Saturday, 31 December 2011

The Most Powerful Coach in Sports


College football has long been a big business. But the money and control Alabama gave Nick Saban raised the stakes to an unprecedented level. Is he worth it?

On New Year's Day in 2007 Mal Moore, the athletic director at the University of Alabama, boarded a private plane bound for Miami. A little over a month earlier the university had fired Mike Shula, its fourth football coach in eight mediocre years. The pursuit of a new coach to that point had been bungled badly--the once proud program was reportedly turned down by Steve Spurrier, from South Carolina, and Rich Rodriguez, at the time the coach at West Virginia. Moore was on his way to Miami to try to woo Nick Saban, then the coach of the NFL's Dolphins. It was all-or-nothing, with no real backup plan. "I told the pilots when they dropped me off in Miami that if I didn't come back to this plane with Nick Saban, they should just go on and take me to Cuba," Moore says.

Saban, a onetime head coach at Louisiana State, fretted over the decision to leave Miami for two restless days, then took the job and flew with Moore back to Tuscaloosa--and into a national media outcry in which he was called a "weasel," a "loser" and "Nick Satan" for leaving Miami after publicly denying interest in the Alabama job.

But in Tuscaloosa, which was desperate to return to national football prominence, Saban, 56, was a savior, welcomed with an open wallet. Saban, with his agent, James E. Sexton II, negotiated an eight-year, $32 million contract that was, at the time, the highest salary ever paid to a college coach. It remains among the highest and is bigger than all but a handful of NFL coaching salaries. His deal includes, among other perks, 25 hours of private use of a university airplane, two cars and a country club membership, extras that make his annual compensation closer to $5 million a year, estimates Smith College economics professor Andrew Zimbalist. He can leave the school at any time without financial penalty, a rarity in big-time college coaching contracts.

What's more, he was given total control of the football program: recruiting, coaching, business administration and public relations. There are coaches at other universities who have similar salaries, like Charlie Weis at Notre Dame and Pete Carroll at the University of Southern California. But no coach, including those in the professional leagues, can match Saban's combination of money, control and influence. Saban, now entering his second year as the coach of the Alabama Crimson Tide, is the most powerful coach in sports.

Handing Saban the keys was a business decision. Bigger TV contracts and bowl game payouts helped push revenues for the Division 1-a colleges to $2 billion, up 25% in four years. Saban has already had an impact. At his first spring practice game 92,000 fans showed up. The waiting list for season tickets tripled after his arrival to 10,000. A stalled 10,000-seat stadium expansion now seems inevitable.

Alabama's football program had $54 million in revenue this past year and an estimated $32 million profit. The profit is used to pay off the athletic department's $130 million debt for capital improvements. Football finances 77% of the athletic department, bankrolling nonrevenue sports like swimming and softball. It also has kicked back millions of dollars to university academic programs.

But the economics of hiring Saban go well beyond athletics. The decidedly pro-football University of Alabama's president, Robert Witt, points to the school's recent $500 million capital campaign as an example. "We have had 100,000 donors in that campaign, and a major reason they support us is football," he says. It's no different at any other college with a football team. Why do Ivy League schools even bother to field teams that are never going to win a bowl game? It keeps the alumni money flowing. That's how you pay for the English department.

Witt says Saban's presence helps the school's academics by attracting strong applicants. In the 2007--08 year 57% of the students enrolled were in the top quarter of their high school class, up from 54% the year before. "Having a coach of his caliber makes it easier to recruit better students and raise more money," says Witt.

All of which may overcome resentment from professors (average salary at Alabama: $116,000) of Saban's contract. Witt can also argue that not a penny of Saban's salary comes from either students or taxpayers. It comes from athletic department revenue, which consists of broadcasting fees, ad sponsorships, donations from "boosters" (alums who give to football, not the university's general fund), ticket sales and shoe and apparel endorsements.

Saban ended his first year with a 7--6 record. But it takes a while for a coach to put his stamp on a team. Recruiting is where it all starts. In three of his five years at lsu, Saban had top-rated recruiting classes, meaning the 25 high school seniors drawn to a college by a football scholarship. His 2008 recruiting class at Alabama was the consensus number one in the country and included a prized high school receiver named Julio Jones from Foley, Ala.

When he visits a recruit, he says, "I tell them this is a 40-year decision, not a 4-year one." He stresses the importance of his players' being successful as people, as students and as athletes. Queen Marvin, the mother of Julio Jones, says: "He came in here and talked about education. That's what I want for my son. Football won't always be there."

Saban's actions even spurred a new NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) recruiting rule. The sneeringly nicknamed "Saban Rule" was enacted to prohibit coaches from visiting high schools in the spring, something Saban had traditionally done. So he came up with a way around it. He used videoconferencing equipment to talk to recruits and coaches face-to-face via computer, a tactic within the NCAA rules. Saban views the NCAA in the way that a tax attorney sees the IRS. "You have to maximize your benefits," he says.

Once he gets a player in the program, Saban becomes a Big Brother. He instituted a summer weight-training program. There are penalty points for missed classes and practices. All players have to attend personal growth seminars taught by Seattle's Pacific Institute. Saban also brings in speakers, including police officers and a former member of a mob family to talk about gambling. "We're trying to create thoughts, habits and priorities," he says. The program hasn't been wholly successful on that front yet. Ten players have been arrested since he took over. (All but one of the players arrested were recruited by the former regime.)

Saban preaches about "control" to his players and staff. He's closed all but a few minutes of most Alabama practices, something no other coach there has done. He forbids his players to use the word "hot" during summer practices. While with the Dolphins, he turned down an invitation to dine with President Bush so as not to miss practice.

Saban has also set about to boost donations and spread the word about his team. One way is to bring together the traditionally balkanized Alabama football booster groups, the alums who raise money and act as ambassadors for the program. He's subjected two dozen or so of them to one-hour interviews to determine their worthiness. "I don't call him, he calls me," says Elliot Maisel, an Alabama booster and the chief executive of Gulf Distributing Holdings, a beer wholesaler in Mobile.

With Saban's wide territory comes the job of managing public relations. That hasn't gone so well. The bad press Saban received after leaving Miami continued in his first year at Alabama. He snapped at reporters after losses. He rudely compared the Louisiana-Monroe and Mississippi State losses during the season to Sept. 11 and Pearl Harbor. "I've had my share of issues since I left Miami," he says. "I feel responsible for being able to manage the public relations better." He personally authorizes all interviews with his players and assistant coaches. "You'd like to have one message with multiple voices," he says. "But it sure is easier to control with only one voice."

Saban grew up in the mining town of Monongah, W.Va., pumping gas and fixing flat tires at his father's gas station. He went to Kent State University, playing defensive back on the football team. "I figured I would run a car dealership, that it was better to sell cars than fix them up," he says.

When Saban graduated, Terry, his wife of now 36 years, still had a year to go. So Saban decided to stick around and took a job as a graduate assistant on the football team in 1973. Over the next 17 years he had a succession of assistant coaching jobs, most notably with Syracuse, West Virginia and Ohio State, and with the NFL's Houston Oilers. He left Houston in 1991 to become the defensive coordinator for the Cleveland Browns under head coach Bill Belichick, now of the New England Patriots. "Bill and I were a lot alike," says Saban. "We spent hours just talking about defensive strategies."

Source: http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2008/0901/092.html?feed=rss_mostemailed

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Morgan Stanley to Cut 580 Jobs in New York City


Morgan Stanley said Tuesday in a filing that more than a third of the 1,600 layoffs it announced earlier this month may be in New York City.

The full article is available to Asset Securitization Report's subscribers only

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Source: http://www.structuredfinancenews.com/news/Morgan_Stanley_Jobs-226146-1.html

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Espinoza's sights set on team qualifying for NCAA regional tournament

Dec. 30, 2011

Espinoza?s sights set on team qualifying for NCAA regional tournament
Q&A with Rams golfer

FORT COLLINS, Colo. - Brianna Espinoza is a senior liberal arts major from Phoenix, Ariz. She carries a 3.18 grade-point average. Recently, she sat down with CSURams.com.

How did you get interested in golf?
My dad first sparked my interest in golf. He started taking me to the range with him when I was younger and hung a net in our garage so I could hit balls. By age 9 I was playing in tournaments all summer.

How do you prepare yourself for competition?
I prepare both mentally and physically. The majority of that is with daily practice and focusing on the goals I have set for the season and/or tournament.

What are your goals for the remainder of the season?
For a team goal, I would really like to see our team make it to the NCAA regional tournament this year. As for myself, I would like to improve my scoring average and stats from last year.

What was your favorite course to play this fall? Why?
I really enjoyed playing The Club at Old Hawthorne. It was a course we had never played before and was an exciting experience. Another great memory was the hole-in-one I had at the tournament (Johnie Imes Invitational) this year.

What has been your greatest golf memory?
My greatest golf memory was when I found out that I qualified for the NCAA regional tournament last year. It was really exciting to have all of my hard work pay off in the end.

Who has had the biggest influence in your life? Why?
My parents have been very important in my life. I don?t know where I would be without them.

Besides golf, what is your favorite activity or hobby?
I love listening to music and watching television and movies.

What was your first job?
The first job I ever had was working in my dad?s hardware store every summer and winter.

Why did you choose to come to CSU?
I loved the Harmony facility. It is really what sold me on this school. A facility of this quality is something most other universities don?t have.

What is your favorite thing about being a Ram?
I love being able to go home to Arizona, wearing my CSU T-shirt, and have someone yell at me from across the parking lot at the grocery store ?GO RAMS!? I love that sense of community and the fact that you can find a former Ram just about anywhere.

Where do you see yourself in 10 years?
The future is a little unclear for me right now but I would like to be working in entertainment television sometime in the future.


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Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5684272108&f=378

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Friday, 30 December 2011

Occupy protesters arrested at Paul, Democratic HQ (AP)

DES MOINES, Iowa ? Police arrested more than a dozen Occupy protesters Thursday in Iowa who are targeting Democrats and Republicans just days before the state's closely watched lead-off presidential caucuses.

Five protesters were arrested outside the Iowa campaign headquarters of presidential contender Ron Paul in Ankeny before the group moved on to the Iowa Democratic Party headquarters in Des Moines, where 12 more were taken into custody. All were ticketed for trespassing and released.

The protests are part of an Occupy the Caucuses effort launched this week in Des Moines that has attracted activists from around the country. Many of them have promised to interrupt campaign activities, and organizers promised more confrontations on Friday with campaign offices of Republican presidential hopefuls.

Occupy the Caucuses spokeswoman Danielle Ryun, who was among those arrested at the state Democratic Party headquarters, said the goal is not to be arrested. But since campaign officials won't listen to them, protesters are willing to be arrested to get their message across, she said.

"It would be great if we could show up, issue our concerns and have the candidates acknowledge us and change their platform," she said.

Those arrested in Des Moines included a 14-year-old girl who was released to her father at the scene. On Thursday, seven protesters were arrested outside Republican Mitt Romney's Des Moines headquarters.

Iowa Democratic Party Executive Director Norm Sterzenbach said the protesters were given the opportunity to express their opinions and party officials listened to their concerns, but he said occupying the party offices was unacceptable.

"Not only does it interfere with the important work that our volunteers and staff do to engage Iowans in the political process, by physically blocking our staff from entering or exiting the building sets a very dangerous precedent," Sterzenbach said in a statement.

Protesters at Paul's campaign headquarters were protesting his proposal to dismantle the Environmental Protection Agency if elected.

Ryun said the Paul campaign headquarters were locked when protesters arrived. By locking their doors, campaigns "are signaling to us that they have become disengaged," Ryun said.

A telephone message left for a Paul campaign spokesman was not returned.

At the Iowa Democratic Party's offices, protesters targeted President Barack Obama, demanding that he put a stop to home foreclosures, turn down campaign donations from Wall Street, and end indefinite detentions of detainees at Guantanamo Bay.

"They're all going to get equal play on this," Ryun said. "We are very disillusioned with every candidate."

Eight protesters were arrested at the party's offices on Dec. 19.

Police in Des Moines and Ankeny said the protesters were given the option of leaving and told if they refused they would be arrested. Police said the arrests were peaceful and no force was used.

The Occupy movement began in New York and has spread across the country. Activists generally protest the growing gap between rich and poor and corporate influence over government.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_el_pr/us_occupy_arrests_paul

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Satellite Spies Tropical Cyclone Thane Targeting India


Sky

Dec 28, 2011 05:02 PM ET

OurAmazingPlanet Staff

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Tropical Cyclone Thane on Dec. 28.

Caption: Tropical Cyclone Thane on Dec. 28.
Credit: NASA/NOAA.

A NASA satellite captured an image of Tropical Cyclone Thane barreling toward India today. The storm is expected to make landfall south of Chennai late tomorrow (Dec. 29), according to the United Kingdom's Met Office.

The storm formed over the southeastern Bay of Bengal Dec. 25. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center lists the maximum sustained winds at 86 mph (138 kph). The storm is expected to intensify to 90-to-100-mph (145-to-161-kph) winds before making landfall.

In the North Indian Ocean, a tropical cyclone is a storm with winds of 39-to-54 mph (63-to-87 kph). Thane would be called a hurricane in the United States, but in this part of the world, Thane is a Very Severe Cyclonic Storm, which is the name used for storms with winds between 74-and-137 mph (119-to-220 kph).

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Thane is the second cyclonic storm of the 2011 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, and the strongest. Thane is a serious threat to the Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, and their coasts have been set on high alert.

Last year, the North Indian Tropical Cyclone season was very active, with six named storms (severe and very severe cyclonic storms are named), nearly above the average of four-to-six named storms. Cyclones Laila, Phet, Giri, Jal and Bandu caused many deaths across India and the Middle East.

Last year's season ran from May 17 to Dec. 8.More than 400 people died during that storm season.

Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter?@OAPlanet?and on?Facebook.

Source: http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/2199-tropical-cyclone-targets-india.html

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Facebook page that reunited tornado victims with pictures shutting down

By Jennifer Bowen - email

LESTER, AL (RNN) - For eight months, Patty Bullion has made it her full time job to reunite victims of the April Southeastern tornado outbreak with their memories.

Her Facebook page "Pictures and Documents found after the April 27, 2011 Tornadoes" became a gathering place for people to post pictures they found in the aftermath in the storm, as well as for victims to reclaim photos ripped from their homes, sometimes thrown hundreds of miles away.

Now that many of the victims have moved on from that day, she says it's time for her to move on, too.

Bullion will be shutting the page down in the next few weeks because she says pictures are no longer being claimed. She also says a lot of her emails have bounced back? and that she's no longer able to get in touch with many of the people who have posted pictures.

"Somebody asked 'Why not leave it up?' I don't feel like it should be left up forever. These people's lives don't need to be forever displayed as a tornado victim," she said.

"I just feel like, for privacy reasons and to let people move on, those pictures don't need to stay out there forever. I wouldn't want something of mine out there for forever."

The page returned more than 2,000 pictures to their owners or, sometimes, family members of people who died in the tornado outbreak.

Bullion found and re-united the family of Maxine Chism with a picture of her and her late husband that hung in a frame on the wall of her home. Chism was thrown from the home during the tornado that touched down in Smithville, MS. She died from her injuries on May 20.

While the page is coming down, her mission to get people's pictures back to them will continue for a little while. In the next few months, she plans to personally travel to Phil Campbell, AL and Hackleburg, AL, some of the hardest hit areas, to let locals look through what's left of the pictures.

"I want to do that one last push because I have a large box of pictures and I want to do everything I can to get them home," she said.

The stories that have emerged and the people she's "met" through the page have interwoven themselves in to the fabric of her heart. She says the page has been a "huge success" and that she's met some lifelong friends through the project that she's poured days, weeks, and months of her life into.

"It went so much further than I ever thought it would. It's been a blessing," she said.

"I have put a lot of hours into it but it's been a labor of love and I have loved every minute of it. I was very blessed to have been a part of this."

Copyright 2011 Raycom News Network. All rights reserved.

Source: http://anniston.myfoxal.com/news/news/103041-facebook-page-reunited-tornado-victims-pictures-shutting-down

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Keep your Wine Safe with a Wine Bottle Lock

The Combo Liquor/Wine Bottle Lock from Franmara will keep your important spirits safe from sneaky sippers. The lock is constructed of stainless steel and provides a customizable 4 digit combination lock. You can buy one from Amazon for $19.99.

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2011/12/29/keep-your-wine-safe-with-a-wine-bottle-lock/

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Thursday, 29 December 2011

Big Fat Gypsy Wedding dressmakers

It was a chance encounter that led to Suzanne and Carol Baber's dressmaking business for Irish and English Traveller communities.

"My mum had a wedding dress shop in Bournemouth," said Suzanne.

"One day I was shutting the shop up and a traveller girl came in and she asked me if we could make her a dress.

"It really spiralled from there."

Since that 2008 meeting, the Dorset dressmakers have been inundated with orders for wedding, party and first Holy Communion dresses for traveller communities in Southampton and Bournemouth.

Suzanne said the travellers' requests could be incredibly elaborate.

'Dress scars'

"In one case, we had four dresses to make for the sisters of the groom at a wedding. Each one had a belt under the bust to the hips with 10,000 crystals, with every crystal sown on individually.

"We had four dresses to make in four weeks, so we were working really hard on that one.

"They heaviest dress we have done was a wedding dress took three of us to lift it. We had a really hard time getting it out of the door.

"The brides get scars on their hips from wearing the dresses, but they have a saying - 'the worse the scars, the better the dress'."

It was the children's dresses created by the pair which drew the attention of programme-makers at Channel 4, and were featured in Channel 4's My Big Fat Gypsy Christmas.

"We are asked to make a lot of matching adult and children dresses.

"The First Communion dresses are like mini-wedding dresses," said Suzanne.

"We also make special dresses for children to wear on Christmas Day. They are quite old-fashioned. They are quite Victorian-looking."

However, the Babers said they enjoyed making all the travellers' dresses.

"We love it. Sometimes the designs are so outrageous, but the dresses always turn out really spectacular and amazing.

"They come up with the designs," she said.

Suzanne said she saw a difference in traveller brides, who are typically aged 17 and 18, compared to other brides she had designed dresses for.

"Brides generally tend to be quite sort of stressed, but the traveller brides don't seem to be as stressed," she said.

"They know exactly what they want. They have an idea in their mind about exactly what they want, and we put it on paper for then.

"So far we've never had a complaint once the dress is made."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-england-dorset-16301930

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Video: Injured model spent Christmas with family



>>> more good news to report on the recovery of a young model from texas who suffered serious injuries when she walked into a plane's spinning propeller. "today" national correspondent amy robach has the latest.

>> lauren scruggs family says she spent christmas surrounded by loved ones and has an entire community coming out to offer support.

>> lauren is doing amazingly well. accidentally walked into the propeller, suffering severe injuries to her head, shoulders and hands. doctors had to remove her hand and her left eye , but the scruggs family remains positive. on monday, the day after christmas , lauren 's mother posted an update on her daughter's blog saying "lo is making remarkable strides. her spirit is incredible. she's positive, hungry and cheery. her appetite is very healthy, even though she is still taking lots of pain medication ." this year the family says christmas served as a reminder sometimes it's the simple things in life that bring great joy, saying "britt and lo wore their matching pjs just for christmas eve . love has been poured out over us in ways we could never have dreamed. our hearts are changed. our lives are molded in a deeper way. lo has twin sister brittany to lean on and brit can literally feel her sister's pain. being twins and having a bond that most never understand, brit's eye has been twitching for the last four to five days every 30 seconds or so." they are still tallying the money raised at last night's fund-raiser. so far the total is at $10,000 and counting. matt?

>> amy robach , thank you very much.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/45803640/

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How the Hashtag Is Ruining the English Language (Updated) [Rant]

If Twitter is useful for anything beyond a flamethrower of breaking news and URL errata, it's forcing us to be considerate about language—we have to use space wisely. Unfortunately, the hashtag is ruining talking. #NotGonnaLie More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ic0fr4juOzI/how-the-hashtag-is-ruining-the-english-language

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Google's Rumored Tablet Could Adversely Impact Partners' Sales of Tablets



Not long ago, Andy Rubin let slip that Google way be working on a "pure Google" branded Android tablet, although he left enough wiggle room that it is still just a rumor at this point. That's probably a good thing too, because some industry analysts are predicting that a Google Android tablet might negatively impact sales of Google's own OEM partners. Some are suggesting that Google will likely lead off with some newer update to Ice Cream Sandwich, like an Android 4.1, which could leave some of the other brands, like Asus, Samsung and Lenovo playing catchup. The DigiTimes analyst also suggested that Google might partner up with Motorola to build the device, since it is in the process off acquiring the company for its patents. This too could leave the other Android tablet manufacturers feeling "jilted."

At this point, it's really just speculation, yet it is food for thought. Perhaps, Google should find a creative way of offering all the manufacturers that a way to create their own "Nexus-style" Android tablet...

Source: BGR

Source: http://www.android.net/forum/android-news/77006-googles-rumored-tablet-could-adversely-impact-partners-sales-tablets.html

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Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Pope denounces Nigeria church blast as 'absurd' (AP)

VATICAN CITY ? Pope Benedict XVI has denounced the bombing of a Nigerian Catholic church that killed 35 people on Christmas Day, saying only respect and reconciliation can bring peace ? not violence.

Speaking at his post-Christmas blessing Monday, Benedict said he had learned with "profound sadness" of the "absurd" attack on the St. Theresa Catholic Church in Madalla, which was claimed by the Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.

It was the second year in a row that the group has staged Christmas attacks.

Benedict invited everyone to pray for the victims and Nigeria's Christian community.

He said: "In this moment, I want to repeat once again with force: violence is a path that leads only to pain, destruction and death. Respect, reconciliation and love are the only path to peace."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_re_eu/eu_vatican_pope

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Live: Radical Anti-Choice Personhood Groups Host 'Presidential Pro-Life Forum' (Little green footballs)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/179877061?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Galaxy Nexus Sound Issues?

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Source: slumz.boxden.com --- Sunday, December 25, 2011
View full article and comments @ Galaxy Nexus Sound Issues? Yo yall been having sound issues with your phones? it's all over the net and it sounds like google is trying to deny there is a problem. I will return this !! before my 30 days is over if they keep !!ing around. Anyone else having low volume/sounds on your nexus phones? View more topics @ BX Wireless | Boxden ...

Source: http://slumz.boxden.com/f244/galaxy-nexus-sound-issues-1674778/

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SB Nation: Deaths pulled hockey community together

ESPN ignored a full year of hockey tragedy in their 2011 Year in Review segment. But as coverage of the game shifts, it's time to realize that ESPN doesn't control the message anymore. Average fans do.

Dec 27, 2011 - I'm not one of those hockey fans that feels ESPN should treat us like first-class citizens. I'm obviously an advocate for our sport and somebody that thinks hockey is far superior to baseball, football, basketball or any other game that's played on the planet, but I'm also not out of touch.

I realize that hockey fans are in the minority, and that as long as it's an expensive game to play and a complicated game to understand, the sport will never catch on the way basketball or football or baseball have. When I was a kid, it was $25 a season to play baseball. Hockey was nearly $1,000 a season. It's just sort of the way it is. Hockey will never match up in popularity in places where you can't just pick up a puck and a stick and go play on the pond, and as a result, the NHL will never be as popular as MLB or the NFL. If you haven't resigned yourself to that yet, you should do it now.

At the same time, ESPN is still a news organization, and their embarrasing refusal to cover even the most obvious hockey stories via their television product was on full display over the Christmas holiday, when they aired their annual Year In Review special. In that special, they honor athletes who have passed away in the last calendar year, and despite the tragic year the hockey family suffered, we were completely ignored by the Worldwide Leader in the 2011 edition.

We'll let a FanPost at Flyers blog Broad Street Hockey do the explaining.

ESPN aired their tribute to athletes who have died in 2011.

Not a single hockey player was mentioned.

So, here, I would like to pay tribute to those players of the sport (whether active in 2011 or not) and any dedicated staff members who passed away. The crew killed on the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl plane crash is included as well.

Mention anyone who is missed, and they will be added.

Remember those who were lost. They are part of our world as hockey players. ESPN forgets, but we will not.

What followed was a lengthy list of members of the hockey community who passed on in 2011, crowdsourced by readers from all across the Internet. It's a remarkably long list that included both active players, coaches, scouts and others, as well as those who were no longer active at the time of their death.

Its length is both tragic, message-sending, and oddly therapeutic. The rest of the sports world may have forgotten about the tragic deaths of Derek Boogaard, Rick Rypien and Wade Belak, or the shocking tragedy that was the loss of the entire Lokomotiv Yaroslavl hockey club.

They may not have ever even heard of Mandi Schwartz, the Yale womens hockey player who lost her inspring battle with leukemia, in April. They may not have remembered the life of E.J. McGuire, the highly-respected head of NHL Central Scouting, who also passed from cancer in April, or that of Harley Hotchkiss, the NHL owner responsible for bringing the league to Calgary.

But that's the therapy of it. They might not have remembered, but we remember. In light of a slap in the face from THE trendsetters in American sports media, the hockey community has come together and said that they won't be ignored.

Luckily, we live in a time when we don't have to be ignored, even when the so-called Worldwide Leader In Sports does just that. More than ever, that "hockey community" today doesn't include just players, coaches, front office staff and owners. It includes you, me, and that guy with the tattoos that sits in the sixth row of Section 127.

The lack of hockey coverage from networks like ESPN is disappointing and at times insulting, but it's forced the NHL to get creative in how they view the media. Five years ago, I was an average fan of the Philadelphia Flyers, and now, I've attended NHL Drafts, All-Star Games, the Stanley Cup Final, two Winter Classics and countless regular season games as a member of the media.

I don't say this to toot my own horn, because we have an entire network of writers that have the had the similar opportunities. In every case, those chances to embed average fans inside NHL locker rooms have hopefully brought other average fans closer to the sport they love.

We're not the only ones doing it, either. Puck Daddy at Yahoo! Sports has become a must-read for hockey fans, as has Pro Hockey Talk at NBC and countless team blogs around the web that aren't part of the SB Nation network. NHL.com is, for my money, the best league-run website on the Internet, NHL Network is consistently improving their coverage, and the soon-to-be-launched NBC Sports Network has already proven that they'll be dedicated to covering hockey in a suitable manner.

Twitter is the great equalizer in all of it, of course, and while I don't have to numbers to back up a claim that hockey fans are some of the most vocal Tweeters, I do know that hockey topics trend worldwide more than the Worldwide Leader In Sports would ever have you believe.

Quality hockey coverage is out there, and in most cases, that coverage is bringing fans closer to the game than ever before. So while it might be frustrating and it might be insulting when ESPN ignores us, especially over highly emotional topics like the most tragic year the sport has ever seen, it's time to realize that it doesn't matter.

No matter what, we're not going to forget. That's what's important.

Do you like this story?

Travis Hughes

NHL Editor

Travis founded Broad Street Hockey in January of 2009, which makes him a Flyers fan. This fact means that everybody hates him, and honestly, he wouldn't have it any other way.

In his other... Read full bio


Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/si_hockey/~3/2Y2pIhngtZQ/espn-hockey-year-in-review-tribute-death-tragedy-nhl

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Tuesday, 27 December 2011

US weighs Yemen leader's travel request

The Obama administration is considering whether to allow Yemen's outgoing president Ali Abdullah Saleh into the United States for medical treatment as fresh violence and political tensions flare in the strategically important Middle-East nation.

A senior administration official says Saleh's office requested that he be allowed to receive specialized treatment in the U.S. for injuries sustained in a June attack on his compound.

Saleh announced Saturday that he was leaving for the U.S. in order to help calm tensions in his country following a fresh wave of violence, but he said his travel was not for medical treatment.

Saleh's presence in Yemen has angered many there, who say he wants to continue to wield his influence despite agreeing to transfer power following months of protests.

"The request for approval for President Saleh to travel to the United States is currently under consideration. The only reason that travel to the United States by President Saleh would be approved would be for legitimate medical treatment," said the senior Obama administration official, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

The official said Saleh's office recently contacted the U.S. embassy in Sanaa to say the president plans to leave Yemen soon and wants to get specialized care in the United States related to injuries he sustained in a June assassination attempt that forced him into hospital in Saudi Arabia.

On Saturday, just hours after his forces killed nine people who had demanded he be tried for the killings of demonstrators over the past year, Saleh said he would leave for the United States and give way to a successor. He did not say when he would depart.

Saleh: 'I'm fine'
The Yemeni leader said he would undergo some medical tests but characterized his intended trip as one of temporary exile.

"I will go to the United States. Not for treatment, because I'm fine, but to get away from attention, cameras, and allow the unity government to prepare properly for elections," he said.

"I'll be there for several days, but I'll return because I won't leave my people and comrades who have been steadfast for 11 months," Saleh said.

Increasing bloodshed and political uncertainty in Yemen is a major concern to its neighbor Saudi Arabia and Saleh's former supporters in Washington, who worry the country's al Qaeda wing could gain control of key oil shipping routes in the chaos.

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President Barack Obama's top counterterrorism official John Brennan called Yemen's acting leader on Sunday to emphasize the need for Yemeni forces "to show maximum restraint" when dealing with demonstrations, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said in a statement issued in Hawaii where Obama is vacationing.

In his phone conversation with Yemeni Vice President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, Brennan also called for all sides in Yemen's political transition to avoid "provocative acts that could spur further violence."

Hadi told Brennan he has launched an investigation into the deaths and injuries that occurred and said he would do his utmost to prevent further bloodshed, Earnest said, adding both officials agreed it was important to stick to the transition path leading to the February 21, 2012, presidential election.

"Mr. Brennan told Vice President Hadi that the United States remains a strong and fervent supporter of the Yemeni people in their quest to realize their richly deserved aspirations for security, political stability, representative government, and economic prosperity," Earnest said.

Hadi on Sunday urged Saleh's foes and loyalists to commit to a truce.

The Associate Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45789820/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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Brazil slaps another fine on Chevron for November oil spill off Rio do Janeiro

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Brazil slaps another fine on Chevron for November oil spill off Rio do Janeiro ??



?????Monday 26th December, 2011??Source: Merco Press ??
Brazil's Environment Institute ordered US oil giant Chevron to pay another fine related to the early November oil spill off the coast of Rio de Janeiro.

Breaking News
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Even on holiday, jobs to be done

That beautiful tree shines a little less bright. The wreath on the door suddenly looks out of season. And all that pretty wrapping paper has been reduced to a pile of ripped up shreds in the trash can.

The pre-Christmas rush now becomes the search for bigger bargains at the after-Christmas sales.

Before you hurry out to spend your gift cards or exchange that ?What was he thinking?? sweater, there?s one more item on the Christmas to-do list that?s yet to be checked off:

A heart-felt thank-you to all the folks in Onslow County who spent Christmas on the job: Police officers; deputy sheriffs; highway patrolmen; paramedics; firemen; doctors; nurses; and medical workers of all descriptions.

As always, our appreciation goes to those who stand guard in defense our nation. The protection of our freedom, both abroad and here at home, is a calling without pause.

Thanks also to nursing home staffers and those at assisted living centers; care-givers ? paid and unpaid; home health aides; and hospice angels.

Christmas thanks to the folks down at the water plant; convenience store clerks; waiters and waitresses; and cashiers at every business that stays open no matter what.

Thanks also to the Daily News carriers, of course, along with the pressroom and mailroom crews, the reporters and editors who bring you today?s edition and who keep you in-the-know all through the day and night with online and social media postings.

To list, of course, is to omit someone who gave up Christmas with family and friends to take care of tasks that take no holiday. We might not know what you did on the job this Christmas, but please consider this our all-inclusive and heart-felt thank you.

For so many workers, Christmas is a day when being on the job is a special gift given to colleagues with distance to drive for a family visit or with little ones overjoyed by the gifts Santa dropped off. These special moments would be lost were it not for the gift of time off from fellow workers.

For others who clock in on Christmas Day, being on the job is making sure that the responsibilities of their work continue when all the world seems to stand still. They give others time to relax and take a deep breath, to forget about daily worries and enjoy this once-a-year holiday happening.

Christmas Day workers are special people, giving a gift too often overlooked ? the gift of time.

To everyone who spent Christmas on the job, a great, big thank-you for the gift of time that you gave to your colleagues and the entire community.

Source: http://www.jdnews.com/opinion/christmas-98799-beautiful-paper.html

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whowhatwhy: RT @thinkprogress: GOP Super Committee member admits Bush tax cuts didn?t create jobs, can?t explain why http://t.co/NU49kYtI #bestof11

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Monday, 26 December 2011

YOUR THREE INVESTING OPTIONS | PRAGMATIC CAPITALISM

The following is an excerpt from John Mauldin?s weekly newsletter:

It?s Christmas Eve and that time of year when we start thinking about what we did in the past year and what we want to do in the next. Why do we make the mistakes we make (over and over and over?) and how do we avoid them in the future? If it seems to be part of our basic human condition, that?s because it is. Recently I have been having a running conversation with Barry Ritholtz on the psychology of investing (something we both enjoy discussing and writing about). Since I am busily researching my annual forecast issue (and taking the day off), I asked Barry to share a few of his thoughts on why we do the things we do. He gives us even more, exploring the three main opponents we face when we enter the arena of investing.

Barry is the driving force behind The Big Picture blog, often cited as the #1 blog site in terms of traffic (and a favorite of mine!) and FusionIQ, a software service that uses both fundamental and technical analysis. Over the years Barry and I have known each other, we have become quite good friends. If you ever get a chance to catch us on a panel together, you are in for some fun, as we tend to go at it and each other just for the heck of it, while trying to share the little that we have learned along the way. Barry is all over financial TV and now has a weekly column in the Washington Post. And now, let me turn it over to Barry.

Your Three Investing Opponents

By Barry Ritholtz

?Tough Year!?

We hear that around the office nearly every day? from professional traders to money managers to even the ?most-hedged?of the hedge fund community. This year?s markets have perplexed the best of them. Each week brings another event that sets up some confusing crosscurrent: call them reversals or head fakes or bear traps or (my personal favorite) the?fake-out break-out? ? this volatile, trendless market has been unkind to Wall Street pros and Main Street investors alike.

Indeed, buy & hold investors have had more ups and downs this year than your average rollercoaster. The third and fourth quarters alone had more than a dozen market swings, ranging from 5 percent to more than 20 percent. Despite all of that action, the S&P 500 is essentially unchanged year-to-date. It doesn?t take much to push portfolios into the red these days.

Three Opponents in Investing

With markets more challenging than ever, individual investors need to understand exactly whom they are going up against when they step onto the field of battle. You have three opponents to consider whenever you invest.

The first is Mr. Markethimself. He is, as Benjamin Graham described him, your eternal partner in investing. He is a patient if somewhat bipolar fellow. Subject to wild mood swings, he is always willing to offer you a bid or an ask. If you are a buyer, he is a seller ? and vice versa. But do not mistake this for generosity: he is your opponent. He likes to make you look a fool. Sell him shares at a nice profit, and he happily takes their prices so much higher you are embarrassed to even mention them again. Buy something from him on the cheap, and he will show you exactly what cheap is. And perhaps most frustrating of all, Mr. Market has no ego ? he does not care about being right or wrong; he only exists to separate the rubes from their money.

Yes, Mr. Market is a difficult opponent. But your next rivals are nearly as tough: they are everyone else buying or selling stocks.

Recall what Charles Ellis said when he was overseeing the $15-billion endowment fund at Yale University:

?Watch a pro football game, and it?s obvious the guys on the field are far faster, stronger and more willing to bear and inflict pain than you are. Surely you would say, ?I don?t want to play against those guys!?

?Well, 90% of stock market volume is done by institutions, and half of that is done by the world?s 50 largest investment firms, deeply committed, vastly well prepared? the smartest sons of bitches in the world working their tails off all day long. You know what? I don?t want to play against those guys either.?

Ellis lays out the brutal truth: investing is a rough and tumble business. It doesn?t matter where these traders work ? they may be on prop desks, mutual funds, hedge funds, or HFT shops ? they employ an array of professional staff and technological tools to give themselves a significant edge. With billions at risk, they deploy anything that gives them even a slight advantage.

These are who individuals are doing battle with. Armed only with a PC, an internet connection, and CNBC muted in the background, investors face daunting odds. They are at a tactical disadvantage, outmanned and outgunned.

We Have Met the Enemy and They Is Us

That is even before we meet your third opponent, perhaps the most difficult one to conquer of all: You.

You are your own third opponent. And, you may be the opponent you understand the least of all three. It is more than time constraints, lack of discipline, and asymmetrical information that challenges you. The biggest disadvantage you have is that melon perched atop your 3rdopponent?s neck. It is your big ole brain, and unless you do something about it, it is going to lose all of your money for you.

See it? There.Sitting right behind your eyes and between your ears. That ?thing? you hardly pay any attention to. You just assume it knows what it?s doing, works properly, doesn?t make too many mistakes. I hate to disabuse you of those lovely notions; but no, sorry, it does not work nearly as well as you assume. At least, not when it comes to investing. The wiring is an historical remnant, hardly functional for modern living. It is overrun with desires, emotions, and blind spots. Its capacity for cognitive error is nearly endless. It was originally developed for entirely other purposes than risk assessment in capital markets. Indeed, when it comes to money, the way most investors use those 100 billion neurons or so of grey matter, they might as well not even bother using their brains at all.

Let me give you an example. Think of any year from 1990-2005. Off of the top of your head, take a guess how well your portfolio did that year. Write it down ? this is important (that big dumb brain of yours cannot be trusted to be honest with itself). Now, pull your statement from that year and calculate your gains or losses.

How?d you do? Was the reality as good as you remembered? This is a phenomenon called selective retention. When it comes to details like this, you actually remember what you want to, not what factually occurred. Try it again. Only this time, do it for this year ? 2011. Write it down. Go pull up your YTD performance online. We?ll wait.

Well, how did you do? Not nearly as well as you imagined, right? Welcome to the human race.

This sort of error is much more commonplace than you might imagine. If we ask any group of automobile owners how good their driving skills are, about 80% will say ?Above average.? The same applies to how well we evaluate our own investing skills. Most of us think we are above average, and nearly all of us believe we are better than we actually are.

(Me personally, I am not an above-average driver. This is despite having taken numerous high-performance driving courses and spending a lot of time on various race tracks. I know this is true because my wife reminds me of it constantly.) [JM here ? I am also in the bottom 25%, as my kids constantly remind me!])

As it turns out, there is a simple reason for this. The worse we are at any specific skill set, the harder it is for us to evaluate our own competency at it. This is called the Dunning?Kruger effect. This precise sort of cognitive deficit means that areas we are least skilled at ? let?s use investing decisions as an example ? also means we lack the ability to identify any investing shortcomings. As it turns out, the same skill set needed to be an outstanding investor is also necessary to have ?metacognition? ? the ability to objectively evaluate one?s own abilities. (This is also true in all other professions.)

Unlike Garrison Keillor?s Lake Wobegon, where all of the children are above average, the bell curve in investing is quite damning. By definition, all investors cannot be above average. Indeed, the odds are high that, like most investors, you will underperform the broad market this year. But it is more than just this year? ?underperformance? is not merely a 2011 phenomenon. The statistics suggest that 4 out of 5 of you underperformed last year, and the same number will underperform next year, too.

Underperformance is not a disease suffered only by retail investors ? the pros succumb as well. In fact, about 4 out of 5 mutual fund managers underperform their benchmarks every year. These managers engage in many of the same errors that Main Street investors make. They overtrade, they engage in?groupthink,? they freeze up, some have been even known to sell in a panic. (Do any of these sound familiar to you?)

These kinds of errors seem to be hardwired in us. Humans have evolved to survive in competitive conditions. We developed instincts and survival skills, and passed those on to our descendants. The genetic makeup of our species contains all sorts of elements that were honed over millions of years to give us an edge in surviving long enough to procreate and pass our genes along to our progeny. Our automatic reactions in times of panic are a result of that development arc.

This leads to a variety of problems when it comes to investing in equities: our instincts often betray us. To do well in the capital markets requires developing skills that very often are the opposite of what our survival instincts are telling us. Our emotions compound the problem, often compelling us to make changes at the worst possible times. The panic selling at market lows and greedy chasing as we head into tops are a reflection of these factors.

The sort of grinding market we had in 2011 only exacerbates investor aggravation, and therefore increases poor decision making. Facts and logic go out the window, and thinking gets replaced with naked emotions. We get annoyed, angry, frightened, frustrated ? and that does not help returns. Indeed, our evolutionary ?flight or fight? response developed for a reason ? it helped keep us alive out on the savannah. But the adrenaline necessary to fight a Cro-Magnon or flee from a sabre-toothed tiger does not help us in the capital markets. Indeed, study after study suggests our own wetware works against us; the emotions that helped keep us alive on the plains now hinder our investment performance.

The problem, as it turns out, lies primarily in those large mammalian brains of ours. Our wiring evolved for a specific set of survival challenges, most of which no longer exist. We have cognitive deficits that are by-products of that. Much of our decision making comes with cognitive errors ?secretly? built in. We are often unaware we even have these (for lack of a better word) defects. These cognitive foibles are one of the main reasons that, when it comes to investing, we humans just ain?t built for it.

?

We Are Tool Makers

But we are not helpless. These large mammalian brains of ours can do a whole lot more than merely overreact to stimulus. We think up new ideas, ponder new tools, and create new technologies. Indeed, our ability to innovate is one of the factors that separates us from the rest of the animal kingdom.

As investors, we can use our big brains to compensate for our known limitations. This means creating tools to help us make better decisions. When battling Mr. Market ? as tough as any Cro-Magnon or sabre-toothed tiger ? it helps to be able to make informed decisions coolly and objectively. If we can manage our emotions and prevent them from causing us to make decisions out of panic or greed, then our investing results will improve dramatically.

So stop being your own third opponent. Jiu jitsu yourself, and learn how to outwit your evolutionary legacy. Use that big ole melon for a change. You just might see some improvement in your portfolio performance.

Individual Investors Have Certain Advantages Over Institutions

One final thought. Smaller investors do not realize that they possess quite a few strategic advantages ? if only they would take advantage of them. Consider these small-investor pluses:

? No benchmark to meet quarterly (or monthly), so you can have longer-term time horizons and different goals
? You can enter or exit a position without impacting markets.
? There is no public scrutiny of your holdings and no disclosures required, so you don?t have to worry about someone taking your ideas.
? You don?t have to limit yourself to just the largest stocks or worry about position size (this is huge).
? Cost structure, fees, and taxes are within your control.
? You can reverse errors without professional consequences ? you don?t get fired for admitting a mistake.
? You can have longer-term time horizons and different goals.

And with those thoughts, good luck and good trading in 2012!

Source: http://pragcap.com/your-three-investing-options

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yidwithlid: @Jeff_Jacoby I am at the Chinese pavilion at Epcot Center....they don't have kosher Chinese food..where's their Christmas Spirit!

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Outsider physicists and the oh-my-god particle

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For amateur theorists, mainstream science is an exclusive priesthood ? like Martin Luther, they want to make their own connections

IN OCTOBER 1991, astrophysicists observed something incredible in the skies above Dugway Proving Ground, a former weapons-testing facility in a remote corner of Utah. It was a cosmic ray with an enormous amount of energy - equivalent to the kinetic energy of a baseball travelling at 100 kilometres per hour, but compressed into a subatomic particle. It came to be known as the oh-my-god-particle, and though similar events have been recorded at least 15 times since, mainstream physicists remain baffled by them.

To Jim Carter, a trailer-park owner in Enumclaw, Washington, ultra-high-energy cosmic rays pose no problem. They offer proof of a radical theory of the universe he has been developing for 50 years.

In Carter's theory, these rays are photons left over from the earliest stage of cosmic evolution. He calls them "apocalyptic photons" and believes that one of them was responsible for the Tunguska eventMovie Camera in 1908, in which a mysterious something from outer space flattened 2100 square kilometres of Siberian forest.

Carter's ideas are not taken seriously by the physics mainstream. He does not have a PhD and has never had any of his work published in a scientific journal. He has just a single semester of university education, which was enough to convince him that what was being taught in physics departments was an offence to common sense.

In response, Carter went off and developed his own ideas. Five decades on he has his very own theory of everything, an idiosyncratic alternative to quantum mechanics and general relativity, based on the idea that all matter is composed of doughnut-shaped particles called circlons. Since the 1970s he has articulated his ideas in a series of self-published books, including his magnum opus, The Other Theory of Physics.

For the past 18 years I have been collecting the works of what I have come to call "outsider physicists". I now have more than 100 such theories on my shelves. Most of them are single papers, but a number are fully fledged books, often filled with equations and technical diagrams (though I do have one that is couched as a series of poems and another that is written as a fairy tale). Carter's is by far the most elaborate work I have encountered.

The mainstream science world has a way of dealing with people like this - dismiss them as cranks and dump their letters in the bin. While I do not believe any outsider I have encountered has done any work that challenges mainstream physics, I have come to believe that they should not be so summarily ignored.

Consider the sheer numbers. Outsider physicists have their own organisation, the Natural Philosophy Alliance, whose database lists more than 2100 theorists, 5800 papers and over 1300 books worldwide. They have annual conferences, with this year's proceedings running to 735 pages. In the time I have been observing the organisation, the NPA has grown from a tiny seed whose founder photocopied his newsletter onto pastel-coloured paper to a thriving international association with video-streamed events.

The NPA's website tells us that the group is devoted "to broad-ranging, fully open-minded criticism, at the most fundamental levels, of the often irrational and unrealistic doctrines of modern physics and cosmology; and to the ultimate replacement of these doctrines by much sounder ideas".

Very little unites this disparate group of amateurs - there are as many theories as members - except for a common belief that "something is drastically wrong in contemporary physics and cosmology, and that a new spirit of open-mindedness is desperately needed". They are unanimous in the view that mainstream physics has been hijacked by a kind of priestly caste who speak a secret language - in other words, mathematics - that is incomprehensible to most human beings. They claim that the natural world speaks a language which all of us can, or should be able to, understand. Rather than having their dialogue with the world mediated by "experts", NPA members insist that they can commune with it directly and describe its patterns in accessible terms.

Regardless of the credibility of this claim, it is sociologically significant. In their militantly egalitarian opposition to what they see as a physics elite, NPA members mirror the stance of Martin Luther and other pioneers of the Protestant Reformation. Luther was rebelling against the abstractions of the Latin-writing Catholic priesthood, and one of his most revolutionary moves was to translate the Bible into vernacular German. Just as Luther declared that all people could read the book of God for themselves, so the NPA today asserts that all of us ought to be able to read the book of nature for ourselves.

And just as Luther didn't reject the basic tenets of Christianity, outsider theorists do not reject science: they believe that it provides the right tools to reveal the majesty of our world. But they insist that the wonders of science be available to everyone.

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