Americans optimistic about economy, pessimistic about jobs

Washington, May 14 (ANI): A majority of American voters believe the nation””s economy is improving, but an equal number believe the job situation is getting worse, according to the latest Fox News poll.

Many more voters continue to say former President George W. Bush is responsible for the federal deficit.

The new poll finds 49 percent of voters think the economy is getting better, while 37 percent say it is getting worse and 11 percent say “staying the same.”

The number saying things are getting better is up 9 percentage points from 40 percent who thought so a year ago (June 2009).

But when it comes to jobs, it””s the reverse: 36 percent say it””s getting better and 48 percent getting worse.

On a personal level, 36 percent say it feels like things are getting better for their family, while about the same number — 38 percent — says it feels like things are getting worse. Another 24 percent say it feels like things are staying the same.

Opinion Dynamics Corp. conducted the national telephone poll for Fox News among 900 registered voters from May 4 to May 5. For the total sample, the poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points. (ANI)

Palin’s answers were ‘scripted’ before TV debate with Biden: GOP strategist

London: Leading Republican strategist Steve Schmidt, the brain behind John McCain’s presidential campaign, has disclosed that former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin’s answers during her TV debate with soon to be US Vice-President Joe Biden were almost rehearsed.

Pitted against the formidable Biden and with time running short, Palin’s preparations for the debate were so poor that the campaign was facing a “crisis” according to Schmidt, and according to him, to avert a complete debacle, Palin was thoroughly tutored.

“These are the questions. Here”s what he”s going to say. Here”s what your most effective response is. That we want to be able to come out of this debate saying you were on offence. If you hear ”A”, you go ahead and say ”B”, and so to that degree it was somewhat scripted,” Schmidt told Sky News.

Incidentally, Schmidt himself had recommended Palin to McCain. They later fell out with Palin accusing McCain’s team of being “too controlling” in her book ‘Going Rogue”.

Schmidt refused to respond to Palin’s accusations directly, saying “I don”t have anything more to add to it on a personal level other than to say that there was a good outcome to that debate.”

Horne frustrated by Waratahs’ bye

Rob Horne is probably the only Waratah less than thrilled by his injury-hit team’s timely bye prior to a potential Super 14 blockbuster against the Brumbies on Saturday week.

Wallabies front rowers Benn Robinson (forearm) and Tatafu Polota-Nau (shoulder) are desperately battling the clock to be fit for the April 24 clash at Sydney’s Olympic stadium and would not have been fit if the Waratahs had a fixture this weekend.

While acknowledging the timeliness of the bye from a team perspective, the 20-year-old Horne is slightly frustrated on a personal level.

Sidelined by a series of hamstring injuries over the past 18 months, the outside centre was relishing a continual run of matches.

After being eased back through four appearances from the bench, Horne has started the Waratahs last three matches.

“I was finding a bit of match fitness last week and now we’ve got the bye, so it hasn’t worked out too well,” Horne said.

“But in a team sense the bye has probably come at a good time for us. We’ve got a few injuries, I think it will refresh us.”

Renowned for his speed in attack and strength in defence, Horne quickly generated a buzz after being given his break in 2008 by then Waratahs’ coach Ewen McKenzie.

Earmarked for big things since making his Super 14 debut as an 18-year-old, Horne was named on the Wallabies 2009 spring tour, but another hamstring niggle forced him to return home without playing a Test.

Waratahs coach Chris Hickey adopted a slowly-slowly attitude with Horne this year, drip feeding him game time before promoting him to the starting line-up for the round seven clash with the Blues.

“I am only 20 years old, so I would like to think I will be in the game a fair while and not rushing it is a big thing. Earlier we tried to rush with a few of them and that obviously resulted in re-injuring,” Horne said.

Horne is adamant playing the Brumbies at the Olympic stadium rather than the Waratahs regular home, the Sydney Football Stadium, will not disadvantage his side.

“I’d like to think we will get a big crowd out there, it’s a massive game in the context of our season, especially going into these last four rounds coming off the bye,” he said.

Contractors worry as mill shutdown extends

Tasmania’s Forest Contractors Association is concerned the north-west economy could be harmed by an extended shutdown of the Hampshire woodchip mill.

A two week closure was planned to install a weighbridge system but that has been extended to four weeks for contractors who harvest native forest.

The Association’s Chief Executive, Ed Vincent, says the ongoing slump in Japanese markets is continuing to hurt Tasmanian workers.

“While they’re shut down they’re not earning any income and that has an impact on both their businesses on a personal level and also on the people that they buy their services from, groceries etc, in all the regional and country areas of the state.”

“I think it’s the continuing uncertainty with the markets.

“There’s been a number of different issues with of course one of them being the impact on the Japanese economy of the GFC,” he said.

Time runs out for 24

Popular television series 24, starring Kiefer Sutherland as detective Jack Bauer, will come to an end with the last episode of this its eighth season.

“It’s very bittersweet,” said Sutherland, 43, who won Emmys for best producer and actor in 2006 for the series.

“24 was the greatest learning experience of my career so far.

“On a personal level, working with this cast and crew and writers, these will be friends of mine for the rest of my life,” he added.

24 has been running since 2001, topping viewership ratings consistently.

Part of its attraction has been its innovative real-time format, with each of the season’s 24 chapters representing one hour of actual action.

- AFP

Roxon ‘uncomfortable’ over parents picking children’s sex

The Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon says she would be very uncomfortable about allowing parents to choose their children’s sex.

The Health and Medical Research Council is reviewing whether to allow any parents who use IVF to select their baby’s gender.

The practice is currently only allowed when there is a risk that parents will pass on genetic diseases.

The Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon says the Government has no plans to overturn the ban.

“I must say on a personal level I am very apprehensive about such a change,” she said.

“I’m happy to see any review of the science and the arguments that people might want to make for and against the case.

“But I need to flag that the governments had not set down the path because we want to make any changes, and at a personal level I’m very uncomfortable about the suggestions that a change might be made.”

Leading IVF specialist Professor Gab Kovacs says that is ridiculous and not allowing parents to choose the sex of their child could have negative results.

“If a couple are determined enough to go through IVF rather than natural pregnancy to have a child of one particular sex, then it’s possible that if they have a child of the opposite sex, that child may not be as appreciated and well looked after,” he said.

Professor Kovacs says parents can already travel to countries like the US and Thailand to choose their child’s gender.

He says if parents are willing to pay up to $15,000 for the technique, then they should be allowed.

“There are a small number of couples who are so determined they want a child of a particular sex, they’re prepared to go for the cost and the difficulty of IVF to get pregnant, rather than just do it naturally,” he said.

“I can’t see any reason why it should be forbidden. I’ve seen a number of couples who have maybe three or four children of one particular sex and they’re very keen on family balancing. That’s the type of couple that most often ask about sex selection.”

Dr Sandra Hacker, chair of the council’s Australian Health Ethics Committee, says the review will consider all sides of the controversial and emotive issue.

She says previous consultations have found the majority of Australians are opposed to the practice being widely available.

“There is considerable interest from the general public about this,” she said.

“But on the other hand, the idea that gender selection should be available for reasons other than genetic abnormalities seems to be one that has a general disaffection within the general population.”

Embarrassing smokers may be key to help them kick the butt

Melbourne, May 16 (ANI): Talking of the smell that lingers with smokers after a ciggie break can prove a better way to push them towards kicking the butt than discussing about tobacco-related diseases that addicts cannot even relate to, according to an Australian study.

For the study, University of Sydney Department of Psychology PhD candidate Emily Kothe brought together 28 current and former smokers to test the effectiveness of the latest anti-smoking advertisements.

Although the television ads were shown to reduce cravings and inspire a sense of “disgust” and “worry” in current smokers, they surprisingly reported feeling that the images did not relate to them.

“Many smokers did not feel the advertisements were enough to make them quit,” News.com.au quoted Kothe as saying.

She added: “… the smell associated with being a smoker may have more impact than talking about gangrene.”

In her opinion, future ad campaigns should highlight consequences of the habit that smokers could immediately relate to.

While the latest advertising campaign had proven effective in discouraging people from taking up smoking, the message did not quite influence young smokers (aged 18 to 26) taking part in the trials.

“We received comments such as ‘some of the particular diseases the advertisement displays might be a bit far-fetched – gangrene, for example’,” said Kothe.

She added: “Others stated ‘being young and healthy, I don’t think the pictures shown, for example mouth cancer, really relate to me … we are a long way from these things happening to us’.”

The researchers looked at the age group most likely to smoke and who most often underestimated their personal level of risk.

It was found that smokers who watched the ads had a 16 per cent decrease in nicotine cravings, while ex-smokers showed no decline.

However, smokers who watched a non-health related video instead of the advertisement experienced a 12 per cent increase in cravings over the same period.

The study will be presented at the Heart Foundation Conference, a three-day event under way on the Gold Coast. (ANI)

Live From Ceres: Climate Change Requires Bold Thinking

Tilde Herrera

Harnessing solar power from space. Plug-in electric vehicles accounting for the majority of vehicles on the road by 2020. Getting involved in one’s community to develop a world-class recycling project.

These are examples of bold steps society needs to take to address the challenges of climate change and resource depletion. Action begins at the personal level yet the stakes couldn’t be higher collectively, according to Lester Brown, author and founder of the Earth Policy Institute.

“Most of us in this room talk about saving the planet but what we’re really talking about is saving civilization itself,” Brown said Thursday during the opening keynote speech on the second day of the annual Ceres conference in San Francisco. “If we continue as business-as-usual or anything close to it, climate change will become so disruptive that the stresses on civilization will probably be unmanageable.”

Already the signs of ecological distress can be found in all corners of the world, Brown said, from melting glaciers in China threatening the country’s ability to grow grain in some regions to a dwindling underground aquifer that’s sending Saudi Arabia to scout fertile land in other countries to grow its food.

At the same time, glimmers of innovation and ambition are fueling a new approach to renewable energy and energy efficiency, including PHEVs and a massive expansion of wind, solar and geothermal in places as far-flung as Algeria, Texas and Turkey.

The theme of bold thinking underscored the conference Thursday. Examples included PG and E’s plan to buy 200 megawatts of solar energy that is to be generated in space and beamed down to earth beginning in 2016. The utility announced it signed a carefully structured contract for the deal this week.

“It may work, it may not,” PG and E CEO Peter Darbee said after Brown’s speech. “So we structured a contract where we only pay for the energy to the extent that we get it. There’s no risk for us. There’s no risk for ratepayers along the way so why shouldn’t we enter into a contract so long as we ensure that it operates safely for the public? That’s what we required of them.”

Darbee admits many think PG and E “has lost it with this one,” he said. “A lot of people think the CEO is crazy, but that’s what bold is all about.”

Darbee scoffed at the naysayers who claim climate change will cost too much to address. “That is nonsense and the people of world who say it’s too expensive don’t have a clue about the expense of not dealing with this problem,” he said.

The costs go beyond dollars and cents, Brown said.

“From time to time, I go back and read about earlier civilizations that have declined and collapsed,” he said. “Those whose archeological sites we study today, one of the themes that keeps coming up is that the most common reason for civilization declines has been food shortages.”

Until recently he rejected the idea that the food system could be our undoing.

“But as a I began to think about it more I realized that the trends — the environmental trends underlying our food system — are increasing in number and we have not reversed a single one,” Brown said.

He pointed to soil erosion, melting glaciers, rising seas, desertifcation, collapsing fisheries, all of which impact food systems. The signs of stress are evident in the case of grains, whose prices have increased dramatically in the face of rising demand as environmental conditions increasingly impair the capacity to grow crops.

“If we can’t turn these trends around, we’re in trouble,” Brown said, “just as the earlier civilizations were.”

‘Meetings on the Move’ spark workplace productivity, fights obesity

Washington, Apr 12 (ANI): For those wondering how to improve their employees’ productivity, ‘Meetings on Move’ concept might do the needful.

Researchers from Washington University in St. Louis have revealed that implementing the ‘Meetings on Move’ concept would significantly increase productivity and improve employees’ health by getting them up from their desks and on the move.

“Forty percent of the population are absolute couch potatoes,” said Dr Debra Haire-Joshu, and professor of social work at Washington University.

“That’s almost a learned behaviour. You learn to sit at school; you learn to sit at work.

“What ‘Meetings on the Move’ (MOTM) really does is get us active like we used to be when we were kids. We can learn then to bring activity back into our daily life, just like we learned to take it out.

“On a personal level, I struggle with a chronic condition – migraines, and research shows that getting away from a computer and adding extra physical activity can help chronic conditions like that,” she added.

The researchers said that MOTM could improve productivity by reenergizing employees by getting their blood pumping.

Ideas or problems can look very different once an individual steps out of the office.

It can also lower stress and help improve chronic conditions such as diabetes or migraines. (ANI)