Wednesday, April 24, 2013

June Mountain Will Be Open For 2013-2014 Winter Season ...

?

June Lake, Calif.??June Mountain?is pleased to announce it will re-open with full winter operations for the 2013-14 season. Following a one-year closing, June?s lifts are slated to welcome skiers and snowboarders mid-December 2013, while reservations for summer 2013 group functions are now being accepted.

?We couldn?t be more pleased to announce that June Mountain will be back in operation for the 2013-14 season,? said Carl Williams, general manager of June Mountain. ?Next winter we look forward to bringing skiers and snowboarders a great on-mountain experience while also planning for June?s future, including the possibility of a new lift and enhanced snowmaking.?

June Mountain leadership will continue to focus on creating a guest experience well suited to families and entry-level skiers and snowboarders.?A long-term strategic plan has yet to be finalized, but will be announced when completed.

As in the past,?Mammoth Mountain MVP season pass holders?for 2013-14 will also have free access to June Mountain.

About Mammoth Mountain

Mammoth Mountain Ski Area is the leading four-season mountain resort in California. With 1.3million annual skier visits, Mammoth Mountain is currently the third most frequented ski resort in the United States. The company owns and operates avariety of resort businesses including recreation, hospitality, real estatedevelopment, food and beverage and retail. Specific businesses owned and operated by Mammoth Mountain include Mammoth Mountain Ski Area, June Mountain, Tamarack Lodge and Resort, Mammoth Snowmobile Adventures, Mammoth Mountain Bike Park and the Mammoth Mountain Inn. Mammoth Mountain also operates Juniper Springs Resort, the Village Lodge and Sierra Star Golf Course in Mammoth Lakes, California. For more information on Mammoth Mountain, visit?MammothMountain.com?or call 800.MAMMOTH.

Source: http://snowboarding.transworld.net/1000201169/news/june-mountain-will-be-open-for-the-2013-2014-season/

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Veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan Conflicts Rally at 9/11 Memorial Site to Launch New Careers Rooted in Community Service

Veterans gather in New York for service program orientation with National Nonprofit The Mission Continues.

St. Louis, MO (PRWEB) April 24, 2013

Ten years after the U.S. engaged in the War on Terror, more than 70 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans will rally at the 9/11 Memorial in Manhattan on May 4 to begin the next chapter of serving their country: leading their communities at home. The veterans are the latest recruits for The Mission Continues, a national nonprofit organization that has helped more than 600 post-9/11 veterans successfully transition to post-military lives by reconnecting to their communities and their sense of purpose through volunteerism.

The 9/11 Memorial event is part of The Mission Continues' national fellowship orientation in New York City ? Bravo Orientation ? for veterans from across the country, May 3-5, 2013. Following a weekend of classroom training and a service blitz to rehabilitate The League School in Brooklyn, the veterans will convene at the 9/11 Memorial site to formally pledge an oath of service to the community before returning home to spend the next six months volunteering with local nonprofit organizations.

?The events of Sept. 11, 2001 inspired an entire generation of warriors to volunteer to defend their country,? said Eric Greitens, Navy SEAL and CEO and founder of The Mission Continues. ?And veterans? desire to contribute to a mission doesn?t end at the conclusion of their overseas deployment. By reigniting a desire to improve their communities at home, veterans rediscover their sense of purpose while building new connections that help them launch meaningful post-military careers.?

Continuing to Serve at Home


As part of Bravo Orientation, the new veteran recruits and alumni will fan out across the two-block school campus of The League School to refurbish common areas with fresh paint, plant a community garden and upgrade landscaping. The site improvements will support the school in its mission to provide a safe and nurturing atmosphere for children with developmental and emotional challenges to learn, grow and ultimately, make successful transitions to mainstream education and employment. Community volunteers, including The Daily Show staff, the Steven A. and Alexandra M. Cohen Foundation, Goldman Sachs? employees and the team from Harry?s Grooming will work side-by-side with the veterans serving the community.

?The veterans of The Mission Continues are heroes to our kids,? said Hannah Actenberg Kinn, CEO of The League Education & Treatment Center. ?Like our students, many of these veterans struggle with and overcome emotional and health issues each day. These generous veterans are role models of what our students can achieve with the right network of support.?

Through their service experience in New York and throughout their six month fellowships at home, veterans learn to translate military abilities into civilian skills, gaining valuable work experience and pursuing a defined post-fellowship goal: full-time employment, pursuit of higher education, or a full-time position of community service.

A New York Veterans? Journey


Among the members of Bravo class is New York City native and retired U.S. Army combat veteran Emmanuel Byron. After returning from Afghanistan, Byron suffered extensive injuries during a training exercise and was honorably discharged in 2006.

As a Mission Continues fellow, Byron will volunteer 20 hours each week at Little Flower Children and Family Services, mentoring children and families in crisis as well as developmentally disabled adults across New York City and Long Island. He?ll also lead an after-school program for children in foster care, which he hopes will help him hone his skills and gain valuable experience that will translate into a career as a social worker.

?I want to be an example for the inner city youth?living proof of someone from the streets of New York City can have a meaningful, positive impact,? Byron said. ?Growing up, I was lucky enough to have a mentor to guide me. I want to show these kids that someone cares about their future and believes they can overcome any obstacles in their paths.?

Media Opportunities:


Film/Photography:


-70 veterans lined up at attention, pledging to serve the community at the 9/11 Memorial site.


-The Mission Continues Fellows and volunteers will work together to renovate The League School?s refurbish common areas with fresh paint, plant a community garden and upgrade landscaping.

Interviews:


-70The Mission Continues Fellows (representing four of the five military branches)


-Eric Greitens, founder and CEO of The Mission Continues and 2013 TIME 100 honoree


-Spencer Kympton, president of The Mission Continues


-The Mission Continues corporate sponsors and service project volunteers

About The Mission Continues


The Mission Continues is a national nonprofit organization that helps Iraq and Afghanistan veterans successfully transition to post-military careers by reconnecting to their communities and their sense of purpose through volunteerism. Founded in 2007 by former U.S. Navy SEAL and TIME 100 2013 honoree Eric Greitens, The Mission Continues has helped more than 600 post-9/11 veterans focus their talents and energy to tackle challenges facing us right here at home. Through a unique model that provides reciprocal benefit for the veteran and the local community?six-month service fellowships?veterans volunteer to help others and, through their service, build new skills that help them launch their civilian career. For more information, please visit http://www.missioncontinues.org or follow us on Twitter @missioncontinue.

###

Laura L'Esperance
The Mission Continues
(212) 430-6549
Email Information

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/veterans-iraq-afghanistan-conflicts-rally-9-11-memorial-170820015.html

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2nd child of Pa. couple dies after only praying

FILE - This undated photo combination provided by the Philadelphia Police Department shows Herbert and Catherine Schaible. The Philadelphia couple serving 10 years' probation for the 2009 death of their toddler after they turned to prayer instead of a doctor , has violated their probation now that another of their children has died. Herbert and Catherine Schaible belong to a fundamentalist Christian church that believes in faith-healing. Judge Benjamin Lerner said at a hearing they violated the most important condition of their probation: to seek medical care for their remaining children. Authorities have yet to file criminal charges in the death of the 8-month-old boy last week, after he suffered with diarrhea and breathing problems for days. But charges could be filed once authorities pinpoint how the baby died. (AP Photo/Philadelphia Police Department)

FILE - This undated photo combination provided by the Philadelphia Police Department shows Herbert and Catherine Schaible. The Philadelphia couple serving 10 years' probation for the 2009 death of their toddler after they turned to prayer instead of a doctor , has violated their probation now that another of their children has died. Herbert and Catherine Schaible belong to a fundamentalist Christian church that believes in faith-healing. Judge Benjamin Lerner said at a hearing they violated the most important condition of their probation: to seek medical care for their remaining children. Authorities have yet to file criminal charges in the death of the 8-month-old boy last week, after he suffered with diarrhea and breathing problems for days. But charges could be filed once authorities pinpoint how the baby died. (AP Photo/Philadelphia Police Department)

(AP) ? A couple serving probation for the 2009 death of their toddler after they turned to prayer instead of a doctor could face new charges now that another son has died.

Herbert and Catherine Schaible belong to a fundamentalist Christian church that believes in faith healing. They lost their 8-month-old son, Brandon, last week after he suffered from diarrhea and breathing problems for at least a week, and stopped eating. Four years ago, another son died from bacterial pneumonia.

Prosecutors said Tuesday that a decision on charges will be made after they get the results of an autopsy.

Catherine Schaible's attorney, Mythri Jayaraman, cautioned against a rush to judgment, and said the couple are good parents deeply distraught over the loss of another child.

"There are way more questions than answers at this point. We haven't seen the autopsy report. We don't know the cause of death of this child," Jayaraman told The Associated Press. "What we do know is Mr. and Mrs. Schaible are distraught, they are grieving, they are tremendously sad about the loss of their most recent baby."

A man who answered the phone at a listing for Herbert Schaible declined to comment and hung up.

A jury convicted the Schaibles of involuntary manslaughter in the January 2009 death of their 2-year-old son, Kent. The boy's symptoms had included coughing, congestion, crankiness and a loss of appetite. His parents said he was eating and drinking until the last day, and they had thought he was getting better.

The Schaibles were sentenced to 10 years' probation.

At a hearing Monday, a judge told the couple they had violated the terms of their probation, noting the Schaibles had told investigators that they prayed to God to make Brandon well instead of seeking medical attention.

"You did that once, and the consequences were tragic," Philadelphia Common Pleas Judge Benjamin Lerner said, according to the Philadelphia Daily News.

Prosecutors on Monday sought to have the couple jailed, but Lerner permitted them to remain free because their seven other children had been placed in foster care.

"He feels they are a danger to their children ? not to the community, but to their own children," Assistant District Attorney Joanne Pescatore, who prosecuted the couple in 2010, said Tuesday.

Herbert Schaible, 44, and his 43-year-old wife grew up in the First Century Gospel Church in northeast Philadelphia and have served as teachers there. The church's website has a sermon titled "Healing ? From God or Medicine?" that quotes Bible verses purportedly forbidding Christians from visiting doctors or taking medicine.

"It is a definite sin to trust in medical help and pills; and it is real faith to trust on the Name of Jesus for healing," says the message, from last May.

A phone message left with the church on Tuesday was not immediately returned.

The church's pastor said in 2010 that the couple had never received medical care themselves beyond the help of a lay midwife who attends home births.

The Schaibles did take their children for medical checkups as required by their probation, according to Jayaraman, the defense attorney. Jayaraman said that Brandon was checked by a doctor when he was 10 days old, but she did not know whether the child had seen a doctor since.

"Nobody argues that these aren't very loving, nurturing parents," she said Tuesday. "Whether their religion had anything to do with the death of their baby, we don't know."

___

Rubinkam reported from northeast Pennsylvania.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-04-23-Prayer-Death-Children/id-fac1afaa704349a09356b30400748ff3

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Feds delay policy to allow small knives on planes

(AP) ? Airline passengers will have to leave their knives at home after all. And their bats and golf clubs.

A policy change scheduled to go into effect this week that would have allowed passengers to carry small knives, bats and other sports equipment onto airliners will be delayed, federal officials said Monday.

The delay is necessary to accommodate feedback from an advisory committee made up of aviation industry, consumer, and law enforcement officials, the Transportation Security Administration said in a brief statement. The statement said the delay is temporary, but gave no indication how long it might be.

TSA Administrator John Pistole proposed the policy change last month, saying it would free up the agency to concentrate on protecting against greater threats. TSA screeners confiscate about 2,000 small folding knives from passengers every day.

The proposal immediately drew fierce opposition from flight attendant unions and federal air marshals, who said the knives can be dangerous in the hands of the wrong passengers. Some airlines and members of Congress also urged TSA to reconsider its position.

The delay announced by TSA doesn't go far enough, a coalition of unions representing 90,000 flight attendants nationwide said Monday.

"All knives should be banned from planes permanently," the group said in a statement.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., who opposed the policy, said TSA's decision is an admission "that permitting knives on planes is a bad idea." He also called for a permanent ban.

Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass., another opponent, said he will continue to push TSA to drop the proposal entirely.

"People with radical ideas can use everyday objects to cause great harm," Markey said. "If there is an opportunity to decrease risks to Americans, we have a duty to protect our citizens and disallow knives from being taken onto planes."

The proposed policy would have permitted folding knives with blades that are 2.36 inches (6 centimeters) or less in length and are less than 1/2-inch (1-centimeter) wide. The policy was aimed at allowing passengers to carry pen knives, corkscrews with small blades and other small knives.

Passengers also would have been be allowed to bring onboard as part of their carry-on luggage novelty-sized baseball bats less than 24 inches long, toy plastic bats, billiard cues, ski poles, hockey sticks, lacrosse sticks and two golf clubs, the agency said.

Security standards adopted by the International Civil Aviation Organization, a U.N. agency, already call for passengers to be able to carry those items. Those standards are non-binding, but many countries follow them.

The proposal didn't affect box cutters, razor blades and knives that don't fold or that have molded grip handles, which are prohibited.

Passengers were prohibited from carrying the small knives onboard planes after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Some of the terrorists in those attacks used box cutters to intimidate passengers and airline crew members.

It's unlikely in these days of hardened cockpit doors and other preventative measures that the small folding knives could be used by terrorists to take over a plane, Pistole told Congress last month.

There has been a gradual easing of some of the security measures applied to passengers after the 9/11 attacks. In 2005, the TSA changed its policies to allow passengers to carry on airplanes small scissors, knitting needles, tweezers, nail clippers and up to four books of matches. The move came as the agency turned its focus toward keeping explosives off planes, because intelligence officials believed that was the greatest threat to commercial aviation.

And in September 2011, the TSA no longer required children 12 years old and under to remove their shoes at airport checkpoints. The agency recently issued new guidelines for travelers 75 and older so they can avoid removing shoes and light jackets when they go through airport security checkpoints.

___

Follow Joan Lowy on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/AP_Joan_Lowy

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-04-22-Knives%20on%20Planes/id-17e9cc9774654c4dac516e2da0041e34

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Wildfires can burn hot without ruining soil

Apr. 23, 2013 ? When scientists torched an entire 22-acre watershed in Portugal in a recent experiment, their research yielded a counterintuitive result: Large, hot fires do not necessarily beget hot, scorched soil.

It's well known that wildfires can leave surface soil burned and barren, which increases the risk of erosion and hinders a landscape's ability to recover. But the scientists' fiery test found that the hotter the fire -- and the denser the vegetation feeding the flames -- the less the underlying soil heated up, an inverse effect which runs contrary to previous studies and conventional wisdom.

Rather, the soil temperature was most affected by the fire's speed, the direction of heat travel and the landscape's initial moisture content. These new findings could help forest managers plan when and where to ignite small controlled burns to reduce dry vegetation and restore the ecosystem in at-risk areas, said Cathelijne Stoof, the soil and water scientist who led this study as part of her PhD research at Wageningen University in the Netherlands.

A report about the experiment by Stoof, who is now at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and her colleagues has been accepted for publication by Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.

To study the real-world effects of landscape and fire dynamics on soil temperature, the research team mapped the watershed and installed instruments before setting the test area ablaze. During the burn the scientists monitored the fire and the resulting soil temperatures. As expected, the fire was most intense in the heavily vegetated areas, but the topsoil in these regions remained "surprisingly cool" during the duration of the fire, Stoof explained.

"Vegetation is fuel, so the areas with more vegetation had more intense fire," Stoof said. "But the heavily vegetated regions also were also more moist, which protected the soil."

The areas with the hottest soil temperatures were in direct sunlight and had sparse, dry vegetation. "Because it's already dried out, it doesn't have the moisture shield that more densely vegetated areas have to preserve the soil," Stoof said.

Other, previously observed behavior of fires could also help explain the new result, Stoof added. "Fires moving fast will quickly burn up all the vegetation and also have little effect on the soil, but slow-moving fires will have much more time to heat up the soil and burn up its organic matter and seeds," she noted.

Prior to this study, most of the research concerning fire effects on soil "took place in small scale field or laboratory settings, where they only burned small plots," Stoof said. "But these plots have less variation than a real watershed. If you have homogeneous conditions, you cannot extrapolate those results to the larger scale, where fire, soil and vegetation are heterogeneous."

Fire researcher Guillermo Rein of the Imperial College, London, called the results from Stoof and her colleagues "thought-provoking." They "go against the currently prevalent theory of soil heating," he said. "This paper ought to quickly mobilize the fire science community so that this soil heating theory can be reconfirmed, refuted or reformulated."

From the new results, Stoof has devised a strategy to minimize soil damage during controlled burns. "You need to burn heterogeneous areas in two stages," Stoof said. "Burn the driest area first when it has some moisture. The damp area will be too damp, and therefore will not carry fire. Then go back and burn the damp area when it's dried out enough so that it will burn. This way you end up with minimum soil damage."

But in order to apply the results of this study universally, soil and fire scientists need to work together and study other types of landscapes, Stoof added. "We just studied one type of environment and one fire. This experiment needs to be replicated so we can understand how different vegetation and soil types are affected. If soil scientists work with fire scientists, they can predict where the damage is going to occur and put up barriers to prevent erosion, or plan prescribed burns strategically to minimize soil depletion."

A scholarship from the International Association of Wildland Fire and a European Commission contract funded this work.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Geophysical Union.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Cathelijne R. Stoof, Demie Moore, Paulo M. Fernandes, Jetse J. Stoorvogel, Ricardo E.S. Fernandes, Ant?nio J.D. Ferreira, Coen J. Ritsema. Hot fire, cool soil. Geophysical Research Letters, 2013; DOI: 10.1002/grl.50299

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/~3/-AaiGOfSshI/130423135718.htm

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Reese's other crime? Waving the celeb card

Atlanta Department of Correction

Reese Witherspoon and husband James Toth after their Atlanta arrest.

By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

When Oscar winner Reese Witherspoon and her husband were pulled over by police early Friday morning in Atlanta, it turned out that even America's sweetheart couldn't resist pulling the celebrity card: "Do you know my name?" she asked the officer. "You're about to find out who I am."

For years tabloids have been doing their utmost to prove that celebrities are just like us -- but that all goes out the window when an A-lister (or aspiring A-lister) goes to pains to remind the little people that they're kind of a big deal.

When leaked, it's a PR disaster of the worst kind, especially when the celeb card is waved under the noses of regular folk (usually police officers) just trying to do their jobs.

But Witherspoon is hardly alone.?

Margaret Cho vs. Korean spa
Korean spas are traditionally communal and, in gender-segregated areas, a place where people can soak and shvitz in the buff. But when the heavily-tattooed Cho sat down for a rest, the manager came over and asked her to cover up. As Cho explained in a Gawker essay in late March, "in Korean culture tattoos are very taboo and my body was upsetting everyone there." But cultural sensitivity or no, the comedian was angered. Cho continued, "This is something I have never done -- I actually said, in Korean, 'Do you know who I am?' I am Margaret Cho!"?

LeBron James' mother vs. Miami Beach police
In 2011, Gloria James was picked up by police in Miami after reportedly assaulting valet worker Sorel Rockefeller. "I'm very, very humiliated because she told me again, 'Do you know who I am?' when she slapped me," said Sorel of the Miami Heat star's mom.

Lindsay Lohan's mother vs. Hollywood nightclub and Carvel ice cream
The mom who takes the cake (or not, as the case might be), however, has to be Dina Lohan. In 2009 she was turned away from Hollywood nightclub Villa when she tried to get both of her daughters in with her. Lindsay was 22, but Ali was only 15 at the time.?"Do you know who I am?" Dina protested, it was reported?at the time, and Lindsay jumped in with "You're making a huge mistake. Huge!" A year later, she was busted when trying to pick up a free cake from Carvel with a promotional item giving Lindsay free ice cream for 75 years. She was turned down (because the entire Lohan family had been abusing the privilege), and as Radar reported, she said, "It just shows how (Lohans) get treated so much worse than regular people." And yes, the cops were called.

Tom Hanks vs. West Fargo diner
Let's face it, if a celebrity asked one of us for a special favor, who would say no? In 2012, a jet company Tom Hanks was using called up the TNT Diner in North Dakota and asked owner Tammy Hagensen if she'd open her doors early for an unnamed special guest, reported the Associated Press. Curious, Hagensen opened at?4 a.m. and in walked Hanks, his wife Rita Wilson and their two sons. Hanks was cool: Later he?tweeted that the diner "makes killer breakfast." We all know Tom Hanks is the most fun celebrity out there?-- but that's another reason why we occasionally get a Witherspoon-esque blunder -- few people can resist doing a celebrity a solid. (And by the way, that Jane-Fonda-turned-away-from-a-steakhouse story? Fake, fake, fake.)

Still, there may yet be hope for celebrities. Though the absence of smug hubris rarely gets reported on, there's at least one incident worth noting from 2009:

Bob Dylan vs. New Jersey police
According to The Awl, police were summoned to a home in Long Branch, N.J., after a report of an "eccentric-looking old man" wandering in the front yard. Officer Kristie Buble showed up and questioned him -- and he said he was Bob Dylan. But she didn't believe him, and took him back to his hotel where he and his manager verified his ID with a passport. (Later reports indicated Dylan might have been looking for a house two blocks away where Bruce Springsteen wrote "Born to Run.") You gotta respect an actual living legend who not only didn't pull out the celebrity card, but doesn't appear to even carry one.

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/04/22/17862419-reese-witherspoon-and-other-stars-who-have-waved-the-celeb-card?lite

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HTC's One available from its online store, 32GB unlocked model priced at $575

HTC's One pops up on its site with unlocked SIM and bootloader for $575

Alongside its developer model, HTC now has an unlocked One for the rest of us. The fetching 4.7-inch 1080p device is in stock at HTC's US store with 32GB of storage and the same powerhouse specs we saw earlier: 1.7Ghz quad-core CPU, 2GB of RAM, 4-megapixel "UltraPixel" cam and Android 4.1.2 with Sense 5. You'll also get a SIM-unlocked model, but unlike the 64GB equipped, $650 developer edition, it won't come with a liberated bootloader -- though it'll cost a touch less at $575. So, if you've been biding your time for a carrier-free version of the svelte aluminum-bodied handset, you can place your order at the source.'s

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PSY's new single 'Gentleman' continues record run

South Korean rapper PSY smiles during a news conference for his concert "Happening" in Seoul, South Korea Saturday, April 13, 2013. PSY is unveiling the music video and choreography for his new single "Gentleman" at the Seoul concert. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

South Korean rapper PSY smiles during a news conference for his concert "Happening" in Seoul, South Korea Saturday, April 13, 2013. PSY is unveiling the music video and choreography for his new single "Gentleman" at the Seoul concert. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

(AP) ? PSY continues to set records on YouTube.

The South Korean pop star hit another mark for viral views with his new single "Gentleman," earning 38 million views in a single day as it set a blistering pace to 200 million views.

Kevin Allocca, YouTube's trends manager, says "Gentleman" was viewed 38 million times on April 14, surpassing the single-day record of 30 million set by the "KONY 2012" short film. It also holds the day-of-debut record with 18.5 million views.

PSY's "Gangnam Style" is YouTube's most-viewed video at 1.5 billion.

"Gentleman" reached 100 million views in four days and was approaching 204 million views Monday afternoon. It's not clear if those are records, but it took "Gangnam Style" more than 50 days to reach 100 million views.

___

Online:

http://bit.ly/Yk9inv

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-04-22-US-People-PSY/id-a64dbedc64834b269105e6ec7779a261

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Self Improvement | How To Double Your Productivity In Only Two ...

graph300By Ashton Aiden -

Do you want to be organized and more productive, but don?t know where to start? It?s no secret that large organizations have whole departments, dedicated to optimizing the efficiency of their processes. Individuals and small businesses all have great ideas, but find it hard to get these ideas through the end. Productivity is the bridge between good ideas and actual success, so you may as well start with yourself! Here is a good technique to get you started.

When you are focused on the important things, you will become more productive and find you are doing a lot more work in a lot less time. And the best part is that instead of feeling tired from the work you have done, you will feel more confident, active and satisfied. So here is a quick and easy suggestion that will reward you with instant benefits.

Organizations waste a surprising amount of time doing unproductive things, which affects their profitability. A well-known business technique for improving efficiency is to conduct a ?time management? study. You can do this for yourself by writing down precisely how you spend your time. Here is my own experience.

I wanted to find out what was the one thing that could most improve my productivity.

I decided to write down how I spent my time. To do this, I used the free ?Calendar? application in Google and for my own convenience I divided each day into three periods ? morning (8:00 to 12:00), afternoon (12:00 to 18:00) and night (18:00 to 00:00).

In the Calendar application each day is divided into thirty minute intervals. For two days I recorded and saved online what I had been doing every thirty minutes.

I expected this to be tedious and confusing, but in fact it did not take much time or effort. Although the days were graduated in thirty minute intervals, that did not mean I stopped work every thirty minutes to write down what I was doing. For example, I worked on one task continuously throughout an afternoon, and afterwards I recorded that it took me two and a half hours. In other words, I was recording my activities to the nearest half hour.

As another example, on Monday morning I had a meeting at 9.00. It lasted three hours, and during that time I had no opportunity to think about anything except the meeting. This meant that for three hours I did not record anything. After the meeting, my first action was to update my calendar.

After two days I reviewed my recorded activities.

The results were unexpected and very interesting.

Remember that until this point I had never thought about where my time went or what I was really doing during the day.

I thought I was spending hours doing various work-related tasks. Instead, I found out that only 40% of my time was actually spent doing those tasks. The other 60% was talking on the phone, checking my email, catching up with friends on Facebook, chatting on Skype, and surfing aimlessly on the Internet.

If someone asks you ?What have you done today??, are you going to say ?Well, I talked on the phone and I checked my email?? Of course not! You would probably say you were working on such-and-such a project, you?d done this and you?d done that, etc, etc. However, if you had kept a calendar, you would have found that your true work activity was only a small part of your day!

Of course, the true work/non-work time balance will be different for each individual. The importance of doing this two day ?time management? study is to make you realize how much of your time is wasted on unproductive activity. You can benefit from this knowledge a lot more than you think!

Benefits

Firstly I understood something in greater depth than before. Namely that you cannot have power over something if you don?t know what it is.

Here is an example of what that last sentence means. If you want to improve your finances, the first thing you should do is find out how you are spending your money. Only when you have this knowledge can you exercise the power to decide whether to buy something or not.

The same thing happens with time management. Once I realized I was spending three hours a day checking my email and two hours a day on Skype and Facebook, it was easy for me to decide not to do these things. That meant I had an extra five hours a day available for doing genuine productive work.

In addition, I discovered another benefit. I realized that my mornings were more productive than my afternoons. By dividing the day into three parts, I realized that most of my non-productive activities were in the afternoon. Therefore, I decided to postpone my Skyping and Facebook time until the evenings after work. Overall, I believe that anyone can do a time management exercise and reach many useful conclusions about themselves.

Actions

After two days of recording my activity and a simple analysis of the results, I made the following minor adjustments:

? I shut down Skype during the day (unless I really needed it for a business call).
? I checked my email once an hour instead of all the time.
? I only read my favorite websites at the very beginning and end of the workday.
? I moved all other activities that were not contributing to my business goals to the evening.

As you can see, I did not stop doing anything I did before. Instead, I either moved those unproductive activities to other times of the day, or I strictly regulated how long they took. As a result, by the third day of keeping my calendar, I had doubled my productive time, while still doing the things I like.

To conclude, the answer is if you don?t open that website, if you don?t go onto Skype, if you stop reading the same emails, if you stop chatting pointlessly with friends or colleagues, then you can focus on being more productive. This can make all the difference between finding time for that new project or idea of yours or not. Your productivity can be the difference between failure or success. Which one do you choose?

Ashton Aiden is a life coach, passionate about helping people reach their goals and experience success in all areas of life. His expertise spreads over a wide range of fields, including manifestation, goal setting, nutrition, power breathing, brainwave entrainment, and more. He is dedicated to sharing his best knowledge and tools on his blog at Brainwavelove.com.

Source: http://theselfimprovementblog.com/self-improvement/featured/how-to-double-your-productivity-in-only-two-days/

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Sunday, April 14, 2013

Dog Pushes Cat in Bathtub | Steve Dale's Pet World

Well, this isn't right. Do you think the dog did this on purpose, or was it just an accident

Filed under: cats, dogs, entertainment, pets

Tags: bathtub, cat, dog, dog pushes cat, Steve Dale archives, swimming cat, wet cat

Source: http://www.chicagonow.com/steve-dales-pet-world/2013/04/dog-pushes-cat-in-bathtub/

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Cell-destroyer that fights and promotes TB reveals what's behind its split identity

Cell-destroyer that fights and promotes TB reveals what's behind its split identity

Friday, April 12, 2013

Tumor necrosis factor ? normally an infection-fighting substance produced by the body? can actually heighten susceptibility to tuberculosis if its levels are too high.

University of Washington TB researchers unravel this conundrum in a report this week in Cell.

Their study shows how excess production of this disease-cell destroyer at first acts as a TB germ killer. But later the opposite occurs: too much tumor necrosis factor encourages TB pathogens to multiply in the body.

In addition to figuring out some reasons behind this back-pedaling, the scientists learned that certain combinations of drugs already available for other conditions can curtail the shift from anti-TB to pro-TB.

The drug combination revealed in this study, the authors noted, "has the potential to revert some cases of hypersusceptibility to hyperresistance."

The scientists were Francisco Jose Roca Soler, of the UW Department of Microbiology, and Lalita Ramakrishnan, UW professor of microbiology, medicine and immunology. A recipient of the National Institutes of Health Director's Pioneer Award, Ramakrishnan is recognized for her work on how the TB pathogen and its hosts' cells interact to cause disease.

These studies are conducted in zebrafish, an animal model for tuberculosis. The fish's embryos and small fry are transparent. Researchers can see through their skin to observe their organs, tissues and cells and the internal appearance of some infections, for example, the bacterial cording of TB.

Roca and Ramakrishnan explained that TB had traditionally been thought of as a disease of failed immunity. However, more recent studies from their lab and other labs, both in zebrafish and in humans, have suggested that it also can result from too strong of a defensive inflammatory response.

"While tumor necrosis factor is a critical host defense against tuberculosis," Roca and Ramakrishnan noted, "an excess of this factor is also implicated in the development of the disease in zebrafish and in humans."

Variations in a specific location of the zebrafish genome can cause either too much or too little tumor necrosis factor to be produced, depending on the type of variation. In either case, deficiency or overabundance, zebrafish become prone to tuberculosis.

In both cases the scavenger cells, or macrophages, that are trying to clear away the TB pathogens by ingesting them, die and burst open. They are like torn vacuum cleaner bags spilling their dirty contents.

When the TB bacteria escape the confines of the scavenger cells, "they grow exuberantly in the extracellular environment," Roca and Ramakrishnan said.

Researchers needed to work out the differences between TB susceptibility caused by too high or too low tumor necrosis factors because the distinction is vital to treatment decisions. Only patients whose genetics made them launch a pro-inflammatory response, benefited from steroid treatment, previous studies have shown. Steroids can increase the chance of death among TB patients with a weak inflammatory response.

In the present study, Roca and Ramakrishnan elucidated the molecular pathways by which too much tumor necrosis factor at first rapidly promotes macrophages to go after TB bacteria, and then turns around and forces the hard-working macrophages to die and expel their captives.

They found that both the microbiocidal activity, and the death of the macrophages, resulted from upping the production of reactive oxygen species by the mitochondria inside the macrophages. Mitochondria are the energy-generating power plants of living cells.

Tumor necrosis factor inside of infected macrophages induces reactive oxygen species from the mitochondria. These are the chemicals responsible for cell damage from oxidative stress.

Early on, reactive oxygen species can be beneficial. Initially their presence encourages the macrophages to destroy pathogens. As they accumulate, however, they promote self-harm.

Suddenly the macrophage is programmed to self-destruct. The reactive oxygen species carry out the death sentence by modulating a pathway for a substance called cyclophilin D, which sets the stage for the demolition of mitochondria.

Reactive oxygen species also play a role in acid sphingomyelinase-mediated ceramide production. This waxy substance occurs in cell membranes. One of its many roles is regulating signals for cell death.

The researchers were able to convert the high tumor necrosis factor state to become resistant to tuberculosis. They did so by genetically blockading both cyclophilin D and acid sphingomyelinase in previously susceptible zebrafish.

Similarly, they discovered that the drug combination of alisporivir, a cyclophilin D-inhibiting drug, and desipramine, an antidepressant that inactivates acid sphingomyelinase, also reverses susceptibility to TB in zebrafish prone to tumor necrosis factor excess.

Essentially, the experiments suggest that preventing cell death in TB infected macrophages can prolong their capacity to attack TB pathogens.

A longer-living army of macrophages, filled with the microbiocidal reactive oxygen species, will destroy the TB pathogens inside them and make the host highly resistant to tuberculosis.

Because excessive amounts of tumor necrosis factor are implicated in several inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, sarcoidosis, and Crohn's, the authors noted, "The findings may be useful for understanding diseases in addition to tuberculosis."

###

University of Washington: http://www.uwnews.org

Thanks to University of Washington for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127722/Cell_destroyer_that_fights_and_promotes_TB_reveals_what_s_behind_its_split_identity

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Saturday, April 13, 2013

New Glass opera "The Lost" premieres in Austria

LINZ, Austria (AP) ? Forget minimalist.

It's a term Philip Glass never liked as a term for his musical style, and the rich complexity of "The Lost," his newest opera, proves those who insist on using it just plain wrong.

Written for the new Linz opera house, where it world-premiered Friday, "The Lost"? "Spuren der Verirrten" in the original German ? is a strangely reassuring confirmation that although mankind has gone astray we are all in the same boat; that while all we do has no sense, that rule applies to all of us.

Life; death; fame; fortune; joy; tears. All human striving in vain. It's a story that has been told many times, in word, music, song and dance. "The Lost" combines all those threads and then some with magnificent result.

Don't look for named characters. That would be too personal. Instead we have singer "A'' interacting with "B'' and so on. The fact that "A'' and "B'' are lost is clear from the very start, even as they mark the way they came.

Hansel and Gretel did that too. In vain.

Two hours later, pause included, more than a hundred people crowd the cavernously deep stage and spill into the pit where they make a show of playing imaginary instruments. The orchestra has moved onto stage. They wear funny hats and conductor Dennis Russell Davies sports a paper crown.

The music soars to a crescendo. Drums pound. All of humanity is lost, and all around is chaos. "Where are we?" they sing on the sinister, red-lit stage, knowing there will be no answer.

But a lot happens before that sonorous end, as one tableau follows the other depicting vignettes of the banality of being.

An old couple sit, both soaking their feet. "Whatever happens I will never desert you," sings one. "We've come through tougher times than these," intones the other; "Even when you sweated in fear, it smelled good" ? exchanges that make clear in their triteness that it is the audience ? all of us ? who are on stage.

Another couple are fighting, "Die, die," screams one before changing tack in mid-breath to suddenly sing "Let's get along again, neighbor. Peace."

Bizarre shapes populate the action. An armless man moves wormlike across the stage as his partner berates him for failing life's tests. They both die.

Another character ? "The Third" ? takes on the role of the Greek chorus loudly proclaiming the futility of it all, while "The Spectator" wonders where all the exertion is leading.

Adding to the on-stage edginess is nervous ballet choreography. The dancers jerk and move rapidly but without a sense of the purpose that a life lived well should have. The motions are mechanical. Life is mechanical.

A visual feast, compliments of director David Pountney, choreographer Amir Hosseinpour, and Anne Marie Legenstein, who created the bewildering array of delightfully bizarre costumes. Fabrice Kebour's lighting ? cold and dreary blues, alternating with jarring brightness ? were also effective.

But none of it would work without Glass's music.

Menacingly buzzing strings, roaring brass instruments and a crashing synthesizer alternate with poignantly melodic lines. Glass is boldly symphonic in one moment, softly insistent the next, weaving a harmonic tapestry that becomes part of the visual fabric on stage.

One of the world's greatest living composers, Glass shows in "The Lost" that he truly is a man for all musical seasons and his wonderful sounds are brought alive by Davis, the conductor, who leads Bruckner Orchestra with the authority and vigor that this music demands.

The soloists ? from "A'' to "K'' also did well, in roles that were less challenging vocally and more dramatically.

Ahead of the performance, Austrian dramatist Peter Handke, on whose play the opera is based, praised Glass's work as "faithful" to his own while Glass described his effort as an attempt at "Gesamtkunst" ? the term coined by Richard Wagner meaning "Total Art."

"I call it earth, air, fire and water," he said in comments to The Associated Press of the totality of art forms that went into "The Lost." ''Movement, text, image and music ? those are the elements we worked with."

While not speaking German, Glass said working to Rainer Mennicken's libretto in that language was no problem because "I knew the grammar and I just plugged in the words. Beyond that, he also is drawn to Austria "because the musicians are so good."

"I used to think that the American orchestras would be my true home," he said. "But I found out that there is another element, another layer of music that you get in a Central European orchestra? a depth of sound" that most American ensembles do not have.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/glass-opera-lost-premieres-austria-001040569.html

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Fidel Castro appears near tears over Chavez in Cuban TV report

By Jeff Franks

HAVANA (Reuters) - Former Cuban leader Fidel Castro looked downcast and near tears as he listened to a song about his friend and ally, the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, in a news report aired on Cuban state television on Thursday.

The unusual report, nine minutes in length on a news program, was the first public glimpse of the impact of Chavez' death last month on the 86-year-old Castro, whom the Venezuelan socialist openly revered and considered his political father and mentor.

Castro, recorded in a rare public appearance on Wednesday for the opening of a school, put his hand over his eyes, his lips trembling, and appeared to fight back tears during the song "The Return of a Friend," which he introduced as having been written and recorded by several musicians to remember Chavez.

Chavez, 58, died on March 5 in Caracas after a long battle with cancer, much of it fought in Cuba under the supervision of Cuban doctors.

"Nobody thinks that he has gone, he went for a moment to mass. He will return with Sandino, with Che, Marti and Bolivar," the song went, referring to several late Latin American revolutionary figures - Augusto Sandino, Ernesto "Che" Guevara, Jose Marti and Simon Bolivar - whose names are often invoked in Cuba.

Long close-ups of Castro were interspersed with video of him and Chavez in their many meetings.

"Really, the song is pretty," the gray-haired Castro said hoarsely to the room of students, school workers and officials, some of whom were moved to tears as they watched.

Castro and Chavez forged a strong friendship and political alliance early in Chavez' 14 years in power as he poured oil and money into Cuba to help it emerge from the economic ruin that followed the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, the communist island's previous top ally.

Their close relationship continued after Castro, aging and infirm, resigned the presidency in 2008 after 49 years in power and was succeeded by younger brother Raul Castro, who is 81.

Fidel Castro and Chavez spoke often, corresponded frequently and plotted jointly to promote leftist governments in Latin America and diminish U.S. influence in the region.

In his only public comments on Chavez' death, Fidel Castro wrote in a March 11 column in state media that Cuba had lost its best friend ever and he admitted that word of his passing "hit us hard."

But it was not known how hard until Thursday's television report.

(Editing by Kevin Gray and Paul Simao)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fidel-castro-appears-near-tears-over-chavez-cuban-205541850.html

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Tawney, Jasmine and Crystal Jade: the automotive colors of 1977 ...

1977colors_lede

As the Seventies dawned, we had automotive colors with names taken from *ahem* risque films. Just seven years later, we had automotive colors with names that would eventually be adopted by *ahem* working ladies. Coincidence?

Okay, all kidding aside, this chart of color codes for 1977 domestic automobiles (AMC, FoMoCo, GM, and Chrysler) should be rather valuable for anybody who?s restoring or looking to restore a Malaise Era car, provided the Du Pont Lucite acrylic lacquer, Centari acrylic enamel, and Dulux alkyd enamel codes can cross-reference to modern paint codes. For example, that AMC Firecracker Red looks to be the same Firecracker Red that I intend to use when it comes time to paint Project HMX. Matt Litwin found the chart in the July-August 1976 issue of Du Pont Refinisher News.

1977colors_01_2000 1977colors_02_2000

Source: http://blog.hemmings.com/index.php/2013/04/11/tawney-jasmine-and-crystal-jade-the-automotive-colors-of-1977/

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Friday, April 12, 2013

Forget iOS 7, it's Hollywood Super suits that need a texture intervention

Forget iOS 7, it's Hollywood Super Suits that need the texture intervention

While many people are no doubt ecstatic that newly appointed head of all human interface at Apple, Jon Ive, is reportedly walking through iOS 7 with a sandblaster, stripping out overly heavy skins and skeuomorphic design elements, one look at the just-released Man of Steel publicity photo above makes me think it's really Hollywood that needs its texture fetish dialed way down.

I don't know what their point is in making the Man of Steel look like the Man of Rich Texas Snake Skin. I do know that, in iOS, an argument can be made that textures serve a purpose.

Even if you're rushed, tired, or drunk -- real use cases that need to be considered in a system design -- and you turn on your iPhone while racing or stumbling around, you'll never mistake the rather mundane contacts page in Phone for the leather appointed one in Find my Friends, or the green felt one in Game Center. When your screen lights up, there's a good chance any app you get dumped into will be immediately recognizable, even under the most extreme conditions. An iOS stripped completely bare would not be as usable.

Moreover, even if a screen represents something potentially quite boring -- ugly lists of mostly data -- good visual design can not only overcome that, but transcend it. Letterpress, however flat it might look, jumps and bounces and pops around delightfully, skeuomorphically, with almost every interaction.

The idea of the iPhone and iPad being totally minimalist when it comes to industrial design is so that the hardware doesn't compete with or distract from the display. Filling that display with awesome is the whole point. Balancing that awesome is the key.

Nature abhors flat surfaces. Most organic things in our world are textured, and for many different reasons. Completely flat surfaces are monotonous, just as completely textured surfaces are tiresome. Our eyes crave areas of interest counterpointed by areas of rest. Good designers use both to lead us.

A good Super Suit design, for example, could tightly texture the main blue body so light always catches it in interesting ways, but leave the red and yellow emblem with a far simpler treatment, letting our gaze come naturally to rest right where it's meant to.

The same holds true for iOS. Subtle textures in the background can help flatter elements in the foreground leap out, and be even more usable, even when stressed. Sure, some Apple apps may have gone too far in the past, and dialing them back could make them even better, but making them flat would be just as bad. Personal taste plays some part, but usability is always king. Too much design or too little are both a bad thing.

It's that balance that's missing from the Super suit above, and Hollywood's inability to let any flat surface go unmolested. And it's that balance, more than any arbitrary dislike of one treatment or another, that I hope Jony Ive is bringing to iOS 7.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/iyF6oKIXzAQ/story01.htm

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Countries with the most people yearning to breathe free

Roughly 138 million people worldwide, or about 2 percent of the world?s adult population, want to immigrate to the U.S. In China, as many as 19 million adults would like to move to the land of opportunity -- the largest number of any country. Based on data provided by Gallup, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed the seven countries where the most people want to come to the United States.

Not surprisingly, these countries are all among the most populous in the world. All seven are among the 12 largest by population. While the numbers are quite large, given that these countries all have at least 100 million citizens, the percentage of the population looking to move to the U.S. is actually quite small. The 19 million Chinese looking to immigrate to the U.S. amount to just 1 percent of China's total population.

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In some of the world's most populous countries, however, very few citizens are looking to immigrate to the U.S. Fewer than 1 million people in Indonesia, the fourth-most populous country in the world, and in Pakistan, the sixth-most populous, want to move to the United States. Much of that likely is due to high disapproval of U.S. leadership. According to Gallup, only 23 percent of Indonesians support U.S. leadership, while only 12 percent of Pakistanis do.

The countries with the highest percentage of people who would like to move to U.S. are far different than the countries on this list. The countries with the highest percentage of people looking to immigrate -- including Liberia, Haiti and Honduras -- tend to be smaller, third-world countries with very little economic opportunity available domestically.

Economic opportunities in many of the seven countries on the list are not plentiful either. Countries such as Bangladesh and Nigeria, both on the list, have far fewer resources to get ahead than in the United States. In 2011, Nigeria?s gross domestic product (GDP) was $2,582 per capita, while in Bangladesh it was just $1,909. The U.S. GDP per capita was $48,328. None of the countries on this list had a GDP per capita in 2011 that was even a third of that in the United States.

Slideshow: Your newest fellow Americans

For countries such as Mexico and the Philippines, the desire to immigrate likely is influenced by the networks of friends and family that already exist in the United States, according to Jon Clifton, a partner at Gallup. More than 1.8 million people originally from the Philippines live in the U.S. In Mexico, the desire for greater economic opportunity led to a four decade-long mass migration to the U.S. However, this trend actually has reversed in recent years as border security has become more stringent and jobs have become more scarce as a result of the U.S. recession.

In the cases of India and China, the people that are eager to come to America tend to be more educated than the population at large, Clifton pointed out. ?Brain drain is probably more serious [in China and India] than it is in a country like the U.S., U.K. or Germany,? Clifton said. In the U.S., United Kingdom or Germany, a higher percentage of people want to leave the country, but those who want to leave for the U.S. tend to be less educated due to the lower economic opportunities for low-skilled workers.

Based on data from Gallup, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed the seven countries where the largest number of adults would like to immigrate to the United States. We also looked at the percentage of adults in a particular country looking to immigrate to the U.S., as provided by Gallup. In addition, we looked at total population numbers from the CIA World Factbook. The number of people living in the U.S. from each country was taken from the U.S. Census Bureau. We also looked at well-being data for each of these countries and the percentage of people who approved and disapproved of American leadership, both provided by Gallup. In addition, we looked at data from the United Nations regarding poverty and literacy rates in the countries, and data on GDP was obtained from the International Monetary Fund.

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These are the countries sending the most people to America.

7. Philippines

? Adults looking to move to U.S.: 4 million

? Total population: 105.72 million (12th highest)

? Percent of adults looking to move: 7.3 percent

? Percent living on less than $1 a day: 3.72 percent (57th lowest)

? Percent approving of U.S. leadership: 64 percent (27th highest)

Of those in the Philippines looking to immigrate, 4 million would like their new home to be the United States. Many people from the Philippines already have made the move to the U.S., likely contributing to the desire for more to make the move. As of 2011, more than 1.8 million people currently living in the U.S. were born in the Philippines, according to the Census Bureau. Of that, nearly 45 percent of them live in California, while another 6.2 percent live in Hawaii. In addition, support for U.S. leadership is high among Filipinos -- 64 percent support U.S. leadership, while 24 percent disapprove.

6. Mexico

? Adults looking to move to U.S.: 5 million

? Total population: 116.22 million (11th highest)

? Percent of adults looking to move: 5.7 percent

? Percent living on less than $1 a day: 0.34 percent (30th lowest)

? Percent approving of U.S. leadership: 37 percent (52nd lowest)

Approximately 5 million adult residents from Mexico would like to move to the United States. According to Gallup?s Jon Clifton, the geographical proximity of the U.S. to Mexico is a major draw, as are the economic opportunities available in the county. In addition, those who wish to move to the U.S. often have a network of family and friends who help facilitate the move. Beginning in the 1970s, a large wave of immigrants from Mexico came to the U.S. They now comprise about 30 percent of all immigrants and nearly 4 percent of the entire U.S. population. However, a report by the Pew Research Center in 2012 indicated that the trend has reached a standstill and maybe even be reversing. According to Pew, this change is likely due to factors such as a weakened U.S. economy and the increased danger of crossing the U.S. Mexico border illegally.

5. Bangladesh

? Adults looking to move to U.S: 6 million

? Total population: 163.65 million (8th highest)

? Percent of adults looking to move: 5.9 percent

? Percent living on less than $1 a day: 11.17 percent (32nd highest)

? Percent approving of U.S. leadership: 37 percent (53rd lowest)

Approximately 6 million people in Bangladesh would like to move to the United States, representing roughly 5.9 percent of that country?s adult population. Living standards in Bangladesh are significantly lower than in the U.S. More than 11 percent of the population lives on less than $1 a day, a higher percentage than the vast majority of countries worldwide and worse than all countries on our list except Nigeria. Bangladesh?s GDP per capita was just $1,909 in 2011, compared to $48,328 in the U.S. According to the United Nations, only 56 percent of the country?s population over the age of 15 is considered literate, lower than all but a handful of countries worldwide. As of 2011, there were 184,000 people in the U.S. who were born in Bangladesh.

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4. Brazil

? Adults looking to move to U.S.: 6 million

? Total population: 201.01 million (5th largest)

? Percent of adults looking to move: Less than 5 percent

? Percent living on less than $1 a day: 3.62 percent (56th highest)

? Percent approving of U.S. leadership: 34 percent (45th lowest)

In Brazil, 6 million would like to immigrate to the United States, more than all but three other countries. In recent years, growth in Brazil has slowed significantly -- GDP grew less than 1 percent in 2012, compared to 2.7 percent in 2011 and 7.5 percent in 2010. Brazil?s Labor Ministry indicated that while unemployment in the country is still below 5 percent, job growth was the worst in 2012 in at least a decade. GDP per capita in the South American country was $11,769, less than a quarter of that of the U.S. Nevertheless, 58.7 percent of residents are considered by Gallup to be thriving, more than the U.S.?s 56.2 percent.

3. India

? Adults looking to move to U.S.: 10 million

? Total population: 1.22 billion (2nd largest)

? Percent of adults looking to move: Less than 5 percent

? Percent living on less than $1 a day: 7.49 percent (44th highest)

? Percent approving of U.S. leadership: 26 percent (18th lowest)

About 10 million people living in India want to immigrate to the United States, more than any country except China and Nigeria. However, due to India?s population of more than 1.2 billion people, the number of willing immigrants represents less than 1 percent of the population. The people who want to come to the U.S. tend to be better educated than the majority of the population, Clifton noted. Before the 2008 financial crisis, India?s economy was growing at a rate of 8 percent annually. Growth has slowed, however. According to the country?s Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, GDP growth for the year ended in March 2013 is forecast to be 5 percent, although growth is expected to rebound in the coming years.

2. Nigeria

? Adults looking to move to U.S.: 13 million

? Total population: 174.51 million (7th largest)

? Percent of adults looking to move: Less than 5 percent

? Percent living on less than $1 a day: 33.74 percent (6th highest)

? Percent approving of U.S. leadership: 77 percent (13th highest)

The reasons that 13 million Nigerians would like to immigrate to the United States are abundant. The African country is extremely impoverished, with more than a third of its population living on less than $1 a day. Corruption is also worse than all but one other country worldwide, according to Gallup. Terrorism, too, has increasingly become a major problem, with the government struggling to enforce security measures. In addition, Nigerians overwhelmingly think favorably of the U.S. leadership. As many as 77 percent of Nigerians support the U.S. leadership, more than most of the countries surveyed.

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1. China

? Adults looking to move to U.S.: 19 million

? Total population: 1.35 billion (the largest)

? Percent of adults looking to move: Less than 5 percent

More than 19 million Chinese adults want to immigrate to the United States, more than any other country in the world. This represents a very small proportion of the total population of more than 1.3 billion people. As of 2011, 2.2 million people in the U.S. were born in China, more than any other Asian country. Like India, Clifton said, the population that wants to move to the U.S. tends to be more educated than the overall population. China's middle-class rapidly emerged in the past decade as GDP has grown an average of 10 percent annually. However, growth has begun to slow. According to a recent Federal Reserve study, China's GDP growth could be less than 1 percent by 2030.

?2013 24/7 Wall St.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653351/s/2a996cb3/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Ccountries0Emost0Epeople0Eyearning0Ebreathe0Efree0E1C9254725/story01.htm

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