything black and white in her mind, it suddenly became impossible to see a middle ground.

Over time though, she made a conscious effort to be a more divergent thinker. For example, she realized she could do some aspects of her job without sacrificing her health. This same advice can work for anyone to help make decisions or shape their frame of mind. All you have to is identify when you're choosing from predetermined options, rather than actively looking for other choices. Be sure to check out the source link to learn more.

What Type of Thinker Are You? | Psychology Today

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/U9nGtFRVoMM/use-divergent-thinking-to-make-big-decisions

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Jeb Bush: I'm 'in Sync' With Lindsey Graham on Immigration Reform

During an interview for "This Week," former Florida governor Jeb Bush told me that he was "in sync" with South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham on the issue of immigration reform.

Graham, a key member of the bipartisan group of senators pushing for immigration reform, took Bush to task after the former Florida governor said Monday that he did not support a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants, which is a key component of the plan being pushed by the Senate group. Bush subsequently reversed course and said he could in fact support a plan that included a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants already living in the United States.

"Senator Graham and I talked. He was responding to concerns that were expressed before the book was actually published," Bush said. "I told him that I support his efforts and I applaud what he's doing. And he concluded, after he heard what the thesis of the book is that we're in sync. We're on the same - on the same path."

"The basic premise needs to be that coming to the country legally should be easier with less cost than coming to the country illegally. And if you can create a system like that as is being discussed in the Senate and in the House- through a path to citizenship, that's fine," Bush said. "But my guess is that will take a long, long time to achieve. In the interim, it's important to take people out from the shadows to allow them to have- the dignity of being- having legal status."

Florida governor Jeb Bush told me that he was "very encouraged" about the possibility of comprehensive immigration reform - a legislative achievement that has eluded lawmakers for more than a decade - becoming law by the end of the year.

"I'm very encouraged. There are some big sticking points about how do you deal with making sure that there's enough seasonal workers, temporary worker programs that have been quite successful in the past," Bush said. "There's a lot of work being done, really good work, courageous work, 'cause this is complex and may not be popular, but I think it's- it is possible that comprehensive reform can be done."

Turning to President Obama's new effort to reach out to his colleagues on right - which included inviting the GOP's 2012 vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan to lunch - Bush complimented the president, comparing his actions to those of Ronald Reagan, an icon of the Republican Party.

"I'm very encouraged by the fact the president is trying to restore some personal connection with policymakers in Congress. I'm at the Reagan Library today and that's kind of what Ronald Reagan did. He didn't scorn his adversaries, he embraced them and got a lot done," Bush said. "This is very positive in my mind. It makes it harder to reach agreement when there's not trust. It's just human nature. And so this is maybe a good, positive first step."

Bush qualified his praise for the president, tweaking him for a lack of "seriousness" when it came to the president's efforts to reach a deal to reduce the national debt and specifically his willingness to embrace entitlement reform as part of a potential bargain with Republicans.

"I haven't seen the seriousness of the president's efforts. I'd love to see a specific plan that really did reform- bend the cost curve for Medicare and the entitlement system. I haven't seen it, so if there is through these talks, some kind of consensus that emerged, I don't think you should say, 'no, no, no' about anything'" Bush said.

"Frankly, there was already been one of the largest tax increases in American history a month ago. And frankly, we ought to be focused on sustained economic growth, which grows more revenue for people and for government than any tax increase that's been suggested, so there are a lot of things that could be done to create a real grand bargain. And let the process work. I'm hopeful that the president's sincere about this," Bush said.

Bush also insisted during out conversation that he is not positioning himself for a 2016 presidential run as he promotes his new book "Immigration Wars," even as speculation grows that he aims to be the third member of the Bush family to occupy the oval office.

"I'm not viewing this as a political reentry either. I just don't view it that way," Bush said. "Everything's viewed with a political lens in Washington and that's just the nature of the beast and it is what it is."

Finally Bush gave me an update on the health of his father, 88-year-old former president George H.W. Bush, who was released from the hospital earlier this year after a lengthy stay.

"He's doing better. You know, he's got his spectacular chief caregiver, Barbara Bush, taking care of him and he's regaining his strength day by day. And he's out more," Bush said. "He was at the University of Texas, A&M, at the Bush School- twice in the last two weeks, so- we're excited that he seems to be making great progress."

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jeb-bush-im-sync-lindsey-130807468.html

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Links We Love: Comparing 'Oz' to the Original

From the differences between the new Oz The Great and Powerful and the classic The Wizard of Oz to the reasons why Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart were snubbed by MTV with no nomination for Best Kiss at the Movie Awards, these are the stories we were reading this week!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/links-we-love-comparing-oz-wizard-oz-more/1-a-526238?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Alinks-we-love-comparing-oz-wizard-oz-more-526238

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

'Sesame Street' celebrates one billion YouTube views with

Can you count to one billion?

YouTube can ? and according to the video-sharing site, Sesame Street has officially become the first nonprofit to garner enough views to give ?Gangnam Style? a run for its money. ?Access to educational video used to be restricted to whatever tapes or DVDs happened to be in the library or at home,? YouTube EDU strategic partner manager Caitlin Hendrickson tells EW. ?Now, high quality, entertaining, and informative content is available on demand wherever there?s an Internet connection. As a result, education is one of the fastest growing content categories on YouTube and Sesame Street is at the forefront of this growth.?

Naturally, the beloved kiddie institution is celebrating this milestone the best way it knows how ? with a pair of special messages from Sesame Street?s resident number-lover, Count Von Count.

In a post on the YouTube Blog, the Count pays tribute to one of his favorites, the number zero. (?Zero comes in very handy when there is nothing around to count? Like right now, as I look around the castle, I count zero elephants, zero airplanes, and zero Justin Bieber CDs. Wonderful.?) And in this exuberant video, he counts all the ?You?s in YouTube ? a project worthy of his considerable talents. Check it out below:

Read more:
Joseph Gordon-Levitt helps Murray in visit to ?Sesame Street?
?Sesame Street? gets messy and loud with Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard ? EXCLUSIVE VIDEO
Sesame Street releases ?Downton Abbey? spoof ? VIDEO

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Source: http://family-room.ew.com/2013/03/06/sesame-street-youtube-the-count/

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Real Estate Weekly ? Blog Archive ? Prada neighbor hits retail market

Home ? Featured, Retail

11:33 am, March 6, 2013

RKF has been named the exclusive retail leasing agent for 10,915 s/f of flagship retail space at 575 Broadway in the heart of SoHo.

575 Broadway

575 Broadway, a six-story Class A office building, is situated on the northwest corner of Broadway and Prince Streets in SoHo?s Cast Iron Historic district.

The retail space RKF is marketing consists of 7,215 s/f on the ground floor, with access both on Broadway and Mercer Street, and 3,700 s/f for storage in the basement. The space, which is adjacent to Prada who recently renewed its lease in the building on a long-term basis, is available immediately.

The RKF leasing team of chairman & CEO Robert K. Futterman, executive vice president Karen Bellantoni and associate christopher Johnson recently launched their marketing effort.

ROBERT FUTTERMAN

?575 Broadway is situated in one of the most desirable locations in all of SoHo because of its nonstop footfall and strong co-tenancy of luxury and aspirational retailers,? said Futterman. ?With 15 ft. ceilings, 35 plus feet of frontage, and iconic cast iron columns, it is the quintessential SoHo flagship.?

SoHo is among the busiest and most sought after retail destinations in the world. Neighboring retailers include Hugo Boss, Ralph Lauren, Louis Vuitton, Moncler, Burberry, Chanel, Tiffany & Co., Michael Kors and Apple, as well as many others. The area is directly served by multiple subway lines, all within a few blocks of 575 Broadway.

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Source: http://www.rew-online.com/2013/03/06/prada-neighbor-hits-retail-market/

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Hugo Chavez legacy: a wedge between US, Latin America

In December 1994, Miami and the Clinton administration hosted the first Summit of the Americas, an event that drew the leaders of every country from Canada to Chile but Cuba. It was perhaps the zenith of the quest to cast the Western Hemisphere in Washington?s image, with a vast, Arctic-to-Tierra-del-Fuego free-trade area among market economies that banished populism and ostracized Cuba as the lone vestige of a bygone socialism.

Enter Hugo Ch?vez, a red-bereted, self-described Bolivarean revolutionary ? after the George Washington of South America, Sim?n Bol?var ? preaching a very different vision to a struggling but oil-rich Venezuela. Mr. Ch?vez?s model of socialist populism struck a chord that reverberated well beyond Venezuela ? and that sounded the death knell of the thinking, more than a century old, that Latin America had no option but to follow Washington?s lead.

Ch?vez died Tuesday after a long illness that, in recent months, silenced the usually vituperative, blustery, even outrageous leader. He leaves a Latin America much changed from the one he encountered when he first took office as Venezuela's president in 1999.

RECOMMENDED: Hugo Ch?vez 101: a quiz about Venezuela's president

The change is not so much because Latin America adopted the model Ch?vez espoused, but rather because Ch?vez made it his project to persuade others ? in part by handing out vast amounts of his country's oil revenues ? that alternatives to Washington?s economic and political vision were possible.

?I don?t think it can be overstated how he fundamentally changed relations not just between the US and Venezuela, but how he did the same with US-Latin America relations,? says Eric Farnsworth, vice president of the Council of the Americas and the Americas Society in Washington. ?Ch?vez put meat on the bones of the basic message he spread, which was that there is an alternative for development, [and] you don?t have to follow the example and dictates of the United States.?

News of Ch?vez?s death came the same day the Venezuelan government, increasingly agitated by the president?s worsening condition, accused ?imperialist? enemies ? specifically the United States ? of having infected the president with cancer. The man Chavez designated to succeed him, Vice President Nicolas Maduro, claimed on national television that officials at the US Embassy in Caracas had been involved in conspiracies with Venezuelan military officials to undermine the government and had been expelled.

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The US quickly rejected the allegations against US officials, saying such ?fallacious? accusations would make improved relations between the two countries more difficult.

?An assertion that the United States was somehow involved in causing President Ch?vez?s illness is absurd, and we definitively reject it,? said State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell, in a statement. ?We completely reject the Venezuelan government?s claim that the United States is involved in any type of conspiracy to destabilize the Venezuelan government.?

During his years at the helm of Venezuela, Ch?vez made the pursuit of alternatives to Washington?s vision possible in two key ways, argues Mr. Farnsworth.

First, ?he put his money where his mouth was,? he says, noting that Ch?vez used Venezuela's oil largess to rescue the communist regime of his mentor, Fidel Castro, and to allow other small Latin American countries to discount Washington and its wishes. Ch?vez, Farnsworth says, ?made the fashionable feasible.?

Latin leftists certainly predated Ch?vez, but the economic limitations of their policies eventually clipped their wings: Mr. Castro is the poster boy for that retrenchment from regional dreams. But Ch?vez, sitting atop what are now considered to be the world?s largest oil reserves, used oil revenues in the service of his vision ? even as the Venezuelan economy and the nation's living conditions suffered.

?Previous to Ch?vez, what would a country like Ecuador do, or Nicaragua?? Farnsworth says. Ch?vez?s petroleum diplomacy ?allowed them to chart a different course.?

Second, Farnsworth says, Chavez?s ?outrageousness? ? taking the United Nations stage to label President George W. Bush ?the devil,? or striking up a strategic partnership with Iran ? gave other Latin countries the ?political cover? to do things that were ?not nearly as outrageous? but that nevertheless charted new, non-US-centric directions. Examples include developing strong trade ties with countries other than the US ? Japan or China, for example ? and opposing Washington on the war in Iraq.

Venezuela?s oil sales to China have soared, and Ch?vez signed a $40 billion loan agreement with Beijing that cements China?s access to Venezuelan oil. More worrying still to Washington was how Ch?vez offered Iran a portal into the hemisphere ? and the opening that could provide to a Tehran already embroiled in a covert war with the US.

Ch?vez's ties with other anti-Western leaders who balked at dominance by the world's big powers ? Iran?s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Syria?s Bashar al-Assad, even Libya?s Muammar Qaddafi ? certainly rubbed Washington the wrong way. But what set Ch?vez apart was his determination to undermine US influence throughout Latin America and to enlist others to create a united front to that end.

?The rise of Hugo Ch?vez recast the search for regional integration,? says Miguel Tinker Salas, a professor of Latin American studies and a Venezuela specialist at Pomona College in Claremont, Calif. With Ch?vez rocking the boat, the Miami Summit of the Americas' vision of a hemispheric free-trade area faltered, and regional attempts at unity, with no US presence, arose.

?Concentrating the new efforts at economic union and political unity on Latin America diminishes the power of the US in the region, and diminishes the relevance of [Washington-based] institutions like the OAS [Organization of American States],? Professor Tinker Salas says. New collective organizations such as Mercosur, UNASUR, and even ALBA, Ch?vez?s ?Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas,? sprang up. Ch?vez was "a central figure in that,? he says.

But it?s also true that he reached the peak of his influence a few years ago, experts say ? probably when George W. Bush was still president. Since then, Ch?vez?s model of political and economic development for Venezuela has lost much luster.

Moreover, despite his vision of regional unity, Ch?vez was a divisive figure in his own neighborhood, never overcoming testy relations with next-door neighbor Colombia, whose FARC guerrilla fighters he championed.

To illustrate how Ch?vez?s image had tarnished in recent years, some Latin American analysts cite the case of Peru?s president, Ollanta Humala. When Mr. Humala first ran for the job in 2006, he touted his kinship with Ch?vez ? both leftist former army officers ? at every turn. He presented himself as the anti-capitalist who would emulate the populism of Ch?vez and other Latin leftists. He lost that race, but ran again and won in 2011, this time eschewing any admiration for the Ch?vez model.

Since Humala?s election, Peru has enjoyed accelerated economic growth and has moved to join Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and others in combining growth with social improvements without resorting to Ch?vez?s populism or to his antidemocratic concentration of power.

?What the Latin America of the past few years demonstrates is that you don?t have to be a militant populist who is anti-American to accomplish social change and govern with a social conscience,? Farnsworth says.

With Ch?vez?s death, the question for Venezuela and Latin America becomes, ?Will there be Chavismo without Ch?vez?? says Tinker Salas.

For Venezuela, the short-term answer appears to be yes. In elections for state governors in December, Chavista candidates ? several of them leftist former military officers like Ch?vez ? trounced the opposition.

Latin America, on the other hand, has already largely moved on from Ch?vez, though a few leftist populist states still depend on Ch?vez largess. Even so, strains of Ch?vez?s anti-imperialist, region-centric doctrine and his socialist rhetoric are heard in the region's new responses to global and economic challenges, some experts say.

Ch?vez sits with Fidel Castro and ?the sainted Che Guevara? in touching ?a chord in Latin America that is there,? says Charles Shapiro, a former US ambassador to Venezuela who is now director of the Institute of the Americas in San Diego.

But these days, Mr. Shapiro adds, a stronger chord than Ch?vez?s is being struck by Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Mexico and other countries that are not just talking about poverty, but reducing it.

RECOMMENDED: Hugo Ch?vez 101: a quiz about Venezuela's president

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hugo-chavez-legacy-wedge-between-us-latin-america-223200955.html

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