Thursday, January 31, 2013

HBO Go Could Come To Apple TV By Mid-2013

hbo-goApple might not need to make a TV set to make a big splash in the television market: a brand new report from Bloomberg claims that the company is negotiating with Time Warner Inc. to bring HBO Go to Apple TV by the middle of this year, citing two people familiar with the plans. That would still mean that the ability to watch HBO shows on Apple's set top box would be limited to people who already subscribe to the network in cable and satellite packages, but it's a promising step.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/R-gu8FQx1lo/

tenacious d steve smith zou bisou bisou tim tebow press conference tebow press conference trina rob dyrdek

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

NYC auction house to offer Warhol works online

This undated photo provided by Christies's auction house in New York shows Andy Warhol's "Campbell's Chicken with Rice Soup," tin soup can filled with concrete, with a pre-auction estimate of $50,000-70,000. It is one of about 125 artworks being offered from Feb. 26 through March 5 in Christie's first online-only Warhol sale. The works can be previewed online prior to the sale. Bidders can browse, bid and receive instant updates by email or phone if another bid exceeds theirs. (AP Photo/Christie's)

This undated photo provided by Christies's auction house in New York shows Andy Warhol's "Campbell's Chicken with Rice Soup," tin soup can filled with concrete, with a pre-auction estimate of $50,000-70,000. It is one of about 125 artworks being offered from Feb. 26 through March 5 in Christie's first online-only Warhol sale. The works can be previewed online prior to the sale. Bidders can browse, bid and receive instant updates by email or phone if another bid exceeds theirs. (AP Photo/Christie's)

This undated photo provided by Christies's auction house in New York shows Andy Warhol's "Self-Portrait with Fright Wig screenprint on t-shirt," with a pre-auction estimate of $15,000 - $20,000. It is one of about 125 artworks being offered from Feb. 26 through March 5 in Christie's first online-only Warhol sale. The works can be previewed online prior to the sale. Bidders can browse, bid and receive instant updates by email or phone if another bid exceeds theirs. (AP Photo/Christie's)

This undated photo provided by Christies's auction house in New York shows Andy Warhol's "New Coke III B.44," screenprint in colors, on colored graphic art paper, with a pre-auction estimate of $25,000-35,000. It is one of about 125 artworks being offered from Feb. 26 through March 5 in Christie's first online-only Warhol sale. The works can be previewed online prior to the sale. Bidders can browse, bid and receive instant updates by email or phone if another bid exceeds theirs. (AP Photo/Christie's)

(AP) ? A New York City auction house will offer an online auction of Andy Warhol's works, giving a broader audience the chance to own a piece of his art.

It's Christie's first online-only Warhol sale. About 125 paintings, drawings, photographs and prints will be offered from Feb. 26 through March 5. Pre-sale estimates range from $600 to $70,000.

The auction is being held in partnership with The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.

The works can be previewed online prior to the sale.

Bidders can browse, bid and receive instant updates by email or phone if another bid exceeds theirs.

Christie's and the foundation entered the partnership last fall.

The first live auction raised $17 million for the Warhol Foundation's endowment.

___

Online: www.christies.com/warhol

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-01-30-US-Warhol-Foundation-Christie's/id-26a0fcc625c54fdc988252455b40bfbd

mario williams vcu unlv sam young ncaa bracket ramon sessions portland trail blazers

Apple?s Next iPad Could Sport A Slimmer Shell, Take A Page From The iPad Mini Playbook

ipad59to5macApple's next iPad might look like an enlarged iPad mini, according to new pictures received by 9to5Mac that claim to represent the device's new back casing. The pics aren't "verified," the blog says, but 9to5Mac's track record is solid, with another example that it generally posts good info coming earlier this week. And let's face it, Apple has nowhere to go with the big boy iPad except for slimmer and lighter, if it wants to keep the thing appealing.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QalPs20SkXw/

bon iver abraham lincoln vampire hunter their eyes were watching god lara logan manu ginobili sports illustrated swimsuit 2012 aretha franklin whitney houston

US eyes drone base in Africa with al-Qaida in mind

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Plans to base unarmed American surveillance drones in the African nation of Niger highlight the Obama administration's growing concern about extremist influences in the volatile region. They also raise tough questions about how to contain al-Qaida and other militant groups without committing U.S. ground forces in yet another war.

In the short run, a drone base would enable the U.S. to give France more intelligence on the militants that French troops are fighting in neighboring Mali. Over time it could extend the reach not only of American intelligence gathering but also U.S. special operations missions to strengthen Niger's own security forces.

The U.S. and Niger in recent days signed a "status of forces agreement" spelling out legal protections and obligations of American forces that might operate in Niger in the future.

Pentagon spokesman George Little acknowledged the agreement, but declined Tuesday to discuss U.S. plans for a military presence in Niger.

"They expressed a willingness to engage more closely with us, and we are happy to engage with them," Little said, adding that the legal agreement was months in the making and saying it was unrelated to the recent fighting in Mali.

The U.S. has found some of its efforts to fight extremists hobbled by some African governments, whose own security forces are ill-equipped to launch an American-style hunt for the militants yet are reluctant to accept U.S. help because of fears the Americans will overstay their welcome and trample their sovereignty.

At France's request, the U.S. has flown 17 Air Force transport flights to move French troops and their equipment to Mali in recent days, Little said. U.S. aircraft also are conducting aerial refueling of French fighter jets based in Mali, he said, and those operations will continue.

Other U.S. officials said the Pentagon is planning a new drone base in northwestern Africa ? most likely in Niger ? but the plans are not yet complete. It would provide more extended U.S. aerial surveillance of militants in the region without risking the loss of air crews. The main U.S. drone base in Africa is in Djibouti in East Africa.

Niger has accepted the idea of hosting unarmed U.S. drones as well as conventional and special operations troops to advise and assist Niger's military on border security, but it has not endorsed armed U.S. Predator strikes or the launching of U.S. special operations raids from their territory, according to a senior U.S. military official briefed on the matter. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak publicly.

Africa is increasingly a focus of U.S. counterterrorism efforts, even as al-Qaida remains a threat in Pakistan, Yemen and elsewhere. The recent terrorist attack on a natural gas complex in Algeria, in which at least 37 hostages and 29 militants were killed, illustrated the threat posed by extremists who have asserted power propelled by long-simmering ethnic tensions in Mali and the revolution in Libya.

A number of al-Qaida-linked Islamic extremist groups operate in Mali and elsewhere in the Sahara, including a group known as Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, which originated in Algeria and is active in northern Mali. Earlier this month French forces intervened to stop the extremists' move toward Mali's capital, and Washington has grown more involved by providing a variety of military support to French troops.

In Addis Ababa on Tuesday, several African and Western nations pledged more than $450 million to fund an African-led military force to fight Islamist extremists in the Mali. And Britain announced it had offered to send up to 200 military officers to help train a West African force in Mali, including as many as 40 who could be sent as part of a European Union training mission of 500 personnel.

African nations including Ethiopia, Ivory Coast, Gambia and others lined up with developed countries including the United States, Japan, Germany and the United Kingdom to pledge money for the military effort. The U.S. share is to be $96 million, pending congressional approval.

As for al-Qaida-linked groups operating in Mali and elsewhere in northern Africa, the issue for the Obama administration is the degree to which they threaten U.S. security interests.

"AQIM poses a threat in the region, and I can't rule out the possibility that AQIM poses a threat to U.S. interests," Little said. "This is a group that has shown its ability to demonstrate brutality and to conduct attacks. And it is very important that we work with our partners in the region and our allies to thwart them."

Army Gen. Carter Ham, the commander of U.S. Africa Command, said last week that the worry is not just the intentions of AQIM but the ability of like-minded groups to leverage their capabilities by working together.

"We're starting to see the increasing collaboration, sharing of funding, sharing recruiting efforts, sharing of weapons and explosives and certainly a sharing of ideology that is expanding and connecting these various organizations," Ham said at Howard University. "And I think that's what poses at least the greatest immediate threat in the region."

The administration has ruled out sending U.S. ground forces to Mali. Its view is that military involvement, while necessary, is not a solution to the region's problems.

"We have said all along that there has to be more than a purely security solution to the problems in Mali, that the security track and the political track have to go hand-in-hand, that a key component of returning stability to Mali includes new elections and overturning the results of the coup firmly," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters on Monday. She was referring to the coup last spring that prompted the U.S. to withdraw military trainers and cut off other forms of direct military assistance.

Some of the Malian troops that had received U.S. training wound up siding with the rebels in the north, and others who remained loyal to the government proved incapable of standing their ground against the militants.

Adm. Bill McRaven, commander of U.S. Special Operations Command, told a Washington conference on Tuesday that the key to future U.S. training operations like that is to ensure that the effort is long-lasting.

"We had an episodic presence in Mali," McRaven said, "and while I don't know if a persistent presence would have changed our relationship with the Malian forces -- whether they would have exponentially gotten better or not. "But in order to work with a host country, you really have to have that persistent presence."

___

Associated Press writers Writer Kimberly Dozier and Pauline Jelinek in Washington and Kirubel Tadesse in Ethiopia contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-eyes-drone-africa-al-qaida-mind-211304820--politics.html

university of kentucky ncaa oakland news alec baldwin alec baldwin college basketball oakland

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Obama lawyers to argue recess appointments again in March

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - While President Barack Obama considers his next move in one high-stakes legal fight to fill vacant jobs, his lawyers expect to go to court at least twice more to argue for his power to appoint when the U.S. Senate is not meeting.

Federal appeals courts in both Philadelphia and Richmond, Virginia, are likely to hear the issue of recess appointments in March, possibly during the same week.

The hearings will be an opportunity for Obama's lawyers to rebound after a blockbuster ruling on Friday, when a court in Washington, D.C., held that three recess appointments to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) were invalid.

Although the three-judge ruling on Friday upturned 190 years of understanding about how a president may fill vacant jobs, it will not take effect immediately.

Under court rules, the Justice Department has 45 days to decide whether to ask the full, eight-judge Washington-based appeals court to reconsider the decision and 90 days to consider an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

A Justice Department spokeswoman had no comment on Monday.

In one of the two other cases, privately held Enterprise Rent-A-Car is questioning the appointments as part of a labor dispute with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters at an airport near Raleigh, North Carolina.

The case is scheduled to be heard in the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, based in Richmond, on March 22.

A nursing home in Newark, New Jersey - New Vista Nursing and Rehabilitation LLC - is bringing the other case as part of a nurse unionization fight with a local of the Service Employees International Union.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia is tentatively set to hear the issue on March 19.

Both cases have to do with the NLRB.

Once rare, recess appointments became more common in the late 1970s as a way to bypass the confirmation process, which senators have used increasingly to block a president's nominees, including the three Obama put forward for the NLRB.

RULINGS WEEKS FROM NOW

The convergence of the two arguments in the same week in March led a government lawyer to express concern in a court filing because Beth Brinkmann, a senior U.S. Justice Department lawyer, is expected to argue both and wants to ensure they are a few days apart.

Rulings from the two courts would likely come weeks later, potentially adding pressure to the U.S. Supreme Court to sort out what already are divided rulings in the lower courts.

A related case, challenging the recess appointment of Richard Cordray to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, is in pre-trial motions in a Washington federal court.

The U.S. Constitution says that presidents have the authority to fill a high-level vacancy without Senate approval if the Senate is in "the recess."

With such vague language, presidents of both major U.S. parties have made increasingly liberal use of the power.

Friday's sweeping ruling from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said that the president cannot decide on his own when the Senate is in recess and that "the recess" happens only about once a year, not whenever lawmakers break from Washington for a few weeks.

The decision directly contradicted a 2004 ruling from the federal appeals court in Atlanta.

(Editing by Howard Goller and Eric Beech)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-lawyers-argue-recess-appointments-again-march-005514310--sector.html

Alaska earthquake Psalm 91 Joe Webb Fiesta Bowl Jeanie Buss NFL.com NFL playoff schedule 2013

Are These The World's Most Comfortable Running Shoes? Maybe?

A year on, Nike's Flyknit technology continues to permeate the company's running shoe line. Today Nike announced the Flyknit Lunar1+, an ultra lightweight, all-purpose runner that combines a Flyknit upper with a cushy Lunarlon bottom. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Hlzyz6Q1hN8/are-these-the-worlds-most-comfortable-running-shoes-maybe

radar weather morosini death jacoby ellsbury jacoby ellsbury lionel richie kenny rogers avatar the last airbender

UK firm in weather satellite deal

British satellite manufacturer SSTL will build the follow-on spacecraft for an innovative weather forecasting system run by Taiwan and the US.

The Cosmic constellation derives information about the atmosphere from the way it disturbs GPS signals.

A clutch of spacecraft currently provide this service, and SSTL has been contracted to provide up to 12 more satellites.

The intention is to launch a new batch in 2016.

"It's a great win for the company, beating off international competition, and it's also a very interesting project," said Alex da Silva Curiel from SSTL.

"It involves operational meteorology, good climate science and ionospheric science," he told BBC News.

The Cosmic project is a joint initiative between the National Space Organization (NSPO) of Taiwan and the American National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa).

It relies on a smart observation technique known as radio occultation.

This recognises that a transmission from a Global Positioning Satellite, which ordinarily is used to plot a time and a position, will be bent as it passes through air.

The degree to which this refraction occurs is dependent on the properties of the atmosphere at that moment, and can be exploited to pull out information about temperature, pressure and water vapour - key parameters required in weather forecasting.

NSPO/Noaa's Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere & Climate (Cosmic) operates a series of small spacecraft in a low-Earth orbit to make these observations.

But this satellite series, referred to as FORMOSAT-3, is beginning to fail and needs replacing.

SSTL, with its worldwide reputation for manufacturing high-performance, low-cost spacecraft, has now been engaged to build the next generation - FORMOSAT-7.

The multi-million-pound contract will see an initial six satellites launch in three years' time. A further six could follow in 2018.

SSTL, which is based in Guildford, will assemble the chassis, or bus, of every spacecraft. Each satellite's instrument - the GPS receiver that makes the observations - will be supplied from the US.

Final integration will occur in Taiwan, after which the flight-ready models will be shipped to America for launch.

SSTL is basing the bus design on its "100 series" of Earth observation spacecraft. These normally take the shape of a cube, but NSPO/Noaa's desire to launch six satellites at the same time means the profile of the spacecraft will be more wedge-like to make them all fit on the one rocket.

"We basically take the circular cross-section of the launcher as seen from the top, and we divide it by six. And that is the available shape for each spacecraft. That makes for a long and thin shape," explained Mr da Silva Curiel.

"We can still use the same electronics that we would normally use in a SSTL-100 series satellite, but the structure is a new structure."

Each spacecraft will weigh just under 200kg.

The first batch would go into low-inclination orbits, to provide data of greatest value to Taiwan. The second set would be placed in high-inclination-angle orbits to retrieve information relevant to higher latitudes on the globe.

FORMOSAT/Cosmic observations have proven very useful in medium-range forecasting - those projections that look several days ahead.

Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21231598#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

guacamole recipe ufc 143 results kickoff time super bowl 2012 superbowl national anthem patriots vs giants super bowl superbowl halftime show jason wu for target

Monday, January 28, 2013

Russia eyes North America meat ban over feed additive

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia warned on Monday it might soon bar imports of U.S. and Canadian beef and pork if producers do not certify them free of the feed additive ractopamine.

The potential ban could jeopardize more than $500 million a year of exports to Russia and coincides with mounting U.S.-Russian tensions over trade and human rights.

Alexey Alexeyenko, the spokesman for Russia's Veterinary and Phyto-Sanitary Surveillance Service (VPSS), said chilled products could be banned from February 4 and frozen meat by February 11.

Ractopamine is a growth stimulant used to make meat leaner which is banned in some countries because of concerns that residues could remain in the meat and cause health problems despite scientific evidence stating that it is safe.

The VPSS said last week it was considering tougher measures on U.S. and Canadian meat imports because they continued to arrive without certification requested by Russia.

An earlier statement left unclear whether frozen meat would be restricted. The VPSS had said it did not receive test results for chilled meat before it was sold. Alexeyenko said frozen meat was addressed in a separate letter to North American regulators.

Alexeyenko said the certification requirements are no more onerous on producers than regulations in place in the European Union.

(Reporting by Melissa Akin; Editing by Lidia Kelly and David Cowell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russia-eyes-north-america-meat-ban-over-feed-121252707.html

hbo luck unc asheville stephen jackson nba trade deadline ncaa tournament marchmadness mike d antoni

'Charities' Funnel Millions to Climate-Change Denial

A British newspaper claims to have discovered the convoluted way oil billionaires in the United States can funnel huge amounts of cash toward climate change-denial campaigns, while reaping tremendous tax advantages in the process.

A shadowy group called the Donors Trust is largely funded by billionaire Charles Koch and his wife Liz, according to an investigation by The Independent. The trust indirectly receives millions of dollars in funding from a third-party group called the Knowledge and Progress Fund, which the Koch family operates, the paper claims.

Charles Koch and his brother David are majority shareholders in Koch Industries, an immense conglomeration of oil and gas companies with a global reach ? and a definite interest in denying any link between fossil-fuel use and climate change.

A recent profile in Forbes called Charles Koch "one of the 50 most powerful people in the world, one of the 20 wealthiest ? and one of the dozen most vilified."

The IRS recognizes the Donors Trust as a charitable organization due to its status as a "donor-advised trust." These trusts "are individual accounts administered by tax-exempt organizations, such as community foundations and national charities," according to the Wall Street Journal.

Because the IRS considers these organizations charitable groups, money donated to them is tax-deductible, and the popularity of such trusts is growing quickly. Contributions to donor-advised trust funds increased 10.6 percent in 2011 over 2010, the Journal reports. [The Reality of Climate Change: 10 Myths Busted]

"It's becoming the vehicle of choice," said Robert Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University in Philadelphia, referring to the donor-advised trust. "It's an attractive conduit of funding to these conservative think tanks," Brulle told LiveScience.

But what do the recipients of the estimated $500 million in donor funding since 2003 actually do with the money? "A lot of it is just unknown," said Brulle. "It goes into the black box of Donors Trust" where the money is, for the most part, untraceable.

The website for Donors Trust provides some clues to their interests: "The current environment on university campuses values Diversitas over Veritas ? but cultural diversity is a poor substitute for truth, which must be the prevailing aim of the university. And discovering truth is impossible without a commitment to freedom of inquiry and the broadest possible range of viewpoints ? what we call intellectual pluralism.

"Typically, we provide top-notch professors with substantial seed capital, spread over three years. After these professors have demonstrated progress with their 'centers,' we assist them in identifying other funding sources ? alumni, institutional or foundations ? to sustain their efforts."

According to the Independent's investigation, Donors Trust has given significant funding to the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a right-wing think tank. Climatologist Michael Mann of Pennsylvania State University has sued that group, claiming it accused him of scientific fraud and compared him to a child molester. (Nine investigations of Mann's climate research, including one by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and another by the National Science Foundation, have found no evidence of academic fraud. The CEI removed the harsh claims several days after publication.)

Mann, however, remains committed to promoting a science-based approach to climate change. "I like to think we're turning the corner on this issue. The damaging impacts that climate change is already having on us here in the U.S. ? are increasingly clear to the person on the street," Mann told LiveScience in an email interview.

"Climate-change denial, despite the great degree of funding and organization behind it, is simply no longer credible to the vast majority of the public," Mann said. "It is my hope ? and my expectation ? that we will soon transition from the unworthy debate about whether the problem even exists to the worthy debate to be had about what to do about it."

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/charities-funnel-millions-climate-change-denial-171452053.html

mitch daniels shirataki noodles prince fielder state of the union address 2012 obama state of the union 2012 2012 state of the union address jorge posada

Performing arts groups use personal sponsorships to build bridges ...

Art needs money and money needs art.

Money allows the arts to flourish. Art allows wealth to be a positive cultural force.

It?s a relationship you can trace to, well, to the invention of money itself.

The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, for example, has ancient funereal statuary and monumental sculptures that are thousands of years old. And it?s a safe bet that they were underwritten by someone with access to large numbers of Babylonian shekels, Greek drachmas or Roman sesterces.

Performing arts organizations in Kansas City are largely funded by our local equivalent of the Medici banking dynasty of Renaissance Italy ? foundations, corporations and wealthy private donors ? but there?s another option available to people with means and an urge to help the arts: personal sponsorships.

Open a program for the Lyric Opera of Kansas City or Kansas City Repertory Theatre and you?ll see that many of the actors, singers and perhaps even directors and designers have been sponsored by individuals. Often the sponsors are on the organization?s board, but not always. It?s a way for donors and artists to rub elbows, enjoy some private time with performers and get to know one another as human beings over lunch or dinner.

Denyce Graves, an internationally famed mezzo-soprano, will make her Kansas City debut in April when she appears in the Lyric Opera?s production of ?The Mikado.? But without personal sponsorships, neither she nor bass-baritone Dale Travis, who will play the title role, might be appearing at the Lyric.

Deborah Sandler, the Lyric?s new general director and CEO, said she actively pursued Graves but wasn?t sure she could meet the opera star?s fee. Sandler found a way to get her to Kansas City.

?I came here and I inherited a budget and not everything was cast and the role of Katisha was not cast,? Sandler said of plans for staging ?The Mikado.? ?So I negotiated with her agent, and we were still a little bit apart. And I wondered: What else could she do that would have a great impact on the company and the community that would allow me to go to a donor??

Sandler turned to attorney Jon Gray, a member of the Lyric board?s executive committee. Gray said he?d help sponsor Graves if she could do something substantial for young people in the community.

So Sandler decided to ask the singer to make a commitment beyond her performance. Graves agreed to conduct a master class for the company?s apprentices as well as Frost Honors Artists ? high school students showing vocal promise ? and observers from the Musical Bridges program at the University of Missouri-Kansas City?s conservatory. The program provides musical instruction to talented at-risk students in the Kansas City area.

?So that?s pretty much a win-win,? Sandler said.

Gray and his wife, Valerie Chow (who serves on the Youth Symphony board), had previously sponsored an out-of-town actor in Kansas City Rep?s production of ?Broke-ology,? and they have thrown cast parties in their home. Gray had a special interest in sponsoring Graves because she, like Graves, is African-American.

?If I want an opportunity to see people of color performing at the highest level, I need to do more than buy a ticket,? Gray said.

Chow helped found Musical Bridges, and Gray said he wanted to include kids from the program.

?We mentioned some things we hoped for in respect to Ms. Graves,? Gray said. ?We hope to meet her. But one of the things we asked for was for the Musical Bridges students to have the opportunity to, if not participate in a master class, at least be in the room to watch it.?

The Lyric?s annual budget is about $6.4 million, and sponsorships help the organization buttress the bottom line. Sandler said an individual sponsor could contribute $5,000 to $25,000 for one artist and could spend as much as $75,000 to underwrite more than one artist. Artists have been sponsored by private donors at the Lyric for at least five years.

Sandler said the money helps but it has a greater value. It?s a way to enrich relationships between the organization and its supporters.

?They are people who already have a relationship with the company, but this gives them an opportunity to forge a deeper relationship,? she said. ?And from our perspective it sometimes makes the difference between having a particular singer here or not having them.?

And if there were no sponsors?

?We?re in the business of producing opera,? Sandler said. ?It?s not that absent the sponsorships we wouldn?t do the opera. Of course we?re going to do the opera. But the more money we can raise, the higher production values the production will have.?

At Kansas City Rep, which has a budget of about $7.5 million, sponsorships for artists and others involved in the first show of the current season, ?Pippin,? came to $27,000, according to former managing director Cynthia Rider, now with the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. That helps the bottom line a little, but an individual sponsorship doesn?t cover the total cost of hiring a single actor or director.

?I think there are two primary benefits,? Rider said. ?One is that it really connects philanthropy with the artists and that in turn leads to greater stability and financial support for the Rep. The other is really supporting the artists in a personal way. It?s one of the ways we can make the Rep a place for artists to do their best work.?

Eric Rosen, the Rep?s artistic director, said the sponsorships began in a small way about four years ago as part of a company plan. They?ve grown since then.

?When I got here it was a very disconnected world between the people who gave us money and those who made it work,? Rosen said. ?It?s much better than I thought it would be. We thought we?d do it for one show and see how it went. And now it?s a major board strategy.?

Rosen, like Sandler, said one of the benefits of the sponsorship program was creating a positive experience for the visiting artists, who will then spread the word about the Rep and the Lyric to their colleagues in New York and around the world.

?It sounds like a small thing, but it?s in our strategic plan, the goal of making this a more exciting experience for all of our artists, so it becomes their top choice in the future,? Rosen said.

In almost every case there?s a social event in which sponsors and artists meet face-to-face. A leisurely lunch, a late dinner, a reception at someone?s home or a visit to a Kansas City barbecue joint are all in the mix.

Elizabeth Caballero, a soprano who played the title role in the Lyric Opera?s production of ?Madama Butterfly,? said the private time is a chance for sponsors to get a sense of who the artist really is.

?It?s always nice because you can meet them and thank them in person,? said Caballero, who was sponsored by Lyric board president Richard P. Bruening and his wife. ?They ask questions about how you got started. They just want to know who you are as a person more than as a singer. They get to know you more as an individual.?

Ann Baum and husband Kenneth sponsored the Kansas City Symphony?s opening weekend this season with featured guest violinist Vadim Gluzman. After the first performance the Baums dined with Gluzman and music director Michael Stern.

?In the case of the Symphony, the most fun aspect of it is we have an intimate dinner afterwards with Michael, with Gluzman, with some of the leaders within the Symphony family,? Ann Baum said. ?It?s an opportunity to really get to know people behind the scenes in a much more intimate way.?

She said a major sponsorship could yield another benefit: inspiring others in the community to follow suit.

?I think Kenny and I would support the Symphony anyway, but it is an opportunity to lead by example,? she said. ?We all know how much money it takes from the private community to support the orchestra.?

No matter which organization you consider, the dynamics are basically the same: A small universe of donors, supporters and subscribers embraces the organization. Social relationships between the artistic leadership and the donors are integral to fundraising. Baum, for example, described Stern as a personal friend. Bunni Copaken, a Rep board member, described Rosen as a friend and attended his wedding in upstate New York last year.

Frank Byrne, the Symphony?s executive director, said donors are regularly offered opportunities to sponsor concerts or specific artists.

?This is a very common structure to connect artists and donors,? Byrne said. ?For the people who have done this for the Symphony, I think they find it particularly rewarding.?? It?s part of creating that connection.?

Sponsorships are not exclusive to the major institutions in town. Just this season Quality Hill Playhouse, the intimate downtown theater that specializes in musical revues showcasing iconic American songwriters, began offering sponsorship opportunities. They include $5,000 to sponsor one performer for one show, $15,000 for an instrumentalist for the entire season and $30,000 to cover pianist and executive director J. Kent Barnhart for a season.

Managing director Rick Truman said all five performers in the company?s inaugural show this season were sponsored.

?It connects the sponsor to both the organization and the performer in a more special way than just that person attending or that person giving to the organization,? Truman said. ?It gives them a broader awareness of what?s involved. People have said to us before, ?Do they wear their own clothes?? ?Do you rehearse a couple of days and then do the show??

?I don?t know if anybody understands anybody else?s job, even in corporate America, but in theater there is a sense of, ?Oh, you just get up there and do it.? It?s nice for them to have an appreciation of what that person does, not just in this one show, but in general to keep themselves working artists.?

Source: http://www.kansascity.com/2013/01/26/4033052/sponsorships-match-money-music.html

nj transit PSEG hocus pocus hocus pocus mta schedule PECO Hurricane Sandy update

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Crested Butte Community Events for February 2013 | Crested Butte ...

Meet Heather Woodward, Realtor

Heather is a full-time Realtor and a consistent top producer in the local Crested Butte, Almont and Gunnison markets.

Heather takes great pride in giving unparalleled customer service and is dedicated to her clients and their individual needs. Her number one priority is to provide service above and beyond her clients? expectations. She will dedicate her time, attention, energy and knowledge during and after each transaction. Read More

Source: http://www.crestedbuttepropertyshop.com/crested-butte-community-events-for-february-2013-2/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=crested-butte-community-events-for-february-2013-2

north korea missile launch modesto st louis weather guinea bissau google stock google stock china gdp

Video: Casey Anthony: I am only worth $1,100

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50605202/

Colorado Marijuana Washington Election Results drudge report Presidential Election 2012 Incumbent politico Tammy Baldwin

Angela Davis Celebrates Sixty-Ninth Birthday: 11 Memorable Quotes From An American Icon

On this day, 69 years ago, the activist, scholar, and revolutionary Angela Davis was born in Birmingham, Alabama.

Davis has spent much of her life fighting for and defending forgotten or marginalized groups in America and abroad. Known for her political activism during the turbulent 1960's, she became a household name when on August 18, 1970 J. Edgar Hoover made her the third woman ever placed on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted List.

After a nationwide manhunt, Davis was arrested on October 13, 1970 for her alleged connection to the kidnappings and murders that occurred during Jonathan Jackson's attempt to free the imprisoned Soledad Brothers. Davis had purchased the guns used by Jackson. Upon her arrest, then President Richard M. Nixon congratulated the FBI for capturing Davis, describing her as a "dangerous terrorist."

Her subsequent trial was covered widely across the world. Stars such as John Lennon and Yoko Ono (with their song Angela) and The Rolling Stones (with their song Sweet Black Angel) showed their support for Davis. On June 4, 1972, after 13 hours of deliberation, an all-white jury acquitted Davis of murder, kidnapping and conspiracy charges. Davis was 28-years-old at the time.

From her radical work during the 1960's, through her trial and subsequent acquittal, to her work as an educator (Davis has served as a professor and department head at the University of California at Santa Cruz and as visiting scholar at other colleges and universities) Davis' name holds a secure space among the ranks of legendary Americans.

As she celebrates her 69th birthday, let's take a look back at some of her most memorable quotes.

  • "Art on the Frontline," Women, Culture, and Politics (written 1984).

    "The work of the political activist inevitably involves a certain tension between the requirement that position be taken on current issues as they arise and the desire that one's contributions will somehow survive the ravages of time."

  • Address, June 25, 1987, Spellman College. Let Us All Rise Together, Women, Culture and Politics (1989).

    "Radical simply means 'grasping things at the root.'" --- NEW YORK, NY - OCTOBER 15: Activist Angela Davis attends Black Girls Rock! 2011 at the Paradise Theater on October 15, 2011 in New York City. (Photo by John W. Ferguson/Getty Images)

  • Women, Culture and Politics, introduction (1989).

    "The work of the political activist inevitably involves a certain tension between the requirement that positions be taken on curren t issues as they arise and the desire that one's contributions will somehow survive the ravages of time."

  • "Art on the Frontline," Women, Culture, and Politics (written 1984)

    "Progressive art can assist people to learn not only about the objective forces at work in the society in which they live, but also about the intensely social character of their interior lives. Ultimately, it can propel people toward social emancipation." --- TORONTO, ON - SEPTEMBER 09: Director Shola Lynch, producer Will Smith, Angela Davis and actor Jada Pinkett Smith attend the 'Free Angela & All Political Prisoners' premiere during the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival at Roy Thomson Hall on September 9, 2012 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images)

  • June 4, 1972 After Being Acquitted On Murder, Kidnapping and Conspiracy Charges

    "A fair trial would have been no trial at all."

  • Address, November 15, 1987. "Facing Our Common Foe,"

    "Media mystifications should not obfuscate a simple, perceivable fact; Black teenage girls do not create poverty by having babies. Quite the contrary, they have babies at such a young age precisely because they are poor--because they do not have the opportunity to acquire an education, because meaningful, well-paying jobs and creative forms of recreation are not accessible to them ... because safe, effective forms of contraception are not available to them." ---- TORONTO, ON - SEPTEMBER 09: Willow Smith and Angela Davis attend the 'Free Angela & All Political Prisoners' premiere during the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival at Roy Thomson Hall on September 9, 2012 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images)

  • Chapter 13 Women, Race and Class, Angela Davis 1981

    "One of the most closely guarded secrets of advanced capitalist societies involves the possibility ? the real possibility ? of radically transforming the nature of housework." Description 1 Angela Davis speaking at an event sponsored by the Left Labor Project (LLP). Location: 1199SEIU Martin Luther King, Jr. ...

  • Are Prisons Obsolete, 2003

    "Because it would be too agonizing to cope with the possibility that anyone, including our? selves, could become a prisoner, we tend to think of the prison as disconnected from our own lives. This is even true for some of us, women as well as men, who have already experienced imprisonment."

  • Are Prisons Obsolete 2003

    "The prison is not the only institution that has posed complex challenges to the people who have lived with it and have become so inured to its presence that they could not con?ceive of society without it. Within the history of the United States the system of slavery immediately comes to mind."

  • Lessons: From Attica to Soledad (1971)

    "Yet human beings cannot be willed and molded into nonexistence."

  • Lessons: From Attica to Soledad (1971)

    "Scores of men are dead; and unknown numbers are wounded. By now, it would seem, more people should realize that such explosive acts of repression are not minor aberrations in a society not terribly disturbing in other aspects."

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/26/angela-davis-birthday_n_2557842.html

joepa sc primary bill moyers heidi klum and seal divorce craigslist killer extremely loud and incredibly close south carolina primary

Apple drops supplier over underage labor violations, hails 'high compliance' with reducing excessive work hours

Apple severs relationship with supplier over underage labor violations

Apple's latest Supplier Responsibility Report has just been published, detailing 393 audits focused on the plants and suppliers that help make all that hardware. The audit number is a 72 percent increase in what it covered in its last annual report, while Apple was also quick to highlight its contracting companies' high compliance (92 percent) with a maximum 60-hour work week. Senior vice president of operations Jeff Williams told Reuters that underage workers and limiting working hours were two of the most challenging issues it faced in its supplier audits. Apple decided to end business relations with component maker Guangdong Real Faith Pingzhou Electronics over underage labour issues. "We go deep in the supply chain to find it," said Williams. "And when we do find it, we ensure that the underage workers are taken care of, the suppliers are dealt with."

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: AllThingsD, Reuters

Source: Apple

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/HTSFhPpvrew/

scotty mccreery megan fox pregnant metta world peace suspension apple earnings report john l smith apple earnings the glass castle

Saturday, January 26, 2013

How Much Control Will We Have Over Our Personal Data?

http://www.flickr.com/photos/yourdon/3405811164/

photo by Ed Yourdon

The flood of online data about each of us seems to be increasing exponentially. For the most part we?re willing participants, lured by the promise of convenience and information. But how much control will we have over the data that we give up? Michael Fertik, CEO of Reputation.com, which is in the business of giving consumers control over their personal data, wrote to us from the World Economic Forum meeting this week in Davos, where the topic has gotten a hearing. (Fertik also wrote the Forum column in our February 2013 issue, A Tale of Two Internets.) Here?s his letter:

A year ago, multinational corporations had begun to entertain some radical (for them) concepts with regards to big data. For instance, executives seemed to consider the notion that consumer data they collected ? from telecommunications data to healthcare records to their commercial and financial transactions to the digital footprints that customers leave as they use the Internet ? need not be regulated and regimented, with benefits that tilted largely to business, but that the possibility of some kind of pro-consumer paradigm shift should be allowed.

Reading between the lines of conversations I?ve been having so far at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos about data governance, usage and privacy, people seem to be sharing a common vision.

On the surface, there doesn?t seem to be much common ground. On the one hand, users want control over their data ? when it?s shared, how it?s shared, for how long it?s shared?and they are concerned about privacy, even as they rush to use social media platforms (see?this Pew study).? Companies, on the other hand, want to further mine the intel they gather ? from Internet browsing habits, shopping patterns, demographic data ? to sell goods and services, make money, expand their businesses faster and more effectively.

For the first time at Davos this year, the key session on Unlocking the Value of Personal Data was moved from an ?offsite? hotel meeting to a front-and-center leading working session inside the Congress Center. ?In the Davos world, that move signals an arrival of the topic as a kind of ?primetime? event at the World Economic Forum. ?In the words of one of the key discussion leaders, last year?s meeting on this topic was one of the best and most important sessions he?s ever attended in years of involvement at the WEF. ?As another discussion leader said this week, nearly every session that is happening at Davos this year in some implicates questions of personal data, big data, and privacy. ?It?s been coming up hourly. ?And at this key session on Unlocking the Value of Personal Data, all of the heavyweights were in the room and leaning in for a robust discussion: Global 2000 technology, health, and financial companies; key regulators; and the principal Internet thought leaders from around the world.

And for the first time ever, the discussion was largely unanimous in its embrace of the proposition that users CAN and SHOULD have some measurable control over either collection or use of their data.

We just saw the world move. ?Huge companies ? and in particular, the large number of massive global companies that are not hide-bound by their attachment to traditional Internet advertising business lines ? see clearly the vast revenue opportunities in the data stores they have been accumulating for decades about people, places, and things. ?And now ? for reasons of both regulation and principle ? they are highly motivated to start monetizing those data sets in ways that are clearly user-centric and pro-user.

There?s a tremendous amount of valuable data that companies can?t presently access or deploy for corporate or user gain ? untapped gold, a resource of tremendous revenue generation.? With the right model?a ?good guy? paradigm that is user-centric?progressive companies could open the door to a huge new source of wealth creation.? With a?Field of Dreams-like focus on incentives (?if you offer them, they will come?), consumers will embrace the shift to owning and benefiting from their data.

The point is not to forestall innovation or accidentally prevent serendipitous discovery arising from the connection of multiple and apparently disjointed data sets. ?The goal is instead to enable the connection of those data sets with knowing and actually informed participation by users.

That?s why I?m a passionate advocate for the concept of?the data vault ? because it perfectly benefits companies and individuals alike.? Customers entrust their data to the vault system and decide what companies or types of businesses they trust.? Those companies then provide incentives, which a person could choose to take or not, in exchange for their data.? The value of the incentive ? whether it?s a coupon, a free item, or even cash ? would vary according to how valuable a company thought that data might be.? Imagine how much richer data would be if a person discloses it voluntarily ? what better decisions, better products, even entirely new innovations could result with that information.? It?s a game-changer ? and?that?s exciting.

Right now, the most mature Internet companies are those that are focused on traditional ways of advertising ? like Facebook or Google.? But sooner or later, the gold rush will be on as the pendulum swings back toward the consumer.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=b01a44e02011f76b7b7c02a8789483c3

stacy francis tournament brackets 2012 ncaa basketball tournament walt what time is it current time a thousand words

Congress making budget promises it can't keep

4 hrs.

Next time you hear someone in Washington come up with a long-term plan to balance the federal budget, take it with a Capitol Building-sized grain of salt.

As the tax and spending battle rages on in the nation?s capital, Democrats and Republicans are vowing to replace temporary, stop-gap budget measures with a long-term plan to narrow the gap between how much the government raises in taxes and how much Congress agrees to spend.

Though bitterly divided over how to pull it off, both sides agree that a gradual, long-term, budget-balancing plan would do less damage to the economy than the steep, short-term spending cuts set to take effect in a few weeks.?Earlier this week, House Republicans set a 10-year timetable for bringing revenues and spending into line.

"Balancing the budget over the next 10 years means that we save the future for our kids and our grandkids," House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said when the deal was announced.

Even if every member of Congress agreed with that goal, it?s a promise none of them can keep.

Any long term budget is subject to a long list of unknowns ? from disasters and wars, to recessions and financial crises - that can quickly knock it off course.?The list includes a future Congress that decides to tear up the plan and replace it with a new one.

?You can talk about a budget as a establishing a sense of direction but you can?t talk about a long term budget as a precise point of arrival,? said William Galston, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a policy advisor in the Clinton administration. ?All sorts of things can alter the assumptions that underlie any long-term planning.?

Congress hit the pause button in the ongoing budget battle this week) by delaying a looming deadline to prevent the government from borrowing to pay its bills. The deal lets the Treasury Department continue to sell bonds to make up the gap between the taxes it collects and the spending Congress has authorized.

That measure effectively postponed the debt ceiling crunch until mid-May. The exact date is difficult to predict because the Treasury is able to juggle its bills for a few weeks as it approaches the borrowing cap.

The next hard deadline comes with automatic budget cuts ? the spending side of the so-called ?fiscal cliff? ? that were delayed until March 1 and pared down by $24 billion in the last-minute, year-end deal that raised taxes on the wealthiest households.

Those cuts, the so-called ?sequester,? were enacted in July 2011 after the last debt-ceiling standoff.

The hope was that the impact of the cuts would be so dire that the deadline would force a compromise in the long-standing budget deadlock. Republicans and the White House remain on a collision course over a long-term plan to replace the sequester?s meat clever approach to spending cuts.

Both sides agreed to come up with a long-term budget plan ? or forego their paychecks. (That?s another promise easier made than kept. The 27th Amendment requires that any change in elected representatives? salaries apply only to the next session of Congress. So the move is largely for show.)

Replacing the short-term budget measures with a 10-year plan begins with a series of guesses about future spending that are all but impossible to make. Will the U.S. fight a war in the next decade? How many natural disasters like Superstorm Sandy will prompt emergency relief spending? Will the cost of health care continue rising faster than the rate of inflation?

There are even bigger wild guesses embedded in the economic projections used to estimate how much money the government will take in through taxes. Will there be a recession in the next 10 years? If so, will it be mild or severe? Short or long?

Like any long-term plan, a relatively small miss on that estimate can have a big impact down the road. If the current $16 trillion U.S. economy grows at the 50-year historical average pace of about 3 percent, for example, in 10 years gross domestic product ? a rough measure of the nation?s income - will hit $21.5 trillion. If that growth rate continues at the current, roughly 2 percent pace, GDP will hit only $19.5 trillion ? generating less tax revenue from businesses and households even if tax rates remain steady.

?You can solve a lot of problems if you simply build in the kind of economic performance that we saw in the last six years of Reagan or the last five of Bill Clinton,? said Galston. ?It?s possible to do anything on paper if you don?t care what you?re doing.?

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/economywatch/congress-making-budget-promises-it-cant-keep-1C8115972

best picture 2012 oscar winners channel 3 news j lo j lo sacha baron cohen ryan seacrest octavia spencer

Friday, January 25, 2013

Tonymodus: The Role of Mothers in Homes


The mother in the family has many roles. Her role rapidly shifts from that of mediator, counselor, role model, nurse, teacher, provider, protector, playmate et cetera. As I emphasize the role of the mother, this does not mean that the father is not important or he is less important. What the mother give to her child and the extent to which she can give, is dependent on that which she can receive from her relationship with her husband. If she receives joy, peace, support and love from the relationship this is exactly what she will pass on. A sad and depressed mother cannot exude love, peace and joy. If she only receives empty promises, frustrations, and false expectations, that is what she will pass on as well. So as I emphasize the role of the mother, this does not in any way play down on the father?s role, but rather it points to the unique role a mother plays in a family.

????????? Mothers differ in style and technique, but most mothers agree on the basis of what the role of a mother entails. However, approaching motherhood from the angle of the positive influence a mother can have on her child culminates in few precious nuggets of the essence of motherhood.

Mediator

????????? Expression of jealousy and disagreements often crop between children in the same family. These expressions may be so, vociferous and unfounded as to alarm the mother. They are quite normal, however, and even within reasonable limits, provide a harmless outlet for the release of emotional tensions that have developed.

????????? Conflict is a part of life.

????????? The mother herself may sometimes be surprised to find that she is the focus of jealous outbursts. This, too, is normal at one stage of a child?s development. These jealousies of the other children may be even, take the form of expressions of contempt against them. The only remedy is to meet the outbursts with kindness and reassurances that things are not as bad as they look in the childhood?s perspective.

????????? Some children seem to be so willful that they cause their mothers considerable anxiety. In the years past, mothers set out to break the will of a child who is stubborn. But this method was not founded on sound principle and probably resulted in many ruined personalities. Why should a mother be so stern in her dealings with a child who seems to be too self-assertive? Adults sometimes are confused over when to assert themselves and when to submit. How can we blame children for being similarly confused? In these cases patient, tactful handling will do more good than stern punishment.

Mothers should help children settle disputes so as to avoid siblings? rivalry. Your approach can make it seem that you love everyone equally or that you favor one over the other. Be careful that both your love and approval are equal for each child. Work to gain that deep understanding of every child?s underlying needs and modes of expressions.

????????? Do your children think you are fair or do they accuse you playing favorites? Do they respect your judgment, though strict, in your discipline or do they think you?re unreasonable? These are some of the questions you, as a mother will have to ask yourself. Gone are the days of mother knows it all. At home, school, children today are encouraged to think for themselves, to express opinions frankly. How your children feel about you as a person and as a mother is very important to them, to you, and to the happiness of the whole family.

Provider

????????? Most mothers aim to provide for the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual needs of their children. On a physical level, this is likely to include a healthy, clean environment and nourishing food for optimal growth. Emotionally, the mother endeavor to provide a calm, safe haven, seeking opportunities to encourage the child and foster positive self-esteem. Mentally, mothers usually sing and read to their children and later help them with homework. Mothers, often than not, may be the parent, who introduces their children to religion or spiritual guidance. Motherhood creates a desire of wanting to ensure a child has every basic need met.

Protector

????????? The moment a mother holds the fruit of her womb in her arms for the first time, maternal instinct takes hold as well as the need to nurture, protect and love her precious child. Mothers handle their children with gentle mannerisms and softness. In addition, mothers instinctively try to protect their children from pain as well as physical discomforts. Mothers provide improved nurturing environment where their children can feel safe and secure. Children will never survive without constant protection. But note that if your child grow up with too much giving in or giving up, too much help and rescuing, or too much criticism and blame, he may not feel good about himself. His self-respect and self-esteem may be poor.

Children who do not feel good about themselves are likely to do one of two things: they will give in and become doormats to others, or they will be arrogant and controlling out of an effort to compensate. Mothers who feel good about themselves are much more likely to raise children who have a healthy self-esteem by not being over protective. Emotionally healthy children are reasonably in touch with how they feel and what they need to cope with these feelings most of the time. Encourage your children to learn to swim, skate, ski, climb, and take part in sports. Every skill they ca master adds to their confidence, broaden their social options and keep them from the boredom. A mother should be involved and cheer them on their pursuits ensuring it is not life threatening.

Playmate

????????? Willingness to do things with your child is important. Time together can mean going to special events, sharing an activity you both enjoy. It is important that when you spend time with your child, you are genuinely interested and involved in what the two of you are doing. Your child knows when you are just going through the motions or doing whatever you are doing half-heartedly. One problem faced by a busy mother is that it is often hard to coordinate schedules. Most of the mothers have to work to help overburdened husbands.

She may think that Sunday is a perfect time to spend time with her child, but her child may have reserved the time for socializing with his friends. Remember that if your child turns down your invitation to do something that he ordinarily enjoys, it is more likely due to bad timing than disinterest on his part. A good mother enjoys doing things with her child and takes pride in his accomplishments. She believes that a mother has an obligation to understand her child?s needs and feelings. She treats the child?s interest and problems as meaningful and shows genuine concern. At the same time, she sets well-defined limits. In order to stay involved in your child?s life, you will need to spend time together.

Nurse

A good mother cultivates the culture of good health in your children. She will nurse them when they are sick. There is no alternative to a mother for a baby. Mothers play an extremely significant role in nurturing a newborn child. It is exceedingly vital for her to devote time in looking after her baby.

When a child is sick, a mother instinctively reacts to her child?s condition, providing proper nourishment and warmth. Mothers are the ones who raise alarm when a child?s temperature spikes or something is going out the norm, calling the doctor and staying with him in the hospital if need be. Mothers provide the child with physical comforts and a place to rest. Through their gentle touch, mothers can reassure a child that all will be well. Mothers find nursing a sick child back to health as one of their deeper commitments to their children.

Contemporary studies have established that it is very crucial for mothers to spend most of their time in guiding and sustaining their babies, both physically and psychologically, especially in the early years of their life. Nannies and relatives are quite helpful but they simply cannot substitute a mother?s compassion for her baby.

Mothers definitely have a major role to play in nurturing their newborn babies, but their responsibility is not restricted to newborn babies only. Mothers have to perform crucial roles in the lives of their babies, irrespective of their ages. It is vital for mother to understand, that until the child moves away from her home and establish a home of his or her own, she happens to be the person on whom the entire wellbeing of the child rests.?????????

Housekeeper

????????? A mother is a housekeeper. Housekeeping is the process of making a home neat and clean. Housekeeping involves disposing of rubbish, storing of belongings in their proper places, cleaning dirty surfaces, dusting, laundry, dishes, and vacuuming. Some housekeeping is chores. Home chores can be defined as homework that needs to be done at regular intervals. Housekeeping equally involves outdoor cleaning chores such as removing leaves from rain gutters, washing the pool, putting away lawn equipment, washing windows, and cleaning doormats. In a more elaborate form it includes the budget and control of expenditures, preparing meals and grocery shopping, paying bills as well as cleaning.

????????? A housewife when the children are asleep or at school, focus on house chores, cleaning or running errands such as paying bills and buying food. Working mothers contribute financially to the household to pay bills. They juggle family and personal relationships with their careers. Housekeeping is a tedious task. When there is cleaning and baking to be done the child can be crying at the same time. Sometimes mothers have to be holding their babies while they tend the flying pans.

Care Giver

????????? A good mother is expected to contribute her whole life to her family. Mother is the glue that holds a family together because in most cases they provide the loving care and support needed by growing children. The nurturing of a mother provides an unparalleled and vital part of a child?s care. It takes learning and practice to handle with proficiency. It is not an easy job because mothers learn the caring as they go. It is helpful if your children are reared in a caring home so that they can pass it on to their own children. a good mother is devoted to care for her family and put them before all else. The ideal growing up environment a mother can provide for her children is a warm caring home.

Teacher

????????? A mother must teach her child the value of proper education. A mother in most cases is the first teacher of a child. The first song a child hears is probably sung by his mother. It is from her the infant learns the rudiments of formal education such as 1,2,3, ? and a,b,c, ?Mothers read aloud to their child, fostering their early literary skills. Mothers also patiently points out common objects and name them, enabling speech and auditory development. It is established fact that mother is the nearest person to a child. He or she grows up watching the mother and her actions. The first syllables taught to the child are from the mother. Mothers instinctively begin teaching children about the world through their communication and interactions with their children.

A mother not only teaches the numbers, alphabets, shapes and colors to her child, but also manners, eating habits, and gestures. It is to be remembered that much of our communication is done through gestures which one again are first learnt from mother. A mother also teaches her daughter and son to play with a doll and a ball respectively. Safety precaution is another important lesson a child learns from his mother. Part of the job is to teach children about the world they live in. a mother also teaches her child appropriate social behavior (how to share and take turns) as well as responsibility (by dividing chores or requesting assistance with a task).

????????? As a child grows and becomes more matured the learning process never ends. Mother always has an answer for all curious questions of the little child. With more maturity the role of the mother becomes more of a friend and guide. From childhood to a teenager, the transformation is drastic. Questions of life, death, marriage, existence starts to engage the developing mind. Mother again is the solution provider to all these questions.

????????? Nancy Lu, author and parent of two gifted children, writes, ?I think of a parent as a farmer preparing fertile and hospitable place for his seeds to thrive and flourish. He plows his field, sows the seeds, and then labors day after day, feeding and irrigating them, getting rid of bugs, and watching over his field with love.?

Counselor

????????? As children grow, they will encounter many challenges, often of the emotional and mental types. Mothers can create a safe-sounding board for the child to discuss the indecision of what path to follow, mistakes, disappointments and failures. One of the most marvelous attributes of motherhood is the demonstration of unconditional love. In other words, no matter what the child did, the mother still loves the child and forgives him. Forgiving mistakes and wrongdoing is critical to the well-being of the human psyche. Because of their prior experiences, mothers can share their knowledge and relate to the child?s difficulties in a sympathetic way. Then the mothers will provide wise options and guidance to help the child move forward.

Role Model

????????? Mothers set the experience through their own actions as how to handle situations and cope with life. By demonstrating such things as determination in periods of trial and tribulations, grace under pressure and self-sufficiency, a parent can provide her child the skill needed to eventually become an independent, productive adult. Jonis R. Cohen, social worker and author, states, ?Think about what you want your children to learn from you and what you want them to pass down to their children. Then make sure they see you live your life as you wish them to live theirs.? In a nutshell, motherhood involves allowing your child to mover forward through well guarded developmental stages and evolves into a capable adult.

?????????

Source: http://chuksm.blogspot.com/2013/01/the-role-of-mothers-in-homes.html

earl csco big bend national park leon russell meredith vieira prop 8 maria menounos