Sunday, July 28, 2013

'Duck Dynasty' patriarch Phil plans to leave show

TV

10 hours ago

Duck Dynasty

Brian Doben / Parade

"Duck Dynasty" will return for a fourth season on August 14.

Hold onto your beards. It looks like there's about to be a shake-up in the "Duck Dynasty" world.

Phil Robertson, the Duck Commander creator and papa of the Robertson clan, recently told Parade that he (and his epic beard) plans to leave the show in the near future.

?Not long," Phil said of how much longer he intends to participate in the show. "But I think it?ll go on without me.?

Indeed it will. The A & E hit show -- which, according to Parade, is the No.1 nonfiction cable series, is set to premiere its fourth season on Aug. 14. The new episodes will feature Phil and his duck-hunting family in all sorts of new scenarios. We can also expect to meet Alan, Phil and Kay's clean-shaven son, who will return to the family business during season four after spending 20 years as a preacher.

During a recent speech at a California church, Alan said he chose to step in front of the cameras to help spread his religious message.

"Because of my association with the show, I'll get to minister to a lot more people," Alan told the congregation. "Any person that's an evangelist, that's what you want to do, so I had to give this up for something possibly bigger."

Alan's wife, Lisa, will also join the cast for season four.

Despite their newfound fame, Willie, who serves as CEO of the family business, says that the Robertsons are closer than ever.

?It?s probably the opposite of most reality shows," he said. "And nobody gets a big head because we?re doing it all together.?

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/duck-dynasty-patriarch-phil-plans-leave-show-6C10765762

Chuck Hagel ncaa football CES russell wilson Pokemon jillian michaels Freddy E

Feast of Lanterns: Pets parade through Pacific Grove - Monterey ...

Click photo to enlarge

Malika Shihadeh, 4, and her dog Rocco dress in bee costumes on Friday during the Feast of Lanterns Pet Parade in Pacific Grove. Saturday's all-day festival will be followed by the pageant at 8 p.m.

Malika Shihadeh, 4, and her dog Rocco dress in bee costumes on Friday during the Feast of Lanterns Pet Parade in Pacific Grove. Saturday's all-day festival will be followed by the pageant at 8 p.m.

Source: http://www.montereyherald.com/news/ci_23743180/feast-lanterns-pets-parade-through-pacific-grove

how to carve a turkey ipad 2 wal mart happy thanksgiving Macys Thanksgiving Day Parade 2012 Turkey Cooking Times Butterball

Friday, July 26, 2013

Asia stocks flounder as China resists stimulus

MANILA, Philippines (AP) ? Asian stock markets floundered Friday as China pressed ahead with industrial restructuring that is partly to blame for slowing growth in the world's No. 2 economy.

Beijing ordered companies to close factories in 19 industries where overproduction has led to price-cutting wars, affirming its determination to push ahead with a painful makeover of the economy. That move followed weak manufacturing data on Wednesday.

Communist leaders are trying to reduce reliance on investment and trade. But a slowdown that pushed China's economic growth to a two-decade low of 7.5 percent last quarter had earlier prompted suggestions they might have to reverse course and stimulate the economy with more investment to reduce the threat of job losses and unrest.

Japan's Nikkei 225 stock average was down 3 percent at 14,129.98 as the yen rose against the dollar. Hong Kong's Hang Seng was little changed at 21,904.18. China's Shanghai Composite dropped 0.3 percent to 2,015.14.

Manuel Antonio Lisbona, from Manila's PNB Securities Inc., said the mixed trading could be attributed to continuing market reaction to feeble economic data from China and unexciting corporate earnings reports.

"It's a continuation of the sentiment for the past few days," he said. "The markets are still digesting the implications of the weak China data that came out earlier this week."

Elsewhere in the region, Australia's S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.1 percent to 5,042. Stocks in Singapore, Malaysia and New Zealand were slightly higher while benchmarks in the Philippines and Indonesia fell.

Andrew Sullivan, principal Asian trader for Kim Eng Securities, said the Japanese market has been affected by the strengthening of the yen overnight as people wait for comments from Prime Minister Abe about the next economic reform steps the government will take. He said the market is watching for signs of changes in agriculture, employment, the pharmaceutical industry and taxes.

Overall, trading has been quiet as a lot of people wait for next week's meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee in the U.S. for guidance on the tapering of U.S. government bond purchases, he said. Since late last year, the U.S. Federal Reserve has been buying $85 billion in Treasury and mortgage bonds a month ? a move that has kept long-term rates near record lows and supported economic recovery.

European stocks drifted lower Thursday amid mixed economic and corporate news. Not even an upbeat German business survey or news that the British economy has picked up steam could alter the prevailing selling mood.

U.S. economic figures failed to lift the mood on Wall Street much, with a bigger-than-expected 4.2 percent surge in durable goods orders in June downplayed because it was largely due to elevated aircraft sales. Meanwhile, a 7,000 increase in weekly U.S. jobless claims was more or less in line with expectations.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 13.37 points, or 0.1 percent, to close at 15,555.61. The Standard & Poor's 500 rose 4.31 points, or 0.3 percent, to 1,690.25.

The latest run of corporate earnings around the world also failed to excite. Though a number of companies like Facebook have impressed, investors have not shown much willingness to push markets higher on the back of corporate earnings. Among the latest releases, Facebook and General Motors impressed but German chemical company BASF disappointed.

In energy trading, benchmark crude was down 37 cents at $105.13 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It rose 10 cents to close at $105.49 on Thursday.

The euro was little changed at $1.3280 from $1.3277 late Thursday. The dollar dropped to 98.79 yen from 99.15 yen.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asia-stocks-flounder-china-resists-stimulus-045436180.html

Heat Harlem Shake mediterranean diet chase kim kardashian pregnant papa johns dominos dominos

Central Florida sting nets 41 charged with sex crimes against children

July 25, 2013 /24-7PressRelease/ -- Forty-one people were arrested recently in what is being called the largest sting operation of its kind in Polk County, Florida. The weeklong undercover investigation involved a collaboration of multiple agencies to target individuals suspected of online sex crimes against children.

Detectives posed as minors online

As reported by the Orlando Sentinel, 40 men and one woman were arrested in the sting after allegedly responding to Internet advertisements and chatting online with undercover detectives posing as minors. The accused individuals have been charged with a variety of criminal offenses, including:
- Transmitting harmful material to a minor.
- Attempted lewd battery.
- Traveling to meet a minor.

Several of those facing charges in connection to the sting had allegedly traveled to Polk County from nearby areas, including Orange County, Osceola County and Seminole County. Under Florida Law, it is a second-degree felony to travel any distance to engage in unlawful sexual conduct with a minor or any individual believed to be a minor. Convicted individuals can face harsh penalties, including up to 15 years in prison in addition to any other penalties they may be facing.

Tough on sex crimes against minors

The Polk County Sheriff's Department is well known throughout the region for its particularly aggressive approach to addressing sex crimes against children, and its intensity has continued to increase in recent years.

The PCSD was named Coordinator of the Central Florida Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force in 2007, and since then the task force has grown to include dozens of representatives from state, local and federal agencies. The Lake County Sheriff's Department, which is also known for its tough stance on sexual offenses involving children, is also affiliated with the task force.

Enforcement efforts increase in recent years

In 2011 alone, according to a press release from the Polk County Sheriff's Department, the Central Florida ICAC Task Force conducted seven undercover operations and investigated 1,156 cases of suspected Internet crimes against children -- an increase of 37 percent from the year before. As a result of their investigations, in 2011 the task force arrested 306 people suspected of sexual offenses against children, including:
- Distribution of child pornography.
- Use of a computer to seduce a child.
- Traveling to meet a minor.
- Lewd battery.
- Use of a computer to solicit a minor to engage in sex.

Because the potential consequences can be severe and life-changing, it is important to get help right away from a skilled defense lawyer if you or a loved one is accused of a sexual offense in Florida. An attorney with broad knowledge of Florida's laws and judicial system can help ensure that you are treated fairly by investigators and prosecutors, and will fight tirelessly on your behalf to give you the best possible defense.

Article provided by Law Offices of Mark L. Horwitz, P.A.
Visit us at www.mlhorwitzlaw.com

---
Press release service and press release distribution provided by http://www.24-7pressrelease.com

Source: http://finance.bnet.com/bnet/news/read?GUID=24721236

nurse jackie nurse jackie peeps nhl playoffs 2012 masters the borgias shroud of turin

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Dina Butcher, Bismarck, letter: Parade no place for 'obscene objects of bad taste'

BISMARCK ? To what lows will the extremist opponents of a woman?s right to make health decisions go?

Judging by the shaped plastic ?fetuses? that they threw to children watching the parade at the North Dakota State Fair, they have definitely reached an all-time low in bad taste. Even Rob Port , a tea-party pundit, took exception to this outrageousness in his ?Say Anything? blog.

How terrifying for those kids who picked up the items, expecting candy. Yuck!

I only wish that more of the lawmakers who?d voted for North Dakota?s new gaggle of unconstitutional bills had been marching in the parade so they could have been pelted by those obscene objects of bad taste. Again: Yuck!

Thankfully, various courts are ruling in clear language that these poorly reasoned actions by extremist legislators around the country are unconstitutional. But then, legislators knew that and did not care about how much taxpayers? money would be squandered to placate the hysterical voices of those who would deny infertile couples the joy of parenthood.

Tags: in the mail,?opinion,?updates

Source: http://www.grandforksherald.com/event/article/id/269132/

Election 2012 Results polling place comedy central philadelphia eagles obamacare Todd Akin Register To Vote

Too Good to Be True

Woman wearing a red shirt. Does the red shirt mean she's ovulating? Not so fast ...

Photo by Ghenadie Rusu/Thinkstock

Are women three times more likely to wear red or pink when they are most fertile? No, probably not. But here's how hardworking researchers, prestigious scientific journals, and gullible journalists have been fooled into believing so.

The paper I'll be talking about appeared online this month in Psychological Science, the flagship journal of the Association for Psychological Science, which represents the serious, research-focused (as opposed to therapeutic) end of the psychology profession.*

"Women Are More Likely to Wear Red or Pink at Peak Fertility," by Alec Beall and Jessica Tracy, is based on two samples: a self-selected sample of 100 women from the Internet, and 24 undergraduates at the University of British Columbia. Here's the claim: "Building on evidence that men are sexually attracted to women wearing or surrounded by red, we tested whether women show a behavioral tendency toward wearing reddish clothing when at peak fertility. ... Women at high conception risk were more than three times more likely to wear a red or pink shirt than were women at low conception risk. ... Our results thus suggest that red and pink adornment in women is reliably associated with fertility and that female ovulation, long assumed to be hidden, is associated with a salient visual cue."

Pretty exciting, huh? It?s (literally) sexy as well as being statistically significant. And the difference is by a factor of three?that seems like a big deal.

Really, though, this paper provides essentially no evidence about the researchers' hypotheses, for three little reasons and one big reason.

First, some specific problems with this particular study:

1. Representativeness. What color clothing you wear has a lot to do with where you live and who you hang out with. Participants in an Internet survey and University of British Columbia students aren't particularly representative of much more than ... participants in an Internet survey and University of British Columbia students.

2. Measurement. The researchers asked people when their last menstrual period started. People might not remember. The interviewers ask for respondents' certainty, but respondents often overstate their certainty.

3. Bias. The article defines the "high-conception risk group" as women who had onset of menses six to 14 days earlier. I saw this and was suspicious. (I have personal experience with fertility schedules because my wife and I had a child in our mid-40s.) According to womenshealth.gov, the most fertile days are between days 10 and 17 of a 28-day menstrual cycle. Babycenter.com says days 12 to 17. I looked at Beall and Tracy's paper and followed some references, and it appears they followed a 2000 paper by Penton-Voak and Perrett, which points to a 1996 paper by Regan, which points to the 14th day as the best estimate of ovulation. Regan claims that "the greatest amount of sexual desire was experienced" on Day 8. So my best guess (but it?s just a guess) is that Penton-Voak and Perrett misread Regan, and then Beall and Tracy just followed Penton-Voak and Perrett.

4. And now the clincher, the aspect of the study that allowed the researchers to find patterns where none likely exist: "researcher degrees of freedom." That's a term used by psychologist Uri Simonsohn to describe researchers? ability to look at many different aspects of their data in a search for statistical significance. This doesn't mean the researchers are dishonest; they can be sincerely looking for patterns in the data. But our brains are such that we can, and do, find patterns in noise. In this case, the researchers asked people "What color is the shirt you are currently wearing?" but they don't say what they did about respondents who were wearing a dress, nor do they say if they asked about any other clothing. They gave nine color options and then decided to lump red and pink into a single category. They could easily have chosen red or pink on its own, and of course they also could've chosen other possibilities (for example, lumping all dark colors together and looking for a negative effect). They report that other colors didn't yield statistically significant differences, but the point here is that these differences could have been notable. The researchers ran the comparisons and could have reported any other statistically significant outcome. They picked Days 0 to 5 and 15 to 28 as comparison points for the time of supposed peak fertility. There are lots of degrees of freedom in those choices. They excluded some respondents they could've included and included other people they could've excluded. They did another step of exclusion based on responses to a certainty question.

I just gave a lot of detail here, but in a sense the details are the point. The way these studies fool people is that they are reduced to sound bites: Fertile women are three times more likely to wear red! But when you look more closely, you see that there were many, many possible comparisons in the study that could have been reported, with each of these having a plausible-sounding scientific explanation had it appeared as statistically significant in the data.

The standard in research practice is to report a result as ?statistically significant? if its p-value is less than 0.05; that is, if there is less than a 1-in-20 chance that the observed pattern in the data would have occurred if there were really nothing going on in the population. But of course if you are running 20 or more comparisons (perhaps implicitly, via choices involved in including or excluding data, setting thresholds, and so on), it is not a surprise at all if some of them happen to reach this threshold.

The headline result, that women were three times as likely to be wearing red or pink during peak fertility, occurred in two different samples, which looks impressive. But it's not really impressive at all! Rather, it's exactly the sort of thing you should expect to see if you have a small data set and virtually unlimited freedom to play around with the data, and with the additional selection effect that you submit your results to the journal only if you see some catchy pattern.

In focusing on this (literally) colorful example, I don?t mean to be singling out this particular research team for following what are, unfortunately, standard practices in experimental research. Indeed, that this article was published in a leading journal is evidence that its statistical methods were considered acceptable. Statistics textbooks do warn against multiple comparisons, but there is a tendency for researchers to consider any given comparison alone without considering it as one of an ensemble of potentially relevant responses to a research question. And then it is natural for sympathetic journal editors to publish a striking result without getting hung up on what might be viewed as nitpicking technicalities. Each person in this research chain is making a decision that seems scientifically reasonable, but the result is a sort of machine for producing and publicizing random patterns.

There's a larger statistical point to be made here, which is that as long as studies are conducted as fishing expeditions, with a willingness to look hard for patterns and report any comparisons that happen to be statistically significant, we will see lots of dramatic claims based on data patterns that don't represent anything real in the general population. Again, this fishing can be done implicitly, without the researchers even realizing that they are making a series of choices enabling them to over-interpret patterns in their data.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/science/2013/07/statistics_and_psychology_multiple_comparisons_give_spurious_results.html

cory monteith al sharpton george zimmerman Pacific Rim Travon Martin riots KTVU

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Egypt army chief calls for mass rallies in support of new regime

Egypt State TV via AP

Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi delivers a speech in Cairo on Wednesday.

By Ayman Mohyeldin and Charlene Gubash, NBC News

CAIRO ? The army chief who led the ouster of President Mohammed Morsi on Wednesday called for Egyptians to stage mass rallies later this week in support of the interim military-backed regime.

In a speech Wednesday, Gen. Abdel Fatah el-Sissi called on supporters to fill public squares across the country on Friday in support of a campaign by the army and police against "violence" and "terrorism."

His comments were a reference to the deadly clashes between opponents and supporters of Morsi, which have left dozens dead, and to a surge in suspected Islamic militancy in the Sinai Peninsula.

Hussein Malla / AP

Days of massive protests and a military ultimatum forced the country's first democratically elected president from office.

"I am asking the Egyptians next Friday, all of you come down. Why? To delegate me to face the violence and terrorism," he said in his speech at a graduation ceremony for naval and air defense forces.

"If violence is used, the army will fulfill whatever measures to combat violence and terrorism."

His comments came hours after two people were killed in Cairo when pro-Morsi demonstrators marched from a neighborhood to the location of the sit-in where protesters have been camped out since the president?s July 3 ouster.

Meanwhile, Egypt?s ministry of health said 19 people were injured when a bomb ? possibly a hand grenade ? was thrown at a police station in the city of Mansoura, capital of Dakhalia province.

The ministry said civilians were among the injured but it did not give a breakdown.

El-Sissi?s call was almost immediately condemned by a senior member of Morsi?s Muslim Brotherhood, Reuters reported.

?Your threat will not stop the millions from continuing to gather,? Essam El-Erian wrote on his Facebook page on Wednesday, calling el-Sissi ?a coup leader who kills women, children and those at prayer.??

NBC News' Alastair Jamieson and Reuters contributed to this report.

Related:

?

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663309/s/2f183381/sc/20/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C240C196549110Eegypt0Earmy0Echief0Ecalls0Efor0Emass0Erallies0Ein0Esupport0Eof0Enew0Eregime0Dlite/story01.htm

deion sanders creutzfeldt jakob disease the lone ranger mad cow pennsylvania primary jerome simpson