Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Memory strategy may help depressed people remember the good times

Feb. 25, 2013 ? New research highlights a memory strategy that may help people who suffer from depression in recalling positive day-to-day experiences.

The study is published in Clinical Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

Previous research has shown that being able to call up concrete, detailed memories that are positive or self-affirming can help to boost positive mood for people with a history of depression. But it's this kind of vivid memory for everyday events that seems to be dampened for people who suffer from depression.

Researcher Tim Dalgleish of the Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit and colleagues hypothesized that a well-known method used to enhance memory -- known as the "method-of-loci" strategy -- might help depressed patients to recall positive memories with greater ease.

The method-of-loci strategy consists of associating vivid memories with physical objects or locations -- buildings you see on your commute to work every day, for instance. To recall the memories, all you have to do is imagine going through your commute.

In the study, depressed patients were asked to come up with 15 positive memories. One group was asked to use the method-of-loci strategy to create associations with their memories, while a control group was asked to use a simple "rehearsal" strategy, grouping memories based on their similarities.

After practicing their techniques, the participants were asked to recall as many of their 15 positive memories as they could.

The two methods were equally effective on the initial memory test conducted in the lab -- both groups were able to recall nearly all of the 15 memories.

But the strategies were not equally effective over time.

After a week's worth of practice at home, the participants received a surprise phone call from the researchers, who asked them to recall the memories one more time.

Participants who used the method-of-loci technique were significantly better at recalling their positive memories when compared to those who used the rehearsal technique.

These data suggest that using the method-of-loci technique to associate vivid, positive memories with physical objects or locations may make it easier for depressed individuals to recall those positive memories, which may help to elevate their mood in the long-term.

In addition to Dalgleish, co-authors on this research include Lauren Navrady, Elinor Bird, Emma Hill, Barnaby Dunn and Ann-Marie Golden, all of the Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit.

This research was supported by the U.K. Medical Research Council.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Association for Psychological Science.

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Journal Reference:

  1. T. Dalgleish, L. Navrady, E. Bird, E. Hill, B. D. Dunn, A.-M. Golden. Method-of-Loci as a Mnemonic Device to Facilitate Access to Self-Affirming Personal Memories for Individuals With Depression. Clinical Psychological Science, 2013; DOI: 10.1177/2167702612468111

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/depression/~3/l9PNtGchdOo/130225122047.htm

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One and done at Oscars for MacFarlane

NEW YORK (AP) ? It looks like it's one and done at the Oscars for Seth MacFarlane.

The "Family Guy" creator was asked on his Twitter account whether he'd consider hosting the Academy Awards again and he replied: "No way. Lotta fun to have done it, though."

MacFarlane's edgy comedy proved a polarizing force on Sunday's Academy Awards, with jokes about domestic violence, women's bodies and Jews in Hollywood that offended some viewers. The Oscars did get their biggest audience in three years, however, with particular growth among young viewers.

MacFarlane's spokeswoman said Tuesday she had nothing to add to the tweet.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-02-26-Oscars-MacFarlane/id-03506d8a45bc4151b2b1090ee38e5a53

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Sky Betting & Gaming and WMS Enter Into an Online Content ...

February 21, 2013

sky-betting-gaming-wms-online-content-agreementSky Vegas Casino and Williams Interactive LLC (WMS) have announced that they are going to enter into an online content licensing agreement. An agreement that will give Sky Vegas Casino access to the WMS library of slot machine games for the desktop and mobile gaming platforms.

As we approached the end of 2012, Sky Vegas Casino announced it was going to join the trend and turn mobile. The new Sky Vegas mobile casino was launched to the delight of its customers. Those customers will be even more delighted with the news that variety is on its way courtesy of WMS.

??We are delighted to add the WMS gaming content to our online casino. Being able to offer the popular slot content from WMS to Sky Vegas players has been a top priority for some time. In land-based casino environments, it is common to see players standing in line for a chance to enjoy the great gaming entertainment WMS is known for and we are very happy to now offer these great player experiences online for our customers. As WMS games become available online, I expect they will quickly become new favorites of our players.? Said Samuel Downey, Head of Casino and Games at Sky Betting & Gaming.

Sky Betting & Gaming, a subsidiary of BSkyB, won the 2012 Operator of the Year award bestowed by eGaming Review magazine. The collaboration with WMS will see the Sky Vegas brand offering proven WMS titles such as THE WIZARD OF OZ, Reel ?Em In and Jackpot Party.

??Sky Vegas is a leading casino operator in the UK interactive gaming market and has a growing community of online players. The inclusion of WMS slot content on their desktop and mobile platforms represents another premier endorsement of our content, games and online gaming capabilities. The agreement again highlights the growing momentum we are generating in expanding the worldwide audience for our gaming content. I?m confident that our industry-leading content will provide excitement and great gaming experiences to the Sky Vegas online community and that together we will achieve great success in the years to come.? Said Orrin J. Edidin, President of WMS Industries and CEO and President of Williams Interactive.

Source: http://calvinayre.com/2013/02/21/casino/sky-betting-gaming-wms-online-content-agreement/

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Who won, who lost at NBA trade deadline

Thomas Robinson was the big winner of the 2013 NBA trade deadline. (Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

Thomas Robinson was the big winner of the 2013 NBA trade deadline. (Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

By?Ben Golliver

Thursday?s NBA trade deadline passed without a splashy move to rival the James Harden and Rudy Gay trades from earlier this season. J.J. Redick was the biggest name dealt. High-profile players who are set to become free agents such as Josh Smith, Al Jefferson and Paul Millsap stayed put. None of the stars mentioned in rumors ? Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce, Rajon Rondo, Monta Ellis, Pau Gasol and Dwight Howard among them ? actually changed zip codes.

Still, plenty of business was done, as 12 trades involving 18 teams and more than 20 players were completed in the final 24 hours before the 3 p.m. ET deadline.

Let?s take a look at the winners and losers from the deals that went down at the deadline. (The Point Forward will address the deals that weren?t made on Friday.)

Winners: Teams

Houston Rockets: A vast majority of deadline moves were subtle deals that involved fringe rotation members or financial considerations. Not Houston?s trade. General manager Daryl Morey acquired the No. 5 pick in the 2012 draft, Thomas Robinson, in a six-player deal that didn?t require the Rockets to part with an A-list asset (player or pick), meaningfully compromise their cap space this summer or receive a dead-weight contract in return. This was as clean a pilfering as you will see in the modern NBA, as if Morey helicoptered in to pluck Robinson off of the roof as flames engulfed the Sleep Train Arena.

Robinson has the most untapped potential and upside of any player traded this week. The Rockets look like a fairly solid playoff team this season, but their window is just opening around a young core that includes Harden, Jeremy Lin, Chandler Parsons, Omer Asik and now Robinson. Parting with the serviceable Patrick Patterson ? who has one more year left on his rookie contract after this season ? is a small price to pay for the chance to see whether Robinson can blossom into the game-changer some believed he would be coming out of Kansas.

Oklahoma City Thunder: Delicate is the word to describe Thunder GM Sam Presti. Oklahoma City pulled off two moves on Thursday, dealing reserve point guard Eric Maynor to the Trail Blazers for a trade exception and acquiring guard/forward Ronnie Brewer from the Knicks for a 2014 second-round pick and cash.

The Thunder boast one of the league?s deepest rosters, but the two moves provides just a touch of improved balance. Maynor was not having his best year after a major knee injury that cost him most of the 2011-12 season. The more athletic Reggie Jackson was emerging as Russell Westbrook?s backup and there just aren?t that many minutes to go around when the All-Star starter plays 36 per game. Brewer gives coach Scott Brooks one more experienced, defensive-minded body to add to a wing mix that includes Kevin Durant, Thabo Sefolosha and Kevin Martin. Brewer, a strong defender, can be used when OKC goes to smaller lineups or in certain matchups that might not be as favorable for Martin. He also provides an added degree of injury protection for Sefolosha.

Presti also shaved more than $1 million off of his books this season. That?s delicate defined: improving the bench?s positional balance while cutting payroll.

Golden State Warriors: The Warriors? owners are deep-pocketed, so money isn?t the end-all, be-all. But the new collective bargaining agreement strongly encourages teams to dip into the luxury tax waters carefully rather than make a habit of swimming in those waters year after year. Where the luxury tax zone was once an annoyance, now it can be a true impediment to team-building and a costly one at that.

The Warriors dumped 2011 second-round picks Jeremy Tyler and Charles Jenkins to move under the $70.8 million luxury tax line. This year?s luxury tax payments would have been?minuscule, but the fact the Warriors are now?recipients?of luxury tax money rather than payers is a?nice bonus. The bigger deal: Staying under the luxury tax line prevents the Warriors from taking a strike in the new ?repeater? system, which promises escalating fines for teams that are regularly taxpayers. With big dollars committed to Andrew Bogut, David Lee and Stephen Curry, plus expensive players options for?Richard Jefferson and Andris Biedrens in 2013-14, the Warriors will be headed to the luxury tax vicinity again next year. These moves, while very predictable, kept them from being behind the financial eight ball down the road.

Portland Trail Blazers: The Blazers? backup point guard position has been one of the NBA?s biggest disasters this season. Few teams fall off as hard when one player checks out as the Blazers do when Rookie of the Year front-runner Damian Lillard hits the bench. Obtaining a new backup has been a glaring need since training camp opened, and Portland finally plugged that hole by acquiring Maynor for nothing more than the draft rights to Greek forward Georgios Printezis. To make room for Maynor, the Blazers released veteran guard Ronnie Price.

Maynor is in the final year of his rookie contract, so this amounts, first and foremost, to a rental tryout. He?s struggled this season, particularly with his shot (he?s shooting a career-low 31.3 percent), and he?s only a little more than a year removed from suffering an ACL injury. With the weakest bench in the league and a need for a longer-term option to back up Lillard, the Blazers were smart to take a ?buy low? flier on a game-managing point guard with some playoff experience who can spell Lillard or potentially play alongside him. ?If he works out, they?ve added one piece to a bench that needs three or four more of them. If not, no assets were expended in the trial.

Losers: Teams

Sacramento Kings: Trading a top-five pick like Robinson just nine months after selecting him without ever giving him a true shot at major minutes reflects failure in so many aspects of the management process. One: Certainly the pick could have been used more effectively. Two: A loose leash, or at least some level of patience, should have come into play in managing his role. Three: This was the best they could get as far as a return package?

The move also reflects an obvious desire to cut costs as an ownership transfer from the Maloofs to a Seattle-based group unfolds. Dealing Robinson to the Rockets reportedly netted the Kings $1 million, along with an additional $1 million-plus in salary savings. Is tossing away Robinson?s potential really worth that little? If Sacramento?s fans hadn?t been through so much in recent years, this would have prompted?unadulterated?outrage. Instead, it joins a long line of blood-boiling, pathetic decisions.

Jordan Crawford was traded to the Celtics

The Wizards?received?a puzzling package in return for Jordan Crawford. (Ned Dishman/NBAE via Getty Images)

Washington Wizards: Dealing Jordan Crawford for Leandro Barbosa and Jason Collins is just a mess. How exactly do you move a rotation player on a rookie deal for a journeyman center and a player with a season-ending injury without receiving any other assets and take on money (albeit only a few hundred thousand) in the process? Who cares how?inefficient Crawford is or disgruntled he might be; how does this move benefit Washington in the slightest? Shedding his $2.2 million contract for next season would seem to be of little concern when, by comparison, the twin powerless towers of Emeka Okafor/Nene pull in a combined $27 million.

There really wasn?t a second-round pick to be found for Crawford? It really wouldn?t make more sense to just wait until the summer and try to move him then?

Winners: Players

Thomas Robinson, Rockets: It?s hard to improve your lot in life more than Robinson did this week. He goes from not playing much for a lottery-bound franchise loaded with question marks and distractions to a young, fun-and-gun team on the rise that promises to commit real minutes to him?and is likely headed to the playoffs. ?He goes from backing up a veteran in Jason Thompson to being penciled in as an every-night starter on a fast-paced team that can put his athleticism to full use. He goes from a me-first squad that has the second-worst assist rate in the league to a Houston team that moves the ball with slightly better than average regularity.

Tobias Harris, Magic: If there?s one totally under-the-radar player moved on Thursday who can emerge into a real player by shifting locales and being given a larger opportunity, it would be Harris. Included as one of the pieces Milwaukee sent to Orlando in exchange for Redick, Harris has good size for a wing and posted decent per-minute numbers in a limited role for the Bucks. Milwaukee simply had too many veteran options in front of the 20-year-old, who was the 19th pick in 2011. In Orlando, coach Jacque Vaughn should be delighted to give Harris the opportunity to showcase his talents.

Eric Maynor, Blazers: After fighting ? and mostly losing ? a battle with Reggie Jackson for scant backup minutes in Oklahoma City, Maynor has the opportunity to start a second chapter to his NBA career in Portland. The Blazers are fading fast, having lost six straight games, and Maynor could very well see at least 20 minutes a game consistently as the season winds down. Missing out on a possible Finals run this year will be a bitter pill to swallow, but he has more immediate concerns, such as shoring up his future in the league.

Jordan Crawford, Celtics: It?s not every day that players stuck on atrocious teams exit that situation as cleanly as Crawford. He moves to the Celtics, a team that is actually playing for something, and plugs into an injury-ravaged backcourt that will need him to provide minutes.

Sebastian Telfair, Raptors: Much like Crawford, Telfair just saw the rest of his season become relevant again. Rather than watching his playing time erode in favor of rookie Kendall Marshall as the Suns limp to the lottery, Telfair moves into the backup point guard hole created when the Raptors shipped Jose Calderon to the Pistons in the deal that netted Rudy Gay. While Toronto has some serious ground to make up to get to the No. 8 seed in the East, that uphill climb is far better for a vet like Telfair than Phoenix?s trudge toward a top-five pick.

Marcus Morris, Markieff Morris

Twins Marcus (left) and Markieff Morris will play alongside each other in Phoenix. (Bill Baptist/NBAE via Getty Images)

Marcus Morris, Suns: Marcus and twin brother Markieff, famously inseparable, are now reunited in Phoenix. If you must play for one of the NBA?s worst teams, you might as well have your best friend alongside you.

Kenyon Martin, Knicks: After essentially begging for a job, Martin finally got one, agreeing to a 10-day contract after the Knicks opened a roster spot by moving Brewer. This is a good spot for Martin: a veteran-laden team with championship aspirations that includes a number of his former teammates from the Nuggets days, including Carmelo Anthony and J.R. Smith. Will he make the most of it?

Losers: Players

J.J. Redick, Bucks: It seemed like the whole NBA world wanted Redick?s services these past few weeks, and for good reason. He?s a great teammate and great shooter and has developed into a solid all-around player. Given his expiring contract, he was the ideal trade target for a contender to add in an attempt to push itself over the top. Instead, the Bucks, the No. 8 seed in the Eastern Conference at 26-27, added Redick in an attempt to prevent a slide back into the lottery. Redick?s reward for suffering through months of rumors and being one of the most coveted trade deadline targets could very well be a four-game sweep in the first round at the hands of the Heat before he undergoes the madness and uncertainty of free agency. He will surely take it all in stride, but you can?t help but feel sympathy for him.

Hakim Warrick, Magic: How many times can one man be traded? Since signing a four-year contract with the Suns in July 2010, Warrick has been traded from Phoenix to New Orleans to Charlotte and now to Orlando, where he will be bought out. Perhaps all that traveling might be worth it if he finds a playoff team to hook on with for the stretch run.

Ronnie Price, Blazers: The Maynor trade came just before the buzzer and it was a bit of a surprise, as Blazers management had been promising a quiet trade deadline. The move cost Price his job and unfairly so, given that he?s played better this season than 2010 first-round pick Nolan Smith. Blazers GM Neil Olshey said the franchise felt an ?organizational responsibility? to continue developing Smith, but that responsibility didn?t extend to picking up Smith?s rookie option for next year. Price is left watching a less deserving player keep a roster spot that should have been his.

Luke Zeller, Suns: Zeller was released to make room for Marcus Morris. The undrafted free agent must now find his next job, a tall task with just 58 minutes of playing time to show for his rookie season.

Source: http://nba.si.com/2013/02/21/nba-trade-deadline-winners-and-losers/?xid=si_topstories

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Vegas shooting 'like something out of a movie'

LAS VEGAS (AP) ? Police say a deadly car-to-car shooting and fiery crash at a major Las Vegas Strip intersection started with an argument in the valet area of the Aria resort.

Sheriff Doug Gillespie made the disclosure Thursday about the early morning incident that left three people dead and at least six injured. Police withheld the names citing the ongoing investigation.

Police are seeking a black Range Rover Sport that fled the scene at Las Vegas Boulevard and Flamingo Road.

The intersection is home to famous casinos including Bellagio, Caesars Palace and Bally's.

Authorities say at least one person in the Range Rover shot at a Maserati that then ran a red light and crashed into a taxi.

The taxi burst into flames, and the driver and passenger died. The driver of the Maserati also died, and his passenger was shot.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-hotel-altercation-sparked-vegas-shooting-182403826.html

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Cincinnati, OH 2007 Ford Mustang Used Coupe Dayton, OH West Chester, OH Jeff Wyler Honda of Colerain for $15,874


*Plus tax, license & fees. Subject to prior sale. Financing w/approved credit.Incentives deducted as noted. Mileage est.based on current EPA estimates, reflecting new EPA methods beginning w/ 2008 models. For comparison only. Do not compare to pre 2008 models. Actual mileage will vary based on how you drive and maintain your vehicle.Information on this site includes 3rd party data believed to be reliable, subject to change without notice. Jeff Wyler reserves the right to correct any errors and /or omissions in the compilation or presentation of this data and makes no representations express or implied to any prospective purchaser as to the vehicle?s; condition, specifications, history, equipment or equipment function, price or warranties. It is your responsibility to confirm any data prior to purchase. Other than MSRP, all offers expire the same date they are published and subject to change. Wyler ? and Jeff Wyler ? are registered trademarks of the Jeff Wyler Automotive Family.

EPA mileage estimates are for newly manufactured vehicles only. Your actual mileage will vary depending on how you drive and maintain your vehicle.

Before purchasing this vehicle, it is your responsibility to address any and all differences between information on this website and the actual vehicle specifications and/or any warranties offered prior to the sale of this vehicle. Vehicle data on this website is compiled from publicly available sources believed by the publisher to be reliable. Vehicle data is subject to change without notice. The publisher assumes no responsibility for errors and/or omissions in this data the compilation of this data and makes no representations express or implied to any actual or prospective purchaser of the vehicle as to the condition of the vehicle, vehicle specifications, ownership, vehicle history, equipment/accessories, price or warranties.

Source: http://www.jeffwylerspringfield.com/2007-Ford-Mustang-Cincinnati-OH/vd/12054930

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Adding movement to 'dry run' mental imagery enhances performance

Feb. 20, 2013 ? Adding movement to mental rehearsal can improve performance finds a study in BioMed Central's open access journal Behavioral and Brain Functions. For high jumpers the study shows that dynamic imagery improves the number of successful attempts and the technical performance of jumps.

The technique of mental rehearsal is used to consolidate performance in many disciplines including music and sport. Motor imagery and physical practice use overlapping neural networks in the brain and the two together can improve performance as well as promoting recovery from injury. Researchers from the Centre de Recherche et d'Innovation sur le Sport found that adding simple movements to mental rehearsal could further improve performance by a third.

When they looked at the rates of 'hit' or 'miss' for high jumpers taught to use either internal visual imagery or external visual imagery (such as mimicking the arm movements during the jump), the researchers found that while mental rehearsal improved performance by 35%, mental rehearsal plus 'dry run' movements increased performance by 45%. Dynamic imagery scored the highest for all measured aspects of the jump including approach, curve, impulsion, and bar clearance. It also shortened the number of jumps required

Prof Aymeric Guillot, who led the study, said, "Our study on high jumpers suggests that dynamic imagery may provide a training edge to professional and amateur athletes. This technique may also be of use to people in other disciplines where 'dry run' rehearsals are routinely used."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by BioMed Central Limited, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Aymeric Guillot, Kevin Moschberger and Christian Collet. Moving while imagining as a new perspective for motor imagery practice: a within-subjects design. Behavioral and Brain Functions, (in press) [link]

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/wdudKAYV3cQ/130219201523.htm

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Sunlight yields more efficient carbon dioxide to methanol model

Feb. 20, 2013 ? Researchers from The University of Texas at Arlington are pioneering a new method for using carbon dioxide, or CO2, to make liquid methanol fuel by using copper oxide nanowires and sunlight.

The process is safer, simpler and less expensive than previous methods to convert the greenhouse gas associated with climate change to a useful product, said Krishnan Rajeshwar, interim associate vice president for research at UT Arlington and one of the authors of a paper recently published in the journal Chemical Communications. Researchers began by coating the walls of copper oxide, CuO, nanorods with crystallites made from another form of copper oxide, Cu2O. In the lab, they submerged those rods in a water-based solution rich in CO2. Irradiating the combination with simulated sunlight created a photoelectrochemical reduction of the CO2 and that produced methanol.

In contrast, current methods require the use of a co-catalyst and must be conducted at high operating pressures and temperatures. Many also use toxic elements, such as cadmium, or rare elements, such as tellurium, Rajeshwar said.

"As long as we are using fossil fuels, we'll have the question of what to do with the carbon dioxide," said Rajeshwar, a distinguished professor of chemistry and biochemistry and co-founder of the Center for Renewable Energy, Science & Technology, CREST, at UT Arlington. "An attractive option would be to convert greenhouse gases to liquid fuel. That's the value-added option."

Co-authors on the recently published paper, "Efficient solar photoelectrosynthesis of methanol from carbon dioxide using hybrid CuO-Cu2O semiconductor nanorod arrays," are Ghazaleh Ghadimkhani, Norma Tacconi, Wilaiwan Chanmanee and Csaba Janaky, all of the UT Arlington College of Science's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and CREST. Janaky also has a permanent appointment at the University of Szeged in Hungary.

Rajeshwar said he hopes that others will build on the research involving copper oxide nanotubes, CO2 and sunlight.

"Addressing tomorrow's energy needs and finding ways to stem the harmful effect of greenhouse gases are areas where UT Arlington scientists can connect their work to real-world problems," said Carolyn Cason, vice president for research at the University. "We hope solutions in the lab are only the beginning."

In addition to the journal, the new work also was featured in a recent edition of Chemical and Engineering News. That piece noted that the experiments generated methanol with 95 percent electrochemical efficiency and avoided the excess energy input, also known as overpotential, of other methods.

Tacconi, a recently retired research associate professor at UT Arlington, said the two types of copper oxide were selected because both are photo active and they have complementary solar light absorption. "And what could be better in Texas than to use the sunlight for methanol generation from carbon dioxide?"

Other than fuel, methanol is used in a wide variety of chemical processes, including the manufacturing of plastics, adhesives and solvents as well as wastewater treatment. In the United States, there are 18 methanol production plants with a cumulative annual capacity of more than 2.6 billion gallons, according to the paper.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Texas at Arlington.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Ghazaleh Ghadimkhani, Norma R. de Tacconi, Wilaiwan Chanmanee, Csaba Janaky, Krishnan Rajeshwar. Efficient solar photoelectrosynthesis of methanol from carbon dioxide using hybrid CuO?Cu2O semiconductor nanorod arrays. Chemical Communications, 2013; 49 (13): 1297 DOI: 10.1039/C2CC38068D

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/hM_Fy9cJ5n0/130220153703.htm

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Arizona hills home to new scorpion species

Richard F. Ayrey

The new scorption, Vaejovis brysoni, in its natural habitat. It was discovered just outside of the city of Tucson.

By Douglas Main
LiveScience

A new species of scorpion has been discovered in the mountains just outside the city of Tucson, Ariz.

The newfound creature is only about 1 inch (27 millimeters) long and sports a dapper brown color. It lives in the oak forests in the Santa Catalina Mountains, at an elevation of around 5,900 feet (1,800 meters), according to a study describing the new scorpion?published recently in the journal ZooKeys.

It's the ninth new species of mountain scorpion discovered in Arizona in the past six years, more than doubling the number of known scorpion species in the area. It has been named Vaejovis brysoni, after the man who collected the first specimen, Robert Bryson, Jr., who was looking for a different animal at the time, according to a release from the journal's publisher.

Using ultraviolet flashlights, researchers found members of the new scorpion tribe at night alongside the Catalina Highway.

Richard F. Ayrey

The new scorption, Vaejovis brysoni, with juveniles on its back.

Like other scorpions, this species often carries its pale-colored juveniles on its back. The arachnid can carry an average of 24 baby scorpions, the study found. It's unclear how venomous the creature may be.?

"This latest new scorpion is a prime example of the amazing diversity of life still to be discovered, right here in 21st century America," said researcher and study co-author Richard F. Ayrey, in the statement.

Reach Douglas Main at dmain@techmedianetwork.com. Follow him on Twitter @Douglas_Main.

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

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/20/17033711-arizona-mountains-home-to-new-scorpion-species?lite

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

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Chimps in Uganda: Conservation Conversation

Greetings are very important in Ugandan culture. Where we work, it is customary to greet those you encounter with a standard exchange in Runyoro, the local language here. For example, if we find a farmer working in his garden in the morning, we might initiate the following conversation:

"Thank you for your work." "Thank you for your work also. You are welcome here." "How was the night?" "The night was fine." "What is the news?" "No news." (Note: It is important to respond in this way even if you do have very big news. You will go on to share that news later in the conversation, but for now, this is the standard reply.) "How is this place?" "This place is fine." This typically marks the end of pleasantries as well as the end of Jack's and my conversational repertoire in Runyoro. From there, field assistant Nick continues the conversation by chatting with people and finding out whether they've seen or heard chimpanzees recently. So began an unusual conversation a few days ago. In our unending quest to find evidence of chimpanzees, we turned onto a dirt trail that runs parallel to a surprisingly intact strip of riparian forest. A farm borders the forest strip, and our path led us to the home of the farmers who own that land. There we found an old man, a young man in his late teens, and several small children. Nick made some initial inquiries in Runyoro, and the young man, named John Mary, began to speak in an animated way. He switched to English and explained that this patch of forest belongs to his family. Nick implored him not to cut their trees. He replied that, ah no, they were cutting trees here some years back, but a couple of NGOs came to educate their family about the importance of protecting natural forests. They stopped cutting and hope to plant more natural trees there in the near future. He said that it is difficult to convince others to do the same. We shifted our gazes across the river, where people were busy cutting down trees for timber and to make way for crop fields. He said that the older landowners around here rent out their land for farming, and that as long as they receive their rent money they don't mind what people do with the land. He expressed frustration that they don't think about the impact of forest cutting on their children and grandchildren. They only want to get the money to fill their bellies now, because soon they will die and then they cannot eat, he said with a laugh. The topic shifted to where he heard the chimps vocalizing that morning. We thanked the family and said our goodbyes, continuing along the path in the direction where he heard them. His words echoed in my mind as we went on our way. He is a great example of the power of education programs. His family stopped logging and is committed to the notion of forest conservation. All this talk of forests wasn't mere rhetoric for our benefit. The evidence is easy to see--it's leafy, green and, still standing tall in remarkable abundance. John Mary will leave his farm soon to resume his schooling in town. In the coming years, he will continue to fight an uphill battle to protect his family's bit of forest. From impoverished local individuals to large multinational corporations, many have a stake in what happens to community-owned forests like these. Because of conservation organizations and people like John Mary, however, the value of natural forests to the livelihood of chimpanzees, humans, and entire ecosystems cannot be ignored. Previously in this series: Chimps in Uganda: Two weeks and counting.... Chimps in Uganda: "These are a few of my favorite things" Chimps in Uganda: Home Sweet Home Chimps in Uganda: Bustling Kampala and Unwanted Houseguests Chimps in Uganda: Reading the Clues Chimps in Uganda: Lessons from Washoe Chimps in Uganda: Travels In and Out of the Forest Chimps in Uganda: Surprise Encounter Chimps in Uganda: Rising Conflict Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chimps-uganda-conservation-conversation-160600850.html

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Pirate Bay reports anti-piracy group to Finnish police for alleged copyright infringement

Two medical school colleagues, one an immigrant from India, the other a life-long Mississippian, joined forces to resolve a historical oversight that until this month had never officially been corrected. The oversight was no small one either. Until February 7, 2013, the state of Mississippi...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pirate-bay-reports-anti-piracy-group-finnish-police-045922108.html

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Monday, February 18, 2013

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Twitter Troll: Playing Hooky, Parking Tickets, And Karlie Kloss

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Thousands of Shiites protest 89 killed in Pakistan

QUETTA, Pakistan (AP) ? At least 15,000 Shiite Muslims took to the streets in southwest Pakistan on Monday in a second day of protests following a bombing that killed 89 people. Relatives of the victims refused to bury their loved ones until the army takes action against the militants targeting the minority sect.

Meanwhile, militants wearing suicide vests and disguised as policemen attacked the office of a senior political official in northwest Pakistan, killing six people, police said.

Pakistan has been besieged by militant attacks in recent years, many of them carried out by the Pakistani Taliban, who have been waging a bloody insurgency against the government. Radical Sunni militant groups have also increasingly targeted the country's Shiites because they do not view them as real Muslims.

Many of these sectarian attacks have occurred in southwest Baluchistan province, which has the largest concentration of Shiites in Pakistan. Many are Hazaras, an ethnic group that migrated from Afghanistan over a century ago.

The bomb that ripped through a produce market Saturday in Baluchistan's provincial capital of Quetta was the second mass-casualty attack targeting Shiites in the city in a little over a month. A double bombing of a billiards hall in January killed 86 people.

The death toll from the most recent blast, which was caused by a bomb hidden in a water tank, rose to 89 on Monday after eight people died of their wounds, said Baluchistan's home secretary, Akbar Hussain Durrani.

Outrage over the attacks has grown in Pakistan, and protests were held in over a half dozen cities Monday in addition to Quetta. But it's unclear whether the demonstrations will spark action that will make the Shiites any safer.

Rights groups have criticized the government for not doing enough to crack down on the attacks. They explain this apathy by pointing to past connections between the country's military and anti-Shiite militants, and also allege the sectarian groups are seen as less of a threat than the Taliban because they are not targeting the state.

Despite this criticism, the Shiites in Quetta see the Pakistani army as their only potential savior and are demanding the generals be given control of the city. They blame the provincial government and police for failing to protect them and want the army to take targeted action against sectarian militant groups like Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, which claimed responsibility for both the recent bombings in the city.

"We will not bury our martyrs until our demands are fulfilled," a top Shiite leader in the country, Amin Shaheedi, told reporters Monday at the site of the protest in Quetta.

Saumbal, the police officer, estimated that the crowd of protesters numbered at least 15,000. Some poured into the streets near the attack site carrying signs and chanting slogans against terrorism. Others remained inside a mosque beside the bodies of their relatives, which were covered with white sheets. One young girl wrote on her face, "Don't kill me. I am Shia."

After the bombing in January that killed 86 people, Shiites camped out in the street for four days alongside the coffins of their loved ones. Eventually the country's prime minister ordered a shake-up in the regional administration, putting the local governor in charge of the whole province. But the governor has expressed frustration, saying the recent bombing was the result of a failure of the provincial security and intelligence services.

Durrani, the home secretary, said the government has no plans to call in the army and will continue to rely on the 3,000 members of the paramilitary Frontier Corps who are deployed in Quetta, as well as the police.

The most significant protests outside Quetta on Monday occurred in Pakistan's largest city, Karachi, located on the country's southern coast. Hundreds of protesting Shiites paralyzed key areas of the city by blocking major roads, including the one that leads to the airport.

Violence in Karachi risked exacerbating sectarian tensions. Gunmen opened fire on a restaurant in the city, killing two people, said police spokesman Imran Shaukat.

A spokesman for a Sunni extremist group, Ahle Sunnat Waljamaat, said two of its activists were killed in the attack. Members of the group clashed with police following the shooting, he said.

In the eastern city of Lahore, gunmen on a motorcycle shot to death a Shiite doctor and his 12-year-old son, but it was unclear whether the attack was sectarian in nature, said senior police officer Malik Ovais.

The target of Monday's attack in the northwestern city of Peshawar was the office of the top political official for the Khyber tribal area, a major militant sanctuary in the country. The militants were disguised in the same type of uniform worn by the tribal policemen who protect the compound.

At least five militants attacked policemen protecting the compound with assault rifles and hand grenades, said Mian Iftikhar Hussain, information minister for surrounding Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Some managed to slip inside the compound, and two blew themselves up. Officials are trying to determine what happened to the other attackers, he said.

Six people were killed in the attack, including four tribal policemen and two civilians, said senior police officer Shafqat Malik. Thirteen people were wounded, including some who were inside an office that collapsed from the force of the explosions.

____

Khan reported from Peshawar, Pakistan. Associated Press writers Adil Jawad in Karachi, Pakistan, Zaheer Babar in Lahore, Pakistan, and Zarar Khan in Islamabad contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/thousands-shiites-protest-89-killed-pakistan-142228686.html

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Teen Twitter talk leads to 3 arrests, warnings to monitor kids' hashtag habits

Police and educators have been cautioning for some time that parents need to pay attention to what their children are doing online.

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SANDY ? Police and educators have been cautioning for some time that parents need to pay attention to what their children are doing online.

Some conversations between teens are explicit. Some even talk about illegal activity. And sometimes their conversations are done in a public format where everyone can see them.

Even parents.

Recently, two 13-year-old girls at Albion Middle School, 2755 E. Newcastle (9130 South) in Sandy, were arrested for investigation of marijuana possession. The girls had arranged to be picked up at the school ? during school hours ? by an 18-year-old man to go to a house and smoke pot.

Police say the arrangements were made using Twitter.

When one of the girl's parents found out what was happening by going through the daughter's phone, they contacted both the school and police. A search of one of the girl's lockers uncovered small amounts of marijuana, said Sandy Police Sgt. Jon Arnold. A search of another girl's bag at home uncovered additional small amounts of pot.

While police were at the school investigating, the man sent a text message to one of the girls asking where they'd like to be picked up, Arnold said. By that time, the girl's parents and police had possession of the girl's phone. They texted back, instructing the man to meet out front. When he arrived, he was arrested.

The 18-year-old claimed he was picking up the girls for a friend and thought they were 16, even though he was picking them up at a middle school, Arnold said.

Police searched the man's car and found a digital scale. He was arrested for investigation of possession of drug paraphernalia, contributing to the delinquency of a minor and possession of cigarettes. He was also charged last month in a separate incident in Cottonwood Heights with possession of drugs and drug paraphernalia, according to Utah state court records.

Twitter is public for everyone to read. Even accounts that are locked or private can have tweets (Twitter messages) that are re-tweeted to the public. Officials say it should be assumed that there is no such thing as a private tweet.

The Canyons School District declined to talk specifically about the Albion incident. But in general, district spokeswoman Jennifer Toomer Cook said, "We think it's great that parents stay on top of their students' social media usage. And it's even better when they contact the school on matters we can help them to address.

"We're pleased that parents continue to partner with schools so we can all work together to maintain and keep a safe school environment," she said.

While marijuana use and teens isn't new or out of the ordinary, if parents want to keep up with what their children are talking about and doing, they need to understand social media, officials warn.

"It's the same as real life. Parents need to know who their kids are hanging out with," said Salt Lake police spokeswoman Lara Jones, who oversees the department's social media activity. "When you can see the kids they're hanging out with, that's one thing. But when you can't see them ..."

While most parents have heard of Facebook, not as many are familiar with Twitter. In 2011, the Pew Internet & American Life Project, a nonprofit organization that monitors people's tech-based habits, noted a slow migration of teenagers from Facebook to Twitter. The reasons? Some industry analysts noted that some teens were drawn to the idea of connecting more directly with celebrities who are on Twitter.

Others, however, noted there was an appeal among some teens of hiding in broad daylight. Even though tweets are public for anyone to read, many teens use anonymous names when setting up their accounts or they set up multiple accounts so their parents can't monitor all their activity.

Source: http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865573424/Teen-Twitter-talk-leads-to-3-arrests-warnings-to-monitor-kids-hashtag-habits.html

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Russia cleans up after meteor blast injures more than 1,000

CHELYABINSK, Russia | Sat Feb 16, 2013 8:37am EST

CHELYABINSK, Russia (Reuters) - Thousands of Russian emergency workers went out on Saturday to clear up the damage from a meteor that exploded over the Ural mountains, damaging buildings, shattering windows and showering people with broken glass.

Divers searched a lake near the city of Chelyabinsk, where a hole several feet wide had opened in the ice, but had so far failed to find any large fragments, officials said.

The scarcity of evidence on the ground fuelled scores of conspiracy theories over what caused the fireball and its huge shockwave on Friday in the area which plays host to many defense industry plants.

Nationalist leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky told reporters in Moscow it could have been "war-mongers" in the United States. "It's not meteors falling. It's a new weapon being tested by the Americans," he said.

A priest from near the explosion site called it an act of God. Social media sites were flooded with speculation about what might have caused the explosion, if not a meteorite.

"Honestly, I would be more inclined to believe that this was some military thing," said Oksana Trufanova, a local human rights activist.

Asked about the speculation, an official at the local branch of Russia's Emergencies Ministry simply replied: "Rubbish".

Residents of Chelyabinsk, an industrial city 1,500 km (950 miles) east of Moscow, heard an explosion, saw a bright light and then felt a shockwave that blew out windows and damaged the wall and roof of a zinc plant.

A fireball traveling at a speed of 30 km (19 miles) per second according to Russian space agency Roscosmos, blazed across the horizon, leaving a long white trail visible as far as 200 km (125 miles) away.

NASA estimated the meteor was 55 feet across before entering Earth's atmosphere and weighed about 10,000 tons.

It exploded miles above Earth, releasing nearly 500 kilotons of energy - about 30 times the size of the nuclear bomb dropped on the Japanese city of Hiroshima in World War Two, NASA added.

"We would expect an event of this magnitude to occur once every 100 years on average," said Paul Chodas of NASA's Near-Earth Object Program Office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

"When you have a fireball of this size we would expect a large number of meteorites to reach the surface and in this case there were probably some large ones."

DIVERS SEARCH LAKE

Search teams said they had found small objects up to about 1 cm (half-an-inch) wide that might be fragments of a meteorite, but no larger pieces.

The Chelyabinsk regional governor said the strike caused about 1 billion roubles ($33 million) worth of damage.

Life in the city had largely returned to normal by Saturday although 50 people were still in hospital. Officials said more than 1,200 people were injured, mostly by flying glass.

Repair work had to be done quickly because of the freezing temperatures, which sank close to -20 degrees Celsius (-4 Fahrenheit) at night.

Emergencies Minister Vladimir Puchkov inspected the damage after President Vladimir Putin sent him to the region.

His ministry is under pressure to clean up fast following criticism over the failure to issue warnings in time before fatal flooding in southern Russia last summer and over its handling of forest fires in 2010.

Putin will also want to avoid a repeat of the criticism that he faced over his slow reaction to incidents early in his first term as president, such as the sinking of the Kursk submarine in 2000 which killed all 118 people on board.

($1 = 30.1365 Russian roubles)

(Additional reporting by Katya Golubkova, Writing by Timothy Heritage; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/3HU5WkIrk8U/us-russia-meteorite-idUSBRE91E05Z20130216

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Pioneer 80prs competitors: are there any at this time(feb 2013 ...

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Are there any modern head units(2 years or newer, or coming down the pipe) that can compete with the pioneer 80prs in terms of features?

-full active capabilities
-preout voltage
-price
-usb outlets/bluetooth/ipod, etc

if not head units, what components can offer the aforementioned features after the head unit?

I single out this head unit, because there doesn't seem to be anything in the market that can match this unit in terms of price, features, and performance.

edit: I understand full active is 3-way, and know that pioneer also has a head unit that does 4 way, the p99rs. are there other head units that can provide the same if not better/more features than the p99rs? same question for components after the head unit(processor?) that can provide the same or more/better features?

I take it, a head unit with these features, will have at least (3)4v preouts, correct? for the sake of this thread, let's assume so AND price no factor.


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Just because there are far more cheap HU options out there with little to no features or style doesn't mean that manufacturers have abandoned those of us that want a nice HU with a strong feature set but can't afford to lay down $700+ on a HU alone. JVC and Kenwood and Clarion are taking aim at the 80prs with the models listed below.

As ZAKOH mentioned earlier Clarion has the CZ702

JVC Arsenal: KD-A95BT

Kenwood eXelon: KDC-X996

So I would say there is still a bit of competition in this bracket, maybe not as much as some would like but it's still a lot more than nothing.


SQ is always greater than SPL


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Quote:

Alpine has a new deck, something -149 with tuning from a smart phone. It has nine band parametric eq, t/a, and x-overs. I have been trying to figure out if it is 2 way or 3 way. The information releaed on Alpines US web site wasn't very helpful in this regard. If it is truly 3 way (like my 9828/33 from years ago), then it would definitely be a challenger to the pioneer and the clarion.

Unless something has changed, it is only high pass with a sub section. In other words, there is no bandpass option to make it a viable option for active.

The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie -- deliberate, contrived and dishonest, but the myth, persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic. Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.

-John F. Kennedy

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Quote:

I would say not not. Active capable head unit is on a different level IMO. Kenwood and JVC are just another consumer head unit maker. The lack of active capability and gimmicky "sound enhancers" in in Kenwood show these companies do not want to address the needs of audiophiles.

I think you're over looking the features you get from these HU's by throwing them in with all the other "consumer level" products. I mean your they have features that your average Joe would never even bat an eye at. Also from what I remember the JVC has adjustable independent HPF and LPS filters for the front and rear so why can't she run actives again?

*Adjustable multi-band panoramic EQ - "where the button that make my sub go BOOM BOOM."
*Time Align - "Why do I need to align the time?"
*High pass and low pass filters - "Huh?"
*6-channel pre-outs - "Why do I need all those when I just have one sub?"
* Incremental Loudness Adjust - again Joe Blow only wants on or off.

Yeah they may lack the Pio's left and right independent EQ's but from what I've seen and read a lot of owners never even use it. All so while running actives may be what you want to do but there are plenty of people that like quality sound that will run passive (like me). So having a HU that can run actives is not that important to one in my situation. I'm not denying that the 80prs as a great HU if you must have every last feature (which a lot of us don't) and can tolerate the looks, I'm just saying it does have some completion, may be not direct but it's got competition and as I said it's only gonna get stiffer now that they've thrown down the gauntlet.


SQ is always greater than SPL

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Source: http://www.diymobileaudio.com/forum/general-car-audio-discussion/144131-pioneer-80prs-competitors-there-any-time-feb-2013-a.html

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Brendan Fraser ?Broke? & Wants To Reduce Child Support/Alimony

Brendan Fraser “Broke” & Wants To Reduce Child Support/Alimony

Actor Brendan Fraser picturesBrendan Fraser is trying to reduce his alimony and child support payments to his ex-wife, Afton Smith. The actor, who was featured in “The Mummy” movies, has asked a Connecticut court to reduce his annual payments of $900,000 because he can’t afford them. Fraser’s divorce was finalized in 2009 when he was getting quite a ...

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

For some Republicans, there's no reason to compromise, ever

HEBER CITY, Utah (AP) ? U.S. Rep. Jason Chaffetz flew home from Washington last week, leaving behind a capital baffled by Republicans like him in Congress: those who stubbornly refuse to compromise with President Barack Obama, a tactic that some see as damaging the GOP brand and pushing the nation repeatedly to the brink of fiscal chaos.

Back in his Utah district, Chaffetz drove to the Dairy Keen and barely had bitten into a bacon cheeseburger before a diner begged him to stop Obama's health care overhaul.

"It's the stupidest plan in the world," said Phoebe Eason, 69, leaning over her booth to complain about a clause that forces her husband, a podiatrist, to pay more for medical devices.

"I'm doing everything I can to repeal it or take out these sections," Chaffetz reassured her. Minutes later, he headed to a town hall where some constituents asked why the president hadn't yet been impeached.

To understand why the nation may remain politically gridlocked for the next two years, talk to people in a place like Heber City, a conservative farming and ranching hub nestled beneath the imposing peaks of the Wasatch mountains. Many voters here, and in conservative communities across the country, still want to do whatever it takes to stop Obama, despite his solid re-election in November, and the politicians they elect are listening.

In his State of the Union address this week, Obama laid out an ambitious agenda that includes gun control, raising the minimum wage, allowing most of the 11 million illegal immigrants in the country to become citizens and raising tax revenue to help cut the deficit.

But the president has acknowledged it will be difficult to get those proposals through a Republican-controlled House of Representatives.

"The House Republican majority is made up mostly of members who are in sharply gerrymandered districts that are very safely Republican and may not feel compelled to pay attention to broad-based public opinion, because what they're really concerned about is the opinions of their specific Republican constituencies," Obama said in an interview with The New Republic magazine last month.

Analysts differ on whether gerrymandering ? the practice of drawing district lines so your party can pick up more seats ? fully explains why Obama handily won re-election in November, even as Republicans lost only a handful of seats in the House. One thing is clear: Compromise is a dirty word for many of the Republicans remaining in the House.

A Pew poll last month found that 36 percent of GOP voters would look favorably on a politician who compromises, compared with 59 percent of Democrats and 53 percent of independent voters.

Virtually all House Republicans come from districts that voted against Obama in November. And in many states, primary voters have punished Republicans they see as too eager to cut deals with Democrats.

That's how Chaffetz, 45, won his seat in 2008. He challenged a 12-term Republican congressman who angered the party's base by backing an immigration overhaul that included granting citizenship to many illegal immigrants. Two years later, Utah Republican primary voters also pushed out Sen. Robert Bennett, replacing him with a tea party-supported candidate who is now the state's junior senator.

Though he has worked with Democrats on some bills, Chaffetz has refused to budge on some of the biggest issues in Washington. In 2011, he voted against raising the debt ceiling, arguing Congress and Obama weren't reining in entitlement spending. Most economists said that if the limit hadn't been raised it would have triggered a global depression. Last month, Chaffetz voted against the so-called fiscal cliff deal because it involved raising levies on those making more than $450,000 annually. Taxes would have risen on all income levels had the deal not passed.

Chaffetz also voted against aid for victims of Superstorm Sandy, saying the bill was larded with pork. He did vote to delay another debt ceiling confrontation until May, but said he won't budge on automatic spending cuts scheduled to kick in next month or on his opposition to citizenship for illegal immigrants.

"The perception inside the Beltway is dramatically different than in hometown America," Chaffetz said. "Most people in my district believe we've compromised too much."

Chaffetz's district stretches from the southern Salt Lake City suburbs and Provo, home to Brigham Young University, to the high valleys of Wasatch County. Nearly half of the county's 23,000 residents live in this town. Once an overlooked rural community far from the Salt Lake City metropolitan area, it has recently seen an influx of more liberal-minded residents drawn by its proximity to storied ski resorts like nearby Park City. In Utah, this place is almost a swing county. Nonetheless, it voted 3-1 for Romney in November.

Here's how things look from Heber City: Obama hiked taxes while pushing through his health care reform. Then he got another round during the fiscal cliff negotiations. Now he's making a third attempt during the latest debt ceiling standoff. Meanwhile, the federal budget has been trimmed, but only slightly. The debt is still huge. Republicans are folding at every turn.

"I'm sick of Republicans not sticking to their principles," said Tina Peterson, 45, who works at a resort in nearby Park City. She recently moved her family here from Arizona after the recession destroyed their construction business. A new arrival in Utah ? "I'm a Christian but not LDS" ? she sees Obama as the unbending force in Washington, not her own party.

"His ideology is what it is and he can stick to it," Peterson said. "We do the same and we get demonized."

Not everyone here wants to just say no.

"There's no sense in falling on our sword and throwing a wrench just to destroy things," said Aaron Gabrielson, chairman of the Wasatch County Republican Party. Still, he added: "It doesn't seem like compromise has gotten us very far."

Jaren Davis, 53, a Republican Salt Lake City real estate developer who owns a second home here, sat in Chick's Cafe on Main Street and bemoaned polarization in politics.

"Both sides, right and left, with 24-hour news, they just need to get more fanatical to get on TV," said Davis, who unsuccessfully ran for a seat in the state Legislature. He noted that partisans have to cater to their extreme wing to win a primary ? the same as winning the general election in this deeply red state.

Chaffetz held his town hall in a county education building. He began by giving a presentation on the weight of the federal debt. Voters asked about the value of the dollar, how to keep the federal government from converting more of the state's land to protected wilderness and the use of drones in the U.S. They also voiced their frustration about the president.

"Have you not found anything to impeach the president of the United States?" asked Jeff Riddle, 34, an attorney. "Losing a drone to Iran? Killing Americans with drones? Infringing on Second Amendment rights?"

Chaffetz asked for patience. He said the best course was to allow congressional investigations into possible administration wrongdoing, like the Fast and the Furious gun-running program, to continue.

"What is it going to take to make the change in Washington?" asked retired commercial airline pilot Robert Wren, 74. "Are we going to have to have a minor revolution of the people? Are we going to have to wait until the next election?"

Chaffetz said the problem is that Republicans haven't communicated well with voters. Later, asked if he ever felt pressure to back down, he acknowledged occasional disagreements with GOP leadership on whether to subpoena the White House.

"I don't know if we have stood up for ourselves as much as we should," he said.

Wren said he was pleased with his congressman's unflinching stance. "He's representing his constituents."

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Follow Nicholas Riccardi at https://twitter.com/NickRiccardi

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/unyielding-gop-politicians-doing-voters-ask-084659707--politics.html

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