Thursday, March 14, 2013

Poll finds attitude shift among working moms

HOLD FOR RELEASE UNTIL THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2013, 12:01 A.M. EDT. THIS PHOTO MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED, BROADCAST OR POSTED ONLINE BEFORE 12:01 A.M. EDT - FILE - In this Thursday, April 7, 2011, file photo, Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's chief operating officer, speaks at a luncheon for the American Society of News Editors in San Diego. In the Pew Research Center study being released Thursday, March 14, 2013 researchers saw a big spike in the share of working mothers who said they'd prefer to work full time; 37 percent said that was their ideal, up from 21 percent in 2007. The poll comes amid a national debate on women in the workplace ignited by Sandberg, who writes in a new book about the need for women to be more professionally aggressive. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File)

HOLD FOR RELEASE UNTIL THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2013, 12:01 A.M. EDT. THIS PHOTO MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED, BROADCAST OR POSTED ONLINE BEFORE 12:01 A.M. EDT - FILE - In this Thursday, April 7, 2011, file photo, Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's chief operating officer, speaks at a luncheon for the American Society of News Editors in San Diego. In the Pew Research Center study being released Thursday, March 14, 2013 researchers saw a big spike in the share of working mothers who said they'd prefer to work full time; 37 percent said that was their ideal, up from 21 percent in 2007. The poll comes amid a national debate on women in the workplace ignited by Sandberg, who writes in a new book about the need for women to be more professionally aggressive. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Working mothers increasingly want full-time jobs, and tough economic times might be a big reason, according to a national survey.

In the Pew Research Center study being released Thursday, researchers saw a big spike in the share of working mothers who said they'd prefer to work full time; 37 percent said that was their ideal, up from 21 percent in 2007.

The poll comes amid a national debate on women in the workplace ignited by top Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg, who writes in a new book about the need for women to be more professionally aggressive.

In "Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead," Sandberg argues that women have not made true progress in the workplace over the past decade and that they need to raise their hands more and "lean in" if they want to land more senior positions in corporate America.

The shift toward full-time work in the Pew poll, however, coincides with the recession and may have less to do with career ambitions than with financial realities.

"Women aren't necessarily evolving toward some belief or comfort level with work," says study co-author Kim Parker, an associate director at the center. "They are also reacting to outside forces and in this case, it is the economy."

Among women who said their financial situations aren't sufficient to meet basic expenses, about half said working full time was best for them. Of the women who said they live comfortably, only 31 percent said full time was their best situation.

Melody Armstrong, 34, of Hampton, N.H., works full time and says she wouldn't have it any other way.

"It works better for my family, and for our finances," Armstrong said in an interview. "It helps pay the bills and we can enjoy the lifestyle we have. We need to have two incomes."

Armstrong and her husband have six children between them, a blended family with one child off to college and a baby at home. She works for Double Black Imaging, a Colorado-based company that sells medical monitors. Armstrong says her company gives her the flexibility she needs to work her sales position from home.

"I do some work early in the morning or after dinner," Armstrong says, and can adjust around her children's school and sports schedules.

Mothers' attitudes ? both for those who work outside the home and those who don't ? have changed significantly. Among women with children under 18 years old, the proportion of those who say they would prefer to work full time has increased from 20 percent in 2007 to 32 percent last year.

When all adults were asked about working moms, however, just 16 percent said the best situation for a young child is to have a mother working full time. Slightly over 40 percent said part time was ideal, and one-third said staying home was best for kids.

Guiomar Ochoa, 38, of Chevy Chase, Md., has two young children and works full time. She says she'd rather work part time but says it's just not an option for her family.

"We just can't afford to not have two full-time incomes," Ochoa says. "We wouldn't be able to do it otherwise."

Ochoa, an international specialist with the National Endowment for the Arts, says she's doing her best to juggle her career and caring for her children.

"I've done a really good job of wearing my mom hat when I get home and putting everything aside as far as work goes and focusing on them," said Ochoa.

Most moms in the poll expressed confidence as parents. Nearly three-quarters of mothers with children under 18 said they were doing an excellent or very good job raising their children. Fathers were asked that question, too, and 64 percent gave themselves high marks.

Other findings in the poll:

?Roughly half of working mothers and fathers say they would rather be home with their children but work because they need the income.

?Fifty-six percent of working mothers and 50 percent of working fathers say it's either very or somewhat difficult for them to balance work and family.

?Forty percent of working mothers with children under 18 and 34 percent of working fathers say they always feel rushed.

The Pew Research findings are based on a survey of 2,511 adults nationwide conducted Nov. 28-Dec. 5, 2012. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.2 percentage points.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-03-14-US-Working-Moms-Poll/id-85a93f6492a74d0798c1f18cbda96f6b

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Christine Quinn launches campaign for NYC mayor

Quinn (YouTube)

Christine Quinn made it official on Sunday, announcing her intention to run for mayor of New York City mayor.

"I'm running because I love this city," Quinn said in a glossy, often-emotional video posted to her campaign's website, QuinnforNewYork.com. In it, the Democrat talked about her Irish Catholic, middle class upbringing on Long Island, as well as her mother, who died of breast cancer when Quinn was 16.

?My mother?s life and death left me with the belief that our obligation is to use every moment we have on this earth to make it a better place,? Quinn said.

The 46-year-old City Council speaker would not only be the first female mayor in New York City history?she'd also be the first openly gay one. Quinn married her longtime partner, Kim Catullo, last year. But as the New York Times noted, the video made no mention of Catullo "or even that Ms. Quinn is gay."

?I?m not about talking and finger-pointing and complaining," Quinn continued. "I?m about getting things done.? She promised to follow Sunday's announcement with a walking tour of the five boroughs.

"With the right leadership, I know that New York can continue to be a beacon for the rest of the world," she said. "A home for the middle class, and for all of those people working hard every day to get there."

Quinn is the third Democratic candidate to officially announce an intention to run in November's mayoral election. Bill de Blasio and Bill Thompson are also seeking to replace the city's outgoing independent mayor, Michael Bloomberg, who plans to endorse Quinn.

In a January cover profile, New York magazine declared Quinn "the crude, playful, openhearted front-runner."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/christine-quinn-nyc-mayor-campaign-195704012.html

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Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba names new CEO

BEIJING (AP) ? Alibaba Group, one of the world's biggest e-commerce companies, said Monday its executive vice president will succeed founder Jack Ma as chief executive.

Ma, 48, announced in January he was stepping down as CEO to make way for younger leaders. He stayed on as chairman.

Jonathan Lu Zhaoxi, a 13-year veteran of the company, will take over in May as CEO, said the company, based in the eastern city of Hangzhou.

"He is passionate about and familiar with the group's various businesses," said Ma in the announcement. "Not only has he contributed to building our culture and organization and developed many talented people, he also possesses a unique leadership style and charisma."

Ma, a former English teacher, founded Alibaba in 1999 to link Chinese suppliers with retailers abroad. It has expanded in consumer e-commerce with its Taobao and Tmall platforms, which are among the world's busiest online outlets.

Ma is part of a generation of Chinese Internet entrepreneurs who built successful businesses in e-commerce, entertainment, search and other fields. In addition to Ma, several others have become billionaires, including Robin Li of search giant Baidu and Ma Huateng of Tencent, an entertainment and Web portal company.

Lu, who joined Alibaba in 2000, was the founding president of its online payment service Alipay and worked in Taobao, the company said.

Alibaba announced a reorganization in January to transform its seven business units into 25 smaller divisions to compete more effectively in China's turbulent Internet market.

China has the world's biggest population of Internet users, with 564 million people online at the end of 2012, according to an industry group, the China Internet Network Information Center.

The country trails the United States and Japan in total e-commerce spending but is forecast by the Boston Consulting Group to take the No. 1 position by 2015.

___

Alibaba Group: www.alibaba.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chinese-e-commerce-giant-alibaba-names-ceo-064953660--finance.html

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Saturday, March 9, 2013

TSA relaxes ban on knives and sharp sticks on planes

Though you still can’t carry your complete Zombie Apocalypse toolkit with you on a plane (my personal favorite, the Dead On Annihilator Superhammer is shown), as of April 25th, 2013, the TSA is changing the rules on small pocketknives, toy bats, ski poles, hockey and lacross sticks, pool cues, and golf clubs. Now, if I [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/03/09/tsa-relaxes-ban-on-knives-and-sharp-sticks-on-planes/

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Job Hunting Students Turn to Business Boot Camp to Gain a ...

March 7, 2013

With the job market still rocky, many college students and graduates?particularly liberal arts majors?are understandably concerned that their education may not be enough to land them a good job. Even business majors are worried and as a result, many business schools have started to beef up their career and job placement services. However, it has not been enough to alleviate some students? fears that they lack solid real world skills.

According to The Wall Street Journal, so-called bridge programs, or business boot camps, are intensive courses that aim to give students, usually regardless of their educational background, tips and skills to navigate and succeed in the corporate world. Such programs have been offered at a number of top b-schools for years, but are now growing in popularity as college students? job hunting concerns are at an all-time high.

As Poets and Quants noted, business boot camps vary in length and cost, but the goal is usually the same: to help students get a leg up on the job market. One example of a program is Fullbridge. According to Bloomberg Businessweek, the Fullbridge Program is designed to teach undergraduates, new grads, veterans and law students business basics. It was originally geared towards law students who wanted to learn about management and quantitative work, but in January 2012 the program expanded to college students and recent graduates in the Boston area. Co-CEO and founder Candice Olson described the program as filling in the gap left by what she calls an outdated MBA model. The program is also known as the XBA, which implies ?beyond the B.A.?

?Everyone agrees that college students need self-awareness and core skills to transition into their career,? Olson explained in Bloomberg Businessweek. ?In the 20th century, the MBA helped fulfill this role. Now, it has more limited utility?students have to take two years out of the workplace and it is debt-inducing and narrow on careers.?

During the 4-week program, which ranges in cost from $5,000 to $10,000, Fullbridge students are trained on basics such as business analysis, strategy, best practices, communication, self-awareness in the workplace and entrepreneurship. Unlike the classroom, students work with coaches to learn and understand the material and at the end of the program, work in teams to present a group analysis, including recommendations, based on a theoretical business dilemma.

?There are a number of deliverables with tight deadlines throughout the day in the XBA, so it?s a lot more like the workplace,? said Olson in Bloomberg Businessweek.

These programs, however, can also be beneficial for students who already have some business or quantitative knowledge. Take Reid McCann, a strong job candidate who majored in statistics at Harvard, for example. As The Wall Street Journal noted, McCann was anxious about competing with other candidates for interviews with private-equity and consulting companies so enrolled in the Fullbridge Program for a crash course in finance and to better prepare for the corporate environment. Now a senior, he landed a full-time job after graduation at private-equity firm Audax Group.

As The Wall Street Journal noted, it is difficult to measure the benefits of business boot camps. Similarly, Bowdoin College president Barry Mills pointed out that although the school teamed up with Fullbridge to offer a winter session program, most students were able to find jobs without taking the program. Mills, however, did point out that it could be invaluable to learn from experts in both the academic and business world. At the very least, students can brush up on some important corporate skills and gain a boost of confidence.

?I can look at a balance sheet. I can look a [sic] cash-flow statement and know what?s going on,? boasted Chelsie Dias, an art history major at Smith College who participated in a Fullbridge session in January.


Compiled by Heidi M. Agustin

Sources:

?Guide to The Best Summer Business Programs,? poetsandquants.com, June 26, 2012, John A. Byrne

?The Business of Boot Camps,? online.wsj.com, March 7, 2013, Melissa Korn

?XBA Aims to Fill a Hole Left by an ?Outdated? MBA Model,? businessweek.com, March 5, 2013, Francesca Di Meglio

Source: http://www.citytowninfo.com/career-and-education-news/articles/job-hunting-students-turn-to-business-boot-camp-to-gain-a-competitive-edge-13030701

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Smart Belt Buckle ? Belt buckle wallet

The current trend in wallets is the skinnier the better. No one wants to carry a thick stack of credit cards and cash in their back pocket anymore. It’s uncomfortable to sit on and can even cause back problems. Money clips make you carry just the essentials, resulting in less pocket bulk. But the Smart [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/03/07/smart-belt-buckle-belt-buckle-wallet/

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Friday, March 8, 2013

UN approves new sanctions against North Korea

Members of the United Nations Security Council vote for tough new sanctions to punish North Korea for its latest nuclear test, during a meeting at U.N. headquarters Thursday, March 7, 2013. The unanimous vote by the U.N.'s most powerful body sparked a furious Pyongyang to threaten a nuclear strike against the United States. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

Members of the United Nations Security Council vote for tough new sanctions to punish North Korea for its latest nuclear test, during a meeting at U.N. headquarters Thursday, March 7, 2013. The unanimous vote by the U.N.'s most powerful body sparked a furious Pyongyang to threaten a nuclear strike against the United States. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

U.K. Ambassador Mark Lyall, left, and U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice confer before members of the United Nations Security Council vote for tough new sanctions against North Korea for its latest nuclear test, during a meeting at U.N. headquarters Thursday, March 7, 2013. The unanimous vote by the U.N.'s most powerful body sparked a furious Pyongyang to threaten a nuclear strike against the United States. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

U.K. Ambassador Mark Lyall, left, and U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice confer before members of the United Nations Security Council vote for tough new sanctions against North Korea for its latest nuclear test, during a meeting at U.N. headquarters Thursday, March 7, 2013. The unanimous vote by the U.N.'s most powerful body sparked a furious Pyongyang to threaten a nuclear strike against the United States. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

North Koreans attend a rally to support a statement given on Tuesday by a spokesman for the Supreme Command of the Korean People's Army vowing to cancel the 1953 cease-fire that ended the Korean War as well as boasting of the North's ownership of "lighter and smaller nukes" and its ability to execute "surgical strikes" meant to unify the divided Korean Peninsula, at Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea, on Thursday, March 7, 2013. North Korea on Thursday vowed to launch a pre-emptive nuclear strike against the United States, amplifying its threatening rhetoric hours ahead of a vote by U.N. diplomats on whether to level new sanctions against Pyongyang for its recent nuclear test. The billboard in background depicts a large bayonet pointing at U.S. army soldiers with writing reading "If you dare invade, only death will be waiting for you!" (AP Photo/Jon Chol Jin)

North Koreans attend a rally in support of a statement given on Tuesday by a spokesman for the Supreme Command of the Korean People's Army vowing to cancel the 1953 cease-fire that ended the Korean War as well as boasting of the North's ownership of "lighter and smaller nukes" and its ability to execute "surgical strikes" meant to unify the divided Korean Peninsula, at Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea, on Thursday, March 7, 2013. North Korea on Thursday vowed to launch a pre-emptive nuclear strike against the United States, amplifying its threatening rhetoric hours ahead of a vote by U.N. diplomats on whether to level new sanctions against Pyongyang for its recent nuclear test. (AP Photo/Jon Chol Jin)

(AP) ? The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously Thursday for tough new sanctions to punish North Korea for its latest nuclear test, and a furious Pyongyang threatened a nuclear strike against the United States.

The sanctions drafted by North Korea's closest ally, China, and the United States send a powerful message that the international community condemns the ballistic missile and nuclear tests ? and repeated violation of Security Council resolutions.

"Adoption of the resolution itself is not enough," China's U.N. Ambassador Li Baodong said. "We want to see full implementation of the resolution." Li also urged calm and a resumption of the stalled six-party talks aimed at denuclearizing the Korean peninsula.

"The top priority now is to defuse the tensions, bring down heat ... bring the situation back on the track of diplomacy, on negotiations."

Immediately before the vote, an unidentified spokesman for Pyongyang's Foreign Ministry said the North will exercise its right for "a preemptive nuclear attack to destroy the strongholds of the aggressors" because Washington is "set to light a fuse for a nuclear war."

The statement was carried by the North's official Korean Central News Agency, which issued no immediate comment after the Security Council vote.

In North Korea, Army Gen. Kang Pyo Yong told a crowd of tens of thousands that North Korea is ready to fire long-range nuclear-armed missiles at Washington, which "will be engulfed in a sea of fire."

The White House responded by saying the U.S. is fully capable of defending itself against a North Korea ballistic missile attack.

Although North Korea boasts of nuclear bombs and pre-emptive strikes, it is not thought to have mastered the ability to produce a warhead small enough to put on a missile capable of reaching the U.S. It is believed to have enough nuclear fuel, however, for several crude nuclear devices.

The United States has long been concerned that North Korea could eventually pose a missile threat to U.S. territory. It was mainly with such a potential threat in mind that the Defense Department first began to operate a ground-based missile defense system in late 2004.

The United States responded to North Korea's threat saying it will take the necessary steps to defend itself and its allies.

"Taken together, these sanctions will bite, and bite hard," U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice said after the vote. "They increase North Korea's isolation and raise the cost to North Korea's leaders of defying the international community."

South Korea's U.N. Ambassador Kim Sook said North Korea's threats and inflammatory statements will be dealt with "resolutely."

"North Korea must wake up from its delusion of becoming a ... nuclear weapons state and make the right choice," he said. "It can either take the right path toward a bright future and prosperity, or it can take a bad road toward further and deeper isolation and eventual self-destruction."

Tensions have escalated following a rocket launch by Pyongyang in December and its third nuclear test on Feb. 12. Both acts defied three Security Council resolutions that bar North Korea from testing or using nuclear or ballistic missile technology and from importing or exporting material for these programs.

The resolution is the fourth sanctions resolution against North Korea since its first nuclear test in 2006.

It condemns the North's third nuclear test in February "in the strongest terms" for violating and flagrantly disregarding council resolutions. It bans further ballistic missile launches, nuclear tests "or any other provocation" and demands that North Korea return to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. It condemns all of North Korea's ongoing nuclear activities, including its uranium enrichment.

But the resolution also stresses the council's commitment "to a peaceful, diplomatic and political solution" to North Korea's nuclear program and urges a resumption of six-party talks.

It strengthens inspections of suspicious cargo heading to and from the country, calls on states to step up "vigilance" of possible illegal activity by North Korean diplomats and reiterates the council's commitment to a diplomatic solution. In a measure targeted at the reclusive nation's ruling elite, the resolution bans all nations from exporting expensive jewelry, yachts, luxury automobiles and racing cars to the North.

The U.N. resolution identifies three individuals, one corporation and one organization that will be added to the U.N. sanctions list. The targets include top officials at a company that is the country's primary arms dealer and main exporter of ballistic missile-related equipment, and a national organization responsible for research and development of missiles and probably nuclear weapons.

The success of a new round of sanctions could depend on enforcement by China, where most of the companies and banks that North Korea is believed to work with are based.

According to the resolution, all countries would now be required to freeze financial transactions or services that could contribute to North Korea's nuclear or missile programs.

To get around financial sanctions, North Koreans have been carrying around large suitcases filled with cash to move illicit funds. The resolution expresses concern that these bulk cash transfers may be used to evade sanctions.

The resolution also bans all countries from providing public financial support for trade deals, such as granting export credits, guarantees or insurance, if the assistance could contribute to the North's nuclear or missile programs.

It includes what a senior diplomat called unprecedented new travel sanctions that would require countries to expel agents working for sanctioned North Korean companies.

The resolution also requires states to inspect suspect cargo on their territory and prevent any vessel that refuses an inspection from entering their ports. And a new aviation measure calls on states to deny aircraft permission to take off, land or fly over their territory if illicit cargo is suspected to be aboard.

___

Kim reported from Seoul, South Korea. Peter J. Spielmann at the United Nations, Robert Burns in Washington and Foster Klug in Seoul contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-07-AS-UN-North-Korea/id-1ce62c57916441b98f948b202022298c

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Alien Moons Could Host Life Outside 'Habitable Edge'

Astronomers have their fingers crossed that within the haul of data collected by NASA's Kepler mission, which has already detected nearly 3,000 possible exoplanets, hide the signatures of the very first exomoons.?

The discovery of alien moons?will open up an exciting new frontier in the continuing hunt for habitable worlds outside the solar system. With the confirmation of exomoons likely right around the corner, researchers have begun addressing the unique and un-Earthly factors that might affect their habitability.

Because exomoons orbit a larger planetary body, they have an additional set of constraints on their potential livability than exoplanets themselves. Examples include eclipses by their host planet, as well as reflected sunlight and heat emissions. Most of all, gravitationally induced tidal heating by a host planet can dramatically impact a moon's climate and geology.

In essence, compared to planets, exomoons have additional sources of energy that can alter their "energy budgets," which, if too high, can turn a temperate, potential paradise into a scorched wasteland. [9 Exoplanets That Could Host Alien Life]

"What discriminates the habitability of a satellite from the habitability of a planet in general is that it has different contributions to its energy budget," said Ren? Heller, a postdoctoral research associate at the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics in Potsdam, Germany.

The 'habitable edge'

In a series of recent papers, Heller and his colleague Rory Barnes from the University of Washington and the NASA Astrobiology Institute tackled some of the big-picture problems to habitability posed by the relationship between exomoons and their host planets.

Heller and Barnes have proposed a circumplanetary "habitable edge," similar to the well-established circumstellar "habitable zone." This zone is the temperature band around a star within which water neither boils off nor freezes away on a planet's surface ? not too hot, not too cold, thus earning it the nickname "the Goldilocks zone."

The habitable edge is rather different. It is defined as the innermost circumplanetary orbit in which an exomoon will not undergo what is known as a runaway greenhouse effect. "To be habitable, moons must orbit their planets outside of the habitable edge," Heller said.

A runaway greenhouse effect occurs when a planet?s or moon's climate warms inexorably due to positive feedback loops. This phenomenon is thought to have taken place on Earth's so-called "sister planet," Venus.

On Venus, the heat from a young, brightening sun could have increasingly evaporated a primordial ocean. This evaporative process put ever more heat-trapping water vapor in the atmosphere, which led to more evaporation, and so on, eventually drying the planet out as the water was broken apart into hydrogen and oxygen by the sun's ultraviolet radiation. The atmospheric hydrogen on Venus escaped into space, and without hydrogen, no more water could form. [Runaway Greenhouse Effect on Venus (Video)]

Moons situated in fairly distant orbits from their planets should be safely beyond the habitable edge wherein this desiccation takes place.

"Typically, and especially in the solar system, stellar illumination is by far the greatest source of energy on a moon," Heller said. "In wide planetary orbits, moons will be fed almost entirely by stellar input. But if a satellite orbits its host planet very closely, then the planet's stellar reflection, its own thermal emission, eclipses and tidal heating in the moon can become substantial."

The cumulative effects of the non-tidal heating effects are small, but could be the difference between an exomoon being inside or outside the habitable edge.

Basking in the glow

Here on Earth, we get a little extra energy from the moon in the form of moonlight, which is reflected light from the sun.

Moons, though, get bathed in a lot more sunlight from their planetary neighbors; Earth shines almost 50 times as brightly in the lunar sky as the moon does in our night sky. In addition to reflected sunlight, planets also emit absorbed sunlight as thermal radiation onto their exomoons.

This "planetshine" can add a not-insubstantial amount of energy to an exomoon's overall intake. Imagine a gas giant planet orbiting a sun-like star at about the same distance that Earth orbits our sun. For a moon with a relatively close orbit around this planet, like Io?s orbit around Jupiter, Heller calculates that the moon could absorb an additional seven or so watts per square meter of power. (Earth absorbs about 240 watts per square meter from the sun).

Periodic plunges into darkness

Eclipses?can potentially offset some of the extra energy input from planetshine. For eclipses, Heller calculated that lost stellar illumination for an exomoon in a close orbit (similar to the closest found in our solar system) is up to 6.4 percent.

Interestingly, because most moons (including ours) are tidally locked to their planet ? that is, one side of the moon constantly faces the planet ? eclipses, as well as planetshine, would only darken and lighten one hemisphere. This phenomenon could modify the climate, as well as the behavior of life forms, in ways not seen on Earth.?

"Asymmetric illumination on the moon could induce wind and temperature patterns, both in terms of geography and in time, which are unknown from planetary climates," Heller noted. "Life on a moon with regular, frequent eclipses would surely have to adapt their sleep-wake and hunt-hide rhythms as well, but only those creatures on the planet-facing hemisphere." [5 Bold Claims of Alien Life]

Roll tides

Although the eclipse-related loss of several percentage points of illumination is not a huge loss of energy, a moon-planet duo might need to be closer to its star to compensate for this deficit if the moon were still to be considered habitable from a Goldilocks zone perspective.

However, this situation introduces another hurdle to habitability: The closer a planet is to its star, the stronger the star's gravitational pull is on the planet's moons. This extra pull can tug moons into non-circular, or eccentric, orbitsabout their planets. Eccentric orbits, in turn, result in varying amounts of gravitational stress exerted on the moon as it orbits.

These ?tidal forces,? as they are called, cause heating due to friction. The ocean tides we experience on Earth occur partly as a result of the moon's gravity tugging more on the water and land nearest it, which distorts Earth's shape. The effect goes both ways, of course, but not equally, with planets inducing significantly greater tidal heating within their much smaller moons.

If an exomoon's orbit takes it too close to its planet, tidal heating could push the energy budget too high, culminating in a runaway greenhouse effect. At the extremes, the tidal heating could unleash massive volcanic activity, leaving the satellite covered in magma and distinctly inhospitable, like the "pizza moon" Io.

On the other hand, it should be noted, tidal heating might be a savior for life. Tidal heating could help sustain a subsurface ocean, like the one suspected to exist within Jupiter's moon Europa, alternatively making an otherwise unwelcoming exomoon outside the traditional habitable zone potentially livable. [Photos: Europa, Mysterious Icy Moon of Jupiter]

Small stars, dead moons

Another factor comes into play as eclipses rob a bit of energy from an exomoon and require the moon-planet pair to be closer to their star. To remain gravitationally bound to a planet and not be ripped away by the star's gravity, a moon must fall within a so-called ?Hill radius? ? the planet's sphere of gravitational dominance. This radius shrinks with greater proximity to the host star. The closer the planet and moon are to their star, the less space is available outside the habitable edge.

For planets and attendant moons around dim, cool, low-mass stars called red dwarfs, this dynamic becomes important. The habitable zone around red dwarf stars is very tight; for a star with a quarter of the sun's mass, for instance, the Goldilocks zone is thought to be around just 13 percent the sun-Earth distance ? in other words, a third of Mercury's orbital distance from the sun.?

In a red dwarf solar system, not only must a moon then be closer to its habitable zone planet, but given the planet's necessary proximity to its star, the moon's orbit will tend to be eccentric. These qualities increase the chances that the moon will fall within the habitable edge.

Heller calculated that for many red dwarf stars, the odds of them hosting habitable moons is accordingly slim.

"There is a critical stellar mass limit below which no habitable moon can exist," Heller said. "Around low-mass stars with masses of about 20 percent the mass of the sun, a moon must be so close to its habitable zone planet to remain gravitationally bound that it is subject to intense tidal heating and cannot under any circumstances be habitable."

A little here, a little there

Many factors beyond habitable edge considerations, of course, ultimately determine an exomoon's habitability.

To be considered broadly habitable by creatures other than, say, subsurface bacteria, an exomoon must meet some of the same basic criteria as a habitable, Earth-like exoplanet: It must have liquid surface water, a long-lived substantial atmosphere and a magnetic field to protect it from solar radiation (and, in the case of exomoons around gas giants like Jupiter, from the charged particles created in the giant exoplanet's magnetosphere).

To possess these qualities, which scientists say grow likelier with increasing mass, a habitable exomoon will likely be quite large compared to those in the solar system ? more on the order of the size of Earth itself. The biggest moon in our solar system, Jupiter's Ganymede, is just 2.5 percent of Earth's mass. But previous studies have suggested that monstrous moons by the solar system's standards are indeed possible.

NASA's Kepler mission is expected to be able to detect exomoons down to about 20 percent of the mass of the Earth. The data, which consists of measuring the extremely small dips in the amount of starlight as their planets (or moons) block it from our point of view ? should reveal a moon?s mass and orbital parameters as well.

Armed with this information ? and now with habitable edge considerations ? astronomers can thus hope to make some ballpark speculations on any soon-to-be-discovered exomoon?s propensity to support living beings.

Heller hopes that there will be a list of candidate exomoons ready for observing by next-generation instruments, such as NASA's James Webb Space Telescope and various 30-meter-class ground telescopes. These observatories, coming online in the next decade, could be able to characterize exomoon atmospheres and offer tantalizing evidence of life.

"The first exomoons that we find will be large ? maybe Mars- or even Earth-sized ? and therefore intrinsically more likely to be habitable than small moons," Heller said. "With Kepler finding many more giant planets than terrestrial planets in stellar habitable zones, it's really important that we try to figure out what conditions might be like on the moons of these giants to gauge if they can host extraterrestrial life."?

This story was provided by?Astrobiology Magazine, a web-based publication sponsored by the NASA astrobiology program.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/alien-moons-could-host-life-outside-habitable-edge-115714229.html

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Island Catholic News Article printed last year. ? Victoria Human ...

History of the Victoria Human Exchange Society

Twenty years ago, a homeless man by the name of Larry Baker died under the Johnson Street Bridge. In a gathering following this tragedy on Valentine?s Day, 1992, a service was held in Larry?s memory?and the seeds for an idea were sown.

This idea became the Victoria Human Exchange Society, a registered charity run 100% by volunteers (including those who used to be homeless themselves) working not just to tackle the issue of homelessness, but to eliminate the loneliness, isolation, and sense of hopelessness that comes along in such a time of crisis and vulnerability.

The idea was a partnership?a network of support and sharing between those that need help, and those who wish to support them:

?What was heard from the people who were Larry?s friends was that when one is homeless, one loses one?s individual identity; one is labeled and segregated from the rest of the human race. Gifts are lost; people are depressed and turn to drugs and alcohol for consolation and to drown their hopelessness and helplessness. The request was that someone start treating people who are homeless as human beings with personal identity and gifts to share.?
? VHES History of the Society

Now in its twentieth year, the society has proven time and again that it is one of the most effective and lowest-cost solutions to the homeless problem, having assisted hundreds of people in need?and yet, is facing desperate times itself. As a completely charitable organization run by volunteers, the funding battle begins year after year, and the society?s goal is threatened by a lack of the support it relies on: the cycle and exchange of gifts.

The name of the society comes from the writing of Thomas Merton: ?Every meeting of persons is an exchange of life?s gifts.? This sense of exchange is the key to the society?s goals: the sharing of identity and gifts, and the acknowledgment that these people undergoing hard times are still worthy of unconditional respect, and have within themselves the ability to work through their problems, grow, and change.

?It is the absence of human contact that is often the deepest pain felt by homeless people. They can go for days with no one speaking to them, much less ask the simplest of questions, ?How are you?? We fear the answers . . . because we might have to act on them.?
? Sister Maureen, in an article by Colman McCarthy

The society believes that when people find themselves in a crisis such as having lost a job, a home, a family, or are trying to recover from addiction or illness, what they need more than intervention is a family of friends: people who will listen, support, assist, and understand.

And so, the society has set out to:

? provide and support shelters and family-type emergency housing;
? provide advocacy and support to low-income persons who are working to solve their own legal, health, educational, employment and social problems;
? include impoverished persons in the decision-making capacity of the
Society, and to support initiatives which they themselves identify, thus enabling the growth of self-esteem and self-direction.

To this end, the society rents houses from sympathetic landlords to provide short-term accommodation for those in crisis. It currently operates eight houses: three in Victoria, two in Sidney, two on Salt Spring Island, and one in Nanaimo?all named after people who have contributed to the success of the movement over its twenty-year history.

Rather than administer or control the houses, the society ?facilitates a dignified and ordered living environment.? These safe houses are free of drugs and drinking?everyone in the houses must be clean?and form a network where those in need can find a roof over their head as they move toward obtaining permanent housing. They also provide a sense of companionship, understanding, and trust, the acknowlegement that they are not alone in their plight, and there are others both in their position and outside of it hoping that they will succeed.

And, it is clear they have. Over these twenty years, VHES has helped provide a stable, caring environment where hundreds of people besieged by homelessness, illness, and addiction have been able to overcome their issues and move on:

?In my time of greatest need, this society came to my rescue. My life has improved dramatically as a result of the continuing efforts of Patricia Fitzgerald, the Society?s Facilitator here on Saltspring Island. I am working again and free from the problems which so plagued me, thanks to her.?
? Gordan C., former resident

?A NEW START is what the Victoria Human Exchange Society has provided for me?a safe place to live and an opportunity to get some help . . . But most of all the VHES has given me the chance to be there for others who are struggling with life.?
? Derrick N., former resident

?I would just like to sincerely thank the ladies of the Human Exchange Society for providing a positive atmosphere for me to continue my life. Thank you.?
? Paul W., former resident

The society provides what is, in many cases, a neglected set of needs in the process of healing, and rehabilitation: friendship, companionship, trust, and appreciation. The acknowledgement that, no matter the circumstances, all humans have gifts that must be allowed to flourish, and it is through the exchange of these gifts that we all become better people.

Among the society?s list of specific activities in 1992 and ongoing were:
? the facilitation of milestone celebrations and arranging social activities which build a network of friends;
? supporting places of healing and rehabilitation in the Gulf Island where street people who are alcoholics can remove themselves from their drinking network;
? assisting unemployed homeless persons to find employment and improve their standard of living and self image;
? providing advocacy to persons dealing with the legal system and those who have specific health problems or social & personal needs;
? educating persons who are substance abusers on its effects on the user and unborn children;
? many more initiatives specifically aimed at supporting, respecting, and appreciating the life of each person they work with.

Between the Society?s eight homes across Victoria, Sidney, Salt Spring, and Nanaimo, as well as the generalized efforts brought forth by all volunteers, the various members of the Victoria Human Exchange Society have worked tirelessly over the years and remained dedicated to their goal of, in their own words, ?a partnership of human beings?all with gifts, weaknesses and addictions?supporting one another and growing together towards a healthier community.?

However, despite its successes, keeping the project running takes more resources than are often available. The society receives no government funding, relying on donations and the hard work of volunteers to continue to expand?or even to keep providing what is currently offered. There is a waitlist of people wanting to become part of the program, and plenty of opportunity to open more houses, but no funding with which to do so. This has stretched the program to the point where one of the much-valued women?s houses may be closed, giving the women that live there little choice but to face the possibility of returning to the streets.

VHES, working together with other groups in Victoria, has led the way in identifying and compassionately addressing the human needs of the homeless: listening to their stories, following their suggestions, and supporting their own efforts to get back on their feet?and it is through the compassion of others and the willingness to give and receive that they have been able to do so.

For further information on the Victoria Human Exchange Society, their website (http://www.humanx.org/) contains their missions statement, as well as newsletters released every three months that detail the lives and progress of people living in each of the homes:

?We presently have a woman who has gone back to school, after years of living a harsh lifestyle; and, I am proud to say?she is in the top 3 in her class.?

?I run into past residents, or receive phone calls from them; and, it always does my heart good to see the positive changes in them and to hear how their lives have changed for the better.?
? Linda, from the Edith Gulland House

The VHES also has a Facebook page. Contributions, donations, and volunteers are always welcome?and, indeed, the key to the society?s continuing success.

?As our first occupant Art Rosette hoped: may the spirit of the Human Exchange spread throughout the world so that no-one is left with only a tree under a bridge.?

Victoria Human Exchange Society
Box 8534
Victoria BC
V8W 3S1

Source: http://humanx.org/2013/03/island-catholic-news-article-printed-last-year/

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Student loan debt, delinquencies escalate

Zeek Miller, a 25-year-old waiter in Northwest Arkansas, hasn?t cashed a tax refund check for the past two years as it has been garnished by the federal government for delinquent student loans.

He?s among the growing class of young consumers struggling to repay an average $26,600 in student loan debt.

A Feb. 28 report released by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York found that student loan debt in the United States is now approaching $1 trillion, and is the only kind of household debt that continued to rise throughout the Great Recession.

Student debt almost tripled between 2004 and 2012 and stood at $966 billion as of December 2012. During those years the number of borrowers increased 70% as did the average balance owed per person.

The study cited several reasons for the escalating loan balances:
? More people chose to attend college and graduate school when the economy tanked in 2008 and jobs could not be found;
? Students are staying in school longer and completing fewer hours in a year?s time but borrowing each year they are in school; and,
? Students have taken advantage of lower repayment rates as borrowers delay payments through deferments and forbearances.

REPAYMENT REALITIES
The higher burden of student loans and higher delinquencies may affect borrowers? access to other types of credit and the performance of other debt, according to Joel Doelger, spokesman with Credit Counseling of Arkansas.

?Students have to be careful about the debt they take on while in college, but for many the reality hits once the are asked to start repayment,? he added.

He said a young consumer facing $26,000 or more in student loan debt is like having a second car payment and it can crunch budgets for several years after graduation.

Sarah Chapman, 26, received a rude awakening awakening six months after she graduated from LSU in 2009.

?The government consolidated all my loans into one payment which was convenient and they put me on a seven year payoff term. Needless to say, I couldn't afford the payments. I extended to the loan to 14 years because the interest rate was low and the payment affordable,? she said. ?I've been paying them since early 2010 and I still feel like the amount owed never decreases.?

Angela Marie, a social worker who lives in Ohio, says she?s not ashamed of the $46,000 in student loan debt she accumulated over the years. But she recently started to repay the debt.

?I am a social worker (bachelor?s level) who graduated in 2007. The only thing that I have going for me is that the government has a ?forgiveness? program. If I pay every month for 10 years straight never missing a payment, then the rest of my loan is forgiven."

Marie says the catch is the monthly payment runs $300, which is hard to cover with a $14 per-hour job.

She says the reality is if she doesn?t pay the $300 per month, her wages will be garnished because of the time the loan has already spent in forbearance.

HIGHER DELINQUENCIES
The student loan report found about 17% of borrowers were past due on their student debt by more than 90 days in 2012, a large increase from under 10% in 2004.

Roughly 44% of borrowers are not yet in repayment phase, because a large percentage of students chose forbearance and deferral options which are made available to borrowers facing financial difficulties.

The transition rate of borrowers in repayment from current to delinquent has been rising since 2008 from around 6% to nearly 9%.

High levels of student debt delinquency reduces young borrowers? ability to secure other types of credit, Doelger said.

Scott Hoyt, senior economic director with Moody?s Analytics, said in a phone interview, that student loan debt is slightly under 10% the size of mortgage debt in the United States, but he agrees that delinquency rates are trending higher for the student loans. He says this will mean a certain percentage of young Americans won?t be able to purchase a home or secure other lines of credit until they first eliminate some of their college loans.

In terms of overall impact, Hoyt said the student loan delinquencies don?t pose a serious threat to the macro economic recovery given they are much smaller in scale when compared to housing debt.

He said more than 80% of student loans are also guaranteed by the Federal Government, not private banks. These delinquencies could add to the federal deficit, but Hoyt doesn?t see the rise in bad debt causing much havoc in the overall financial markets.

Source: http://www.thecitywire.com/node/26779

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