Friday, November 30, 2012

Actress Tichina Arnold Talks Weight Loss & Long Distance ...

You know the face and you know the voice. Our beloved Pamela James from 90s hit sitcom ?Martin,? the one and only actress Tichina Arnold hits the purple couch on The Wendy Williams Show this week to talk love, relationships, her latest work and even her take on why she was skeptical about getting tattoos.

The new ?Happily Divorced? television star even shares her weight loss secret and tells us about her recent wedding.?Plus, Tichina reveals how she makes her long distance marriage work and if she wants more kids!

Watch as Tichina strikes a pose with her newly fit figure and be sure to catch her on TV Land tonight at 10:30PM EST. We?re in for a treat.

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Source: http://ipowerrichmond.com/2202702/actress-tichina-arnold-talks-weight-loss-long-distance-relationships/

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Arctic permafrost is melting faster than predicted

We may be closer to a major climate tipping point than we knew. Earth's permafrost ? frozen soil that covers nearly a quarter of the northern hemisphere and traps vast amounts of carbon ? may be melting faster than thought and releasing more potent greenhouse gasses.

The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) released a report yesterday reviewing the most up-to-date research on Arctic permafrost. It claims temperature projections due in 2014 from the International Panel on Climate Change are "likely to be biased on the low side" because the IPCC does not take into account the positive feedback cycle of permafrost melting and releasing greenhouse gases.

"Overall, these observations indicate that large-scale thawing of the permafrost may already have started", the UNEP report warns. It calls on governments to monitor permafrost in greater detail and urges communities in permafrost areas to develop plans for managing any damage to infrastructure caused by the frozen soil melting.

But even these calls might be downplaying both the extent of the melting and the severity of the warming it could cause, according to NASA researchers doing groundbreaking research. Using a plane flying just 150 metres above the ground, the team has been measuring levels of both carbon dioxide and methane above the Arctic.

Elevated values

The NASA team has not yet finished analysing the data, some of which will be presented at the American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco next week. But preliminary results are already suggesting that levels of greenhouse gases in some Arctic areas are much higher than climate models have predicted, says Charles Miller of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, the principal investigator on the Carbon in Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment (CARVE).

"I have been surprised by some of the elevated values that we've seen," he says. That indicates the permafrost is melting faster than expected.

The early findings also suggest that more methane ? a greenhouse gas that is about 25 times more powerful than carbon dioxide over 100 years ? is being released than models have predicted. The result agrees with other recent studies. Miller says climate models do not have a good grasp on how much methane will be emitted by the melting permafrost.

Pep Canadell, executive director of the Global Carbon Project in Canberra, Australia, says one exciting aspect of the NASA project is its attempt to locate where these greenhouse gases are coming from.

By flying at low altitude, the team is able to measure changes in the levels of gases over much smaller distances and time intervals than previous research flights, which have flown about 2 kilometres higher. "Those get measurements on a regional scale," says Miller. "There's a great deal of local information to be found flying this close to the surface."

Miller says the factors driving the release of gases are found on these small scales. "The vegetation, the relative heights of the land and the water table ? these so called 'micro-topographic' variabilities really seem to be driving what's going on in terms of release of carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere."

Early warning

Another benefit of finer-grained measurements is their ability to give early warning of that major change ? a large methane release for instance ? is under way. Miller says they have no evidence for this as yet.

The team are also doing a lot more repeat measurements over a much longer period of time. Whereas previous studies have typically had four or five flight days over a six-week period, CARVE has flown for two weeks per month between April and October this year, its first year of experiments. It will carry out the same pattern of flights over the next four years.

One big question is how much of the 1700 billion tonnes of carbon locked in the permafrost as frozen organic matter will be released as methane and how much as CO2if there is a thaw. Miller says that if the region gets warmer and drier, the microbes that thrive will be the type that produce CO2. But if it gets warmer and wetter, they will tend to produce more of the potent methane.

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Why is the Supreme Court Interested in Patent Cases? | IPWatchdog ...

Seth Waxman

Have you ever wondered why the Supreme Court is taking so many patent cases over the last few years? ?In Part I of my interview with Seth Waxman?we learned that while he was the Solicitor General of the United States, and even before ascending to that position, he advocated within the Department of Justice for at least occasionally seeking Supreme Court review of Federal Circuit cases. That lead from a trickle of cases to what has become a handful of cases year after year.

Personally I think there are plenty of cases that the Federal Circuit gets wrong and should be taken by the Supreme Court to get things correct. But that is now what the Supreme Court does. ?They are looking for meaty issues, not just to get some esoteric point of patent law correct. In fact, it is my observation that the more esoteric and the more incorrect the Federal Circuit the less likely the Supreme Court will get involved. But that is just my view from the sidelines.

Waxman, steeped in the rules, procedures and art of Supreme Court advocacy drills down deeper.

WAXMAN: Well, I think it?s a combination of several different things.? When you?re talking about patent decisions of the Federal Circuit, for purposes of answering this question it?s useful to distinguish between rulings about litigation procedure in patent cases and rulings about the meaning of substantive patent law.? With respect to the former, it?s easy to see why the Supreme Court?s interest would be piqued if a petitioner says, as it did for example in Medimmune, ?there?s a general rule that applies across all the regional circuits with respect to standing in declaratory judgment actions. ?But the Federal Circuit applies a different ?rule ?in patent cases.?? That is just the kind of disuniformity the Supreme Court is looking for.? It?s proverbial ?split in the circuits? that the Court feels it needs to address ? where a particular law or set of procedures is being interpreted or applied differently in one part of the country than another.

The paradigmatic role of the Supreme Court is to harmonize the application of federal law across the country.? So when different circuits are at loggerheads about what a particular law means, or how a particular doctrine is applied, only the Supreme Court can resolve it.? Several of the cases the Supreme Court has taken from the Federal Circuit in recent years have involved ?procedures sanction by the Federl Circuit that ddidn?t strike the Supreme Court as warranted a patent-exceptional. The declaratory judgment standard was one obvious example.

Another was the eBay case, involving the standrds for ?injunctive relief was another.? The other packet of cases are cases that annunciate substantive patent principles.? The test for obviousness.? The standard of review when one is challenging patent validity based on art that the examiner never had, arguably never had before him or her.? Subject matter eligibility for new life forms, or software, or things like that.? And there I think the Court is taking cases where it genuinely is skeptical about whether the Federal Circuit has decided the issue correctly.? And you can say that the Federal Circuit is sort of unique in this regard because by and large the Supreme Court doesn?t view its role, surprisingly, as one of error correction.? It?s not grounds for certiorari on the grounds that the 4th circuit, the 8th circuit, or the 9th circuit just decided it?s wrong.? They are looking principally for cases in which the Supreme Court is the only court that can resolve a lack of uniformity across the country.

With respect to substantive patent law, obviously that never applies because the Federal Circuit has exclusive jurisdiction so that there?s rarely an instance, maybe Coronado vs. Holmes might be some sort of example to the contrary, but there rarely is a split in the Circuits over the standard for determining obviousness with respect to a patent because no other court of appeals is ever going to answer that question.? And therefore it?s appropriate for the Supreme Court of the United States to assure itself that in fact the Federal Circuit, which has specialized jurisdiction, is in fact answering significant questions of patent doctrine in a way that the majority of the Supreme Court thinks is correct.? And that certainly characterizes a number of patent cases that the Supreme Court has taken in recent years.

The other thing I think that?s at play here, and maybe it?s the principal reason is a point that I made earlier which is our economy depends utterly on intellectual property.? That is in fostering innovation and inventiveness in the manner in which the framers of the Constitution understood needed to be fostered.? That is within appropriately countered system of protections for discoveries and inventions and novel expression.? But that doesn?t smother innovation by competitors and by others.? And because our economy is so utterly tied to intellectual property the Supreme Court correctly understands that this is a substantive area in which it is very, very important for the correct balance to be struck.

And I think the final reason for the increase in the cases is maybe the same reason that I?m attracted to doing cases like this, which is they are just darn interesting as an intellectual matter.? You get to learn about a technology that you don?t know as much about as you need to to decide a case.? And you get to learn and scrutinize and question the contours of substantive legal doctrine that you?re not otherwise familiar with.? I don?t know how comforting that is the Patent Bar.

QUINN: That?s what I was just going to say.? And I would agree with what you say, but to hear you articulate it just makes me want to sigh and say that?s exactly why I?m scared when the Supreme Court takes a case, because I understand when you look at this globally, why should patents be different?? And the argument that I always hear is is well, copyrights are an exclusive right and you?re doing it different from copyright law.? But for better or for worse since practically the beginning of intellectual property law in the United States, copyrights have been different than patents.? They?re calling them an exclusive right is almost comical because there are so many ways that you can use a copyright that directly infringes, that copies the entirety of what you?re doing that is okay.? And it?s not exclusive.? Fair use swallows these rights whole in a lot of cases.? And there is no concept of fair use in patent matters.? But how do you lay the foundation to explain that, no, these things are different?? When you can?t get an injunction as a matter of right after you?ve won, then what good is the patent because the patent is supposed to be practically an injunction when the Patent Office gives it to you.? It says, don?t do this stuff and if you do you?re going to get punished.

WAXMAN:?You?re certainly preaching to the choir on this issue.

QUINN: I know I am.

WAXMAN: But I think you?ve identified something that?s actually quite important. Which is in an era in which the Supreme Court is increasingly interested in the contours of patent law and practice.? And in which therefore most of the judges on the Federal Circuit are trying very hard to decide cases and write their opinions so that they are accessible by the Supreme Court of the United States and are written in a manner that?s sensitive to the reality that they are subject to review by not just a higher court by a court of generalists.? It?s extremely important for advocates before the Federal Circuit in anything other than the run of the mill claim construction dispute to advocate the case in a way that is sensitive to the way that whatever issues that are going to be decided may look to the Supreme Court, may look to Congress, may look to generalists generally.? And I think many of the Federal Circuit judges welcome help in this regard, welcome advocacy that?s sensitive to this new reality.? And which in the end may be all to the good.? That is having a clubby isolated bar and bench that understands all these things and the advocacy is pitched to specialists and the specialists write opinions that are intelligible to and useful for the cognoscenti is fine if you fell in that cone.? But if you?re not, it?s not that helpful and in a system in which the final review in the judiciary or in the? legislator is made by generalists it?s really important that cases be? even in a specialized area, be briefed and argued in a way that?s accessible to and intelligible by generalists.? And it may be another reason why it seems particularly edifying to me to be a resolute generalist as to all areas of the law.? And makes it less intimidating to argue patent cases before a specialized court.

TO BE CONTINUED?

Part I ??Exclusive with Seth Waxman, Supreme Court Patent Superstar

Part II ??Seth Waxman Discusses Advocacy in the Supreme Court

Source: http://www.ipwatchdog.com/2012/11/27/why-is-the-supreme-court-interested-in-patent-cases/id=30523/

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Crew picked for 1-year space station flight

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Nine radar images of asteroid 2007 PA8

ScienceDaily (Nov. 27, 2012) ? A collage shows nine radar images of near-Earth asteroid 2007 PA8 that were obtained between Oct. 31 and Nov. 13, 2012, with data collected by NASA's 230-foot-wide (70-meter) Deep Space Network antenna at Goldstone, Calif. On Nov. 5 at 8:42 a.m. PST (11:42 a.m. EST/16:42 UTC), the object came about 4 million miles (6.5 million kilometers) from Earth, or 17 times the distance between Earth and the moon.

The images of 2007 PA8 reveal possible craters, boulders, an irregular, asymmetric shape, and very slow rotation. The asteroid measures approximately one mile wide (about 1.6 kilometers).

Each panel shows one image per day, and all of them are oriented so rotation is counterclockwise. Each image is shown at the same scale and covers 1.1 miles (1.7 kilometers) from top to bottom. The resolution of the images varies from day to day as the asteroid's distance changed. The images achieve resolutions as fine as 12 feet (3.75 meters) per pixel on Nov. 5 and 6, when the asteroid was closest. The resolution was 25 feet (7.5 meters) per pixel on Nov. 2, 3 and 8, and 62 feet (18.75 meters) per pixel on Oct. 31 and Nov. 11 to 13.

New radar measurements of 2007 PA8's distance and line-of-sight velocity refined calculations of its orbit about the sun, enabling reliable computation of the asteroid's motion for the next 632 years. 2007 PA8 is not a threat to Earth. The 2012 flyby was the closest since 1880. The next flyby with Earth closer than the one that occurred this year will be in 2488, when the asteroid will approach no closer than 3.6 million miles (5.8 million kilometers).

NASA detects, tracks and characterizes asteroids and comets passing close to Earth using both ground- and space-based telescopes. The Near-Earth Object Observations Program, commonly called "Spaceguard," discovers these objects, characterizes a subset of them, and plots their orbits to determine if any could be potentially hazardous to our planet.

JPL manages the Near-Earth Object Program Office for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. JPL is a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

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


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://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/11/121127145950.htm

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

ConAgra to buy Ralcorp for $5 billion, to be No.1 in store-brand foods

(Reuters) - Long-time suitor ConAgra Foods Inc finally sealed a deal to buy Ralcorp Holdings Inc for $5 billion to become the biggest private label food company in North America.

Ralcorp shareholders will receive $90 per share in cash, a premium of 28.2 percent to the stock's Monday close, ConAgra said in a statement.

ConAgra, the maker of Chef Boyardee pastas and Slim Jim meat snacks, began its pursuit of Ralcorp in March 2011 with an offer of $84 per share.

The company raised its bid twice but Ralcorp spurned them, including the then-final offer of $94 per share, which valued Ralcorp at $5.2 billion.

Ralcorp chose instead to spin off its cereals business into Post Holdings Inc earlier this year.

With Tuesday's deal, the combined market value of Ralcorp and Post is about $6.12 billion, showing that Ralcorp was able to extract a much higher price than last year's bids.

Davenport & Co analyst Ann Gurkin said ConAgra did not overpay since the deal would result in a very lucrative private label business.

"Ralcorp with ConAgra's private label portfolio will make a very strong combination," Gurkin told Reuters, adding her main concern about the deal was successful and timely integration.

ConAgra said the acquisition will create the largest private label packaged food business in North America, with about $4.5 billion in combined annual sales of store-branded products.

ConAgra's shares were up 6 percent at $29.93 before the bell on Tuesday, after closing at $28.29 on the New York Stock Exchange on Monday.

Ralcorp shares were trading at $88.50. They closed at $70.23 on Monday.

The deal is a big win for activist investor Corvex Management, Ralcorp's largest shareholder, which in August demanded that the food manufacturer either sell itself, buy another company or change its strategy after a series of earnings disappointments.

Ralcorp reported on Tuesday a fourth-quarter net loss of $44.2 million, or 80 cents per share, on revenue of $1.07 billion.

The deal is valued at $6.8 billion including debt, ConAgra said.

The deal, which was approved by the boards of both companies, will add to earnings in the first year, ConAgra said.

Centerview Partners and BofA Merrill Lynch are financial advisers to ConAgra, while Barclays and Goldman Sachs & Co are advising Ralcorp.

(Reporting by Siddharth Cavale in Bangalore and Dhanya Skariachan in New York; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/conagra-acquire-ralcorp-5-billion-121828953--finance.html

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U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree arrives (cbsnews)

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Retinal implant could let visually impaired 'see' Braille

5 hrs.

An "artificial eye" is still a long ways off, but researchers have made the low-resolution devices now available useful in a new way.?Instead of trying to replace vision entirely, they only "translate" text, presenting it to the user in a more familiar format: Braille.

Today's retinal implants are promising and allow people suffering from certain kinds of visual disability to see very rough shapes and contrasts. But with a resolution of only a few hundred total pixels, they are unable to display the world in anything but the lowest fidelity.

But replicating vision isn't just about the view. Sighted people take the ability to read things like?street signs and menus for granted, but not only is this difficult or impossible for most visually-impaired?people, there are relatively few accommodations available, as there are for things like crossing the street or using an ATM.

With this in mind, the team at Second Sight decided to modify?an Argus II retinal implant system, in which visual signals are presented to the retina in the form of electrical signals. They hooked the built-in camera up to software that translates text it sees into Braille, and then sent that signal on to be displayed by the implanted electrode arrays.

Low resolution isn't a problem for Braille, since letters are represented as dots in a three-by-two grid rather than using the lines and curves of standard glyphography. In testing, they would show up to four letters at a time ? not efficient for reading longer sentences, but?enough to quickly differentiate between "left" and "right," "open" and "closed," or "men" and "women."

Their test subject?had limited success with the system: Already a user of Braille and the Argus II implant, he was able to identify letters correctly 89 percent of the time. But as the length of the word grew, success rate fell.

Still, any improvement over the previous system, in which the highly pixelated image could barely show letters or words at all, would surely be welcome to users of the implant. While for reading books and articles, Braille is much faster, that option doesn't exist for many signs and other pieces of writing.

At the moment, retinal implants are still something of a rarity; while hundreds of thousands could potentially benefit from the technology, they are still in a relatively early stage of development and have not yet entered widespread clinical testing. But whenever they start to be prescribed to the general population, having helpful alternative modes like this one could be very important to the people for whom they are intended.

The paper describing the research, "Reading visual braille with a retinal prosthesis," appeared recently?in "Frontiers in Neuroprosthetics." The lead author is?Thomas Lauritzen of Second Sight, in collaboration with colleagues from?Brigham Young University and two French vision research institutes.

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBC?News Digital. His personal website is?coldewey.cc.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/retinal-implant-could-let-visually-impaired-see-braille-1C7265442

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Students at cooperative schools are more engaged

ScienceDaily (Nov. 26, 2012) ? Student engagement is not independent of the type of school attended. Nor is it independent of the organisational development of the school. The school's organisational style affects the work of its teaching staff, which, in turn, has repercussions on the performance and engagement of their students. As Iker Ros, the UPV/EHU researcher, has been able to verify in his PhD thesis, these factors vary when comparing public schools, subsidised schools and co-operative schools, the latter being the ones that fare best.

"The study of engagement is a subject that motivates me a lot, because I believe that a student who is engaged with his or her school is also engaged with his or her environment," says Iker Ros. As a PhD holder in Psychopedagogy, he has analysed the differences in the organisational development of schools by looking at their typology and the level of engagement of their students, and highlights that the best results were achieved at the associated work co-operative school in Vitoria-Gasteiz (Basque Country).

The study was carried out with students from primary and secondary school. The thesis is entitled "Desarrolloorganizacional de unacooperativa de trabajoasociado y la Implicaci?n de sus estudiantes y docentes" (Organisational Development of an associated work cooperative and the Engagement of its students and teaching staff) and some of his conclusions have been published recently in the Revista de Psicodid?ctica.

The greater the organisational development, the more engagement there is

According to the results, organisational development is higher in a co-operative than in subsidised schools, and public schools come between the two. "We have established highly significant statistical differences," explains Ros; "you have to bear in mind that the associated work co-operative is much more horizontal. In schools of this kind people collaborate more, and this leads to greater organisational learning. They are organisations that learn."

As far as the students are concerned, it has also been the students at a co-operative school who have displayed the greatest engagement, while those of the public schools are the most hostile. "If the biggest difference in the engagement of the workers is to be found between the co-operative and the subsidised schools, the same thing does not happen with respect to the students. The biggest difference emerges between the co-operative and the public schools, which indicates to us that work clearly needs to be done with the students attending public schools which, despite having a more similar organisational development, have less engagement," reflects Ros.

This engagement is made up of three elements: the emotional or psychological aspect, translated into the feeling of belonging to the school; the behavioural element, which is extracted from the data on student participation in teaching and extramural activities; and the cognitive element that has to do with the students' perception of academic work and future expectations. "It is a subject that is of great educational importance in the Anglo-Saxon sphere and in China and Taiwan as well," stresses the author, "but studies on the subject have not yet been published here."

Ros has also detected differences with respect to the sex and age of the students. For example, engagement is greater among girls than among boys, and in both cases falls with age, above all at secondary school and sixth form levels.

In this study the author also wanted to check whether the teaching staff is the factor that most influences the students, as established by previous pieces of research. On the basis of the hypothesis that the greater the organisational development is, the greater and better the work of the teaching staff is, and consequently the greater student engagement is, Ros believes that the results leave no room for doubt. "The results seem to indicate that, in actual fact, the work of the teacher and his/her engagement would need to be better considered, but this is being undermined today at a time of cutbacks," he stresses. In this respect, Ros foresees an increase in the number of associated work co-operative schools due primarily to two factors: firstly, the economic crisis, and the fall in the number of members of religious orders who are putting the management of their schools into the hands of teachers through co-operative formulas.

The research was carried out at 14 public (10) and subsidised (4) schools in the Basque Country and Catalonia -- in collaboration with the Autonomous University of Barcelona -- ; and at an associated work co-operative school in Vitoria-Gasteiz. A total of 1,273 students between 9 and 17, and 343 teachers participated in the study.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Iker Ros, Javier Goikoetxea, Joaqu?n Gair?n, Pablo Lekue. Student Engagement in the School: Interpersonal and Inter-Center Differences // Implicaci?n del alumnado en la escuela: diferencias interindividuales e intercentros. Revista de Psicodidactica / Journal of Psychodidactics, 2012; DOI: 10.1387/RevPsicodidact.4557

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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/top_news/top_health/~3/M3AyDIHJssM/121126142951.htm

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Monday, November 26, 2012

How would you change the Huawei Ascend P1?

How would you change the Huawei Ascend P1

2012 was the year Huawei stepped out of the OEM shadows and make a "name" for itself. That hasn't been the smoothest process, but political wrangling aside, what about the phones themselves? Huawei's Ascend P1 has a slender body (and a chubby camera module), marred by a flimsy plastic shell and 4GB of on-board storage. However, it more than made up for its failings in the performance stakes, but what did you think about it? Did you buy one, and if so, what would you change?

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/25/hwyc-ascend-p1/

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Maine should 'divorce' legal, ceremonial aspects of marriage ...

The voters of Maine have spoken, and same-sex marriage will soon be legal in the state.

There are undoubtedly those in the voting minority who feel their religious or cultural beliefs are harmed by the referendum result. Those in the voting majority may also feel hurt because their basic civil rights are still being questioned. How do we bridge this clash of values between civil rights and religious or moral beliefs?

Before and during the same-sex marriage referendum campaign, others, and I, began advocating a separation between the legal recognition of a relationship between a loving couple and the celebratory observance. I believe Maine should now, as a result of this election, ?divorce? the civil rights of couples from the celebrations, religious or otherwise, of their relationship.

Examples of these civil rights, previously available to married couples but not domestic partners, included tax and other financial advantages, transfers and inheritance of property, court testimony, child custody and health care and survivor benefits. These and all other rights will now be available to any legally married couple.

Currently, the legal knot between a couple can be tied by a notary public, a lawyer, a judge or an ordained member of the clergy in Maine. (It can also be performed with a temporary authorization by someone who is not a Maine resident). I believe the state of Maine could, and should, determine that the civil and legal rights of couples ought to be conferred only by a notary public, a lawyer or a judge. This could be called a ?civil union? or ?marriage? or any term the state chooses to give it.

The sanctification, celebration or confirmation of the relationship, with no legal aspects to it, could be performed by an ordained clergy member, or any other person chosen by the couple. This could be called a ?wedding? or ?commitment ceremony? or ?marriage? or whatever term the public and participants give to that event. Couples would not need to go through this second ceremony to gain all the legal rights that any couple currently ?married? now has.

While this separation doesn?t resolve all differences of viewpoints, it does more easily allow those with opposite views to maintain their own beliefs about what we now call ?marriage.? Those who want equal rights and treatment will get it through the legal ceremony; those who want to maintain their own religious and cultural ideas of what ?marriage? means to them will have it through their ?commitment? or ?wedding? ceremony.

This redefinition of who can perform ?marriages? creates a clearer separation between church and government, which has been a cornerstone of our political system for centuries. That blurred line has been a major part of the conflict surrounding marriage, since those with religious beliefs against same-sex marriage have opposed it, in part, because they see marriage as both a religious and legal institution.

This separation would clarify what the government?s role should be ? ensuring that certain classes of people are guaranteed their legal rights ? and where it shouldn?t have a role ? in how couples celebrate their relationship.

With this ?divorce? of civil rights from ceremony, religion wouldn?t have to worry as much about government telling it how to perform weddings, and same-sex marriage advocates wouldn?t have to be as concerned with religion trying to define loving relationships in a way that denies some couples their legal rights.

The 2013 Maine Legislature could accomplish this ?divorce? by altering those authorized ?to solemnize marriages? in Title 19-A of the Maine statutes. Currently, it includes justices or judges, lawyers who are admitted to the Maine Bar, notary publics, ordained clergy and nonresidents who obtain a ?temporary registration certificate.?

By limiting the right to ?solemnize? to only justices or judges, lawyers and notary publics, it would be clear that the ceremony was specifically for legal purposes. Couples could then celebrate and confirm their relationship in any way they chose ? religiously or nonreligiously, with or without clergy, or not at all.

I hope the Maine Legislature will consider and pass this change in the 2013 session.

Larry Dansinger of Monroe is a community organizer and works on projects for the nonviolent resolution of conflicts.

Source: http://bangordailynews.com/2012/11/25/opinion/maine-should-divorce-legal-ceremonial-aspects-of-marriage/

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Video: Prince Charles ?impatient? about life goals



>>> the british tabloids are reading a lot into some recent comments from him. keir, good morning to you.

>> reporter: hey, savannah, good morning. you know, prince charles is now in his mid-60s, a time when many people's thoughts turn to what they want to do next. what he was saying in these comments is he wants to finish restoring one of his stately homes , but some think it is a reference by the future king to when he might get to move into this home. prince charles has seen his eldest son married and watched his mother celebrate 60 years on the throne. yet still he waits for the day when he will be king.

>> reporter: in british history no heir apparent has had to wait so long. now at 64, in an outburst of frustration, he has betrayed a hint of mortality.

>> impatient, me? what a thing to suggest. yes, of course, i am. i'll run out of time, soon.

>> reporter: i'll have snuffed it if i'm not careful.

>> reporter: even though he was officially talking about work to restore a stately home , humphries house. charles is famously one of the hardest working royals, running charities and speaking out on issues he cares about, like global warming .

>> if we do not create a big shift in our thinking and approach, humanity and the earth will soon begin to suffer some very grim consequences.

>> reporter: but he worries that the clock is ticking for him, too. his mood made worse perhaps by a recent poll that found prince charles less popular even than his new daughter-in-law. the same survey discovering the british like charles a lot less than the queen and even his son who is also waiting to be king.

>> perhaps camilla and charles are in the sandwich generation of royals. okay, they are respected but between the queen and william and kate don't get much of a lookp doesn't matter what the public thinks. charles will be king one day.

>> reporter: charles represents his mom. on a tour of australia last month, a successful trip, the crowd not as excited for william and kate. later in new zealand he spent his birthday on the set of the new movie "the hobbit. ".

>> the on this special day, your birthday, i offer myself at the request of sir peter jackson for you to come on as you see fit.

>> reporter: one day prince charles will be in command of an entire nation. but he may still be a few birthdays short of becoming king. royal experts say the queen will never give up the throne, not before she dies. she sees it at her duty. and, of course, savannah, the queen is still a young 86. her mother, the queen mother, lived to 100 which by my math prince charles may have to wait until he's 79.

>> what do they say, long live the king?

>> or in the words of the hobbit --

>> being a royal might stink sometimes. you can't talk about the hard life you've got going there.

>> pardon me while i take my crown off and talk about how rough it is.

>> you can't refinish your castle without reading into your remarks.

>> if he was truly talking about the house.

>> the flowy shirts and the pregnancy.

>> if that's the worst thing that happens to you in a day, still doing good.

>> a little bit of a

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/49963801/

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Obama may get chance to end Benghazi PR disaster

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The White House could finally have its chance to close the books on its Benghazi public relations disaster, as key Republicans signal they might not stand in the way of U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice to become the next secretary of state.

"I think she deserves the ability and the opportunity to explain herself and her position," Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., told "Fox News Sunday." ''But she's not the problem. The problem is the president of the United States," who, McCain said, misled the public on terrorist involvement.

Rice is widely seen as President Barack Obama's top pick to replace Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as the nation's top diplomat. But Rice's reputation took a serious hit this fall when she relied on unclassified talking points provided by the intelligence community that portrayed the attack in Benghazi, Libya, as a spontaneous assault by a mob angered by an anti-Muslim video posted on YouTube.

Intelligence officials quickly amended their assessment to conclude the attack hadn't been related to other film protests across the Middle East. But that revised narrative was slow to reach the public, prompting Republicans to allege a White House cover-up ahead of the Nov. 6 election.

The attack killed Ambassador Chris Stevens, a State Department computer specialist and two former Navy SEALs who were working as contract security guards.

McCain's remarks were in contrast to his previous stance that Rice wasn't qualified to replace Clinton, who is expected to step down soon, and that he would do "whatever is necessary" to block Rice's possible nomination.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, McCain's close friend and colleague on the Senate Armed Services Committee, told ABC's "This Week" he still suspects the White House intentionally glossed over obvious terrorist links in the attack to keep voters from questioning Obama's handling of national security.

But instead of repeating his prior assertion that he was "dead set" against a Rice promotion, Graham suggested he looked forward to hearing her out. If Rice were nominated, "there will be a lot of questions asked of her about this event and others," said Graham, R-S.C.

The subtle shift in GOP tenor on Rice could be the result of internal grumblings on how far to take party opposition. Democrats picked up extra Senate seats in the election to maintain their narrow majority, making it that much harder for the remaining 45 Republicans to block the president's nominees.

One senior GOP Senate aide said Sunday that Republicans hadn't united against Rice and were not convinced she was worth going after. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the aide was not authorized to speak publicly on internal GOP deliberations.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-may-chance-end-benghazi-pr-disaster-082741024--politics.html

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Gone spear hunting: Ancestors used stone spear tips 500,000 years ago

Stone spear tips from South Africa date to 500,000 years ago, says new research. Human ancestors were hunting with stone spears about 200,000 years earlier than scientists previously thought.

By Malcom Ritter,?Associated Press / November 16, 2012

This stone spear tip (shown from different angles) from Kathu Pan, South Africa, may be 500,000 years old, according to a study published in the journal Science.

(AP Photo/Jayne Wilkins)

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Scientists say they've found evidence that stone tips for spears were made much earlier than thought, maybe even created by an earlier ancestor than has been believed.

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Both Neanderthals and members of our own species, Homo sapiens, used stone tips ? a significant development that made spears more effective, lethal hunting weapons. The new findings from South Africa suggest that maybe they didn't invent that technology, but inherited it from their last shared ancestor, Homo heidelbergensis.

The researchers put the date of the South African stone tips at about half-a-million years ago ? 200,000 years earlier than other research has suggested.

RECOMMENDED: Are you scientifically literate? Take the quiz

The new study involved analyzing stone points, a bit less than 3 inches (8 centimeters) long on average, that had been excavated about 30 years ago. Scientists had previously estimated they were about 500,000 years old, but it wasn't clear whether they were used as spear tips or some other kind of tool, said Jayne Wilkins, a researcher at the University of Toronto and lead author of the new report.

So she and her co-authors looked for evidence that the artifacts were spear tips, focusing on the way they were shaped and fractured. The pattern of damage along their edges fit in with what researchers found when they made copies of the artifacts and thrust them into the carcasses of antelopes.

From the age of the stone tips, the researchers suggest the technology may have been used by Homo heidelbergensis.

Sally McBrearty, an anthropology professor at the University of Connecticut who was not involved in the study, said it's clear that the South African artifacts are spear points. She said she sees no logical reason to doubt the trove is 500,000 years old, but she said she'd like to see some firmer proof.

"I would be happy to say that this is really half-a-million years old, I just want to be sure that it is," she said.

There's some room for doubt because of assumptions required in the dating technique and the geology of the South African site where the points were found, she said. Further sampling and analysis could firm up the evidence for the age, she said.

RECOMMENDED: Are you scientifically literate? Take the quiz

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/ENUmcDPdHas/Gone-spear-hunting-Ancestors-used-stone-spear-tips-500-000-years-ago

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Backed Or Whacked: An NFC Reader And Writer For iOS That Developers Can Hack

Backed or Whacked logoEditor?s note:?Ross Rubin?is principal analyst at Reticle Research and blogs at Techspressive. No, the Flomio FloJack doesn't track stolen boats with GPS. In the spirit of the Square credit card reader, the device plugs into the headphone jack of mobile iOS or legacy Android mobile devices to read and write data via NFC.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/KjnVd24Qvhc/

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Sunday, November 25, 2012

Harley-Davidson? Billiard Starter Kit Review | Recreation Smarts

November 2012 Deal Alert: See below for the link to the?Billiard Starter Kit Deal on Amazon

A Great Gift Idea- the Harley Davidson Billiard Starter Kit!

For most Harley-Davidson owners, there is a great pride in not just the machine they own, but for all things Harley-Davidson. There is no shortage of HD branded apparel and products available for the biking enthusiast. One such product that has proven to be quite popular with the Harley-Davidson crowd is the Harley-Davidson Billiard Starter Kit. This item combines two natural ?loves? of the stereotypical biker; billiards and Harley-Davidson!

This HD branded billiard set is a fantastic way for the owner to state his allegiance. The Harley Billiard Starter Set has everything that the pool player needs to enjoy his favorite indoor sport. Two 58-inch maple wood pool cues are included in the kit. These beautiful cues are designed to break down into two parts for easy storage and\or transportation, and can quickly be screwed back together for use. A full size bridge, which enables the player to make difficult shots, is also standard fare in this kit. To keep the pool cues accurate, a box of blue pool cue chalk, branded in Harley-Davidson logos, is also a part of the set. A cue repair kit is also standard with this amazing offering.

A full set of regulation size and weight pool balls is included. These pool balls, color-coded to match their appropriate number, also sport the winged Harley-Davidson logo. Regulation play billiard balls are either solid or striped according to their odd or even numbering. This starter kit also comes with two different ball racks; one for ?traditional? billiards and one for playing eight ball billiards. A set of two brushes, one for rails and the other for the table itself are a nice compliment to this attractive set. Finally, a vinyl pool table cover emblazoned with the Harley-Davidson logo completes this collection. This complete billiards set is a must-have for those who shoot pool and share a love of all things Harley-Davidson!

Click Here For The?Billiard Starter Kit Deal at Amazon

Compare the?Billiard Starter Kit to other similar products, check ratings and read customer reviews.

Product prices and availability are accurate as of Nov 23 20:22:14 UTC but are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on the merchant site at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.

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Source: http://recreationsmarts.com/harley-davidson-billiard-starter-kit-review/

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Cause of Mass. gas blast that hurt 18 being probed

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) ? Dozens of building inspectors began assessing homes and businesses in one of New England's biggest cities on Saturday, a day after a natural gas explosion leveled a strip club located next to a day care and heavily damaged a dozen other structures. The blast injured 18 people, many of them first responders.

Investigators were trying to figure out what caused the Friday night blast in Springfield that could be heard for miles, left a large hole in the ground where the multistory brick building housing Scores Gentleman's Club once stood and scattered debris over several blocks.

Officials had already evacuated part of the entertainment district after responding to a gas leak and odor reported about an hour before the explosion while firefighters, police officers and gas company workers were in the area filled with commercial properties and residences.

"It really is a miracle and it's an example of our public safety officials, each and every day, putting themselves in harm's way, taking what could have been considered a very routine call of an odor of gas, but they took the proper precautions," State Fire Marshal Stephen Coan said. "And thanks to God that they did."

Officials also marveled how the 5:30 p.m. blast occurred when a day care center next door was closed. The center's building was heavily damaged.

Lt. Gov. Tim Murray and Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno were attending a tree-lighting ceremony when the explosion occurred. Sarno said some people mistakenly thought the boom was part of the holiday event.

The explosion blew out windows in a three-block radius, leaving at least three buildings irreparably damaged and causing emergency workers to evacuate a six-story apartment building that was buckling, police said. Pieces of broken glass littered streets and sidewalks. It was unclear how many residents had been evacuated. A shelter was set up at a school.

Omar Fermin, manager of the Punta Cana Restaurant two blocks from the explosion site, found the floor-to-ceiling windows blasted out when he came to check on the property Saturday morning.

"It looks like an earthquake hit," said Fermin, a native of the Dominican Republic. "I've never seen anything like it."

He said he was waiting for somebody to come and assess the damage. He worried the restaurant would remain closed for weeks while the owner seeks to replace the massive custom-made windows.

Authorities cordoned off the center of the explosion Saturday morning as building inspectors worked to identify unsafe structures. Anxious residents gathered at the perimeter, waiting for permission to visit their buildings.

Dogs trapped in abandoned buildings barked out loudly Saturday as building inspectors fanned out across the area. One inspector said he wished he could get a ladder and permission to retrieve a dog that was barking in the upper floor of one building sealed off from residents.

Coan, the fire marshal, said his office was investigating a cause of the blast and its possible origin. The state's Department of Public Utilities was also investigating.

Sheila Doiron, a spokeswoman for Columbia Gas of Massachusetts, said the company will continue to monitor for any potential leaks within several blocks of the blast site. So far, she said, the company hadn't yet found any measurable readings.

Doiron said the company also didn't find in its records any gas odor calls to the area where the strip club was located.

The victims were taken to two hospitals in the city. None of their injuries was considered life-threatening, officials said. Those injured were nine firefighters, two police officers, four Columbia Gas workers, two civilians and another city employee.

Springfield, which is 90 miles west of Boston and has about 150,000 residents, is the largest city in western Massachusetts. It's known as the home of the Basketball Hall of Fame, which is not in the vicinity of the blast.

The city has been rebuilding from damage it sustained in a June 2011 tornado.

On Friday night, residents milled around the neighborhood where the explosion occurred, stunned by the destruction and confused by the cordoned-off area, which grew as crews continued to search for gas leaks. The mayor warned against looting, saying police would be out in force.

Wayne Davis, who lives about a block away from the destroyed building, said he felt his apartment shake.

"I was laying down in bed, and I started feeling the building shaking and creaking," he said.

The Navy veteran said the boom from the explosion was louder than anything he'd ever heard, including the sound of a jet landing on an aircraft carrier.

The blast was so loud it was heard in several neighboring communities. Video from WWLP-TV showed the moment of the explosion, with smoke billowing into the air above the neighborhood.

___

Associated Press writers Rodrique Ngowi, Bridget Murphy and Bob Salsberg in Boston and Jessica Hill in Springfield contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cause-mass-gas-blast-hurt-18-being-probed-170621239.html

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No. 3 Georgia blows out hapless Ga. Tech 42-10

Georgia running back Keith Marshall (4) dives for a touchdown as Georgia Tech safety Isaiah Johnson defends during the third quarter of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, in Athens, Ga. Georgia won 42-10. (AP Photo/John Amis)

Georgia running back Keith Marshall (4) dives for a touchdown as Georgia Tech safety Isaiah Johnson defends during the third quarter of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, in Athens, Ga. Georgia won 42-10. (AP Photo/John Amis)

Georgia running back Todd Gurley (3) reacts after scoring a touchdown against Georgia Tech during the first quarter of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, in Athens, Ga. (AP Photo/John Amis)

Georgia running back Todd Gurley (3), fullback Alexander Ogletree (46), and guard Mark Beard (79) celebrate their 42-10 win over Georgia Tech after an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, in Athens, Ga. (AP Photo/John Amis)

Georgia head coach Mark Richt, left, and Georgia Tech head coach Paul Johnson meet on the field after an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, in Athens, Ga. Georgia won 42-10. (AP Photo/John Amis)

Georgia head coach Mark Richt argues with an official during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Georgia Tech, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, in Athens, Ga. (AP Photo/John Amis)

(AP) ? The Georgia Bulldogs collected a trophy at midfield for another win over their state rival, then got some encouragement from the governor in their quest for a bigger reward.

No. 1.

Aaron Murray threw two touchdown passes, Todd Gurley and Keith Marshall each ran for a pair of TDs, and third-ranked Georgia stayed right in the thick of the national championship race with a 42-10 rout of Georgia Tech on Saturday.

Gov. Nathan Deal presented the "Governor's Cup" to the Bulldogs (11-1) after they beat the Yellow Jackets for the 11th time in 12 years. He congratulated both teams on a "great game" (a bit of a stretch, to say the least) before turning toward the jubilant Georgia players.

"Keep up the good work," Deal said. "We're looking for a national championship."

Georgia is two wins away.

The Bulldogs will face No. 2 Alabama for the Southeastern Conference championship in Atlanta next Saturday. The winner of that contest will likely advance to play in the BCS title game on Jan. 7.

"All that matters is this game," Georgia linebacker Christian Robinson said, looking ahead to facing the defending national champion Crimson Tide. "This is everything. This is what you play for."

Georgia Tech (6-6) didn't put up much of a fight. This one was a laugher right from the start as the home team scored just over a minute into the game, built a 28-3 halftime lead and was up 42-3 before the Yellow Jackets scored a meaningless TD in the fourth quarter.

"It was a pretty good thumping," Georgia Tech coach Paul Johnson said. "We could not slow them down at all, which has been a recurring theme the last few times we've played them, and we couldn't finish drives offensively."

Murray completed 14 of 17 for 215 yards, becoming the first quarterback in SEC history to pass from more than 3,000 yards in three straight seasons.

Gurley finished with 97 yards on 12 carries and now has 14 touchdowns on the season, one shy of Herschel Walker's school freshman record set in 1980. Marshall, also a freshman, piled up 66 yards on just seven carries.

The Bulldogs certainly didn't look like a team that was looking ahead to Alabama.

"You don't do that when you're playing Georgia Tech," coach Mark Richt said. "This game means a lot for us. Our coaches prepared hard, they were diligent, and the players took to the coaching. I thought we played a superb game. I'm so proud of everybody. I could not have asked for a better today."

Bacarri Rambo and Alec Ogletree came up big for the Georgia defense. Rambo stripped the ball away at the Georgia 1 to stop the Yellow Jackets' first possession, as well as grabbing his 16th career interception to tie Jake Scott's school record. Ogletree had 15 tackles, several of which were downright brutal and the highest total by a Georgia defender this season.

For good measure, the Bulldogs ran their season total to 456 points, breaking the school scoring mark set by the 2002 SEC championship team.

"We put our foot on the pedal from the start didn't let up the entire game," said receiver Rhett McGowan, who hauled in one of Murray's touchdown passes.

Georgia Tech, amazingly enough, still has a chance to win the Atlantic Coast Conference title next weekend and earn a BCS bowl bid. The Yellow Jackets clinched a spot in the championship game against No. 10 Florida State after Miami pulled out from postseason consideration, hoping to lessen the blow from a pending NCAA investigation.

The Yellow Jackets won't have any chance of beating the Seminoles if they don't turn in a much better effort than this.

"Well, I look at it like another opportunity," Johnson said. "We'll see how they respond. You don't get those opportunities very often, so you need to take advantage of them."

Malcolm Mitchell returned the opening kickoff 47 yards to the Georgia Tech 44, and the rout was on. Murray completed an 11-yard pass to Gurley, Gurley broke off a 15-yard run, Murray hooked up with Arthur Lynch on a 15-yard pass, and Gurley ran 3 yards for the score. Four snaps, and it was 7-0. The game was 63 seconds old.

Georgia Tech appeared to be moving for a tying touchdown on its first possession. With nine straight runs, the Yellow Jackets ripped off five first downs and had the ball at the Georgia 20. Robert Godhigh tried to take it in from there, breaking tackles and staying on his feet all the way to the 1. But Rambo snatched the ball away before Godhigh got to the end zone, returning it 49 yards to midfield.

This time, the Bulldogs needed less than 3 minutes to put another touchdown on the board.

Gurley had runs of 15 and 10 yards, Murray passed to Mitchell for a 16-yard gain, and Gurley made it 14-0 with a 1-yard plunge.

Before the half was done, Georgia tacked on two more scores: Marshall's 15-yard run and Murray's 11-yard pass to McGowan. The Yellow Jackets ran for 220 yards in the first two quarters, but all they had to show for it was Chris Tanner's 38-yard field goal.

Georgia Tech's misery was epitomized by its final possession of the half. After another extended drive ? 13 plays covering 56 yards ? the Yellow Jackets had to settle for a field goal try on the last play. Tanner's 36-yarder was wide right by a good 10 yards, the almost entirely red-clad crowd letting out a sarcastic cheer.

Georgia piled it on in the third quarter. Jay Rome hauled in a 24-yard touchdown from Murray and Marshall scored for the second time, sprinting around right end for a 17-yard TD.

The Yellow Jackets had another miserable defensive effort, giving up more than 40 points for the sixth time this season.

"We've got to stick together because some guys were fading apart during the last bit of the game," linebacker Quayshawn Neely said. "We've got to stick together and hold tight because we've got something big coming up next week."

___

Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-11-24-T25-Georgia%20Tech-Georgia/id-76ff496ae6ae4d48b39e7f17026a213b

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Communication is key to keeping a balance in romantic relationships

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Alex Sylvester has been with his boyfriend, Loren, for a year and seven months. When they first started dating, they struggled to find and maintain a balance between independence and dependence. Everyone requires different amounts of personal space, and understanding a partners personal needs is critical.

From getting comfortable with a higher education curriculum to making and breaking relationships on a consistent basis, life on a university campus is a learning experience by default. Students interact with other students both familiar and unfamiliar, relationships are made, and friendships either blossom or wither.

Moreover, intimate relationships are explored and pursued. Whats overlooked is the importance of these relationships to the college experience and the personal growth of each partner.

Let?s face it ? relationships are hard work. There is no doubt that they are an essential aspect of human life; however, they require more energy and communication than people are often willing to give. Relationships are especially susceptible to turmoil at the university age range.

When it comes to romantic relationships, it?s important that partners maintain an appropriate balance of dependence and independence.

?One of the biggest developmental issues among college-aged students is trying to create a sense of independence from their parents but also trying to find who you are in relation to other people,? said? Jonathan Davies, a psychologist and former counselor for the University of Oregon.

That sense of freedom carries over into every aspect of a students new life in college. Maintaining the appropriate balance between personal independence and interpersonal dependence is an important factor in this new lifestyle.

?I do not require as much (alone time) as Loren, but that?s something he?s taught me to appreciate, taking time to go be alone or be with other friends,? said Sylvester, the Gender and Sexual Diversity Advocate for the ASUO.

Over the course of his relationship, Sylvester realized that ?communication is the answer to most relationship problems.

?If you hang out too much together all the time you can get sick of each other, so we talk about it a lot more, and there is a lot more communication,? Sylvester said. ?We have to make sure that we are both getting our needs met, whether that is a need to be together or a need to be apart.?

In terms of intimate relationships, it?s important to be ?aware of your needs for connection and for your needs to be independent,? Davies said. ?It?s about understanding and accepting where someone is emotionally at a given time.?

An important part of a healthy relationship is moderating the balance of freedom that each partner needs. Recognizing that you have dual needs for both freedom and attachment is extremely pertinent for all age ranges, but especially for the university-aged demographic.

College is an important time for experimenting and seeking out the niche that students are best suited to associate with. Relationships, intimate or otherwise, are an essential factor in the academic success of students.

?Our academic learning is built on top of having our social and physical needs met,? Davies said. ?I think the need for social connection is as strong and as necessary as the need for air and water.?

?If you?re going to get serious with someone, I think it?s important to maintain your own life while still being connected with the other person?s life simultaneously,? Ali Noell said. ?I think my boyfriend and I do that really well.?

Noell?s boyfriend Brent graduated two years before Ali in 2009. Ali graduated this past spring with a degree in education.

?So all of his friends moved away (after Brent graduated), and we decided to live together,? Noell said. ?So that was a big commitment for both of us to make. It could have worked out poorly, but luckily we both still very much love each other.?

After Noell and her boyfriend had both graduated, they made the decision to stay in Eugene. Noell explained that becoming dependent on another person in terms of livelihood and romantic?necessity?is a difficult decision to make.

?I think it?s really important to be yourself,? Noell said. ?I have a lot of friends who think that they really like somebody, but they?re really trying to be somebody else for that person, and that?s not ever going to work out in the long run.?

Noell explained that it is critically important to have a partner that respects who you are and doesn?t expect you to be someone that you?re not. This comes back to maintaining your individuality as well as your independence.

The real issue is maintaining that personal liberty without losing sight of the intimate relationship that is so important to students. ?A healthy romantic relationship should have room for both (dependence and independence), and if it doesn?t then that?s something to think about,? Davies said.

He explains that there is a danger in either of the extremes: being too independent or being overly connected and dependent that one loses his or her individuality. The solution according to Davies: communication.

Dependency does not necessarily have to carry a negative connotation. As humans, we naturally seek out relationships with others. However, too much dependence can hinder the development of healthy relationships. It?s counterintuitive because if you love someone you want him or her all the time, but often times becoming too dependent on that person?s presence can begin to erode that person?s sense of freedom.

Davies spoke on the topic, saying that an overdependence on a partner can lead to an abusive relationship. This isn?t to say this is true of all cases; however, it is definitely a prevalent issue. Partners need a sense of independence or else that partner can lose touch with their support group and personal interests. According to Davies, this is a dangerous phenomenon. Again, he explains that communicating is the best solution to avoiding this kind of behavior.

It?s important to note that understanding one?s own emotional patterns is essential in understanding what one wants out of a relation?ship. ?People need to be aware of their emotional patterns and sometimes those patterns can be extremely healthy,? Davies said. ?But sometimes we?re also attracted to negative characteristics.?

However, it?s not always negative qualities in a partner that create hardships or conflicts within a relationship. The UO brings together students from all different geographical regions, both nationally and internationally. This brings on a new set of challenges for students and their romantic relationships. Oftentimes, relationships break apart geographically because the summer months separate some couples. Also, study abroad programs leave students with their intimate partner thousands of miles away in a foreign country with new friends, new experiences and minimal communication.

?Loren and I have spent two summers apart, and he tours the nation with a drum and bugle corps, so he can?t talk very much. I get to talk to him for five minutes a day during the summer for pretty much the entire two months,? Sylvester said. ?That is really hard, and we have a lot of systems in place to make sure that I don?t get controlling and angry and that he doesn?t feel like he?s constantly disappointing me because he?s unable to talk to me.?

?Both times were really hard. The first summer I was, I don?t like to use the word crazy, but I was crazy,? Sylvester said. ?This summer, the thing that really changed was that we talked about what was going to happen over the summer a lot in advance, and we had been dating longer, so I trusted him. I think that trust and communication was what was missing the first time.?

Managing the intimate ties with your romantic partner is difficult when you?re separated by thousands of miles. Davies said, ?There is no magic solution to that, but I think talking about one?s fears and what?s realistic to pledge is helpful and can provide some clarity.?

?There used to be a saying in the 60s that if you love something set it free. If it?s meant to be, it?ll always be there,? Davies said. ?It?s a paradox ? you have to do the opposite of what your emotions tell you. Instead of squeezing tighter, you just have to let go.?

As humans, we undergo a natural cycle of desires, fears, ambitions, successes and hardships. It?s important to find a balance and this holds true when it comes to romantic relationships. Oftentimes, the balance of independence and dependence on partners goes astray, but that balance can be restored with the combined efforts of both partners.

This is where the communication factor comes into play. If you understand your own emotional position, communicating that to the other partner in the relationship can create a healthy discussion about fears and desires.

Consequently, the relationship will thrive because both partners understand each other?s emotional states, therefore creating a respectful, balanced relationship. Communication is the key to maintaining that balance and helping both partners grow as a couple and as individuals.

Source: http://www.mugsmall.com/2012/11/24/communication-is-key-to-keeping-a-balance-in-romantic-relationships/

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