Monday, December 31, 2012

German trade group predicts record exports in 2013

(AP) ? Germany's exports are expected to reach record levels this year and grow again in 2013.

An industry group predicts German exports will rise 4 percent to ?1.103 trillion ($1.45 trillion) in 2012 from ?1.06 trillion the previous year.

The Federation of German Wholesale, Foreign Trade and Services said Sunday that it expects exports to increase by up to 5 percent in the coming year and hit ?1.158 trillion.

Exports as varied as cars, computer chips and chemicals contribute about a third of Germany's gross domestic product.

German exports have benefited from the low value of the euro compared to other currencies, and strong demand for their goods in the United States and emerging economies like China.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-12-30-EU-Germany-Economy/id-b9ebbdea78c2483e9fb9569593e95caa

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Washington off the mark, loses on road to Connecticut

Originally published December 29, 2012 at 8:23 PM | Page modified December 29, 2012 at 8:46 PM

HARTFORD, Conn. ? One look at that stat sheet answered most questions regarding why Connecticut beat Washington 61-53 in a nonleague game Saturday night at the XL Center.

For example, Washington (8-5) set season lows in points (53), field-goal percentage (29.7 on 19 of 64) and three-point percentage (23.5 on 4 of 17).

And Washington's seasonlong rebounding issue was a problem again as UConn (10-2) outrebounded the Huskies 40-36, only the second time Connecticut has had more rebounds than its opponent this season.

"You have to give UConn credit in that they did a good job on the boards," UW coach Lorenzo Romar said. "There were a lot of shots to be had on the backboards with us shooting a low percentage. On the offensive boards, we were able to get 14 to their seven, but that wasn't enough."

C.J. Wilcox, Washington's top scorer, was held to five points on 2-for-12 shooting.

Scott Suggs led the Huskies with 15 points,

UConn, meanwhile, had a trio of double-figure scorers in Omar Calhoun (14), Shabazz Napier (13) and Ryan Boatright (12).

"UConn came out aggressive on defense early, but the ball did not go down for us," Romar said of UConn's man-to-man defense.

Wilcox blamed himself for missing shots, especially when he had good looks at the basket.

"On a couple of those shots, they played good defense," Wilcox said. "But half of them were wide-open shots, and they just weren't falling. There weren't any excuses.

"I was surprised we weren't making shots. But it was one of those nights where the shots weren't falling. In pregame shooting, we all felt comfortable. But during the game they didn't fall."

It was the final nonconference game for Washington, which opens the Pac-12 season Saturday at Washington State.

"We're going to take what we can from the loss," Wilcox said. "It shouldn't carry over. We're going to go to practice next week and build on what we can."

"We played another team (in the Big East), Seton Hall, and we played Ohio State, who was No. 4 in the country," Romar said. "This was a game against a good, storied program from a strong conference.

"If we had been successful, it would have helped us. Now, we must get ready for our conference."

Even though Washington shot a frigid 32.3 percent (10 for 31) in the first half, it still trailed just 31-25 at intermission.

One reason UConn didn't lead by more was UW forced four turnovers in the last four minutes.

Suggs drained a three-point shot after the first of those UConn miscues to give Washington a 24-23 lead. But UConn built a five-point halftime lead by going 8 for 8 from the foul line in the final 3:57.

UConn opened the second half with a 13-4 run capped by an alley-oop jam by Calhoun.

Washington countered with a 15-5 run that sliced its deficit to 50-45 with 7:75 remaining. But a 9-1 UConn run ended Washington's chances.

"I give a lot of credit to UConn tonight," Romar said. "Down the stretch they probably turned the ball over more times than they would have liked. But, overall, they were able to do what they tried to do."

WASHINGTON 53
min fgm-a ftm-a or-t a pf pts
Simmons 32 2-8 1-2 6-10 0 2 6
N'Diaye 14 0-3 0-0 1-3 0 3 0
Gaddy 23 4-10 0-1 3-6 3 5 8
Suggs 39 5-15 3-3 0-2 4 1 15
Wilcox 34 2-12 0-0 0-2 1 1 5
Andrews 23 2-5 5-7 2-6 2 4 9
Jarreau 14 0-2 1-2 0-1 0 1 1
Kemp, Jr 21 4-9 1-1 1-4 0 3 9
200 19-64 11-16 14-36 10 20 53
Percentages: FG .297, FT .688. Three-point goals: 4-17, .235 (Suggs 2-6, Simmons 1-2, Wilcox 1-6, Andrews 0-1, Gaddy 0-2). Team rebounds: 2. Blocked shots: 3 (Wilcox, Simmons, Kemp, Jr.). Turnovers: 13 (Andrews 3, Simmons 3, Suggs 2, Gaddy 2, Jarreau, Wilcox, Kemp, Jr.). Steals: 8 (Simmons 3, Suggs 2, Gaddy, Jarreau, Andrews). Technical fouls: N'Diaye.
UCONN 61
min fgm-a ftm-a or-t a pf pts
Daniels 35 4-9 0-0 0-5 1 4 9
Olander 17 1-3 2-2 1-2 0 2 4
Boatright 32 5-11 2-4 0-2 3 3 12
Napier 36 3-10 6-8 0-8 4 2 13
Calhoun 29 6-10 2-4 0-1 2 0 14
Nolan 6 0-0 3-4 0-0 0 1 3
Wolf 17 1-2 0-1 2-9 0 1 2
Giffey 13 0-0 0-0 1-3 2 1 0
Evans 15 2-2 0-2 0-1 1 2 4
200 22-47 15-25 7-40 13 16 61
Percentages: FG .468, FT .600. Three-point goals: 2-14, .143 (Daniels 1-2, Napier 1-6, Boatright 0-2, Calhoun 0-4). Team rebounds: 9. Blocked shots: 4 (Wolf 2, Daniels, Olander). Turnovers: 17 (Napier 7, Boatright 2, Calhoun 2, Wolf 2, Daniels 2, Nolan, Evans). Steals: 6 (Napier 3, Evans 2, Wolf). Technical fouls: None.
Washington 26 27 ? 53
UConn 31 30 ? 61

Attendance: 12,720. Officials: Michael Stephens, Brian O'Connell, Mike Roberts.

Source: http://feeds.seattletimes.com/click.phdo?i=ac98e7fb2af2cab9367ce4e9247e1d99

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Organist's widow addresses church after his murder

Maureen Greaves, a Christian outreach worker, thanked the congregation for their support at the couple's church in Sheffield where Mr Greaves had been due to worship when he was assaulted.

The 68-year-old grandfather, a lay preacher and organist at the church, was discovered by a member of the public, badly beaten, just yards from St Saviour's in High Green on Monday, but died from his head injuries in hospital on Thursday night.

Two men have been arrested on suspicion of murder.

During the service, Mrs Greaves told the congregation at St Saviour's: "I won't be able to contact you over the next few days, but I want to thank you for the support you have given me.

"I have prayed constantly for Alan and I know you have too. I have not stopped crying for him and I know you have not stopped either.

"I have wept over the evil that has been done. I have prayed for you and I know you have prayed for me. You were Alan's Christian family and he loved belonging to this church. I have felt your love towards me."

Source: http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/534871/s/270ebd27/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0Cuknews0Ccrime0C977160A60COrganists0Ewidow0Eaddresses0Echurch0Eafter0Ehis0Emurder0Bhtml/story01.htm

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

No. 2 UConn women rout No. 1 Stanford 61-35

Connecticut forward Breanna Stewart (30) drives to the basket against Stanford guard Jasmine Camp (23) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., Saturday, Dec. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Tony Avelar)

Connecticut forward Breanna Stewart (30) drives to the basket against Stanford guard Jasmine Camp (23) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., Saturday, Dec. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Tony Avelar)

Connecticut center Stefanie Dolson, right, pulls up for a shot over Stanford forward Joslyn Tinkle (44) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., Saturday, Dec. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Tony Avelar)

Connecticut guard Bria Hartley (14) drives to the basket past Stanford forward Joslyn Tinkle (44) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., Saturday, Dec. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Tony Avelar)

Stanford forward Chiney Ogwumike (13) battles for position against Connecticut guard Kelly Faris (34) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., Saturday, Dec. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Tony Avelar)

Connecticut guard Kelly Faris (34) drives to the basket against Stanford forward Mikaela Ruef (3) as guard Jasmine Camp (23) looks on during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., Saturday, Dec. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Tony Avelar)

(AP) ? Geno Auriemma insists long winning streaks do little to get him amped up, even after he traveled his Connecticut team across the country to face top-ranked Stanford and its daunting 82-game unbeaten run at Maples Pavilion.

The Huskies sure got a thrill from leaving with an unexpected rout and silencing a typically raucous crowd ? and likely stealing away the No. 1 spot in the polls along with it.

Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis and second-ranked UConn played spoiler and streak-buster this time, snapping Stanford's nation-leading home winning streak with a surprisingly easy 61-35 victory Saturday.

It was the Huskies who saw the end of their NCAA record 90-game winning streak at Maples Pavilion with a 71-59 loss two years ago, almost to the day on Dec. 30.

"The last time we were here it was a big event for them and they treated it like it was a big event, and God bless them," Auriemma said. "But for us to win a game here in late December, it's no more than just a big game against a really good team. The other stuff, I didn't get all that excited about us winning 90, I'm not going to get that excited about us beating somebody who's won 82 in a row at home."

Mosqueda-Lewis scored 19 points as UConn (11-0) thoroughly outplayed Stanford (11-1) on both ends of the floor in this highly touted game featuring the country's top programs and Final Four regulars from opposite coasts.

Stanford got harassed right off the home floor that it ruled with perfection and dominant play for nearly six years ? and the Huskies surely took the Cardinal's No. 1 spot along with it.

The game was the 51st meeting between the top two teams in the poll. The No. 1 seed had won the previous nine matchups and holds a 31-20 lead.

Chiney Ogwumike had 18 points and 13 rebounds but struggled in the post as Stanford lost at home for the first time since March 2007.

"It was a bad day. Whatever we were trying to do, we really struggled with it," Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer said. "Connecticut came in here on a mission. Mission accomplished."

Stefanie Dolson had 10 points and 14 rebounds and flustered Ogwumike all afternoon, and Bria Hartley and Kelly Faris also scored 10 apiece for UConn.

Breanna Stewart scored seven straight points during a decisive 17-2 run in the first half as UConn built a 22-7 lead against the cold-shooting Cardinal and kept the pressure on the rest of the way.

Stanford trailed 31-13 at halftime in one of its worst 20 minutes in recent memory ? though the school had no record of when the Cardinal were last held to that few points in a half.

They had gone five full seasons with an unbeaten record on their home floor.

Mosqueda-Lewis, last season's Big East top freshman averaging 16.4 points and 5.0 rebounds, shot 7 for 13 as Connecticut shot 37.5 percent from the floor ? and that was plenty good enough against a Stanford team that wound up at a dismal 19.3 percent (11 for 57) in its lowest single-game shooting performance and fewest field goals made.

"I love the game, I think it's a great game for both teams, but for our game two years ago it was a national event ? I don't think tonight was a national event," Auriemma said. "We beat a really good Stanford team on their home court and they happened to have won a lot of games at home."

Stanford had four early possessions over the opening 4 1/2 minutes in which it faced a dwindling shot clock.

This wasn't the Cardinal's worst home loss ever ? that was a 96-51 defeat to Long Beach State on March 10, 1983 ? though UConn sure made it feel like it for an afternoon to silence a typically animated crowd.

Auriemma was booed by the crowd during pregame introductions, then again when the coach was whistled for a technical foul with his team ahead 19 points with 13:22 remaining.

UConn, which had trailed for only 48 seconds all season coming into the game and now just 2:21 in all, won for the first time at Stanford in four tries.

Ogwumike, Stanford's leading scorer and rebounder averaging 21.8 points and 12.8 boards, was held to 6-for-22 shooting.

"I don't think I've experienced anything like this," Ogwumike said. "That Connecticut team we played for 40 minutes is the standard. And the great thing is now we've experienced the standard."

UConn's 6-foot-5 Dolson made things tough all day for Ogwumike ? who stands 6-4 ? and gave her problems with a size advantage to deny Stanford's top player and keep her away from the basket. That led to some forced shots in the first half, when Ogwumike missed 8 of her first 9 attempts. She scored at the 7:25 mark of the first half to end a nearly 6-minute scoring drought since her previous basket on a putback at 13:19.

Stanford then went 4:58 without scoring before Ogwumike's three-point play 2:27 before halftime.

"Stefanie was going to guard Chiney until she proved that she couldn't," Auriemma said.

Dolson was whistled for her third foul with 17:42 left in the game, but Mikaela Ruef missed both free throws.

Walking off the court after this one "was complete opposite," Dolson said.

"Two years ago we lost and it ended our streak. It was just a horrible loss," she recalled.

Bonnie Samuelson's back-to-back 3-pointers midway through the second half, the Cardinal's first from behind the arc, gave them some life. But it was short-lived as the Huskies pulled away.

Stanford's 82-game home winning streak dated to a 68-61 loss to Florida State in the second round of the NCAA tournament on March 19, 2007.

This season's Cardinal stunned defending NCAA champion and then-top-ranked Baylor and Brittney Griner on Nov. 16 to become the nation's No. 1 team and avenge a loss in last spring's NCAA semifinals.

The Cardinal hardly looked like the best team Saturday against the dominant Huskies. They were held below 40 points for the first time since a 72-32 loss to Missouri on Jan. 2, 1984.

Stanford missed its initial 10 3-point tries and began the game 3 for 22 to fall behind 22-7, with UConn getting three quick 3s.

Ogwumike's big sister, Nnemkadi ? the 2012 No. 1 overall WNBA draft pick of the Los Angeles Sparks ? attended the game, along with other former Stanford players Rosalyn Gold-Onwude and Lindy La Rocque.

Stanford senior Joslyn Tinkle, the team's second-leading scorer, managed only two points while playing on her 22nd birthday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-12-30-BKW-T25-Connecticut-Stanford/id-b79813260c34433cbf42c29c25d8e599

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Natural, Healthy and Happy: Books On Aerobics Cardio

It has been seen that these forms of exercises are common with women, as compared to men because women want to lose fat and weight and the men usually want to gain muscles. But there is a general misconception here that men don't perform too many cardio exercises but these forms of exercises are essential for weight loss and muscles gain. These forms of physical exercises are ideal for toning their bodies and there are different kinds of books available on aerobics and cardio exercises.Diagnosis Some of the most common books available on them usually deal with two main issues.

These issues are gaining muscles and loss of weight. Both cardio and aerobic exercises are very similar to each other and they help people to lose weight the healthy way. Most of these books suggest that eating a healthy diet aids in the process of weight loss and gain in strength. These books suggest that users should exercise and follow a healthy diet where eating less o f proteins and carbohydrates mentioned because this helps in weight loss.

The various books on aerobic exercises lay emphasis on the various kinds of exercises that help to develop cardio vascular strength as well as stamina to the body. Most of these exercises help to work large muscle gropes together bringing activeness to the body and thus they also help to improve the coordination of movements of the body. It has been seen that these exercises also help to make the lungs work harder so that the lung can develop the power of the body and increase the respiratory system. This also implies that the stamina of the body is improved.

Along with these benefits these exercises also help to increase the metabolism rate of the body and thus lose weight.Diagnosis Most of these books suggest that men should also perform various kinds of aerobic exercises because these will help to develop the flexibility of the body, which will aid in reducing the chances of injuries to the body. Also through these exercises you can benefit from the continuous development of the body as these exercises work to increase the activity level and the oxygen supply to the various parts of the body.

Basically, these books list benefits of the aerobic exercises, which include increasing the energy levels of the body, and reduction in the stress levels of the same. Through the regular aerobics exercises you can achieve better mental health along with reducing the risks of various kinds of ailments and diseases caused due to obesity.

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Source: http://natural-healthy-happy.blogspot.com/2012/12/books-on-aerobics-cardio.html

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

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Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/12/nick-stahl-arrested-for-lewd-act-in-adult-video-store/

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Iraqi Sunni protesters turn out in several cities

FALLUJAH, Iraq (AP) ? Tens of thousands of Iraqi Sunnis angry over perceived second-class treatment by the Shiite-led government massed along a major western highway and elsewhere in the country Friday for the largest protests yet in a week of demonstrations.

The well-organized rallies, which took place after traditional Friday prayers, underscore the strength of a tenacious protest movement that appears to be gathering support among Sunnis, whose sense of grievance has been increased by arrests and prosecutions that they feel underscore Shiite political dominance.

The biggest of Friday's demonstrations took place on a main road to Jordan and Syria that runs through the cities of Fallujah and Ramadi in the Sunni-dominated desert province of Anbar, west of Baghdad.

Several thousand protesters took to the streets in Fallujah, holding aloft placards declaring the day a "Friday of honor." Some carried old Iraqi flags used during the era of former dictator Saddam Hussein, whose Sunni-dominated government was ousted in the U.S.-led invasion nearly a decade ago.

Others raised the current flag, which was approved in 2008. A few hoisted the banner of the predominantly Sunni rebels across the border who are fighting to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Massive crowds also blocked the highway in Ramadi, further to the west, to demand "fair treatment" from the government and?the release of prisoners, said Dhari Arkan, the deputy governor of Anbar province.

"The people have demands that must be met by the Baghdad government immediately or these demonstrations will spread nationwide," Arkan said. "The people can bring down the regime, just like what happened in other Arab Spring countries."

In the northern city of Mosul, abound 3,000 demonstrators took to the streets to denounce what they called the sidelining of Sunnis in Iraq and to demand the release of Sunni prisoners. As in protests earlier in the week, demonstrators there chanted the Arab Spring slogan: "The people want the downfall of the regime."

Thousands likewise turned out in the northern Sunni towns of Tikrit and Samarra, where they were joined by lawmakers and provincial officials, said Salahuddin provincial spokesman Mohammed al-Asi.

At a conference in Baghdad, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki warned against a return to sectarian conflict and cautioned that the country is close to returning to the "dark days when people were killed because of their names or identities."

He also used the occasion to take a jab at the protesters in Anbar.

"Nations that look for peace, love and reconstruction must choose civilized ways to express themselves. It is not acceptable to express opinions by blocking the roads, encouraging sectarianism, threating to launch wars and dividing Iraq," he said. "Instead we need to talk, to listen to each other and to agree ... to end our differences."

The demonstrations follow the arrest last week of 10 bodyguards assigned to Finance Minister Rafia al-Issawi, who comes from Anbar and is one of the central government's most senior Sunni officials.

While the detentions triggered the latest bout of unrest, the demonstrations also tap into deeper Sunni fears that they are being marginalized by the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Although the government includes some Sunni Arabs and Kurdish officials as part of a power-sharing agreement, it draws the bulk of its support from Iraq's majority Shiites.

Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi, another top-ranking Sunni politician, is now living in exile in Turkey after being handed multiple death sentences earlier this year for allegedly running death squads ? a charge he dismisses as politically motivated.

Sunni-dominated Anbar province has been the scene of several large demonstrations and road blockages since last Saturday. The vast territory was once the heart of the deadly Sunni insurgency that emerged after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.

Al-Qaida is believed to be rebuilding in pockets of Anbar, and militants linked to it are thought to be helping Sunni rebels in Syria.

___

Associated Press writers Sinan Salaheddin and Adam Schreck contributed reporting from Baghdad.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iraqi-sunni-protesters-turn-several-cities-155639815.html

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Friday, December 28, 2012

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I installed some speed reading apps and tested them. I?ve so far notices a few ?categories? or groups of equals:

  • One kind exists mostly from showing a text word by word in the middle of the screen. Showing each word a very short time and so you can read at a high wpm because you never need to move your eyes.
  • Another kind is merely a speed reading article disguised as app.
  • Another kind is no speed reading app but just a reading app with a fancy name.
  • Yet another kind is training in the form of news/actually.
  • And the last kind is a training app, not for your own stuff but purely for training.

I only tested them quickly and unions talked the non-interesting. But they aren?t quite what I?m looking for. Maybe I should write one myself for training and guided reading.

This entry was posted in Other and tagged Android, Self Improvement, Speed Reading. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://www.tjenwellens.eu/other/speed-reading-apps-for-android/

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Mothers of Invention singer Ray Collins dies

By Rolling Stone

Ray Collins, the guitarist who helped found the Mothers of Invention with?Frank Zappa, died on Monday after being admitted to the hospital a week earlier for cardiac arrest, the?New York Times?reports. He was in his mid-70s.

?

Donaldson Collection / Getty Images file

Frank Zappa, Roy Estrada and Ray Collins perform as the Mothers of Invention in 1967.

While the Mothers of Invention helped pave the way for avant-garde rock, Collins started his music career singing in the R&B cover band the Soul Giants. Collins met Zappa in 1961 after seeing him perform at the Sportsman Tavern in his native Pomona; Zappa later joined the group after Collins fired the guitarist Ray Hunt. How the firing actually went down, though, is the subject of some speculation: Zappa said in one interview that Collins "punched [Hunt's] lights out." Collins, however, recalled it differently, with no punching involved.

From 2008: Mothers of Invention drummer dies

The addition of Zappa transformed the group. The guitarist encouraged the group to perform original material (often his own), and soon the Soul Giants changed their name, first to the Mothers and eventually to the Mothers of Invention. Collins sang lead on the Mothers of Invention's first record, "Freak Out!"?(1966), as well as its follow-up "Absolutely Free"?(1967). He quit the band after that album.

500 Greatest Albums of All Time: The Mothers of Invention, 'Freak Out'

In a 2009 interview with?The Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, Collins said he'd grown tired of Zappa's emphasis on satire: "I wanted to make beautiful music. I was raised on Johnny Mathis and Nat King Cole." Still, Collins reunited with his former bandmate several more times, including on the 1968 doo-wop concept album "Cruising with Ruben & the Jets."

2011: Jim Sherwood of The Mothers of Invention dies

In recent years, Mr. Collins was reportedly living out of a van in Claremont, California, where he was frequently seen on sidewalk benches. He'd worked as a taxi driver in Los Angeles and a dishwasher in Hawaii, receiving Social Security checks and some royalties from "Memories of El Monte," a ballad he and Zappa wrote based on the chords to the Penguins' "Earth Angel."

Related content:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2012/12/27/16194753-mothers-of-invention-founding-singer-ray-collins-dies?lite

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Neural Pointillism: Lighting Up the Brain in Psychedelic Relief

Genetic engineering enables individual brain cells of research animals to ignite in brilliant color to trace the elaborate connections of a nervous system


neural artwork Image: Brainbow image

During the last decade, researchers have labored intensively to find new methods to photograph the complex networks of nerve cells that make up the brain and spinal cord, an attempt to overcome the severe limitations of earlier imaging technologies. The emerging science of connectomics, intended to map such connections, will be made possible by deploying these techniques.

In 2007, Jeff Lichtman, Joshua Sanes and colleagues at Harvard University came up with one of the most notable examples of the new brain-cell imaging methods. Brainbow lights up neurons in about 100 different hues, enabling a precise tracking of neural circuitry and synapses, the gaps between brain cells.

>>View the Neural Pointillism Slide Show

Scientists engineer a mouse or another model animal with a gene that randomly causes each neuron to express differing amounts of a red, green or blue fluorescent protein, producing a palette of varying pastel-like colors. Slices of tissue are photographed and recombined to produce detailed imagery of the brain?s structural topography. (The original discovery of what is called green fluorescent protein by Martin Chalfie, Osamu Shinomura and Roger Y. Tsien, from which these new multi-colored fluorescent proteins are derived, was awarded the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.)

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=93d09bab44843f32ccf87e0d8682cb58

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Video: Sen. Corker on "fiscal cliff" situation: "It's a travesty" (cbsnews)

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

Monkey see, monkey do: Visual feedback is necessary for imitating facial expressions

Dec. 27, 2012 ? Research using new technology shows that our ability to imitate facial expressions depends on learning that occurs through visual feedback.

Studies of the chameleon effect confirm what salespeople, tricksters, and Lotharios have long known: Imitating another person's postures and expressions is an important social lubricant.

But how do we learn to imitate with any accuracy when we can't see our own facial expressions and we can't feel the facial expressions of others?

Richard Cook of City University London, Alan Johnston of University College London, and Cecilia Heyes of the University of Oxford investigate possible mechanisms underlying our ability to imitate in two studies published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

In the first experiment, the researchers videotaped participants as they recited jokes and then asked them to imitate four randomly selected facial expressions from their videos. When they achieved what they perceived to be the target expression, the participants recorded the attempt with the click of a computer mouse.

A computer program evaluated the accuracy of participants' imitation attempts against a map of the target expression. In contrast to previous studies that relied on subjective assessments, this new technology allowed for automated and objective measurement of imitative accuracy.

In one experiment, the researchers found that participants who were able to see their imitation attempts through visual feedback improved over successive attempts. But participants who had to rely solely on proprioception -- sensing the relative position of their facial features -- got progressively worse.

These results are consistent with the associative sequence-learning model, which holds that our ability to imitate accurately depends on learned associations between what we see (in the mirror or through feedback from others) and what we feel.

Cook and colleagues conclude that contingent visual feedback may be a useful component of rehabilitation and skill-training programs that are designed to improve individuals' ability to imitate facial gestures.

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

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Journal Reference:

  1. R. Cook, A. Johnston, C. Heyes. Facial Self-Imitation: Objective Measurement Reveals No Improvement Without Visual Feedback. Psychological Science, 2012; DOI: 10.1177/0956797612452568

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/BxPGDLaHIAM/121227142959.htm

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Philanthropy: You're doing it wrong | Felix Salmon

Merry Christmas! Maybe it?s because of some vestigial religious undertones to this holiday, or maybe it?s because the end of the tax year is rapidly approaching, along with the urgency of maximizing your annual deductions. Either way, this is a particularly philanthropic time of year. And since I?m personally feeling very charitable right now, I?ve decided to do you all the favor of telling you that when it comes to philanthropy, you?re doing it wrong.

Interestingly, philanthropy is one of those areas where the richer you are, the more likely you are to be doing it spectacularly wrong. So to make you feel better still, this is aimed mainly at the mega-philanthropists: the people who give away millions of dollars and feel fantastic for doing so. These are the people at the heart of the debate over capping the mortgage-interest tax deduction: they receive an outsized proportion of its costs, on the grounds, to quote Bob Shiller, that

charitable giving can substitute for a good part of the things that the government would otherwise be doing itself, a factor that is rarely introduced into budget calculations. Indeed, in many cases, individual philanthropy may be more effective than government expenditures.

Being ?more effective than government expenditures? is a pretty low bar to hurdle. But that doesn?t mean it?s reasonable to assume that most philanthropic donations hurdle it with ease. Remember John Paulson, with his $100 million gift to the Central Park Conservancy: I think I?m entirely safe in saying that the government, in the form of the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation, spends its money a lot more carefully and effectively, despite the fact that it has to divvy up its budget across 5,000 different properties, including Central Park.

And the much bigger problem is that Paulson is no exception here. Let?s run down the list of things you?re likely to be doing wrong, if you?re a rich philanthropist:

You meddle in the internal workings of the charities you donate to, even though you?re not on the board.

If you?ve done your homework, then you?re giving to a certain charity precisely because you admire the way it gets things done. If you don?t admire the way it gets things done, then you should find a different charity: there are many very good ones out there.

What?s more, your experience in the for-profit world is not nearly as valuable as you think it is. The executives are probably good at flattering you by asking you for your advice: the slogan in the non-profit world is ?if you want advice, ask for money; if you want money, ask for advice?. Once again, be humble. They live these issues every week; they know them better than you do.

Remember: the things which work in your business aren?t necessarily a good idea in your philanthropy. One of the reasons why so many rich businessmen give money to microlenders is that it?s a model they?re intuitively very comfortable with. Even if there?s very little evidence that it actually does much good.

You set up your own foundation.

The classic waste of money and resources. Foundations are expensive things to run, both in terms of overhead costs and in terms of opportunity costs. A well-run foundation will be staffed with qualified philanthropic professionals; such people are not easy to find, and if you do find them, the fact is that their talents could almost certainly be put to better use elsewhere.

The main reason why people set up foundations rather than just giving their money to the needy is that foundations are a have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too form of philanthropy: you get to say that you?ve given your money away while at the same time continuing to have ultimate control over that money. That?s great for your own personal power and influence, but it?s almost never the most effective way to spend your money.

Personal foundations are also the easy way out: a way of saying ?I know I want to give my money away, but I can?t be bothered to actually do it yet.? If you?re committed to philanthropy, that?s not good enough. You?re trying to improve the world, rather than trying to create a tax dodge which gives away the bare minimum every year.

You give your money to Harvard, or any other large endowment.

The Harvard endowment currently stands somewhere north of $30 billion. If it grows at 5% a year, that?s $29 million per week. The marginal utility of your donation is probably smaller here than anywhere else. The general principle here is this: giving money to a well-endowed institution is just another way of not actually spending your money.

You fund architecture.

It?s generally easier to raise money for a new building than it is to raise money for continuing operations, which is one reason why charities often embark on huge capital campaigns. But such campaigns often end in tears, with cost overruns which necessitate staff cutbacks or even high-level resignations. Leave the ego-infested world of architecture to others: your money can always be better spent elsewhere. Mission-building is more important than edifice-building.

You encourage mission creep.

If an organization is doing great work in Cambodia, don?t offer it a large amount of money to do the same thing in Nicaragua. Donations with strings attached are bad; donations which essentially force a non-profit to do something it never particularly wanted to do in the first place are much, much worse. Examples would include most cancer wings at hospitals; or a dedicated yoga center at a university. (I?ll come back to that example.) Charities are under constant pressure to move away from their core mission and towards where the money is; don?t be part of the problem.

You kid yourself that your mere presence on the board, or your ?celebrity endorsement?, is valuable.

It?s your money that?s valuable ? the money you give to the organization, and the money you can persuade others to give to the organization. The main value of your presence on the board is the implicit or explicit financial commitment that comes with it.

You are a rich and important person, but no one is going to give money to this organization just because you did.

You?re a tease.

Charities are forced to put a lot of effort into buttering up donors and potential donors. Don?t be part of the problem: don?t waste their time. If you?re going to give money, give money. If you?re not, then say so, clearly.

You confuse philanthropy with social climbing.

Philanthropy is one way of feeling better about yourself; buying the admiration of your friends and peers by ostentatiously giving money to their favorite causes is another. Do not confuse the two.

You think that going to to charity balls constitutes charitable activity.

Some people actually enjoy these things. If you?re the kind of person who likes to dress up in black tie spending an evening in an orgy of rubber chicken and self-congratulation, then by all means go to as many of these things as you like. But if you?re not that kind of person, and you feel that you can?t politely decline, then just take the money you would otherwise spend on a table, and donate it to the organization directly. That way the charity gets all of the donation, and you get four hours of your life back.

Amazingly, charity balls aren?t even the most inefficient way of giving to charity. Paul Sullivan recently glowingly profiled Cindy Citrone, who went to Sotheby?s and spent $425,000 on ?a small, pink-diamond ring and diamond bracelet that had the word love written on it in rubies.? That was probably near the market price for those jewels, and in any case, given that this was an auction, there was certainly an underbidder willing to pay almost as much. So even though the auction proceeds were going to charity, the marginal benefit of Citrone?s $425,000 was pretty tiny. And yet, somehow, Sullivan managed to write a column implying that this was a good way of giving money to charity. Donating the jewels was a genuine charitable act; buying them, not so much.

You put your name on a building, or anything else, for that matter.

Why?

You transactionalize your giving.

The world of non-profit fundraising has become increasingly transactionalized: everything?s a tit-for-tat operation, these days. Give a small amount of money and you get a yellow wristband; give a large amount of money and you get to rename the entire organization you?re funding after yourself. It?s an invidious trend, and the only way to reverse it is for prominent philanthropists to refuse to play the game. The Jewish charitable tradition of tzedakah calls out anonymous gifts for especial praise: philanthropists and charities alike should take note.

All too often, meetings between fundraisers and donors turn into a kind of bargaining session: if you give us this, we?ll give you that. The conversation ignores the important ? how the charity will use the money to improve the world ? and concentrates instead on the banal: what the charity can do to publicly thank the donor.

In one particularly odious recent case in New York, two foundations which helped pay for a big new FDR memorial on Roosevelt Island went all the way to the state?s Supreme Court to ensure that their names appeared so prominently as to damage the whole architectural construct. In their minds, the quality of the memorial itself was less important than the conspicuousness of the thank-yous.

It?s incredibly easy to find examples of all of these sins, but one in particular jumps out at me for the way it encapsulates many of them at once. Here?s Andrew Rice, talking about the way that the University of Virginia?s Teresa Sullivan tried to get money from one of its richest alums:

One of Sullivan?s most promising targets was Paul Tudor Jones, a Virginia alumnus, billionaire hedge-fund manager and philanthropist. Though he had given away countless millions, Jones considered his brain to be his primary asset: he was fond of saying that ?intellectual capital will always trump financial capital.? He had already given large sums to his alma mater, and he told Sullivan that he and his wife had an exciting new idea: endowing a center for yoga.

?I thought, Oh, man, people are going to be very cynical about this,? recalls Bob Sweeney, UVA?s fund-raising chief. So Sullivan convened a dinner at her home with professors of religion, medicine and other disciplines. ?I said, ?O.K., let us think about it a little bit,? ? she said. ?We began talking about, wait a minute, it?s not just yoga.? The group swiftly produced a proposal for a multidisciplinary Contemplative Sciences Center, which was vetted by Jones?s paid yoga consultant. In April, Sullivan announced the $15 million gift, one of the largest of her tenure.

This was all part of a multi-year buttering-up campaign, of someone who is convinced that just by thinking about the University of Virginia in the right way, he can do more good than by giving it money. The University, of course, knew exactly what it needed money for, but Paul Tudor Jones wasn?t interested in what the University thought: he had his own ideas ? and his own paid yoga consultant.

When someone offers you $15 million, and a very large part of your job is to raise money, you can?t just laugh and say their idea is ridiculous. Instead, you have to spend an inordinate amount of valuable management time, across multiple university faculties, and eventually construct a white elephant that no one actually wanted in the first place.

And so the lesson here is pretty simple: Don?t be Paul Tudor Jones. Instead, have some humility. Here?s one idea: for every dollar you spend on overhead and payroll at your foundation, make sure that you donate a dollar earmarked for overhead and payroll somewhere else. Those are the funds which are always the hardest to raise, after all.

If you did that, you would be helping to counteract one of the most corrosive and invidious memes in the nonprofit sector: the idea that it?s incredibly important to look at the ?overhead ratio?, and give only to charities which spend a small proportion of their money on overhead, and a large proportion of their money on program activities. It really isn?t. But partly because a lot of people think that it is, this year I gave to DNDi, the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative, an amazing nonprofit which is basically all overhead. Its job is to coordinate the work of organizations all over the world, from non-profits to pharmaceutical companies to multilateral organizations to national health ministries, and to get them all working together to create drug cocktails which can cure devastating diseases in some of the most forlorn parts of the world.

What else should you do? Well, if you?re one of those extremely wealthy people who has pledged to give away most of their money, then follow the spirit of the pledge, rather than just the letter. It?s not enough to set up a foundation which will receive most of your wealth when you die: that?s, quite literally, a cop-out. Instead, embrace the concept of front-loading, and give the money away right now, as much as you can. In a world which is getting richer, your money is best put to use now, rather than in the future. And in a world with many vicious cycles, an increase in up-front investment can prevent enormous damage down the road. You?re not building a business with permanent equity capital, you?re trying to make a difference. And if you think that the world would be better off if you invested the money, made a huge return, and then gave away that much larger sum ? well, that?s just your hubris at work. Remember, in philanthropy, you?re meant to be the humble one. The graveyards are full of people who dreamed of giving away hypothetical future riches. Much better to give away real present ones.

What?s more, if it turns out that you really are very successful, and that your wealth is going up rather than down, increase your giving commensurately. This is a tough one: even very large-scale philanthropists like George Soros have found it very difficult to make a serious dent in their wealth by giving it away. But it is possible. Do it.

Finally, there?s something that all of us can do, whether we?re dynastically rich or really rather poor: volunteering. But weirdly, volunteering is harder for the rich, who can more easily afford the time commitment: they often think that time spent volunteering is wasted.

The logic, after all, is simple and clear. The value to the charity of my labor is $x; so if I just donate $y>$x then the charity is better off. What?s more, the value of my time is $z>$x, so in a way I?m destroying value by volunteering.

The problem with this logic is that it ignores the enormous value to the volunteer of volunteering. Volunteering is the best and most effective way of piercing the bubble that all wealthy people live in every minute of every day, and of giving such people a gut-level understanding of the problems the charity is trying to solve.

On that level, volunteering is much more effective than some fact-finding poverty tour, where a bunch of rich donors or potential donors jet in to observe the Great Work Being Done in some far-flung country. The logistics involved in organizing such tours are substantial, and the good they do is minuscule. So if you want to see for yourself what an organization is doing, find out by doing that work yourself.

But volunteering is also worthwhile for its own sake. It gives an extremely valuable perspective on life, one that?s hard to find elsewhere. And it can be incredibly rewarding, in ways both expected and unexpected. Find time to do it: almost nobody ends up regretting the time they spent volunteering.

The theme here is humility, mixed with seriousness. Giving away money effectively isn?t fun or easy, and although it can be rewarding, it?s important to keep your eyes on the job at hand, rather than on maximizing those rewards. Philanthropy has always been self-serving in large part, and that?s never going to end. But there?s no good reason why you should be part of the problem.

Source: http://blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2012/12/25/philanthropy-youre-doing-it-wrong/

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Prevent Ice Dams from Forming on Your Roof - Tell Toledo

?

Toledo roofing contractor, Arnold?s Home Improvement, have announced the third installment of their Home Improvement Webinar Series. The free 30-minute session titled, Prevent Ice Dams from Forming on Your Roof, will be held Thursday, January 17, 2013 at 12 noon.

The winter months can damage your roof; ice dams can get under shingles, condensation can cause problems with mold and you can be left facing an entire roof replacement. Join home improvement experts from Arnold?s Home Improvement as they present preventative steps homeowners can take to protect their roofs from ice dams and water damage this winter.

Topics to be covered include:

? What is an ice dam?
? Overview of the damage that ice dams can cause to your roof
? Signs that your home may be susceptible to ice dams
? How you can prevent ice dams from occurring

Register now. Visit http://bit.ly/Vb1Sja to register for the free, 30-minute Webinar. GoToMeeting details will be emailed upon registration.

About Arnold?s Home Improvement

Founded in 1990, Arnold?s Home Improvement is an award-winning home improvement and remodeling contractor located in Toledo, OH providing services throughout northwest Ohio and southeast Michigan. The company?s mission is to provide value, comfort and convenience for clients through personal and caring service. Arnold?s Home Improvement has an A+ BBB rating, is an Owens Corning Platinum Contractor and is a member of the Professional Remodelers Organization (PRO) and Home Builders Association of Greater Toledo, Inc. For additional information or a free, no hassle estimate, call 419.476.9600 or visit www.arnoldshomeimprovement.com.

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Source: http://tell.toledo.com/2012/12/26/prevent-ice-dams-from-forming-on-your-roof/

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Two killed as passenger plane lands in Myanmar rice field

YANGON (Reuters) - Two people were killed and 10 wounded in northeast Myanmar on Tuesday when a passenger plane missed an airport runway in heavy fog and landed in a rice paddy, state television said.

The pilot of the Air Bagan plane touched down beyond Heho airport in Shan state, killing one passenger and a motorcyclist on the ground, MRTV said.

MRTV had earlier reported the dead passenger was an 11-year-old boy but the airline later confirmed the deceased was a female tour guide.

Four foreigners -- two Americans, a South Korean and a Briton -- and the pilot were among the injured. The plane was carrying 63 passengers, 51 of whom were foreigners.

Air Bagan is one of five airlines operating domestic routes in Myanmar.

Owned by Tay Za, a local tycoon blacklisted by the United States for his alleged links to former military regime, Air Bagan was the country's first privately run carrier when it was established in 2004.

(Reporting by Aung Hla Tun; Editing by Martin Petty and Daniel Magnowski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/two-killed-passenger-plane-lands-myanmar-rice-field-063522030.html

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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Getting The Right Towable Tube, Boat Tube Or Ski Tubes

There are many different ways that you can enjoy your time on the water today. Choices for ski tubes or a boat tube can really add to your experience today. Getting the right type of towable tube is important for the safety of the people using it as well as making sure they last.

This activity provides hours of fun for people of all ages. It provides entertainment for those who are just watching as well as the tube flies across the water. There are many different activities that people can do with these tubes but the equipment can sometimes be expensive.

Deciding on this type of entertainment means that you will be able to purchase the equipment one time and use it many times if you get the right things. You want to be sure that the tube is going to be able to stand up to the harsh tugging of the boat as well as the water that it is going to encounter. Using the wrong style will quickly result in the tube falling apart.

There are many different ways you can purchase these things online and offline. However it is often the case the people buy these on a whim as a last minute decision. Therefore you might find that your favorite store is out of stock.

Instead you might consider planning ahead to ensure that you can get what you need. You can order these from an online retailer and have them shipped you right away. As a result you will find that you have a number of options for the equipment you need.

The decision you make will depend on a number of things today. Because you want to make sure that you will have the right style to hold up to the activities you are planning, you need to do plenty of research on the activity. As you look at various styles, you will find there are several different sizes available as well.

Deciding on this activity will require equipment that is specific to what you plan on doing. Using ski tubes is much different from the option to just float down the river. Floating down a river can easily be accomplished with any type of tube.

Selecting the right towable tube will depend on several different factors of course. There are a number of different choices when you are looking at aboat tube. You need to know how many people you are planning on putting on them at any given time as well as how fast you plan to go.

About the Author:
When you are looking for high quality water accessories such an tubes for tubing, trampolines and other items, you can find what you need at Premium Power Sports. Visit them online today at www.premiumpowersports.com to view their inventory.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Getting-The-Right-Towable-Tube--Boat-Tube-Or-Ski-Tubes/4345637

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Health care tax hikes for 2013 may be just a start

FILE - In this Thursday, June 28, 2012 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the East Room of the White House in Washington after the Supreme Court ruled on his health care legislation. New taxes are coming Jan. 1, 2013 to help finance Obama's health care overhaul. Most people may not notice. But they will pay attention if Congress decides to start taxing employer-sponsored health insurance, one of the options in play if lawmakers can ever agree on a budget deal to reduce federal deficits. (AP Photo/Luke Sharrett, Pool)

FILE - In this Thursday, June 28, 2012 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the East Room of the White House in Washington after the Supreme Court ruled on his health care legislation. New taxes are coming Jan. 1, 2013 to help finance Obama's health care overhaul. Most people may not notice. But they will pay attention if Congress decides to start taxing employer-sponsored health insurance, one of the options in play if lawmakers can ever agree on a budget deal to reduce federal deficits. (AP Photo/Luke Sharrett, Pool)

(AP) ? New taxes are coming Jan. 1 to help finance President Barack Obama's health care overhaul. Most people may not notice. But they will pay attention if Congress decides to start taxing employer-sponsored health insurance, one of the options in play if lawmakers can ever agree on a budget deal to reduce federal deficits.

The tax hikes already on the books, taking effect in 2013, fall mainly on people who make lots of money and on the health care industry. But about half of Americans benefit from the tax-free status of employer health insurance. Workers pay no income or payroll taxes on what their employer contributes for health insurance, and in most cases on their own share of premiums as well.

It's the single biggest tax break allowed by the government, outstripping the mortgage interest deduction, the deduction for charitable giving and other better-known benefits. If the value of job-based health insurance were taxed like regular income, it would raise nearly $150 billion in revenue in 2013, according to congressional estimates. By comparison, wiping away the mortgage interest deduction would bring in only about $90 billion.

"If you are looking to raise revenue to pay for tax reform, that is the biggest pot of money of all," said Martin Sullivan, chief economist with Tax Analysts, a nonpartisan publisher of tax information.

It's hard to see how lawmakers can avoid touching health insurance if they want to eliminate loopholes and curtail deductions so as to raise revenue and lower tax rates. Congress probably wouldn't do away with the health care tax break, but limit it in some form. Such limits could be keyed to the cost of a particular health insurance plan, the income level of taxpayers, or a combination.

Many economists think some kind of limit would be a good thing, because it would force consumers to watch costs, and that could help keep health care spending in check. Obama's health law took a tentative step toward limits by imposing a tax on high-value health insurance plans. But that doesn't start until 2018.

Next spring will be three years since Congress passed the health care overhaul, but because of a long phase-in, many of the taxes to finance the plan are only now coming into effect. Medicare spending cuts that help pay for covering the uninsured have started to take effect, but they also are staggered. The law's main benefit, coverage for 30 million uninsured people, will take a little longer. It doesn't start until Jan. 1, 2014.

The biggest tax hike from the health care law has a bit of mystery to it. The legislation calls it a "Medicare contribution," but none of the revenue will go to the Medicare trust fund. Instead, it's funneled into the government's general fund, which does pay the lion's share of Medicare outpatient and prescription costs, but also covers most other things the government does.

The new tax is a 3.8 percent levy on investment income that applies to individuals making more than $200,000 or married couples above $250,000. Projected to raise $123 billion from 2013-2019, it comes on top of other taxes on investment income. And while it does apply to profits from home sales, the vast majority of sellers will not have to worry since another law allows individuals to shield up to $250,000 in gains on their home from taxation. (Married couples can exclude up to $500,000 in home sale gains.)

Investors have already been taking steps to avoid the tax, selling assets this year before it takes effect. The impact of the investment tax will be compounded if Obama and Republicans can't stave off the automatic tax increases scheduled at the end of the year if there's no budget agreement.

High earners will face another new tax under the health care law Jan. 1. It's an additional Medicare payroll tax of 0.9 percent on wage income above $200,000 for an individual or $250,000 for couples. This one does go to the Medicare trust fund.

Donald Marron, director of the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, calls the health care law tax increases medium-sized by historical standards. The center, a joint project of the Brookings Institution and the Urban Institute, provides in-depth analysis on tax issues.

They also foreshadow the current debate about raising taxes on people with high incomes. "These were an example of the president winning, and raising taxes on upper-income people," said Marron. "They are going to happen."

Other health care law tax increases taking effect Jan. 1:

? A 2.3 percent sales tax on medical devices used by hospitals and doctors. Industry is trying to delay or repeal the tax, saying it will lead to a loss of jobs. Several economists say manufacturers should be able to pass on most of the cost.

? A limit on the amount employees can contribute to tax-free flexible spending accounts for medical expenses. It's set at $2,500 for 2013, and indexed thereafter for inflation.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-12-25-Health%20Care%20Taxes/id-c670c0dfa8834affbe2bd32e772e2cfb

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