Thursday, December 20, 2012

AudioCodes Mediant E-SBC Achieves Certification From AT&T for ...

LOD, Israel (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) ? AudioCodes, a leading provider of Voice over IP (VoIP) technologies, products and services, today announced that the company?s Mediant Enterprise 3000 Session Border Controller (E-SBC) has achieved certification with AT&T IP Flex Reach SIP Trunking for use with Genesys IP contact center applications. As a result of this certification, IT managers and network systems integrators will be able to migrate existing, or design new, cost-effective Genesys contact center solutions utilizing AT&T?s IP Flex Reach SIP Trunking services.

?At Genesys, we know that contact centers are heavily dependent on both inbound and outbound telephone traffic, making them very sensitive to the reliability and costs of those services,? said Richard Barton, Director of Product Management at Genesys Telecommunications. ?Achieving certification by AT&T of IP Flex Reach with AudioCodes Mediant E-SBCs, along with Genesys, will make our contact center customers more cost competitive, while maintaining utmost reliability.?

?We are pleased to have achieved this important certification milestone with AT&T and Genesys,? said Sharone Ben-Levi, VP Marketing and Business Development, North America at AudioCodes. ?AudioCodes? E-SBCs successfully demonstrated their ability to integrate two strategic technology partners that is expected to open new opportunities for Genesys, a leading contact center software platform, and AT&T, a leading provider of SIP Trunking services.?

Certification testing mentioned in this announcement was performed at the AudioCodes North American Interoperability Lab in Research Triangle Park, NC. The Interoperability Lab was constructed under the close guidance and recommendations by Genesys, hosting a fully operational Genesys SIP Server alongside various AudioCodes gateways and Session Border Controllers. The AudioCodes Interoperability Lab can be contracted for specific interoperability and certification services.

More about our Mediant E-SBC family can be found at www.audiocodes.com/e-sbc.

About AudioCodes:
AudioCodes Ltd. (Nasdaq:AUDC) designs, develops and sells advanced Voice over IP (VoIP) and converged VoIP and Data networking products and applications to Service Providers and Enterprises. AudioCodes is a VoIP technology market leader focused on converged VoIP and data communications and its products are deployed globally in Broadband, Mobile, Enterprise networks and Cable. The Company provides a range of innovative, cost-effective products including Media Gateways, Multi-Service Business Routers, Session Border Controllers (SBC), Residential Gateways, IP Phones, Media Servers and Value Added Applications. AudioCodes? underlying technology, VoIPerfectHD(TM), relies on AudioCodes? leadership in DSP, voice coding and voice processing technologies. AudioCodes? High Definition (HD) VoIP technologies and products provide enhanced intelligibility and a better end user communication experience in Voice communications. For more information on AudioCodes, visit http://www.audiocodes.com.

Source: http://psc.apcointl.org/2012/12/19/audiocodes-mediant-e-sbc-achieves-certification-from-att-for-sip-trunking-with-genesys-powered-contact-centers/

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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Panetta orders probe of military day care centers

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on Tuesday ordered a worldwide review of hiring practices at all U.S. military day care centers after the Army revealed that it discovered problems with security background checks of workers at a Washington-area center.

Shortly after the Army said it was launching an investigation of hiring practices at its 283 day care centers worldwide, Panetta's press secretary, George Little, issued a statement saying Panetta supports the review.

Little said Panetta has directed each of the military services to conduct similar reviews. The actions stem from the Sept. 26 arrests of two Army employees accused of assaulting children at a Fort Myer, Va., day care center. But the problem there apparently is much deeper; indications are that at least 30 workers at the Fort Myer facility have histories that call into question their suitability to care for children, two officials said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation into worker backgrounds at Fort Myer is not completed.

"Military children are precious members of our Defense Department family," Panetta said. "As a department, protecting our service members and their families is paramount."

After the Fort Myer arrests, the Army replaced the day care center's management team and found what the Army called "derogatory information" in the background of an unspecified number of other employees there.

Army officials did not reveal the derogatory information.

In addition, Fort Myer began a review of the background files of about two dozen other day care workers to determine whether they should be fired, the Army said. That review apparently is ongoing.

"The safety of the children under our care is our most important responsibility," said Col. Fern Sumpter, the Fort Myer commander. "The quality of their care and safety has been and will continue to be our most important priority."

Sumpter said the day care center was closed "out of an abundance of caution" and the children moved to a separate day care center at Fort Myer. A Fort Myer spokeswoman, Mary Ann Hodges, said the center was closed on Dec. 13.

Of the two Fort Myer day care workers who were arrested, one faces five counts of assault and the other faces four counts of assault, according to the Army.

Based on the findings at Fort Myer, Army Secretary John McHugh said Tuesday he ordered an Army-wide review of hiring practices and management at every day care center.

"These initial findings are not only troubling, they are unacceptable, and we will make certain that adequate policies and procedures are in place, and that they are strictly followed and fully enforced," McHugh said.

___

Associated Press writer Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/panetta-orders-probe-military-day-care-centers-051354988.html

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Friday, September 28, 2012

When your eyes tell your hands what to think

When your eyes tell your hands what to think [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Sep-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Hilary Hurd Anyaso
h-anyaso@northwestern.edu
847-491-4887
Northwestern University

You're far less in control of your brain than you think, study finds

EVANSTON, Ill. --- You've probably never given much thought to the fact that picking up your cup of morning coffee presents your brain with a set of complex decisions. You need to decide how to aim your hand, grasp the handle and raise the cup to your mouth, all without spilling the contents on your lap.

A new Northwestern University study shows that, not only does your brain handle such complex decisions for you, it also hides information from you about how those decisions are made.

"Our study gives a salient example," said Yangqing 'Lucie' Xu, lead author of the study and a doctoral candidate in psychology at Northwestern. "When you pick up an object, your brain automatically decides how to control your muscles based on what your eyes provide about the object's shape. When you pick up a mug by the handle with your right hand, you need to add a clockwise twist to your grip to compensate for the extra weight that you see on the left side of the mug.

"We showed that the use of this visual information is so powerful and automatic that we cannot turn it off. When people see an object weighted in one direction, they actually can't help but 'feel' the weight in that direction, even when they know that we're tricking them," Xu said.

The researchers conducted two experiments. In the first, people were asked to grasp a vertical stick with a weight hanging from its left or right side. People easily reported which side they felt the weight was on, even when they had their eyes closed.

The researchers then used a set of mirrors to occasionally flip the view of the object so that it looked like the weight was on the left, when actually it was on the right. And although people were told to report on which side they felt the weight (with their hands), the visual image strongly influenced the direction that they felt the weight was coming from, especially when the weights were lighter.

In the second experiment, the researchers tried harder to convince people to ignore the visual information by carefully explaining the nature of the "trick."

"People still could not ignore the visual information," said Xu. "In fact, the effect even works on us, and we designed the experiment!"

Steven Franconeri, co-author of the study and associate professor of cognitive psychology at Northwestern, said the brain is constantly making decisions for us that we don't know about or understand.

"These decisions are usually smart and based on vast experience," he said. "In this study's example, your brain is automatically using visual information to tell your hands what they are feeling. We can show that these decisions are happening by manipulating the information your brain receives -- we mirror-reverse the visual information and your brain now tells your hands that they are feeling the reverse of what they are actually feeling. This inference is mandatory -- you feel it even if you know it's not true."

Franconeri said this is not a "bug" in the brain's operation.

"In the vast majority of cases, you want to 'delegate' decisions like this to the unconscious parts of your brain, leaving you free to focus on less straightforward problems, like following driving directions or enjoying your cup of coffee."

###

"Visual Influence on Haptic Torque Perception" is published in the current issue of the journal Perception. See link for article: http://www.perceptionweb.com/contents.cgi?journal=P&issue=current

In addition to Xu and Franconeri, Shlan O'Keefe and Satoru Suzuki are also co-authors of the study.

NORTHWESTERN NEWS: www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


When your eyes tell your hands what to think [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Sep-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Hilary Hurd Anyaso
h-anyaso@northwestern.edu
847-491-4887
Northwestern University

You're far less in control of your brain than you think, study finds

EVANSTON, Ill. --- You've probably never given much thought to the fact that picking up your cup of morning coffee presents your brain with a set of complex decisions. You need to decide how to aim your hand, grasp the handle and raise the cup to your mouth, all without spilling the contents on your lap.

A new Northwestern University study shows that, not only does your brain handle such complex decisions for you, it also hides information from you about how those decisions are made.

"Our study gives a salient example," said Yangqing 'Lucie' Xu, lead author of the study and a doctoral candidate in psychology at Northwestern. "When you pick up an object, your brain automatically decides how to control your muscles based on what your eyes provide about the object's shape. When you pick up a mug by the handle with your right hand, you need to add a clockwise twist to your grip to compensate for the extra weight that you see on the left side of the mug.

"We showed that the use of this visual information is so powerful and automatic that we cannot turn it off. When people see an object weighted in one direction, they actually can't help but 'feel' the weight in that direction, even when they know that we're tricking them," Xu said.

The researchers conducted two experiments. In the first, people were asked to grasp a vertical stick with a weight hanging from its left or right side. People easily reported which side they felt the weight was on, even when they had their eyes closed.

The researchers then used a set of mirrors to occasionally flip the view of the object so that it looked like the weight was on the left, when actually it was on the right. And although people were told to report on which side they felt the weight (with their hands), the visual image strongly influenced the direction that they felt the weight was coming from, especially when the weights were lighter.

In the second experiment, the researchers tried harder to convince people to ignore the visual information by carefully explaining the nature of the "trick."

"People still could not ignore the visual information," said Xu. "In fact, the effect even works on us, and we designed the experiment!"

Steven Franconeri, co-author of the study and associate professor of cognitive psychology at Northwestern, said the brain is constantly making decisions for us that we don't know about or understand.

"These decisions are usually smart and based on vast experience," he said. "In this study's example, your brain is automatically using visual information to tell your hands what they are feeling. We can show that these decisions are happening by manipulating the information your brain receives -- we mirror-reverse the visual information and your brain now tells your hands that they are feeling the reverse of what they are actually feeling. This inference is mandatory -- you feel it even if you know it's not true."

Franconeri said this is not a "bug" in the brain's operation.

"In the vast majority of cases, you want to 'delegate' decisions like this to the unconscious parts of your brain, leaving you free to focus on less straightforward problems, like following driving directions or enjoying your cup of coffee."

###

"Visual Influence on Haptic Torque Perception" is published in the current issue of the journal Perception. See link for article: http://www.perceptionweb.com/contents.cgi?journal=P&issue=current

In addition to Xu and Franconeri, Shlan O'Keefe and Satoru Suzuki are also co-authors of the study.

NORTHWESTERN NEWS: www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-09/nu-wye092812.php

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Mozilla?s Persona Login System Is Now In Beta, Takes On OpenID And OAuth

signinMozilla's Persona, the organization's experimental distributed login system that's an alternative to OpenID and OAuth, is now officially in public beta. Mozilla bills Persona as a "login system that completely eliminates passwords on websites while being safe, secure, and easy to use." Persona uses your email address to identify you to third-party sites and?uses two existing Mozilla services to make all of this work: BrowserID, which handles the authentication and encryption of your data, and Firefox Sync, which takes care of the connection to Mozilla's servers.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Qv921zCDExs/

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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

The Genie Within Use The Law Of Attraction To Grant Your Wishes ...

The Genie Within Is An Original E-book / Mp3 Audio Program To Use The Laws Of Attraction & Manifestation To Attract New Success, Love, Luck, Physical Health. Affiliates Enjoy 50% Commissions, An Up-sell, Banners, Testimonials, 5 Emails, High Conversions.

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Source: http://customersurveys.onyourweb.biz/self-help/6093-the-genie-within-use-the-law-of-attraction-to-grant-your-wishes-self-help.html

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Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Naive Notes: Creating a Music Hall for Nonexpert Listeners

Concert hall designers generally aim for acoustics that satisfy experts, but a move is afoot to also consider the tastes of other concertgoers


Concert hall of the Rudolfinum in Prague, Czech Republic Image: by Wintermute314 (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

?

The throaty, melodic groans of a cello playing Bach fill the darkened space of a music hall. Each rich note reaches the audience via sound waves that radiate from the vibrating string like ripples created by a pebble plunked into a still pond. Some waves hit listeners' ears directly; others reflect off of the walls and ceiling, reverberating and surrounding the audience with sound. The best concert halls are built to showcase the performers' skill, but evaluating their acoustics can be a challenge, because the quality of sound is subjective.

Engineers, musicians and other experts have a checklist of factors to assess music hall acoustics, but do scores on such measures correlate with sound that pleases concertgoers best? To find out, researchers in Spain recently asked laymen to judge many aspects of the sound of 17 music halls in Valencia. They discovered several differences between the assessments of experts and nonexperts that could eventually direct architects toward music hall design that optimally satisfies both. The findings are the first to offer a systematic method for nonexpert evaluation of other halls.

Since the early 1900s experts have judged the quality of existing auditoriums by measuring the timing of when direct and reflected sound waves reach an audience. Researchers have linked arrival times to attributes such as clarity and warmth, but the data do not translate readily into guidelines for how best to design, say, the spacing between seats or stage configurations.

The new findings addressing that issue follow up on years of studies in which researchers sometimes have trouble matching expert and amateur opinions. For example, in 2010 investigators recorded acoustics in the Bolshoi Sal (Great Hall) of Moscow's P. I. Tchaikovsky Conservatory, comparing the measures with those for other venues (pdf). They found that the Russian hall had a similar reverberation time?how long it takes reflected sound waves to subside?to that in such facilities as the Boston Symphony Hall and the Sibelius Hall in Lahti, Finland (2.5 and 2.4 seconds, respectively, mid-range values that compromise between the long times preferred for choral music and the shorter times needed for speech). They also asked audience and orchestra members to evaluate the Bolshoi Sal's acoustics. Whereas both groups agreed the hall's sound quality was good, the researchers noted that answers from the audiences were varied and "in some cases ambiguous." Some nonexperts gave poor evaluations but still stressed the excellent acoustic properties of the hall.

To delve into the differences between experts and nonexperts, the Spanish team?Miguel Galiana Martinez, a professor of architecture at the Polytechnic University of? Valencia, and his colleagues?turned to a product-assessment method called Kansei engineering. The technique links a customer's emotional responses and needs to aspects of a product's design. "We want to grasp the nonexpert's opinions and take them into account," Galiana Martinez says. "And then we can translate them into features that improve the sound in the venues."

Galiana Martinez and his colleagues first combed the Internet, magazines, scientific papers and books for words or phrases describing the sound and quality of music. A small group?comprising two professional musicians, two acousticians and two nonexperts?divided the descriptions by categories and chose a representative expression for each set. This method yielded 27 expressions. Next, the researcher wrote a questionnaire and asked concertgoers to evaluate the 17 auditoriums on the selected terms.

Each listener ranked their venue on a five-point scale for each of the 27 terms: totally disagree, disagree, neutral, agree and totally agree. The researchers found that assessments by nonexperts relied on five factors: "fidelity and quality," "power," "intimacy," "reverberation" and "sound defects." In contrast, experts assessed music hall acoustics using six factors: "balance and pitch quality," "intimacy and wide dynamic range," "power and brightness," "softness," "bass enhanced" and "without sound defects." The researchers published their findings in the December 2012 Building and Environment.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=e74721449beeae381a8da77f521aff51

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Tuesday, September 11, 2012

The Ima Music Business Academy, Arts & Entertainment

Cirque du Soleil returning to Pittsburgh

Cirque du Soleil will bring its "Saltimbanco" show to the Petersen Events Center in Oakland.

Circuit of The Americas(tm) opens FORMULA 1 UNITED STATES GRAND PRIX(tm) celebration with The Starting Grid luncheon ...

Austin, Texas -- Circuit of The Americas and the Circuit EventsHost Committee today announced that two-time Academy Award(R)-winningfilmmaker Ron Howard (2013's Rush) willbe the special celebrity guest ...

ONGC plans football academy in Tripura

State-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) is planning to set up a football academy in Tripura to boost the sport in the northeastern region, an official said here Tuesday.

Rare tour of motion picture academy's archive

Eyewitness News reporter Elex Michaelson takes us on a tour of an Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences facility.

EA and Sony Pictures Entertainment Join Forces to Support EA?s Project HONOR Initiative With Medal of Honor Warfighter ...

Electronic Arts and Sony Pictures Entertainment announced today a unique, philanthropic-directed, cross-promotional partnership in North America that will result in a million minimum donation to charities benefiting the nation?s veterans.?In anticipation of the release of the Columbia Pictures and Annapurna Pictures? Zero Dark Thirty, directed by Academy Award? winner Kathryn Bigelow and ...

ECHO Entertainment News: Marcus Collins?s former singing coach Natasha Brookes to open own academy

MARCUS COLLINS?S former singing coach is opening her own academy in Southport.

Film academy to present honorary Oscars to Jeffrey Katzenberg and other industry veterans

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The first Oscars of the season have been awarded.

Canada merges 2 major entertainment awards

TORONTO, Sept. 4 (UPI) -- Separate awards for Canadian films and television production are being merged into one, the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television said Tuesday.

Michael Clarke Duncan, Academy Award nominee for 'Green Mile,' dead at 54

Michael Clarke Duncan, nominated for an Academy Award for his role in the 1999 film "The Green Mile," died Monday morning at age 54, according to a representative for his family.

Guggenheim Partners, Mandalay Entertainment and Mosaic Media Investment Partners Agree to Purchase Dick Clark ...

LOS ANGELES and NEW YORK, Sept. 4, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --?Guggenheim Partners together with Mandalay Entertainment and Mosaic Media Investment Partners ("the investor group") today announced a ...

Source: http://ecommerce.matrix-e.com/eshops/39-arts-entertainment/8549-the-ima-music-business-academy-arts-entertainment.html

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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

The Sun Made This 5.2-Million-Mile Tall Light Bulb [Video]

For all its ruthless atomic power, the Sun does some really cute things sometimes. Other than making flowers grow and tan Kate Upton's skin, I mean. Like this pretty good impression of a lightbulb, taken by the Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO) C2 instrument aboard the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/VVTf5130Z90/the-sun-made-a-52+million+mile-tall-light-bulb

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Monday, August 20, 2012

HBT: Astros (39-82) fire manager Mills, 2 coaches

Brad Mills was hired before the 2010 season by Drayton McLane, who is no longer the Astros? owner, and Ed Wade, who is no longer the Astros? GM. So he?s been a sitting duck under the new regime.

And a 39-82 record sure didn?t help matters.

Mills was let go on Saturday night following an ugly eight-run loss to Arizona, along with hitting coach Mike Barnett and first base coach Bobby Meacham.

Interims for those positions will be named Sunday.

Mills, a first-time manager, went 171-274 in just shy of three seasons with the ?Stros. His roster was sapped of talent over the past two summers as the organization began a frantic rebuild, but that brutal winning percentage means it will likely be a little while before he?s given another try as a major-league skipper.

The Astros are moving quickly to change the look and feel of the organization under new owner Jim Crane and new general manager Jeff Luhnow. They?ll move into the star-studded American League West next season, and recently submitted a more ?traditional? uniform redesign to the MLB offices for approval.

It?s a club under a complete renovation. A renovation that isn?t attracting many spectators.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/08/19/astros-fire-manager-brad-mills-after-less-than-three-seasons/related/

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Friday, August 17, 2012

The case for shutting up: Wasted time at work

Bruce Ayres / Getty Images

Web surfing? Facebook? Online shopping? No. The water cooler, or its equivalent, kills the most time.

By Michelle V. Rafter, Today contributor

Technology may be revolutionizing the workplace, but old-fashioned distractions like meetings and chatting with co-workers are still considered the biggest office time-wasters.

That, at least, is the conclusion of a survey of office workers, released Thursday by TrackVia, a Denver-based software company.

Office chit-chat ranked as the No. 1 work distraction, the top choice of 14 percent of those surveyed, while meetings and computer problems followed close behind at 11 percent each.

Other time wasters mentioned by survey respondents:

  • Surfing the web
  • Dealing with office politics
  • Addressing misunderstandings with co-workers
  • Using social media
  • Checking email
  • Following company rules and procedures

It?s no surprise employees see going to meetings as a major obstacle to accomplishing their work-day goals, says productivity expert Laura Stack.

?A lot of people feel like they spend their entire day in meetings,? says Stack, a Denver-based speaker and author who leads 80 to 100 productivity training sessions a year.

In her experience with clients, however, employees waste far more time checking email, instant messages and social media like Facebook -- what she calls ?tech time? -- than dealing with computer problems or on other non-critical tasks. ?You could sit in your inbox all day and at the end of the day say, ?Where?d all my time go??? Stack says.

Holly Witt, a Portland, Ore., insurance account executive, says social media is her biggest time waster, especially Facebook.

?I keep telling myself to deactivate the account and I am almost there,? she says.

Slightly more than half of employees surveyed (51 percent) say they waste up to two hours a week on tasks that aren?t work related or don?t help them ?get real work done.? Approximately 11 percent say they waste 6 to 9 hours on nonessential tasks, and close to 4 percent said they waste 10 to 19 hours during the work week, according to the survey.

The survey of 300 workers, conducted this month by Amplitude Research, has a margin of error of about 6 percent.

Source: http://lifeinc.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/08/16/13302788-the-case-for-shutting-up-how-we-waste-time-at-work?lite

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Thursday, August 16, 2012

Crossings into cross-cultural cross-dressing ? The Long and ...

Curious about or puzzled by that photograph of the Caucasian man dressed in a Nonya kebaya I posted the other day? I have a shocking revelation ? not only was that man seen in the kebaya, but also in a bright red saree, and in the company of yet another man spotted that same afternoon in a bright red dress ?

The same man in a bright red saree.

Seen in the company of another in a bright red dress.

Shocking as it would seem, residents of the housing estate in which the cross-dressed men were spotted in can rest assured that this isn?t the start of a transvestite invasion but an attempt at artistic expression ? expression that is part of a cross cultural multidisciplinary collaboration of artists from two countries, Singapore and Croatia. The men ? and several other performers had crossed-dressed for roles of their fellow artists for the recording of a multimedia segment of the performance which will be juxtaposed onto the live performance on stage.

Singapore performer Sharda Harrison dressed for Edvin Liveric?s role for the recording of the multimedia segment.

Najib Soiman.

Bani Haykal, Sound Artist.

Zac Valenta.

Chuang Xiu?Er, Sharda Harrison and Najib Soiman.

I was provided with the opportunity to photograph the recording of the multimedia segment, as well as a full dress rehearsal at The Necessary Stage last week. The theatre company is putting the performance, named Crossings, together with Croatian based TRAFIK. Crossings is being presented in collaboration with Esplanade ? Theatres on the Bay as part of The Studios and involves a series of cultural exchanges, workshops and improvisations. Crossings as described in the synopsis will explore fundamental questions that will make us confront who we are and how we can survive in today?s global village, investigating the coexistence, understanding and mixing of different cultures.

One of the opening scenes shot during the full dress rehearsal at The Necessary Stage on Saturday.

Sharda Harrison plays the role of the woman at the centre of a somewhat abusive love-hate relationship that she finds it hard to escape from.

The performance explores elements of violence in the male-female relationship.

While the performance seems like a confusion of scenes and characters that at times seem to have no connection with each other, there is a central theme that revolves around the male-female relationship in society and across cultures. There is also an attempt to examine somewhat taboo subjects such as domestic violence and non conventional sexual relationships that have perhaps become quite prevalent in our society, as well as the role of myths and traditions in the two societies which are being brought together in the performance ? all of which makes for a fascinating story. Crossings debuts this evening at the Esplanade and plays in Singapore until 19 August 2012. It will also tour the National Theatre of Rijeka in Croatia from 19 to 20 September 2012. More information can be found at The Necessary Stage and The Studios.

There are also characters that seemingly unconnected with the central theme of the story, introduce myths that influence the cultures of the two countries.

Najib Soiman gives a masterly performance.

Chuang Xiu?Er.

Edvin Liveric as a male stripper.

Zac Valenta and Sharda Harrison.

A light used during the rehearsal.

Sharda Harrison and Najib Soiman.

Another of Sharda Harrison and Najib Soiman.


Synopsis

A woman who is a victim of a social scandal proves her fidelity by passing a test. Yet, her society does not believe her. She is exiled by her husband who is dedicated to serving his people and so has to listen to their discernment to remain in power. Will she sacrifice for the larger good and suffer the unjust allegation to be with her husband or will she walk?

Based on Asian myths, Crossings take us on a journey of the transformation of the self ? how one deals with the seduction of being imprisoned and how freedom opens us to meaningless pain.

Crossings is a multidisciplinary collaboration between artists from Singapore and Croatia investigating the coexistence, understanding and mixing of different cultures.

The collective comprises:

Sharda Harrison [Performer]
Bani Haykal [Sound Artist]
Vincent Lim [Set Designer]
Edvin Liveric [Performer]
Loo Zihan [Multimedia Artist]
Josip Marsic [Composer]
Haresh Sharma [Script Editor]
Najib Soiman [Performer]
Alvin Tan [Director]
Zac Valenta [Performer]

The play will be performed in multiple languages, with English surtitles. Suitable for patrons aged 15 years and above.

Crossings will premiere at Esplanade?s The Studios Season from 16 ? 19 August before touring to the National Theatre of Rijeka [Croatia] from 19 ? 20 September 2012.

There will be a post-show discussion with the artists for 17 & 18 Aug, Fri & Sat, 8pm performance.

Crossings is presented by The Necessary Stage and TRAFIK in collaboration with Esplanade ? Theatres on the Bay as part of The Studios.

16-18 Aug, Thu-Sat, 8pm
18-19 Aug, Sat-Sun, 3pm

Esplanade Theatre Studio
(1hr 10 mins, no intermission)

Tickets: $25
Concessions for students: $10
Concessions for NSF and senior citizens: $16


Sharda Harrison on her role


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Source: http://thelongnwindingroad.wordpress.com/2012/08/16/crossings-into-cross-cultural-cross-dressing/

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Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Belarus shot putter stripped of Olympic gold

LONDON (AP) ? Shot putter Nadzeya Ostapchuk of Belarus became the first athlete to be stripped of a medal at the London Olympics after her gold was withdrawn Monday for doping.

Valerie Adams of New Zealand was awarded the gold and Evgeniia Kolodko of Russia was bumped up to silver. Fourth-place finisher Gong Lijiao of China was moved up to bronze.

The International Olympic Committee said Ostapchuk tested positive for the steroid metenolone. She won the shot put exactly a week earlier. The IOC said she was tested the day before her competition and again following the event. Both samples were positive.

"The (Olympic committee) of Belarus is ordered to return to the IOC, as soon as possible, the medal, diploma and medallist pin awarded to the athlete in relation to the above-noted event," the IOC said in a statement.

The announcement came hours after the flame was extinguished at the closing ceremony with athletes and officials heading out of London. A day earlier, IOC President Jacques Rogge had proclaimed the fight against doping a success.

The Belarus team had already sent home hammer thrower Ivan Tsikhan because of suspicions over a sample provided after his silver-medal performance at the 2004 Athens Games.

Besides Ostapchuk, only one athlete tested positive for a banned substance after competing. U.S. judo fighter Nick Delpopolo was cited for traces of marijuana in his urine sample.

He blamed "inadvertent consumption" of food baked with the substance. The IOC disqualified him from seventh place in the 73-kilogram class.

Seven more were caught in doping controls conducted since the official testing period for the games began July 16. One of the seven competed in London before her test result was known.

"I think that is a sign that the system works," Rogge said Sunday. "I am happy about the fact that we could catch athletes who cheated, both before the games and at the games."

The IOC had said this would be its most extensive Olympic anti-doping program. It took almost 6,000 urine and blood samples, including no-notice tests ahead of athletes competing.

Rogge cautioned that some samples are still being analyzed and "we might hear something tomorrow or the day after. Hopefully not, but you never know."

Syrian runner Ghfran Almouhamad tested positive for the stimulant methylhexaneamine two days before her 400-meter hurdles heat. She placed eighth and was eliminated before the IOC disqualified her.

Until this latest turn of events, the London Games were set to end with medal standings in all 302 events unaltered by doping scandals.

Three Beijing events were tainted during the games, and two more medals were changed months later when a new test for the blood-booster CERA was introduced. The signature men's 1,500-meter gold medal was stripped from Rashid Ramzi of Bahrain.

Rogge reminded that the IOC will store all samples from London and can reanalyze them, revise results and reallocate medals until the statute of limitations expires in August 2020.

"When there is no new tests, we wait until the last moment; if there is a breakthrough new test, we'll test immediately," he said.

Indeed, the next Olympic doping scandal could be from the 2004 Athens Games instead. Next week the IOC could announce up to five new disciplinary cases based on retested samples.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/belarus-shot-putter-stripped-olympic-gold-105642575--oly.html

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HTC Rezound getting another update

HTC Rezound

There's another OTA package for the HTC Rezound out in the wilds of the Internet, and quite frankly nobody knows what's going on with it. We (and likely everyone else) have reached out to Verizon, who hasn't yet responded with news of anything new, so we have to roll with Internet wisdom on this one. Scary, I know.

We do know that the update has a new radio, new recovery, new kernel, and updates in the firmware itself. What we don't know is what the update brings new to the table, or what it might have fixed. Some users are less-than-happy with the ICS update from earlier in the month, so there very well could be some bug and stability fixes. There's also the global roaming capability that Verizon has promised for this summer, so maybe it's there along with the new radios -- there is a setting in the options for Preferred Network to be Global now.

We won't know for sure until Verizon posts the changes, or enough people get the update to verify the suspicions. That's where you come in -- if you've received the OTA (or flashed it manually via directions at XDA), sing out in the Rezound forums. Help get this one figured out!

Source: XDA-Developers; via Android Central forums



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/akuRCQP0nNo/story01.htm

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Monday, August 13, 2012

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About Us|Newsletter August 12, 2012 Follow us on: Home SlideshowPictures ImageCollection Quizzes Diseases & Conditions Symptom Checker Health & Living Medications MedTerms Dictionary Pet Health Slideshow Pictures All Slideshows Newest Slideshows Pet Health Slideshows Featured Slideshow Sexual Health Surprising Health Benefits of Sex View Slideshow?? Image Collection (categories) Allergic Skin Disorders Bacterial Skin Diseases Bites and Infestations Diseases of Pigment Fungal Skin Disease Medical Anatomy and Illustrations Noncancerous, Precancerous & Cancerous Tumors Oral Health Conditions Papules, Scales, Plaques and Eruptions Scalp, Hair and Nails Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) Vascular, Lymphatic and Systemic Conditions Viral Skin Disease Additional Skin Conditions Featured Image Picture of Psoriasis A reddish, scaly rash often located over the surfaces of the elbows, knees, scalp, and around or in the ears, navel, genitals or buttocks? View Image Gallery?? 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Medications Supplements and Vitamins home > health & living center > exercise & fitness a-z list > exercise index > exercise article ArticleRelated DiseasesImages & Quizzes smallermediumlarger 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next Exercise & Fitness Tips Exercise and Fitness Tips to Improve Your Health 7 Most Effective Exercises Pictures Take the Exercise and Fitness Quiz! How to Build a Better Butt Slideshow Get answers to your questions about exercise, and tips for getting the most from your workouts. By Richard Weil, MEd, CDE WebMD cupcake recipes Loss Clinic Exercise Physiologist Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD Why Use the Body Mass Index (BMI)? Aerobic Exercise and Muscle Gains from cupcake recipeslifting? Should I Hold Off on cupcake recipes Training Until I Lose cupcake recipes? How Much Exercise Should I Do? I Don?t Have Time to Exercise. I Hate Exercise. Where Do I Start if I Have Never Exercised? What Should My Heart Rate be During Exercise? My cupcake recipes Has Hit a Plateau. What Do I Do? What?s the Bottom Line to cupcake recipes Loss? What if I Have a Medical Condition? What is Interval Training? Fat-Burning Mode vs. Cardio Mode at the Gym? What is Basal Metabolic Rate? Are you getting started with an exercise program? Hoping to improve your existing routines or find new workout options? Did you know that a complete plan consists of three basic elements: aerobic fitness, muscle strength/endurance and flexibility? How do you assess your current fitness level before you begin? How do you know how much exercise you should do, or whether you should see a doctor before you start? Our Healthy Living channel provides in-depth answers to these questions, along with guidelines to help you develop a fitness program that?s right for you. With these exercise and fitness tips, you can learn to gauge how hard and how often you should exercise, and get yourself started on the road to better fitness today. High Blood Pressure and Exercise Medical Author: Dwight Makoff, MDand Melissa Conrad St?ppler, MD Medical Editor: Leslie J. Schoenfield, MD, PhD A sedentary lifestyle is a major risk factorfor heart and blood vessel (cardiovascular) disease. For example, people who are less active and less physically fit have a 30%-50% greater frequency (incidence) of hypertension (high blood pressure) than their more active peers. Furthermore, clinical trialshave shown that physical activity may reduce blood pressure in hypertensiveand normotensive(having normal blood pressure) individuals, independent of changes in weight. Medications have proven to be effective in lowering blood pressure and protecting against the risk of cardiovascular and kidney(renal) diseases. However, because of the side effectsand cost of medications, many individuals would prefer to undertake lifestyle modifications to help improve blood pressure as a first-line treatment. In numerous clinical studies, it has been well documented that aerobic exerciseis a suitable treatment and can even play a roll in the prevention of hypertension. (Aerobic exercise is vigorous and sustained exercise, such as jogging, swimming, and cycling.) Even without changes in body weight, those individuals who participate in aerobic exercise regularly tend to have reductions in resting blood pressure. The blood-pressure reduction does not seem to depend on the frequency or intensity of aerobic exercise or on the type of exercise. That is, the studies have indicated that all forms of exercise seem to be effective in reducing blood pressure. Aerobic exercise appears to have a slightly greater effect on blood pressure in hypertensive individuals than in individuals without hypertension. Read more about the benefits of exercise ? Q. Why do you use the BMI, and is it useful for weight lifters? The Body Mass Index (BMI) is a simple way for men and women to estimate body fat based on their height and weight. From the BMI, it is possible to determine your healthy weight range. One of the limitations of BMI is that it can overpredict overweight or obesity in people who are lean and muscular. For instance, someone who is 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighs 220 pounds, with 12% body fat, would be considered obese based on BMI standards. Obviously, someone with 12% body fat is not obese. The scientists who developed the BMI guidelines readily admit to this limitation. But their rationale is that most Americans are not lean and muscular and so for most people, the BMI is an accurate assessment of body fat and increased health risk. It is important to know that people who are classified as overweight or obese can still be healthy as long as they are fit. In one well-known study, fit people with BMIs that classified them as overweight or obese were healthier and lived longer than unfit people who were at normal weight. The BMI, for the majority of Americans, is the most up-to-date and scientifically sound method available for determining healthy weight. Q. Does aerobic exercise interfere with muscle gains from weightlifting? If you?re training for an endurance event like a marathon, when you might run 60 miles or more per week, you?ll almost always see a decrease in your muscle mass. For most of us, who do more moderate amounts of physical activity, there will be minimal, if any, loss in muscle mass ? so there?s nothing to worry about. If you do plan on lots of aerobic exercise and are concerned about losing muscle, try starting with 20-30 minutes of moderate aerobic exercise (at 50% to 70% of your maximum heart rate) two to three days per week, and see how it goes. Next: Should I Hold Off on cupcake recipes Training Until I Lose cupcake recipes?1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next Exercise Index Glossary Privacy Policy Living Better Find the secrets to longer life. Featured on MedicineNet Is it Depression? Type 1 Diabetes Slideshow Managing OA Pain Psoriasis Slideshow What is Ulcerative Colitis? Rheumatoid Arthritis TOP 10 Exercise Related Articles Anxiety Athlete?s Foot Dehydration Foot Pain Heat Rash Heat Stroke Hernia Hip Bursitis Kinesio Tape Total Hip Replacement Complete List ? Health & Living Center Diet & cupcake recipes Management Exercise & Fitness Benefits of Exercise Exercise & Fitness Tips Mind & Body Fitness Workout Routines & Ideas Exercise & Fitness RSS Calories Burned Calculator from WebMD Nutrition, Food & Recipes Prevention & Wellness WebMD Food &Fitness Planner Diet and exercise just got a lot easier. Introducing the new way to meet your healthy living goals. Latest Exercise & Fitness News ?Exergames? 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Source: http://www.sighttrends.com/2012/08/12/cupcake-recipes/

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Learn to drink plenty of water, eat plenty of protein foods and closely monitoring your food intake.

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o Eat plenty of low-calorie vegetables to help you feel full. o Stay away from any tempting food o Drink plenty of water so you do not confuse hunger with thirst. o Do minor household chores to keep you busy and sweating. o Eat only from a small plate while seated. o Eat small meals up to 6 times daily and do not skip breakfast.

Do about 7 hours or more per week of cardio exercise. Cardio will help to burn more calories, so it is ideal for fast weight loss, but afterwards you need to include a few hours a week of strength training. To burn the more fat, try to break a sweat after your warm-up and keep sweating for the entire hour.

Do a morning and evening workout, and if you do not have time to do two a day, increase the intensity of your current workout.

Easy weight loss. The secret to lose weight fast is not in any fad diets or diet pills. Stay away from them and live the healthy life you desire free from diabetes, high blood pressure, arthritis, etc.


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Source: http://howcanyouloseweighttoday.com/2012/08/12/the-secrets-to-lose-weight-fast-diet-men/

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Sunday, August 12, 2012

Despite rocky region, Israeli tourism booming

In this picture taken on Friday, Aug. 10, 2012 , people enjoy the Mediterranean Sea in Tel Aviv, Israel. Israel is facing a possible showdown with Iran over its suspect nuclear program, worrying about neighboring Syria's bloody civil war spilling across the border and dealing with armed militants trying to infiltrate from Egypt's lawless Sinai Peninsula. But that doesn't seem to be deterring hundreds of thousands of tourists from flocking to Israel each month. Despite the region's turmoil, Israel is enjoying an unexpected tourism boom, and 2012 is shaping up to be a record year. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

In this picture taken on Friday, Aug. 10, 2012 , people enjoy the Mediterranean Sea in Tel Aviv, Israel. Israel is facing a possible showdown with Iran over its suspect nuclear program, worrying about neighboring Syria's bloody civil war spilling across the border and dealing with armed militants trying to infiltrate from Egypt's lawless Sinai Peninsula. But that doesn't seem to be deterring hundreds of thousands of tourists from flocking to Israel each month. Despite the region's turmoil, Israel is enjoying an unexpected tourism boom, and 2012 is shaping up to be a record year. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

In this picture taken on Friday, Aug. 10, 2012 , a woman pose for a photograph in a spot overlooking the Mediterranean from Jaffa , a mixed Jewish and Arab part of Tel Aviv, Israel. Israel is facing a possible showdown with Iran over its suspect nuclear program, worrying about neighboring Syria's bloody civil war spilling across the border and dealing with armed militants trying to infiltrate from Egypt's lawless Sinai Peninsula. But that doesn't seem to be deterring hundreds of thousands of tourists from flocking to Israel each month. Despite the region's turmoil, Israel is enjoying an unexpected tourism boom, and 2012 is shaping up to be a record year. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

In this picture taken on Friday, Aug. 10, 2012 , tourists from Portugal listen to their guide in Jaffa , a mixed Jewish and Arab part of Tel Aviv, Israel. Israel is facing a possible showdown with Iran over its suspect nuclear program, worrying about neighboring Syria's bloody civil war spilling across the border and dealing with armed militants trying to infiltrate from Egypt's lawless Sinai Peninsula. But that doesn't seem to be deterring hundreds of thousands of tourists from flocking to Israel each month. Despite the region's turmoil, Israel is enjoying an unexpected tourism boom, and 2012 is shaping up to be a record year. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

In this picture taken on Friday, Aug. 10, 2012 , Christian pilgrims from India attend a mass the St. Peter's church in Jaffa , a mixed Jewish and Arab part of Tel Aviv, Israel. Israel is facing a possible showdown with Iran over its suspect nuclear program, worrying about neighboring Syria's bloody civil war spilling across the border and dealing with armed militants trying to infiltrate from Egypt's lawless Sinai Peninsula. But that doesn't seem to be deterring hundreds of thousands of tourists from flocking to Israel each month. Despite the region's turmoil, Israel is enjoying an unexpected tourism boom, and 2012 is shaping up to be a record year. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

(AP) ? It's priming for a risky showdown with Iran over its suspected nuclear program, concerned about neighboring Syria's bloody civil war spilling across the border and dealing with terrorists attempting to infiltrate from Egypt's lawless Sinai Peninsula.

But that doesn't seem to be deterring hundreds of thousands of tourists from flocking to Israel each month. Despite the region's turmoil, Israel is enjoying an unexpected tourism boom, and 2012 is shaping up to be a record year.

Nearly 300,000 tourists arrived in July, a record for the month and an 8 percent increase over the previous July, according to the Tourism Ministry. The trend is nothing new: The ministry says each month of 2012 so far has set an all-time record for that month.

"It's a period where, on the face of it, we should be struggling with an economic downturn and the Arab Spring around us," said Uri Steinberg, head of the America department at the Tourism Ministry, "but it hasn't worked out that way."

He said Israel initially hoped that tourists fearful of traveling to Egypt would choose Israel instead. But more often than not, he said, tourists planned Israel-Egypt combo tours and then put off the whole trip because of the unrest in Egypt.

Israel has more than made up the difference with American and eastern European travelers, who are arriving to the Holy Land in record numbers.

Just a decade ago, Israel was overwhelmed with suicide bombings and shooting attacks on buses and restaurants that killed more than 1,000 Israelis and devastated incoming tourism. With the recent years of calm, a post-9/11 sense that Israel is no longer disproportionately dangerous and an aggressive worldwide campaign to promote Israeli tourism, the tables have turned.

Steinberg said Israel has also become a destination for specialized tourism. These include Jewish and Christian faith-based travelers to the Holy Land, bird watchers, opera fans and marathon buffs.

Gay travel has also provided a boost. Tel Aviv was recently crowned by readers of the travel website GayCities and American Airlines customers as "Best Gay City of 2011," ahead of New York, Toronto and London.

Young American Jews taking part in organized trips, such as Birthright Israel, are increasingly spreading the word back home to older, wealthier relatives.

"Faith-based travel, though, is our bread and butter," said Steinberg. "There are 85 million Americans who identify as Evangelical, and they all want to visit."

The numbers point to an economic rebound in the United States, he said.

Nearly 70,000 July tourists were from the United States, a nine percent increase over the previous July.

The second largest source, with just under 30,000, was Russia. In the past two years, Israel dropped its visa requirements for tourists from Russia and Ukraine. In the Ukrainian capital of Kiev, dozens of large billboards promoting Israel as a tourist destination can be seen flanking downtown streets.

Naturally, the holy city of Jerusalem is a top draw, attracting 80 percent of all those who visit Israel, according to the Tourism Ministry.

Not everything is rosy, though. Tourism operators complain of a severe shortage of hotel rooms and affordable accommodations. In Jerusalem, for instance, rates in upscale hotels start at $450 a night, and quality budget rooming options are limited.

Mark Feldman, CEO of ZionTours, the largest American-owned travel agency in Israel, said Israel caters to high-end visitors and modest pilgrims but offers little in between.

"Tourists are being overcharged for hotel accommodation," he said. "I'd say Israel is a happening place to get away to. I wouldn't market it as good value for your money, though."

The fear of violence is never too far away either.

"The biggest concern here is whether Israel is going to go to war with Iran, but that is the only concern by and large," Feldman said.

The Tourism Ministry says it has no control over that. But in a partial attempt to rectify the price of travel, on Thursday it announced a $20 million investment to renovate and expand six hotels across the country. The initiative will add 146 hotel rooms.

The ministry said projects approved in 2012 are expected to add 1,123 hotel rooms overall, with $190 million in investments.

"Increasing the number of hotels promotes competition and reduces the cost of vacation packages for many Israelis and foreign tourists whose numbers are increasing and therefore we need to make the necessary preparations in order to accommodate them," Tourism Minister Stas Misezhnikov said in a statement.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-08-11-Israel-Tourism%20Boom/id-882a04eda31c43b3b8d27d0d4dbd971c

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Saturday, August 11, 2012

Steel mill polluted town as Romney firm profited

Paul Skoko stands outside his rust-stained house in Georgetown, S.C., in this photograph taken on Friday, Aug. 10, 2012. He was one of a group of local residents who brought a pollution suit against GS Industries, operator of a nearby steel mill, back in 1998 when the company was owned by the company Mitt Romney co-founded, Bain Capital. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith).

Paul Skoko stands outside his rust-stained house in Georgetown, S.C., in this photograph taken on Friday, Aug. 10, 2012. He was one of a group of local residents who brought a pollution suit against GS Industries, operator of a nearby steel mill, back in 1998 when the company was owned by the company Mitt Romney co-founded, Bain Capital. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith).

The steel mill in Georgetown, S.C., is seen in this photograph taken on Friday, Aug. 10, 2012. Local residents brought a pollution suit against GS Industries, then operator of the milll, back in 1998 when the company was owned by the company Mitt Romney co-founded, Bain Capital. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith).

Paul Skoko stands outside his rust-stained house in Georgetown, S.C., in this photograph taken on Friday, Aug. 10, 2012. He was one of a group of local residents who brought a pollution suit against GS Industries, operator of a nearby steel mill, back in 1998 when the company was owned by the company Mitt Romney co-founded, Bain Capital. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith).

(AP) ? The rusty stains on Shirley Carter's home are a permanent reminder of her fight with the local steel mill, just down U.S. Highway 17 near the boat docks. No matter how many cans of industrial-strength acid she went through, the red tint on her property never seemed to go away.

In 1998, Carter and her neighbors sued Georgetown Steel, then owned by the company Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney co-founded, Bain Capital. They sought millions in cleanup costs and accused the mill's owners of leaving their historic Southern neighborhood looking like it had been hit by a "chemical bomb."

State officials determined the mill was largely to blame for the pollution. As the lawsuit dragged on for years, the steel mill filed for bankruptcy and the plant ultimately settled with the residents.

In the end, Bain walked away with more than $30 million in profits. Carter got $800.

"That wasn't even enough to paint the house," said Carter, who is a Romney supporter this election.

As a presidential candidate, Romney has pledged to roll back environmental regulations as a way to spur growth. Under President Barack Obama, he recently quipped, "a regulator would have shut down the Wright Brothers for their 'dust pollution.'"

But the story of Georgetown Steel shows how Romney's company thrived under conditions that largely allowed the emissions to continue for years, leaving locals to clean up the mess after Bain left town.

Asked to comment on the Bain legacy in Georgetown, the Romney campaign instead criticized Obama on unemployment and green energy projects. A Bain spokeswoman did not directly address the impact of the plant's emissions but instead said the firm "undertook an ambitious plan" to turn around GS Industries and invested millions of dollars into the company.

The Georgetown saga surfaced in the mid-1990s, when South Carolina environmental officials received complaints from a local resident asking why his boat kept turning red-orange. The phenomenon was more than a nuisance, like ash from a fire, as dust aggressively stained not only nearby boats but cars and homes as well.

The Georgetown residents' complaints came a few years after Bain Capital purchased the Georgetown mill and its sister plant in Kansas City, Mo., as part of a $24.5 million buyout deal. The parent company was later called GS Industries and became one of the largest producers of wire rods.

Bain Capital, a private-equity firm Romney co-founded in 1984, had an impressive track record by then. It would eventually buy dozens of troubled companies and help make them profitable, a skill Romney has trumpeted on the campaign trail as making him more suited to lead the country than Obama.

But amid Bain's profitable ownership of GS Industries, the plant's production had created unsightly byproducts. By the late 1990s, the red dust was so was so ubiquitous that those who lived in rustic, two-story homes near Georgetown's waterfront took to calling it "The Stuff" ? a mineral called goethite that's used to make steel.

"Everybody talked about the red dust, The Stuff," said Marilyn Burkhardt, who owned a seven-room bed and breakfast with her husband before leaving town in 2000.

"My husband scrubbed the house probably every other week with a pressure hose," Burkhardt said. It was often difficult for guests to eat breakfast on the deck. "We had to work like crazy. And for what? Just to keep the outsides of our houses clean."

South Carolina regulators placed monitoring sensors around town and compared air-quality results with similar sites in the state capital, Columbia, and in Alabama. In turn, officials wanted to see improvements at the mill and at times cited the plant during Bain's ownership for environmental violations, records show.

They also asked that the mill's emissions "be minimized" and that management review its steel-making process to reduce staining. Indeed, the plant paved its dirt roadways, installed a truck wash and sealed gaps in its buildings to prevent The Stuff from leaking out.

The state report, made available to The Associated Press through a public-records request, said the mill was largely responsible for goethite emissions. Yet the staining continued.

So Georgetown neighbors took the mill to court, with the case growing into a class-action lawsuit covering those who lived within a few miles of the steel mill. At one point, the plaintiffs sought millions of dollars in at least three civil cases, civil filings show.

The federal government has declared goethite a hazardous substance for workers exposed to large quantities each day. It's generally not toxic like arsenic and it doesn't cause cancer like benzene, two pollutants that are regulated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

In 1999, just as the mill's lawyers asked a local judge to force the plaintiffs to turn over more documents, Romney announced he was leaving Bain to organize the Salt Lake City Olympics. Romney's federal presidential financial disclosures report that he had no active role in Bain after 1999. Several Romney associates recently told the AP that Romney made no managerial decisions after that date, but they also said he kept his formal CEO position and continued to meet with Bain partners. And an AP analysis of regulatory documents between 1999 and 2001 also showed Romney kept up an active role in overseeing Bain-related investments.

Romney stood to benefit financially from his company's investments. And his departure from Bain also came as the balance sheets at GS Industries began to look bleak. Despite Bain's reputation for turning around troubled companies like Staples and Domino's Pizza, the Georgetown plant was in trouble.

In February 2001, the company filed for bankruptcy protection with more than $500 million in debt. Romney has blamed cheap steel from China for the plant's demise, telling Fox News in December that he remembered a few dozen steel mills also foundered.

But as soon as the bankruptcy documents were filed, company lawyers told the Georgetown neighbors that the settlement was on hold. To see any money, they'd have to get in line behind everyone else ? including Bain, with its majority ownership share. The steel mill offered to settle the case for $870,000.

By September 2003, as GS Industries was emerging from bankruptcy and after Bain sold the company, a local judge ordered that Georgetown homeowners in the lawsuit receive their money. After attorney's fees, that came to about $113,000, split dozens of ways.

And it certainly wasn't enough to repair the damage, some residents said.

"I had the house cleaned and pressure-washed all the time," said Paul Skoko, who was among those who sued. "Within two years, it needed to be done again. That's when I said, 'That's it. I'm not doing this anymore. It simply costs too much."

Skoko opted to let his house turn a hue of burnt orange-red.

___

Online:

Links to documents at http://apne.ws/NRjdLb

___

Contact the Washington investigative team at DCInvestigations(at)ap.org

Follow Jack Gillum on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jackgillum

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-08-11-Romney-Steel%20Mill/id-f84f6705fc3d4be292ed7f1ff232f8ea

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