Thursday, October 6, 2011

Democrat wins West Virginia governor's race (AP)

CHARLESTON, W.Va. ? Democrat Earl Ray Tomblin overcame weeks of Republican attack ads to win the West Virginia governor's race Tuesday, successfully distancing himself from the Obama administration and the president's health care plan.

Tomblin, who has been acting governor for the past year, will finish the final year of a term left vacant by Joe Manchin, a well-liked governor who stepped down after he won a U.S. Senate seat.

The race was fraught with negative ads from both sides and narrowed in the final weeks. The national parties spent millions of dollars on each campaign.

With 96 percent of precincts reporting, Tomblin had 50 percent of the vote compared with Republican Bill Maloney's 47 percent, according to unofficial results.

Tomblin campaigned as the rightful heir to Manchin. He said together they helped shape policies that created pain-free balanced budgets and revenue surpluses at a time when other states continued to struggle during the recession.

"We tried to stay on message as much as possible," Tomblin told to The Associated Press before addressing his supporters Tuesday night. "We do have a stable budget and a stable economy in West Virginia. That's what people are looking for."

A veteran state lawmaker, Tomblin fended off questions about his mother's greyhound breeding business and efforts to tie him to Obama. Republicans were upset Tomblin didn't join a majority of other states who sued the administration over the health care plan.

Obama lost West Virginia in 2008 and remains wildly unpopular here, but Tomblin got a replay of last year's U.S. Senate special election, when Manchin beat back efforts to tie him to Obama.

Democrats outnumber the GOP by nearly 2-to-1 in West Virginia, but they are considered more conservative than their national counterparts on both social and fiscal issues, supporting gun rights and cutting taxes.

Maloney called to congratulate Tomblin before conceding the race at a gathering of campaign backers in Morgantown, where he has been a drilling engineer and became a millionaire businessman. The political newcomer said he started the race with "zero name ID, zero traction and zero chance."

"All along the way, the insiders were lined up against us, but that didn't matter to me because I wasn't running for them, I was running for you."

The Obama ads featured images of the president floating on the screen with Tomblin. One spot asks: "What's Gov. Tomblin doing about Obamacare? Absolutely nothing."

Of at least 21 spots that aired, 15 were attack ads. The negative ads turned Dushyant Shekhawat against Maloney.

"He's not fighting against Tomblin; he's fighting against Obama. That I don't like. He should concentrate his run against Tomblin," said Shekhawat, a federal employee at the National Energy Technology Laboratory.

The link to the president resonated with Mark Gingerich, who voted for Maloney.

"I think it's important right now to have a conservative Republican governor because the states are going to have to do something together to do away with Obamacare, the socialized medicine," Gingerich said.

Tomblin, meanwhile, used ads to blame Maloney for sending jobs to Pennsylvania when the drilling firm he co-founded moved there. But the relocation came four years after Maloney sold his shares in the company.

Tomblin wasn't as well known as Manchin, who resigned during his second term to fill the vacancy created by the death of 92-year-old U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd. Tomblin became acting governor because of his position as Senate president, a job he held longer than anyone else in the state.

Tomblin drew a contrast between himself and Obama by saying West Virginia was far more economically sound than the country. The state has an unemployment rate below both the national rate and also has begun gradually cutting both business and consumer taxes, while improving its Wall Street credit rating and emergency reserves, points frequently noted by Tomblin's campaign.

Like Manchin, Tomblin sparred with tougher coal mining regulations from the Obama administration, keeping up a lawsuit the former governor filed against the Environmental Protection Agency's handling of permits.

Tomblin has represented the heart of the southern coalfields as a legislator since 1974, and the mining industry has long been crucial to the state's economic health. West Virginia's Coal Association endorsed Tomblin, and the energy sector was his chief source for campaign cash.

Growing up, Tomblin lived above his family's restaurant. He received a bachelor's in business management from West Virginia University and a master's in business administration from Marshall University.

Tomblin entered politics just as he was finishing college, getting elected to the House of Delegates in 1974 at age 22.

He later bought a local restaurant, owned a real estate company and was involved in a business owned by other family members, Southern Amusement, before they sold it.

Republicans had angled for an outcome similar to last month's upset in a New York City special congressional election, in which Obama's favorability loomed large.

"We don't want Tomblin back in there," said retiree Janet Varney, who along with her husband voted for Maloney. "We just believe he will follow Obama's policies ? and we don't agree with Obama's policies."

While West Virginia has had a Democratic governor for the last decade, it has not elected a governor from the southern part of the state since the 1960s. The GOP seized on the region's reputation for political corruption in this race.

Both Maloney and the Republican Governors Association, which has spent at least $3.4 million attacking Tomblin since late August, used ads to make an issue of a greyhound breeding business run by his mother. They claimed Tomblin wrongly diverted money to a state fund that benefits greyhound breeders.

Tomblin said the breeder with the fastest dogs, not state officials, determines who reaps the proceeds.

Richard Farley, of Morgantown, is a registered Republican. He said he was torn until the last minute.

"It was a rough one because I had a choice between Maloney, who stands for nothing, and Tomblin, who ? well, I can't support anyone who's ever been involved in gambling," he said.

"Unfortunately, I had to go with Maloney," Farley said.

The Obama-themed ads turned him off, though.

"I'm not sure what the president has to do with the gubernatorial race in West Virginia. That's kind of a non-issue," he said.

Maloney focused on the state's high poverty ranking and touted his experience as an employer. He vowed to take West Virginia in a new direction by aggressively targeting its tax structure, regulatory policies and court system. He also campaigned on his contribution to the rescue plan that freed the 33 trapped Chilean miners last year, saying he provided drilling expertise.

Tomblin and America Works USA, bankrolled by the Democratic Governors Association, targeted Maloney over whether his businesses paid their taxes on time. America Works devoted at least $2.4 million to negative ads.

Tomblin also touted endorsements from groups ranging from the National Rifle Association and the state Chamber of Commerce to the United Mine Workers union and West Virginia AFL-CIO.

Tomblin must resume campaigning almost immediately to keep the seat: It's up again in 2012 for a full four-year term.

___

Associated Press writers Vicki Smith in Morgantown and Pam Ramsey and John Raby in Charleston contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111005/ap_on_go_ot/us_west_virginia_governor

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Source: http://micro-morph.com/why-swim-spas-really-are-a-fun-and-soothing-investment/

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Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Video: Talking Numbers: S&P Bottom Coming?

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/44777831#44777831

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Civil rights leader the Rev. Shuttlesworth dies (AP)

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. ? The Rev. Fred L. Shuttlesworth, who was bombed, beaten and repeatedly arrested in the fight for civil rights and hailed by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. for his courage and energy, has died. He was 89.

Princeton Baptist Medical Center spokeswoman Jennifer Dodd confirmed he died at the Birmingham hospital Wednesday morning..

Shuttlesworth, a former truck driver who studied religion at night, became pastor of Bethel Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., in 1953 and soon was an outspoken leader in the fight for racial equality.

"My church was a beehive," Shuttlesworth once said. "I made the movement. I made the challenge. Birmingham was the citadel of segregation, and the people wanted to march."

In his 1963 book "Why We Can't Wait," King called Shuttlesworth "one of the nation's the most courageous freedom fighters ... a wiry, energetic and indomitable man."

He survived a 1956 bombing, an assault during a 1957 demonstration, chest injuries when Birmingham authorities turned fire hoses on demonstrators in 1963, and countless arrests.

"I went to jail 30 or 40 times, not for fighting or stealing or drugs," Shuttlesworth told grade school students in 1997. "I went to jail for a good thing, trying to make a difference."

He visited frequently and remained active in the movement in Alabama even after moving in 1961 to Cincinnati, where he was a pastor for most of the next 47 years. He moved back to Birmingham in February 2008 for rehabilitation after a mild stroke. That summer, the once-segregated city honored him with a four-day tribute and named its airport after him; his statue stands outside the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute.

And in November 2008, Shuttlesworth watched from a hospital bed as Sen. Barack Obama was elected the nation's first African-American president. The year before, Obama had pushed Shuttlesworth's wheelchair across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma during a commemoration of the Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights march.

In the early 1960s, Shuttlesworth had invited King back to Birmingham. Televised scenes of police dogs and fire hoses being turned on black marchers, including children, in spring 1963 helped the rest of the nation grasp the depth of racial animosity in the Deep South.

Referring to the city's notoriously racist safety commissioner, Shuttlesworth would tell followers, "We're telling ol' `Bull' Connor right here tonight that we're on the march and we're not going to stop marching until we get our rights."

According to a May 1963 New York Times profile of Shuttlesworth, Connor responded to the word Shuttlesworth had been injured by the spray of fire hoses by saying: "I'm sorry I missed it. ... I wish they'd carried him away in a hearse."

While King went on to international fame, Shuttlesworth was relatively little known outside Alabama. But he was a key figure in Spike Lee's 1997 documentary, "4 Little Girls," about the September 1963 Birmingham church bombing that killed four black children.

He also gained attention in Diane McWhorter's book "Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama: The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution," which won a Pulitzer Prize in 2002.

Shuttlesworth was born March 18, 1922, near Montgomery and grew up in Birmingham.

As a child, he knew he would either be a minister or a doctor and by 1943, he decided to enter the ministry. He began taking theological courses at night while working as a truck driver and cement worker during the day. He was licensed to preach in 1944 and ordained in 1948.

It was 1954 when King, then a pastor in Montgomery, came to Birmingham to give a speech and asked to stop by Bethel Baptist and meet Shuttlesworth. Shuttlesworth already knew the Rev. Ralph Abernathy, who became a key aide to King, as they both attended Alabama State College, later known as Selma University.

Meanwhile, in Montgomery, Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a city bus in late 1955, prompting the boycott led by King that gave new life to the civil rights movement.

In January 1956, King's Montgomery home was bombed while he attended a rally. Eleven months later, on Christmas night 1956, 16 sticks of dynamite were detonated outside Shuttlesworth's bedroom as he slept at the Bethel Baptist parsonage. No one was injured in either bombing, although shards of glass and wood pierced Shuttleworth's coat and hat, which were hanging on a hook.

The next day, Shuttlesworth led 250 people in a protest of segregation on buses in Birmingham.

In 1957, he was beaten by a mob when he tried to enroll two of his children in an all-white school in Birmingham.

In Cincinnati, Shuttlesworth left Revelation Baptist Church and became pastor of the Greater New Light Baptist Church in 1966. He also founded a foundation to help low-income people make down payments on homes.

In 2004, he was president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference for about three months. The troubled organization's board had suspended Shuttlesworth without giving a reason after he tried to fire a longtime official. He resigned, saying board members tried to micromanage the organization.

He was 84 when he retired as the pastor of Greater New Light in 2006. "The best thing we can do is be a servant of God," he said in his final sermon. "It does good to stand up and serve others."

___

Associated Press writers Kendal Weaver in Montgomery, Ala., and Lisa Cornwell in Cincinnati contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obits/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111005/ap_on_re_us/us_obit_shuttlesworth

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Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Little bug leads to big prize

Igor Siwanowicz via Nikon Small World

A green lacewing larva gets its close-up in this photo by Igor Siwanowicz, first-place winner in the 2011 Nikon Small World contest. Click on the image to see this year's top 20 pictures.

By Alan Boyle

It's a good thing that Igor Siwanowicz didn't smash the bug that bit him. A photomicrograph of that pesky?lacewing larva has won first place in this year's edition of the prestigious Nikon Small World Photomicrography Competition.

Siwanowicz, a biochemist and photographer who lives in Madison, Wis., said the story of his prize-winning picture began when the bug started "fiercely digging its mandibles" into his skin.?Instead of swatting the bug away, he pulled out?the test tube that he always carries in his pocket for?occasions like this, slipped the insect inside and fired up the microscope.

As described in a Nikon news release, Siwanowicz had only one chance to capture?the?image he had in mind, due to the specific requirements for the bug's dissection. He carefully fixed and dyed the sample, then?set up?his confocal microscope?for?20x magnification. The?resulting picture reveals the lacewing's?1.3-millimeter-long head, and those fierce mandibles, in startling detail.


Siwanowicz, who completed his doctoral studies in protein crystallography but now works in invertebrate photography for research, sees his work not just as a technical aspect of a science project, but as a true?artform.

"My art causes a dissonance for its viewer ? a conflict between the culturally imprinted perception of an insect as something repulsive and ugly, with a newly acquired admiration of the beauty of its form," he told Nikon. "My hope is that in some way, my photomicrographs prompt people to realize the presence of culturaly programming, question it, and eventually throw it off as an illusion. I am so pleased to be recognized by Nikon Small World for this philosophy, but also for the technical expertise it required to capture this photo."

Dissonance between the macro and micro worlds is a theme in this year's crop of top Small World photos, which I had a hand in selecting as a member of the judging panel. A blade of grass turns into a forest of color. The surface of a microchip glows like a gaudy neon sign. A tiny sprig of liverwort becomes a chain of scaly alien hands. Cracked solar-cell film takes on the beauty of a black-and-white abstract painting.

To get the bigger picture, check out our slideshow of the contest's top 20 images, then go on to the Small World website to see the honorable mentions, this year's "Images of Distinction" and still more distinctive images from past competitions. You'll also enjoy Siwanowicz's voluminous?gallery on DeviantART.

This?year's 37th annual Small World contest drew hundreds of entries from almost 70 countries around the world. Siwanowicz receives $3,000 worth of Nikon gear for his first-place photograph ??with gift certificates of lesser amounts, ranging from $2,000 to $100, going to the others on the top-20 list. Eric Flem, communications manager for Nikon Instruments, said it was "our privilege to honor the talented researchers and photomicrographers who submit their amazing work."

"As evidenced by Dr. Siwanowicz ... marrying technique and aesthetics is no easy feat," he said. "We are proud that this competition is able to showcase this beautiful imagery and demonstrate some of the many facets of science."

More glimpses of microscopic worlds:


Top images from the 2011 Nikon Small World competition will be exhibited in a full-color calendar and through a national museum tour. For additional information, visit the?Small World website or follow the conversation on Facebook and Twitter @NikonSmallWorld.?

My colleagues on the judging panel for this year's contest included USA Today science columnist?Dan Vergano; Simon Watkins,?founder and director of the University of Pittsburgh Center for Biological Imaging, as well as a professor at the University of Pittsburgh?Medical School; and Richard Day, physiology professor at the Indiana University School of Medicine.

Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page or following @b0yle on Twitter. You can also add me to your Google+ circle, and check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.?

Source: http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/10/03/8126834-little-bug-leads-to-big-prize

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Graphic Designing | Graphic Design Online

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Graphic designing is an art of delivering message to a chosen audience through a stream of visual images. It has a wide commercial use. ... Graphic designs apply ?n th? entertainment industry. Graphics build up scenes, th? ...

Source: http://www.online-graphix.com/graphic-designing.htm

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The face | Free Article Directory

Individuality and recognition

Your skin may be the feature which best distinguishes an individual. You will discover ?special? sections of our brain, such as fusiform face area (FFA), that when they are damaged avoid the recognition of the faces of even intimate household. The pattern of specific organs such as eyes or parts thereof are being used in biometric identification to uniquely identify individuals.
[edit]Metaphor

By extension, anything the forward or world facing component of a head unit and that has internal structure is known its ?face?, much like the fa?ade associated with a building. For example a public relations or press officer is likely to be known as ?face? of the organization the person represents. ?Face? also designates reputation or waiting in society, particularly Chinese society, is spoken of as being a resource and that is won or lost. A result of the association with individuality, the anonymous individual is sometimes often called ?faceless?.
[edit]Plastic surgery

Cosmetic surgery are often used to change up the appearance for the facial features.[3] Surgery treatment may also be used in the event of facial trauma, difficulties for your face. Severely disfigured men and women have recently received full face transplants and partial transplants of skin and muscle tissue.

Various face profiles as caricatures
[edit]Caricatures

Caricatures often exaggerate facial features to manufacture a face with less effort recognised in colaboration with a pronounced a natural part of the public presence of your companion in question-for example, a caricature of Osama bin Laden might concentrate on his hair on your face and nose; a caricature of George W. Bush might enlarge his ears to the measurements of an elephant?s; a caricature of Jay Leno may pronounce his head and chin; in addition to a caricature of Mick Jagger might enlarge his lips. Exaggeration of memorable features helps men and women to recognise others when presented from a caricature form.[4]
[edit]Perception and recognition of faces

Gestalt psychologists theorise that your chosen face is just not only one range of facial features but is fairly something meaningful included in the form. It is like Gestalt theory make fish an image is noted to use entirety, not by its individual parts. Consistent with Gary L. Allen, people adapted to retort more to faces during evolution as the natural result of learning to be a social species. Allen points too the goal recognizing faces has some roots while in the ?parent-infant attraction, an effective and low-effort strategies which parents and infants form an enclosed representation of one another, lowering the likelihood which the parent will abandon his offspring because of recognition failure?.[5] Allen?s work needs a psychological perspective that mixes evolutionary theories with Gestalt psychology.
[edit]Emotion

Faces are necessary to expressing emotion, consciously or unconsciously. A frown denotes disapproval; a grin results in someone is pleased. Being in position to read emotion in another?s face is ?the fundamental cause empathy additionally, the chance to interpret a person?s reactions and predict it is likely that ensuing behaviors?. One study used the Multimodal Emotion Recognition Test[6] to see how to measure emotion. This research focused towards utilizing a measuring device to perform what people do it easily everyday: read emotion in any face.[7]
Citizens are also relatively proficient at determining if your smile is real or fake. Majority of folks seen individuals judging forced and genuine smiles. While young and elderly participants equally could identify the difference for smiling college students, the ?older adult participants outperformed young adult participants in distinguishing between posed and spontaneous smiles?.[8] This suggests by purchasing experience and age, we become more accurate at perceiving true emotions across various age ranges.
[edit]Biological perspective

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Source: http://sarticles.in/business/job-search-techniques/the-face/

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