Thursday, October 11, 2012

Golden Hawk Athletics & Recreation - Men's basketball hosts Hawk ...

Men's basketball hosts Hawk Challenge

WATERLOO, Ont. (October 10, 2012) - The Wilfrid Laurier Golden Hawks men's basketball team is set to host its annual Hawk Challenge tournament this Friday and Saturday at the Athletic Complex.

Joining the Hawks for this two-day tournament will be the UBC Thunderbirds, the Concordia Stingers and the Guelph Gryphons.

This tournament represents Hawks fans first opportunity to watch a rebuilt Laurier team in action at home. Led by returning stars Maxwell Allin of Chatham, Ont., Patrick Donnelly of Oakville, Ont., and Will Coulthard of Oakville, Ont., the Hawks will unveil nine new faces to their home crowd this weekend. Among the new additions are forwards Garrison Thomas of Burlington, Ont., Matthew Chesson of Whitby, Ont., Amen Obano of Brampton, Ont., and Nicolaas Lau of Owen Sound, Ont.

Early in this preseason, Laurier has posted a 1-1 record as they defeated the Fanshawe Falcons 84-80 while falling to the Gryphons 84-73.

Wilfrid Laurier students can attend both days of action for free with a valid OneCard. Adult ticket prices are $4 for each set of games while seniors and non-Laurier students are $3. Children under 12 are also free.

HAWK CHALLENGE SCHEDULE

Friday, October 12

5 p.m. - Concordia vs Guelph

7 p.m. - UBC vs Laurier

Saturday, October 13

2 p.m. - Guelph vs UBC

4 p.m. - Concordia vs Laurier

Source: http://www.laurierathletics.com/createarticle.php?ID=6203

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Hong Kong International Bowls Classic Goes Live on TV | Other ...

Lawn Bowls?Hong Kong Classic

By Claudius Lam Created: October 10, 2012 Last Updated: October 10, 2012


The ladies singles champion in the Hong Kong International Bowls Classic 2010, Nor Hashimah Ismail from Malaysia will return to defend her title in this year’s Hong Kong International Bowls Classic. (Stephanie Worth)

The ladies singles champion in the Hong Kong International Bowls Classic 2010, Nor Hashimah Ismail from Malaysia will return to defend her title in this year?s Hong Kong International Bowls Classic. (Stephanie Worth)

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Do you want to see Hong Kong?s star lawn bowlers against some of the best in the world on local television? This year you can.

For the first time in the history of bowling in Hong Kong, every final match in the annual Hong Kong International Bowls Classic from Nov 3 to 11 will be broadcast live on PayTV channel Now with a Cantonese commentary.

Vincent Cheung, president of the Hong Kong Lawn Bowls Association, announced the broadcast breakthrough at a press conference last week (Oct 4).

?We have made substantial investment in engaging Now TV to take up the broadcast rights,? said Cheung. ?The four finals will be broadcast live on its channel and on the internet. This allows more people to watch our matches and definitely help to further promote the sport in the territory.

?In addition to the first TV broadcast, also for the first time, we have secured separate sponsors for the Classic. The Singles event will be sponsored by Concord Industrial & Commercial Development Enterprise Ltd, while the Pairs will continue to be sponsored by the Zhong Gang Multi-Bowls Club. This is in addition to the continual Government funding support from the Leisure and Cultural Services Department.

?We are really grateful to our sponsors and I am sure this will be a splendid event that all bowls will enjoy,? said Cheung.

The 2012 event will see 64 top bowlers from 12 of the world?s strongest bowling nations and elite local Hong Kong players competing in singles and pairs competitions. Countries participating include: Australia, China, England, India, Ireland, Macau, New Zealand, Philippines, Scotland, Singapore and Wales.

The double champions of the Men?s Pairs and Singles title in 2010, Robert Newman from England, is returning with the task of keeping the trophy at home. He will face strong challenges from the 2009 Singles runners-up Hommer Mercado (Philippines) and World No. 13 Graham Mckee from Ireland. He will partner compatriot Mark Read to defend the Pairs trophy.

In the Women?s competition, Australian Julie Keegan will return to defend her 2010 Pairs title, while Malaysian Nor Hashimah Ismail will aim to retain her 2010 Singles title.

The International Bowls Classic was not held in 2011 as the HKLBA celebrated its centennial year with HKLBA Golden Jubilee International Bowls Mixed Pairs Classic.

The Event Format

England International Robert Newman will be coming back to Hong Kong in November to defend his double titles at the Hong Kong International Bowls Classic 2012. (Mike Worth)

England International Robert Newman will be coming back to Hong Kong in November to defend his double titles at the Hong Kong International Bowls Classic 2012. (Mike Worth)

The Singles is a knockout competition that will be played at the Kowloon Bowling Green Club, Club de Recreio and United Services Recreation Club on Nov 3-4, with the finals being held at the Kowloon Bowling Green Club in the afternoon of Nov 4. The 64 competitors include overseas bowlers and Hong Kong?s top bowlers, comprising winners of national Singles events and qualifiers from local clubs.

The Pairs is a 7-day competition. Twenty-four teams of each gender will be divided into two groups to play out a round robin competition. The top team from each group will enter the Semi-finals directly, while the second and third place will meet in a play-off to fight for places in the Semi-finals. The round robin will be played at Craigengower Cricket Club, Hong Kong Football Club and Indian Recreation Club, while the final will be played at CCC on Nov 11.

Premier League Updates

Kowloon Cricket Club extended their lead to five points after beating Craigengower Cricket Club 7-1 away last weekend, while defending champion Kowloon Bowling Green Club only managed a 6-2 victory at Hong Kong Football Club.

Hong Kong International Bowls Classic

3 to 11 November?

First organised in 1981, the Hong Kong International Bowls Classic is recognised as one of the best outdoor bowls tournaments in the world. Over the years, famous bowlers from all leading bowling countries have participated in the event

Hong Kong has won the Pairs title on five occasions and the Hong Kong Team won it in 2007. In the Singles, Hong Kong players George Souza Jnr and Noel Kennedy won their titles in 1984 and 1994, respectively.

The two leading clubs will meet this weekend in a game widely considered as a title decider. While holding the home green advantage, KBGC needs to win this game to maintain any chance of winning the championship.?

Elsewhere in other divisions, Hong Kong Cricket Club became the first team to become champions this season when they won the Men?s Division 4 title. With only two games to go, the team opened up an untouchable 19-point lead over their closest rival. HKCC once was a Division 1 club, but due to the departure of a number of good players they plunged to Division 4 in the past few years. The divisional win will see HKCC climb into Division 3 next season.

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Claudius Lam is an Officer with the Hong Kong Lawn Bowls Association.

Source: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/sports/hong-kong-international-bowls-classic-goes-live-on-tv-301920.html

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Apple: iPhone 5 defect ?normal?

While Titina gave up her teaching career to raise their two children, Claude had a lucrative career as pharmaceutical sales representative. But Claude's lay-off earlier this year, coupled with a $75,000 debt from a previous marriage and $69,000 a year in child support, has sent shock waves through the family's finances. Now seriously considering a move to Titina's home country of Canada, the couple seeks alternative options by speaking with finance expert Farnoosh Torabi.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/technology-blog/apple-iphone-5-defect-normal-180031918.html

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Craft Room: Ribbon Organization

As well as being a?paperholic?I?m also a ribbon hoarder. Bet you find that hard to believe! One glance at my?scrapbook room?and it?s true confessions time. Much of this ribbon has been collected over the years. Yard sales, after Christmas and holiday sales, crafting products from years and years ago, hand me downs and thrifting. Surprisingly, with all this ribbon I?m not a bow maker. I?m sure there?s a great tutorial on Pinterest, but making a pretty bow is not something I?m good at. Collecting ribbon is.

What do I use all this ribbon for? Mostly for scrapbook pages and cards. I just love the added touch they bring. I?m all for tactile in my pages as much as possible. I also use the ribbon in tablescapes and home decor when it gives a special look.

The twin bed we have in the scrapbook room has a great selling point: drawers underneath for storage. Guess what I found to put in them! More ribbon. Imagine that.

This is the prettier version of ribbon storage. Five wooden dowel rods 1/4 inch thick, as the individual ribbon rolls demanded. We hooked off the ends with a washer and hung them up with a eye bolt. Easy and pretty to look at. I tried to organize according to color families. I?m a little OCD like that.

See all those tiny rows of ribbon spools on the bottom row? I won those in a blog drawing quite a while back. Yes, I actually won something! Can?t beat free!

Yes, there?s still more. I used a cd rack (yard sale for $1) and bought baskets at the dollar store to store even more ribbon. Not crazy about the colors but they were inexpensive.

I know. I?m a little obsessed. Don?t tell me husband, k?

I would love for you to see the vinyl wall quote I made for my scrapbook room to inspire me. I also used my Cricut for a family gallery wall in our den.

Source: http://www.martysmusings.net/2012/10/craft-room-ribbon-organization.html

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Yearlong MAGIC climate study launches: Climate instruments mounted aboard the Horizon Spirit container ship begin taking data

ScienceDaily (Oct. 1, 2012) ? A Horizon Lines container ship outfitted with meteorological and atmospheric instruments installed by U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) scientists from Argonne National Laboratory and Brookhaven National Laboratory will begin taking data today for a yearlong mission aimed at improving the representation of clouds in climate models. The study, a collaborative effort between DOE's Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) program Climate Research Facility and Horizon Lines, marks the first official marine deployment of the second ARM Mobile Facility, AMF2, and is likely the most elaborate climate study ever mounted aboard a commercial vessel.

"We are very grateful to Horizon Lines for giving us the opportunity to install our research equipment aboard the Horizon Spirit," said lead investigator Ernie Lewis, an atmospheric scientist at DOE's Brookhaven National Laboratory. The Horizon Spirit makes a roundtrip journey from Los Angeles to Hawaii every two weeks, which allows for repeated measurements over the same transect at different seasons.

"Collecting data on a wide range of atmospheric conditions over an entire year, including the transitions among cloud types along this particular route, will give us a large amount of data to help refine and validate models of Earth's climate," Lewis said.

The project -- dubbed MAGIC, for the Marine ARM GPCI Investigation of Clouds, where GPCI is a project comparing results from the major climate models -- will take place through September 2013.

"We are excited to deploy the AMF2 sensors and the infrastructure that supports them on the Horizon Spirit. This represents the culmination of four years of hard work in designing, building and preparing to deploy aboard an ocean going vessel," said AMF2 Technical Operations Manager Michael Ritsche, an atmospheric scientist at DOE's Argonne National Laboratory.

Clouds and climate

Low marine boundary layer clouds over the ocean exert a large influence on Earth's climate through reflection of sunlight and by mediating interactions between the atmosphere and the ocean, Lewis explained. However, global climate models have difficulty accurately representing these clouds and the transitions among their different types. Extensive data collection from a marine environment with variable cloud cover could significantly improve these models.

Horizon Spirit's route crosses just such a region, making it ideal for assessing the effects of changing cloud conditions. This region is important to a wide range of climate models included in the GPCI project.

"Horizon Spirit's route from Los Angeles to Honolulu lies almost on top of the GPCI line, providing a great opportunity for extensive data collection," said Lewis. "We approached Horizon about working together on this project with the idea that our equipment could be installed on the ship with no disruption of their ordinary operations."

"Horizon Lines is happy to cooperate in the year-long MAGIC project to improve climate modeling," said Pete Strohla, Vice President of Operating Services at Horizon Lines. "Our hope is that better understanding of climate change will facilitate more accurate weather forecasting, which in turn will help our industry plan safer and more fuel-efficient vessel routes."

A group from Argonne in charge of the deployment has spent the past nine months preparing the instruments and optimizing their performance for shipboard data collection. Many instruments, including an aerosol observing system developed by Brookhaven scientists, are housed in three modified 20-foot SeaTainer cargo containers designed for mobile deployment. Other instruments include radars that are mounted to tables designed to maintain stable "vision" despite the inherent rolling of the ship's deck as it plies the waves. All of these instruments were installed aboard the Horizon Spirit while it was in port in Los Angeles in September, with final preparations made while en route to Hawaii and back.

"Altogether, the AMF2 comprises a suite of instruments to measure properties of clouds and precipitation, aerosols, and infrared, visible, and ultraviolet light, as well as meteorological and oceanographic conditions," Lewis said. "These ship-based measurements can provide much more detailed information than can be determined from satellites, and these data will prove a valuable addition to other measurements that have been made in marine conditions, albeit for much shorter periods, for many of these quantities."

The science team -- which includes researchers from DOE's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in addition to Brookhaven, as well as collaborators from NASA, Stony Brook University, and a range of other universities and private consultants -- is anxiously anticipating the data that will arise from this endeavor.

"In the end, these data will greatly enhance our understanding of clouds, aerosols, Earth's energy and water balance, and the interactions among them in the marine environment, providing an unequalled dataset for evaluating and improving climate models. Our data, which will be placed in the ARM Data Archive, will be made available to anyone who is interested."

MAGIC is funded by the DOE Office of Science.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Brookhaven National Laboratory.

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


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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/xLU9sOafMhE/121001111407.htm

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Misconduct, not error, accounts for most scientific paper retractions: 10-fold increase in fraud-related retractions found

ScienceDaily (Oct. 1, 2012) ? In sharp contrast to previous studies suggesting that errors account for the majority of retracted scientific papers, a new analysis -- the most comprehensive of its kind -- has found that misconduct is responsible for two-thirds of all retractions. In the paper, misconduct included fraud or suspected fraud, duplicate publication and plagiarism. The paper's findings show as a percentage of all scientific articles published, retractions for fraud or suspected fraud have increased 10-fold since 1975.

The study, from a collaboration between three scientists including one at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University, published online October 1 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

"Biomedical research has become a winner-take-all game -- one with perverse incentives that entice scientists to cut corners and, in some instances, falsify data or commit other acts of misconduct," said senior author Arturo Casadevall, M.D., Ph.D. , the Leo and Julia Forchheimer Chair and professor of microbiology & immunology and professor of medicine at Einstein. Dr. Casadevall is also editor-in-chief of the journal mBio.

The study reviewed 2,047 papers retracted from the biomedical literature through May 2012. To determine the reasons for the retractions, the researchers consulted several secondary sources, such as the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Research Integrity and Retractionwatch.com, which investigate scientific misconduct.

The researchers found that about 21 percent of the retractions were attributable to error, while 67 percent were due to misconduct, including fraud or suspected fraud (43 percent), duplicate publication (14 percent), and plagiarism (10 percent). Miscellaneous or unknown reasons accounted for the remaining 12 percent.

"What's troubling is that the more skillful the fraud, the less likely that it will be discovered, so there likely are more fraudulent papers out there that haven't yet been detected and retracted," said Dr. Casadevall.

Earlier studies that underestimated the extent of scientific misconduct relied solely on the journals' retraction notices, which are written by the papers' authors, according to Dr. Casadevall. "Many of those notices are wrong," he said. "Authors commonly write, 'We regret we have to retract our paper because the work is not reproducible,' which is not exactly a lie. The work indeed was not reproducible -- because it was fraudulent. Researchers try to protect their labs and their reputations, and these retractions are written in such a way that you often don't know what really happened."

The PNAS study also found that journals with higher impact factors (a measure of a publication's influence in scientific circles) had especially high rates of retractions. Dr. Casadevall attributes the growing number of retracted papers to the prevailing culture in science, which disproportionately rewards scientists for publishing large numbers of papers and getting them published in prestigious journals.

"Particularly if you get your papers accepted in certain journals, you're much more likely to get recognition, grants, prizes and better jobs or promotions," he said. "Scientists are human, and some of them will succumb to this pressure, especially when there's so much competition for funding. Perhaps our most telling finding is what happened after 2005, which is when the number of retractions began to skyrocket. That's exactly when NIH funding began to get very tight."

In a recent article in Infection and Immunity, Dr. Casadevall proposed various solutions to the problem of scientific misconduct, including:

  • more emphasis on the quality of publications rather than quantity
  • less emphasis on impact measures when rating journals
  • fostering a cooperative and collaborative culture in the research community
  • developing more stable and sustainable sources of research funding.
  • creating more flexible career pathways to prevent the ongoing loss of capable scientists due to inadequate funding

The retraction study's findings weren't all gloom and doom. "There is a very optimistic piece of data in the paper," noted Dr. Casadevall: 43 percent of all retractions came from just 38 of the thousands of labs worldwide. "So while we're not looking at a systemic disease, so to speak, in the scientific community, our findings do indicate a significant problem that needs to be addressed."

The paper is titled, "Misconduct accounts for the majority of retracted scientific publications." Additional authors are Ferric Fang, M.D. (University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA) and R. Grant Steen, Ph.D. (Medical Communications Consultants, Chapel Hill, NC).

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Albert Einstein College of Medicine, via Newswise.

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/RgASyHUihFw/121001151949.htm

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Watch These Quadrotor Robots Learn to Play Catch [VIDEO]

TRIPOLI/BENGHAZI, Libya (Reuters) - Hundreds of Libyans handed in weapons left over from last year's war on Saturday, part of a drive by the North African country to rid its streets of arms and crack down on rogue militia groups. As the day went on, a trickle of people turned into longer lines in Tripoli and in the eastern city of Benghazi, where tents were set up in squares for military officials to collect arms, explosives and even rocket propelled grenade launchers. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/watch-quadrotor-robots-learn-play-catch-video-013947173.html

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