Are These Spin-offs Worth Investing In? - Wall Street - eWallstreeter

From: Insider Monkey - Free Hedge Fund and Insider Trading Data - 9:11am - November 8, 2012

In the wide world of investing, there are many ways for a company?s executives to boost the wealth their shareholders, though one of the most underrated approaches is the stock spin-off. Typically, a spin-off occurs when a large cap company wants to separate its most creative departments from the inundations of typical corporate structure. Other [...]

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Source: http://ewallstreeter.com/are-these-spin-offs-worth-investing-in-3559/

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Clear for Mac: The Best iPhone To-Do List Comes to Your Desktop

Southwest Nature Preserve Renovations | MyArlingtonTX.com

The City of Arlington Parks and Recreation Department has begun development of the Southwest Nature Preserve, in southwest Arlington. The goal of the development project is to enable public access to environmentally sensitive facilities within the Preserve, and for the restoration and maintenance of the site?s ecosystem and various habitats.

The Southwest Nature Preserve is a 58-acre tract of undeveloped land located just south of Interstate 20 and adjacent to Bowman Springs Drive, in southwest Arlington. The Preserve has one large and two smaller ponds, is home to several significant native plant communities, and has a high bluff located on sandstone outcroppings with dramatic views. Phase I Development of the Southwest Nature Preserve will involve construction of a new lighted parking lot with 35 spaces and a controlled access entry gate. A new concrete walkway will run from the parking lot to the lower pond. The walkway will lead to a pond side board walk that will feature a fishing pier and built-in benches. A terraced outdoor seating/education area will be located off the new walkway and will over-look the west end of the lower pond. New picnic tables will also be included in an area adjacent to the new walkway.

The Nature Preserve has approximately one mile of non-accessible existing soft surface trails that circle the property. Many of the existing trails within the Preserve are suffering from the effects of erosion and will require extensive restoration work. The new renovations will provide hikers a way to access the large pond and the bluff on the west side of the Preserve.

The expected completion date of the project is currently set for May 2013.

The Southwest Nature Preserve is a 58-acre tract of undeveloped land located just south of Interstate 20

Source: http://myarlingtontx.com/2012/11/07/southwest-nature-preserve-renovations/

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Despite their thick skins, alligators and crocodiles are surprisingly touchy

ScienceDaily (Nov. 8, 2012) ? Crocodiles and alligators are notorious for their thick skin and well-armored bodies. So it comes as something of a surprise to learn that their sense of touch is one of the most acute in the animal kingdom.

The crocodilian sense of touch is concentrated in a series of small, pigmented domes that dot their skin all over their body. In alligators, the spots are concentrated around their face and jaws.

A new study, published in the Nov. 8 issue of the Journal of Experimental Biology, has discovered that these spots contain a concentrated collection of touch sensors that make them even more sensitive to pressure and vibration than human fingertips.

"We didn't expect these spots to be so sensitive because the animals are so heavily armored," said Duncan Leitch, the graduate student who performed the studies under the supervision of Ken Catania, Stevenson Professor of Biological Sciences at Vanderbilt.

Scientists who have studied crocodiles and alligators have taken note of these spots, which they have labeled "integumentary sensor organs" or ISOs. Over the years they have advanced a variety of different hypotheses about their possible function. These include: source of oily secretions that keep the animals clean; detection of electric fields; detection of magnetic fields; detection of water salinity; and, detection of pressure and vibrations.

In 2002, a biologist at the University of Maryland reported that alligators in a darkened aquarium turned to face the location of single droplets of water even when their hearing was disrupted by white noise. She concluded that the sensor spots on their faces allowed them to detect the tiny ripples that the droplets produced.

"This intriguing finding inspired us to look further," Catania said. "For a variety of reasons, including the way that the spots are distributed around their body, we thought that the ISOs might be more than water ripple sensors."

As a result, Leitch began a detailed investigation of the ISOs and their neural connections in both American alligators and Nile crocodiles.

Leitch found that these sensory spots are connected to the brain through the trigeminal ganglia, the nerve bundle that provides sensation to the face and jaw in humans. In addition, his studies ruled out most of the alternative hypothesis for the ISOs function. For example, his anatomical studies didn't find pores that could release cleansing oil. Similarly, he found that the nerves in the ISOs didn't react to electric fields or, when submerged in water, to changes in salinity.

"I didn't test for sensitivity to magnetic fields, but we don't think this is likely either," said Leitch. In animals that can detect magnetic fields, he explained, the sensors are located inside the body, not on the surface.

What he did find is a diverse collection of "mechanoreceptors:" nerves that respond to pressure and vibration. Some are specially tuned to vibrations in the 20-35 Hertz range, just right for detecting tiny water ripples. Others respond to levels of pressure that are too faint for the human fingertip to detect.

Their analysis led the scientists to conclude that the crocodilian's touch system is exceptional, allowing them to not only detect water movements created by swimming prey, but also to determine the location of prey through direct contact for a rapid and direct strike and to discriminate and manipulate objects in their jaws.

Their finding that the most heavily wired ISOs are located in the mouth near the teeth suggests that the touch sensors help the animals identify the objects that they catch in their jaws. The sensors also appear to provide the sensitivity that female alligators and crocodiles need to delicately break open their eggs when they are ready to hatch and to protect their hatchlings by carrying them in their jaws, the same jaws that can clamp down on prey with a force of more than 2,000 psi.

This research was supported by National Science Foundation grant #0844743 and by a Vanderbilt University Discover Grant.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Vanderbilt University. The original article was written by David Salisbury.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Duncan B. Leitch and Kenneth C. Catania. Structure, innervation and response properties of integumentary sensory organs in crocodilians. Journal of Experimental Biology, 2012 DOI: 10.1242/%u200Bjeb.076836

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/nLtjJktZ_Wg/121108073633.htm

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Will the Mavi Marmara Trial Spoil Turkish-Israeli Relations for Good ...

ISTANBUL ? In the early hours of May 31, 2010, Israeli commandos repelled onto the deck of a Turkish ship, the Mavi Marmara, as it was about to run a blockade of the Gaza Strip. The result was a tragic mess. Nine Turkish passengers died in the fray. Turkey?s pragmatic friendship with Israel fell apart, endangering one of the few relationships in the Middle East that could help to stabilize the region.

Since then, the challenge has been how not to make things worse. The issue resurfaced Tuesday in Istanbul?s Palace of Justice with the opening of the trial in absentia of four former Israeli military chiefs responsible for the raid, who are charged, among other things, with ?inciting murder through cruelty or torture.?

Turkish anger with Israel may not have run its course, but it does seem to have lost its edge.

The Turkish government may be pursuing what it believes to be a genuine grievance, but it risks being accused of cynicism ? whipping up anti-Israeli sentiment at home and courting popularity in its Arab near abroad.

Although to the victims? families who packed the courtroom, the case is open and shut, not all the world sees it that way. A 2011 UN investigation [pdf] into the clash found fault all around. It was respectful of Israel?s right to maintain a blockade but critical of its use of lethal force. Yet it acknowledged that the Israeli troops encountered violent resistance when they attempted to board the vessel.

The Israeli government?s response to the Turkish prosecutors? case against the Israeli generals has been to label it ?a show trial.? Given the liberal sprinkling of billboards all over Istanbul summoning people to demonstrate in front of the courthouse, it might have a point.

The Islamic nongovernmental organization that organized the Mavi Marmara voyage ? the I.H.H. Humanitarian Relief Foundation ? declares in its advertisements that Israel itself will be put in the ?felon?s dock.? For the group and its sympathizers, the trial is a chance to make their voices heard. ?Martyr?s blood should not be spilled in vain,? said Habibe Salvarli, a 22-year-old student who made the five-hour bus trip from Karahisar, in western Turkey, with other students assembled through the Internet.

Yet the planned demonstrations outside the courthouse turned into a desultory affair. On Tuesday, small groups of bearded men waved a giant Turkish flag, shouting ?God is great!? and Israel be damned. Vendors sold Palestinian flags and headbands with Koranic inscriptions. But only a few hundred people showed up in total, not enough to fill the plaza in front of the court. At one point they were out-shouted by rival protesters demanding the acquittal of four women on trial for demonstrating against the prime minister?s (now-abandoned) proposal to outlaw abortion.

Turkish anger with Israel may not have run its course, but it does seem to have lost its edge. An important explanation is that the whole Middle East has been transformed since the Mavi Marmara incident. Back in the spring of 2010, the conventional wisdom here was that Israel would pay the greater price for offending so important an ally. In the intervening two and a half years, Turkey, too, has been losing friends.

It now leads the chorus calling for the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad in Syria. It is at odds with the Shiite-led government of Iraq for providing sanctuary to the fugitive Sunni vice president, Tariq al-Hashimi, who has been sentenced to death for his alleged involvement in a car bombing that targeted Shiites. This, in turn, has badly strained Turkey?s relations with Iran.

Turkey?s creeping isolation within its own neighborhood has drawn it closer than ever to an old ally, the United States. Some commentators now speak of Ankara and Washington entering a ?golden age.? President Barack Obama is known to consult with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey regularly ? even though he has yet to convince Erdogan to lead a coalition of the willing into Syria.

Yet on the subject of Israel, the two men are not on the same page, and this chokes Turkey?s influence in Washington. The Obama administration may wish that it had the same liberty as Erdogan to discipline Israel, but it is wary that Erdogan may go too far: He recently announced his intention to visit Gaza, presumably an attempt to use foreign policy to increase his standing with his own electorate. But a Turkey that flirts with the anti-Zionist rhetoric common in the Middle East isn?t nearly as appealing to the Americans as a Turkey that can speak to Israel.

Turkish justice moves slowly, and the case against those who gave the order to storm the Mavi Marmara will limp on for months, if not years. Meanwhile, Turkey will not abandon its demand for an apology from Israel and for compensation for the victims ? or for the lifting of the Gaza blockade. And if the Israeli government hems and haws before giving in to the first two conditions, it will not on the third. This means that Turkish-Israeli relations will not be mended until a solution is found for the misery in the Gaza Strip.


Andrew Finkel has been a foreign correspondent in Istanbul for over 20 years, as well as a columnist for Turkish-language newspapers. He is the author of the book ?Turkey: What Everyone Needs to Know.?

Source: http://latitude.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/11/08/turkish-israeli-relations-on-trial/

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Source: http://www.fashionindustrynetwork.com/xn/detail/786233%3AComment%3A1155631?xg_source=activity

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Report: Fighting erupts in northeast Syria

In this Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012 photo, a group of Free Syrian Army fighters carry a wounded comrade to cover in the town of Harem, Syria. Despite two weeks of attacking a Roman-era citadel in which pro-Assad militia are dug in, the rebels failed to secure the town. (AP Photo/Mustafa Karali)

In this Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012 photo, a group of Free Syrian Army fighters carry a wounded comrade to cover in the town of Harem, Syria. Despite two weeks of attacking a Roman-era citadel in which pro-Assad militia are dug in, the rebels failed to secure the town. (AP Photo/Mustafa Karali)

In this Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012 photo, Mustafa, a rebel from the town of Bennish, watches for a sniper firing down a street in the town of Harem, Syria. Despite two weeks of attacking a Roman-era citadel in which pro-Assad militia are dug in, the rebels failed to secure the town. (AP Photo/Mustafa Karali)

In this Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012 photo, a Free Syrian Army fighter fires his weapon while running for cover in the Bab al-Nasr district of Aleppo, Syria. (AP Photo/Mustafa Karali)

ISTANBUL (AP) ? Syrian regime forces on Thursday battled opposition rebels trying to take control of a region in the far northeastern corner of the country, sending refugees fleeing across the Turkish border, Turkey's state-run agency reported.

Turkish authorities meanwhile, inspected the cargo of a Syria-bound plane from Armenia to make sure it was not carrying military equipment.

The clashes broke out in the Rasulayn region of al-Hasakah province, a few hundred meters (yards) from the Turkish border town of Ceylanpinar, the Anadolu Agency said.

Several Syrians fled to Ceylanpinar seeking refuge from the fighting and at least eight wounded people were being treated in Turkish hospitals.

Schools in Ceylanpinar were closed for the day as the military increased security measures. Residents were being warned to stay away from the border.

Dogan news agency video showed people running for shelter in panic as a piece of shrapnel from the fighting reportedly landed on the grounds of the hospital in Ceylanpinar.

Elsewhere in Turkey, a Syria-bound Armenian plane landed in the city of Erzurum to allow Turkish authorities to search its cargo.

Last month, another plane from Armenia landed in Turkey under an agreement with Turkish authorities, who later said the cargo consisted of aid and could continue on to Syria. Turkey also forced a Syrian passenger plane traveling from Moscow to Damascus to land in Ankara on suspicion that equipment it was carrying was military gear. Russia, a backer of Syrian President Bashar Assad, said the equipment consisted of spare parts for radar systems.

The civil war in Syria has killed more than 36,000 people since an uprising against the Syrian regime began in March 2011. More than 111,000 Syrians are being sheltered in refugee camps in Turkey.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-08-ML-Syria/id-6edd10d03f8b428b9c1e73e8e3888357

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How Obama Won Four More Years

155691346 More than 50 percent of voters said Mitt Romney had a better vision for the future. But they elected Barack Obama.

Photo by Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

In the end, it wasn't close. Barack Obama won re-election handily over Mitt Romney with 303 electoral votes (so far), well more than the 270 electoral votes needed. Of the nine battleground states that were up for grabs, Obama won seven of them, losing only North Carolina (Florida remains to be called). But while Obama won those states, he didn't crush it; he won instead, a string of precise narrow victories. He didn?t win because his leadership during Hurricane Sandy blew all those swing votes his way (though it may have helped). The president won because he ran a permanent campaign, keeping his offices open in the battleground states from his 2008 campaign, tending his coalition assiduously, and because he relentlessly defined his opponent. His was the better campaign. The Democratic candidate of ?hope and change? beat the big business Republican in the trenches, in one state after another.? ?

President Obama?s tactical victory is clear when you look at the election returns. He has no grand mandate that comes out of Tuesday?s numbers. He has been re-elected, but his policies did not win the day. Voters didn't turn their faces up to the vision he painted the way they did in 2008. When voters were asked which candidate had a vision for the future, Romney won that question in exit polls, 55 percent to 43 percent. Asked about Obama's signature achievement, health care, voters did not approve. Forty-nine percent said they wanted it repealed in part or whole. Voters also said the federal government was too large.

Voters are deeply divided by race and age.?The president can credit strong support from women. He led by 11 percentage points among women, while Romney led by 7 points among men. There was also an Obama advantage among younger voters. He grabbed a majority of those under 45. Older voters broke for Romney. Obama lost the white vote by a larger margin than in 2008 when he got 43 percent of the vote. On Tuesday, he got just 40 percent of the white vote. They represented virtually the same share of the electorate as before. But Obama made up for that deficit by winning handily with minorities, which represented an ever-so-slightly larger share of the vote.

The best news the president can find in the exit polls was that he fought the economic question to a tie. Voters who cared about the economy picked Romney by only one point over Obama, 49 percent to 48 percent. Still, Obama simply neutralized his opponent; there's nothing in that number that suggests a mandate. Sixty percent of voters backed Obama's call for tax increases for those with incomes over $250,000. But that?s a proposal that will have no life beyond the campaign trail. Polls show that voters have long supported this idea. It doesn?t happen because the proposal will never shake loose enough of the partisan opposition to make it real.

Now?the candidate of ?hope and change? must bind up his wounds and prepare himself for another round. Half of the country is going to be upset by this outcome, and the president, who once knew how to make the music of?reconciliation, will have to whip up some kind of stirring message in the months to come.?

The White House knew what tone to strike when it released its first post-election?photograph, which was a vision not?of jubilation but of almost relief. In his remarks, Obama immediately moved to start the?reconciliation.?"We rise or fall together as one nation," he said. He then praised Romney and his family: "From?George to Lenore to their son Mitt, they give back through public service and that is a legacy that we honor and applaud tonight." He promised to sit down with Romney in the coming weeks to "talk about moving this country forward." He said the vote was a vote for action to focus on jobs and that in the weeks and months ahead he would work with the other party. "Whether I earned your vote or not ... you have made me a better president. I return to the White House more determined than ever."

What was ratified on election night was the benefit of a permanent campaign and the talent of the Obama team.?The much vaunted Obama ground game appears to have been a real thing. (David Axelrod's candidate won by more than a whisker, and Axelrod got to keep his; he'd pledged to shave off his mustache if Obama lost Pennsylvania, Michigan, or Minnesota.)?His campaign team was so formidable that it made up for all the inadequacies, vulnerabilities, and missteps (remember that first debate?) of a weak incumbent president in a sputtering economy. He pulled out every stop possible: Bill Clinton, Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Wonder, and Katy Perry in a dress that was as tight as Obama?s margin in Florida.

A few theories of political science were upheld. Debates didn't change the outcome, and late-deciding voters don't break for the challenger. Nine percent of voters said they made up their mind with three days to go, and they broke for the president, 51 percent to Romney?s 44 percent.

In the end, Romney was right. It was all about the economy. But Americans seemed to?want more than someone who cares about fixing the problem; they want someone they think cares about them. It was the empathy, stupid. When voters were asked which candidate cared more about then, Obama won more than 80 percent of those voters.

The president won among African-Americans, who were 13 percent of the electorate, by 93 percent to 6 percent. He won among Hispanics, 70 percent to 30 percent. Romney's poor performance with Hispanics, in particular, is likely to start a wave of soul-searching in the party about how to reach out to the country?s fastest-growing minority group.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=048fdba3cfee481a87ca0223568a48e1

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New view of Irish icon Maureen O'Hara

MONTREAL ? Ruth Barton is reputed to be among the pre-eminent authorities on Irish cinema. She is the author of opuses on Irish film and TV, including one on filmmaker Jim Sheridan and Acting Irish in Hollywood. Head of the department of film studies at Trinity College Dublin, she is the visiting scholar at Concordia?s School of Canadian Irish Studies for this fall semester.

But don?t let the pedigree intimidate you. Barton also has a playful side. She will be delivering a lecture, illustrated with film clips, Friday, Nov. 9 at Concordia on Irish actress Maureen O?Hara. ?The lecture is meant to be entertaining and at least somewhat informative,? Barton cracks.

Barton will seek to prove that ?pirate queen? O?Hara may actually be a feminist icon. Which might seem like a stretch for those who know O?Hara best as the kindly mother of Natalie Wood in Miracle on 34th Street, or perhaps as the love interest of John Wayne in The Quiet Man ? O?Hara?s favourite of her films.

The lecture will also serve as a benefit to raise funds for a scholarship at the School of Canadian Irish Studies in memory of Patrick Vallely, a Montreal filmmaker and one of the founders of the Irish film society Cine Gael, which celebrated its 20th anniversary this year.

?I think most people of a certain age remember O?Hara as the feisty Irish colleen in The Quiet Man, but in her day her big films were really that whole slew of swashbucklers (The Black Swan, Sinbad the Sailor et al.) that she did. Those films were what her reputation was based on,? the Dublin-born Barton says.

?She played tough characters, sometimes cross-dressing. In one, she is a pirate queen, the captain of a ship; she is a fighter. Yet she is still quite elegant and stunning.?

And thus perhaps a feminist icon, according to Barton.

?My point is that there have been actresses like Bette Davis who, because of the strong characters they played, were considered feminist icons. But Maureen O?Hara never was, possibly because she seemed so glamorous.?

O?Hara, now 92 and living in both the U.S. and Ireland, hasn?t done much acting since the early 1990s. One of her last roles was in the 1991 romantic comedy Only the Lonely ? also one of John Candy?s last. He died in 1994.

Barton is teaching two courses at Concordia: Gender and Irish Cinema and Cinema of the Celtic Tiger. The latter course is in reference to the boom of Irish cinema in which directors like Sheridan (In the Name of the Father, My Left Foot) and Neil Jordan (The Crying Game) flourished.

?Now I?m trying to catch up on Canadian films,? Barton says. ?So few ? other than those of David Cronenberg, Atom Egoyan and Sarah Polley ? travel to us.?

Ruth Barton?s lecture on Maureen O?Hara takes place Friday, Nov. 9?at 7:15 p.m. in Room H-1070 of Concordia?s Hall Building, 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W. A $10 donation is suggested. Proceeds will go to establish a scholarship at Concordia?s School of Canadian Irish Studies in memory of Patrick Vallely.

- -

Three years ago, Quentin Tarantino wrote and directed a fictional tale of a plot by Jewish-American soldiers to infiltrate and strike back at the Nazis during the Second World War. The film was called Inglourious Basterds.

Well, back off, Quentin. Time to meet The Real Inglorious Bastards, Thursday, Nov. 8?at 9 p.m. on the History Channel. Toronto director Min Sook Lee has crafted a fascinating documentary about two American Jews who were parachuted into the Austrian Alps, behind enemy lines, to create havoc against the Nazis.

Orchestrated by the U.S.?s Office of Strategic Services (OSS), Operation Greenup, as it was called, was almost a suicide mission.

Hans Wijnberg and Fred Mayer were keen to exact revenge on the Nazis, even though their early training was not exactly of the highest calibre.

Nonetheless, they successfully parachuted ? despite the fact that Mayer had never jumped from a plane before ? into Austria, where they hooked up with Franz Weber, a Wehrmacht deserter. Their behind-the-lines work led to the destruction of 26 trains along the supply route from Germany to Italy.

Mayer was eventually captured by the Nazis. They suspected he was Jewish, but dismissed the idea after they tortured him, saying ?a Jew couldn?t take that kind of punishment.? He managed to bluff his way out of captivity by promising immunity to the Nazi commander in the Tyrol region of Austria when the war ended.

Mayer, now 91, recently received a citation from the OSS for his efforts. Wijnberg died 10 years ago.

It?s a remarkable story. ?And once again life proves to be so much more fantastical than fiction ? perhaps even more than Quentin Tarantino fiction,? opines director Min Sook, who had previously done the doc The Real MASH.

Min Sook thinks Mayer and Wijnberg?s mission was almost doomed to fail: ?They were making it up as they were going along. They didn?t have much training. They were essentially two guys from Brooklyn, European refugees whose families had been destroyed. They just wanted revenge. But they believed against all hope that they would succeed, and that?s half the battle.

?But what really resonated for me here was that Fred did have the opportunity for revenge when the war ended and his former Nazi torturer begged him not to kill him. And right at the moment, Fred told him: ?What do you think I am? A Nazi?? That to me is one of the core moral lessons of this story.?

The Real Inglorious Bastards airs Thursday, Nov. 8?at 9 p.m. on the History Channel.

bbrownstein@montrealgazette.com
Twitter: @billbrownstein

Source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/movie-guide/Concordia+presents+view+Irish+icon+Maureen/7512737/story.html

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