11/12/2012

Experiments show we quickly adjust to seeing everything upside-down


A researcher wearing goggles that inverted everything stumbled about wildly at first, but soon enough he was able to ride a bicycle.


In the middle of the 20th century, an Austrian professor turned a man's eyesight exactly upside-down. After a short time, the man took this completely in his stride.

Professor Theodor Erismann, of the University of Innsbruck, devised the experiment, performing it upon his assistant and student, Ivo Kohler. Kohler later wrote about it. The two of them made a documentary film.

The professor made Kohler wear a pair of hand-engineered goggles. Inside those goggles, specially arranged mirrors flipped the light that would reach Kohler's eyes, top becoming bottom, and bottom top.

At first, Kohler stumbled wildly when trying to grasp an object held out to him, navigate around a chair, or walk down stairs.

In a simple fencing game with sticks, Kohler would rise his stick high when attacked low, and low in response to a high stab.

Holding a teacup out to be filled, he would turn the cup upside down the instant he saw the water apparently pouring upward. The sight of smoke rising from a match, or a helium balloon bobbing on a string, could trigger an instant change in his sense of which direction was up, and which down.

But over the next week, Kohler found himself adapting, in fits and starts, then more consistently, to such sights.

After 10 days, he had grown so accustomed to the invariably upside-down world that, paradoxically and happily, everything seemed to him normal, rightside-up. Kohler could do everyday activities in public perfectly well: walk along a crowded sidewalk, even ride a bicycle. Passersby on the street did ogle the man, though, because his eyewear looked, from the outside, unfashionable.

Erismann and Kohler did further experiments. So did other scientists. Their impression is that many, perhaps most, maybe just about all, people are able to make these kinds of adjustment. Images reach the eye in some peculiar fashion, and if that peculiar fashion is consistent, a person's visual system eventually, somehow, adjusts to interpret it — to perceive it, to see it — as being no different from normal. Kohler writes that, "after several weeks of wearing goggles that transposed right and left, one person "became so at home in his reversed world that he was able to drive a motorcycle through Innsbruck while wearing the goggles".

This may strike you as extremely unusual. But the basic ability – to adapt to visions seen topsy-turvy or backwards – is something you have almost certainly witnessed.

Many people develop the ability to read documents that are upside down. Many teachers, especially, treasure this as a semi-secret skill they've picked up without having worked at it.

This automatic, almost-effortless adaptation to visual weirdness is one of many bizarre things that brains do that scientists simply do not understand. Were we not talking about the brain, it would be appropriate to say that these behaviours, these abilities, are so weird that they are "unthinkable".

- guardian.co.uk

'Rate your course' idea catches on for students

 I realised a student who had done the course would
have been able to tell me the ins and outs of it better
than a prospectus
, says Georgie Smithwick

IRELAND: Most third-level students might be inclined to have a good grumble or even drop out if they discovered the college course they had enrolled in was not as described. Georgie Smithwick went one better, however, when she founded Coursehub.ie, a student-led review site.

Smithwick left the college where she was studying and transferred to take business and French at Trinity College Dublin. Her experience helped her to identify a gap in the market for a student-led course review site.

“I ended up switching courses and transferring to TCD. I realised a student who had done the course would have been able to tell me the ins and outs of it better than a prospectus, so went about setting up an online review site,” she says.

The site went live in August 2011 featuring the 12,000 course and college reviews, on the same day that 71,000 students in Ireland were awaiting the first round of offers from the Central Applications Office.

Less than three months later, course hub.iewon the Best Education Website at the Eircom Spider Awards and Best Student Website at the Irish web awards.

Current students and graduates can anonymously review their course and rank the accuracy and helpfulness of each other’s comments.

Prospective students can read reviews or ratings on any course they may be interested in, she explains.

The site leverages the experiences and inside knowledge of third-level students to provide course reviews that go beyond the gloss and bias of prospectuses, Smithwick says. It currently has more than 15,000 reviews.

A survey last year by the ESRI found that 15 per cent of new entrants into third- level courses in Ireland did not continue the course the following year and up to 80 per cent of final year secondary school students said they would like to have more information before making a decision about college and career choices.

Smithwick hopes to roll out the site to other countries, beginning with Australia next August.

Argentina’s Messi beats Pele’s 1958 goal record


Lionel Messi surpassed Pele’s milestone of goals in a calendar year by scoring for the 75th and 76th time in 2012 to move within nine of Gerd Mueller’s all-time record as Barcelona won 4-2 at Mallorca in the Spanish league on Sunday.

Xavi Hernandez unlocked Mallorca’s defense with a free kick in the 28th minute before Messi struck in the 44th. Cristian Tello added a third goal a minute later at Iberostar stadium.

After Mallorca netted twice early in the second half to breathe life into the match, Messi stepped up to score again the 70th to ensure victory as Barcelona rebounded from its loss at Celtic in the Champions League with its 10th win in 11 rounds.

“Leo’s records are spectacular” said Barcelona coach Tito Vilanova. “It’s spectacular when you think that he scores so many goals. Some few players reach these numbers in seven or eight seasons, he does it in one. And most of his goals are great goals.”

This is the latest scoring feat for the Argentina forward, one of the leading candidates for the Ballon D’Or. Messi scored 73 goals in the 2011-12 season for Barcelona, breaking the previous European club record of 67 goals set by Mueller in 1972-73. He also set a Spanish league record of 50 goals last season and broke Cesar Rodriguez’s 57-year milestone of 232 goals to become Barcelona all-time leading scorer.

Eye injury keeps Ronaldo out of Portugal game


Cristiano Ronaldo will miss Portugal’s friendly in Gabon on Wednesday after sustaining a gash over his left eye in a Real Madrid game.

Ronaldo missed the second half of his club’s match against Levante after defender David Navarro’s elbow cut the Portugal captain. Madrid coach Jose Mourinho said his star forward temporarily lost his sight.

The Portuguese Football Federation said in a statement Ronaldo would miss the trip to Libreville, though it gave no details.

Defender Joao Pereira and midfielder Miguel Veloso are also out for medical reasons, the federation said without elaborating.

Coach Paulo Bento called up Hugo Viana and Ruben Ferreira.

- AFP

Rolling Stones release hits album with two new tracks


The Rolling Stones today release a greatest hits album titled “Grrr!” featuring two new tracks recorded over the summer in Paris, as fans count down to a string of 50th-anniversary concerts.

The first new single, “Doom and Gloom” was released online last month, and is available to stream from the band’s official website, www.rollingstones.com, while the second, “One More Shot,” was put online on Nov. 8.

“Dirty, swaggering and perfectly Stonesy,” is how the Daily Telegraph’s reviewer described the latest track. The songs are the Stones’s first new recordings together in seven years.

“Grrr!” will be released in several formats, including 50- and 80-track box sets, featuring such classics as “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction,” “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” or “Honky Tonk Women”.

Celebrating a half-century in rock and roll this year, the Stones played their first concerts in five years at two small venues in Paris late last month.

They have announced four major concerts in Britain and the United States to mark the anniversary. The band is currently rehearsing in Paris.

- AFP

Headline November 13,2012/

''GETTING THRIFTY
EVEN ON A BARGAIN HUNT!"





Only last week a friend retired his Laptop and bought a new one. The retiree I am told, was a three year old MacBook which had just just gone out of warranty. As long as I remember, this was the first time that this old miser, ever had the same Laptop all the way through its life cycle. Hahaha!


Speaking strictly for myself, I'd rather gouge my own eyes out, then ever buy a Dell again. Dell is simply and plainly, out of my life, forever! .But my own story I will cover some other time.


My buddies old Laptop didn't get to retirement unscathed -the keyboard, the optical drive and the hard drive had all died and been replaced enroute. I remember all that happening very vividly It was becoming a little bit like the legendary shovel that has changed the blade and handle and shaft but is still notionally the same!! Hahaha!



Its replacement is a shiny MacBook Pro with a 15in screen. He had come around, and got wiser over all these years, to feeling that ''size does indeed matter very much''. To put it differently, he started to out think these smart marketeers.He then reached a point where he rather schlep a large heavy Laptop than tote a tiny elegant one that he could not see.


What's unique about his old Laptop is that it isn't obsolete at all. Every other computer he had ever had stopped being fully functional before he got rid of it. He took action when he discovered he needed his computer to  do new things that the computer couldn't do. It soon became a familiar process, which started to happen within about a year,and became truly annoying around 18 months later, and always ended up with him  getting rid of the of the darned old model and buying a new one at around 2 year mark.


Not the time before the last one though.In 2006 his computer still did everything he wanted it to do. It helped that he was not a graphic jock:He don't manipulate large images or do any desktop publishing of large files or images, so his needs were fairly old-skool, limited to word processing, surfing the net, listening to music, and so on


It was just about then, that I came onto the scene and got into the act. What all this suggested to me, was exactly what the genius physicist at MIT, Luca Turin  -and incidently, one of the world's best perfume critic- had been saying since long:

''Moore's law had basically stopped for Laptops!'' Moore's law is the formula named after the Intel engineering legend, Gordon Moore, which states that computer chips either double in power or half in price every 18 months or so. But the process has now, for practical Laptop purposes, reached a limit. What this means from the buyers point of view is, that issues of screen size and portability are now PARAMOUNT - you are one of those graphics jocks.


My other piece of advice, that I hope to cover in the next post, could easily help all the students from all the worlds, rich or developing. It can be summed up In just one word: Refurbishing!


With many thanks to !WOW! 

Good Night & God Bless!

SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless

Students Struggle Amid Frequent Teacher Absence

Schoolkeeper Supriyadi, right, teaches at a village school in
Bogor when the teachers fail to show up. The teenager only
 has a junior high diploma but says he doesn't want to see
the students turned away.  (JG Photo/Vento Saudale)

Bogor, West Java. After enduring a one-hour trek uphill through muddy pathways to reach her elementary school in the village of Gobang, Bogor, 12-year-old Yanti doesn’t know if she’ll learn anything after the hike. She and her classmates are sometimes told to go back home because their teachers are often late — if they show up at all.

The condition has forced the school’s keeper, 17-year-old Supriyadi, who only has a junior high school diploma, to act as a substitute teacher.

“For the students here, if Bu Ayu or Pak Fahzri haven’t showed up by 9 a.m., we can either go home or take Pak Supri’s class,” Yanti said, refering to the school’s two teachers.

The nameless school sits on top of Kukuh Sumbung hill, five kilometers away from the nearest paved road, to provide basic education for two isolated hamlets — Kukuh Sumbung and Pabuaran — inhabited in total by 150 families, mostly farmers.

Before the school was built in 2010 through the help of the Community Empowerment National Program, students had to walk more than five kilometers to the nearest elementary school in Gobang, which prevented many families from sending their children to school.

But given poor attendance from teachers in the Kukuh Sumbung school, some children have stopped bothering to come at all,
particularly as the district, which borders Jakarta to the north, enters the rainy season. The rains transform beaten roads and paths into impenetrable pools of mud, forcing students to take detours and walk even further.

“In the dry season it usually takes less than one hour because we can cut through the hills,” Yanti said, adding that this time she and her friends had to cross the neighboring village of Cijantur.

The school only has two classrooms, forcing the 150 students from different grades to study together, often sharing books their parents can’t afford. Some students’ families cannot afford their uniforms, while others show up to class barefoot.

The walls are dirty from muddy water leaks and construction for the school’s facade remains unfinished with the scaffolding still in place. The school has one bathroom, but no running water.

Supriyadi said he felt sorry for the students, who journeyed on kilometers of muddy roads just to reach the school.

“Actually, I only graduated from junior high school but I have to do something if the teachers don’t come,” he said. “What can I do? I am sad to see the kids come only to be told to go home.”

After Supriyadi taught the first and second graders for more than an hour, finally one teacher showed up — 22-year-old Yunengsih, arriving on her old scooter. Known to her students as Bu Ayu, Yunengsih was soaking wet, her uniform dirty from mud.

Yunengsih, who is still finishing college, said sometimes she has to attend morning classes at her university in Bogor, 30 kilometers away on winding and heavily congested roads.

“That is why sometimes I have to abandon teaching,” she said. “I want to graduate right away so I can become a full-time civil servant and concentrate on teaching.”

Even if she doesn’t have to attend classes at her university, getting to work means travelling 10 kilometers from her home in Bojong Kulur village on a motorcycle, spending more than half of her Rp 500,000 ($52) monthly salary on gasoline.

“For gasoline, I spend about Rp 300,000 per month and if I cannot use my motorcycle, I have to take ojek [motorcycle
taxi], which costs Rp 50,000 round trip,” she said.

Schoolkeeper Supriyadi said he only gets paid Rp 300,000 per month and
he doesn’t get any extra for being a substitute teacher. The other teacher, Fahzri, did not show up the day the Jakarta Globe visited.

But the school is the only way for children like Yanti to get a formal education. Most of the children her age are already in sixth grade, but Yanti, who only got a taste of formal education when the school opened, has to mingle with classmates between 8 and 9 years of age.

“Before, I only attend Koran recital lessons in my village but I was asked by Pak Muklis [her Koran teacher] to go to formal school so I can learn how to read and write,” Yanti said.

- thejakartaglobe.com

Research shows binge drinking inhibits brain development



Teenagers who binge drink risk inhibiting part of their brain's development and many are laying the groundwork for alcoholism down the track a Queensland University of Technology (QUT) researcher has found.
Professor Selena Bartlett, from QUT's Institute for Health and Biomedical Innovation (IHBI), studied the effect excessive binge drinking during adolescence had on a particular receptor in the brain and discovered teen bingeing altered it irreversibly, keeping the brain in an adolescent state.
"The human brain doesn't fully develop until around age 25 and bingeing during adolescence modifies its circuits, preventing the brain from reaching maturity," she said.
"During adolescence, the brain undergoes massive changes in the prefrontal cortex and areas linked to drug reward but alcohol disrupts this.
"The research, which was carried out on rats, suggests that during ageing, the brain's delta opioid peptide receptor (DOP-R) activity turns down, but binge drinking causes the receptors to stay on, keeping it in an adolescent stage.
"The younger a child or teenager starts binge drinking and the more they drink, the worse the possible outcome for them."
Professor Bartlett said recent trends to mix high-caffeine drinks such as Red Bull with alcohol were making the binge drinking problem worse.
"Historically, a young person who'd had too much to drink might be sick, pass out or fallen to sleep but now the high-caffeine drinks keep them awake longer enabling them to drink even more," she said.
"Other studies have shown that over 60 per cent of Gen Y drinkers are engaging in risky drinking behaviours.
"Youth binge drinking is something parents should be concerned about," she said.
"Because it inhibits part of the brain's development, binge drinking over time keeps people in an emotionally immature state and often leads to huge problems when in their 30s and 40s when people come face to face with the demands of life.
"We're making this information available, not to be wowsers, but because our research shows that binge drinking does inhibit the brain's development and can causes drinking problems in adulthood.
"It's about providing information so people can make informed choices about the quantity and strength of the alcohol they consume."

Liverpool draw Chelsea, City down Tottenham



Chelsea 1 - 1 Liverpool
Chelsea failed to close the gap on Premier League leaders Manchester United as Luis Suarez's equaliser gave Liverpool a point at Stamford Bridge.
Captain John Terry headed the Blues an early lead but was then taken off on a stretcher after appearing to sustain a serious knee injury in an accidental first-half collision with Suarez.

Oscar and Juan Mata were guilty of missing clear chances to emphasise Chelsea's obvious superiority and, with 18 minutes remaining, Roberto Di Matteo's side paid the price when Suarez headed in his 11th goal of the season after Jamie Carragher flicked on Suso's corner.
Suarez was on target for the fourth successive away league game - further illustrating his vital importance to a Liverpool team that enjoys plenty of possession but, apart from the Uruguayan, carries too little threat.


Man City 2 - 1 Tottenham

Edin Dzeko's late winner gave Manchester City a dramatic victory over Tottenham that keeps them in touch with leaders Manchester United and just two points off the top of the Premier League.
Spurs led through Steven Caulker's first-half header before Sergio Aguero drew City level.
Dzeko, so often City's hero this season, came off the bench to snatch the three points with two minutes to go.

The Bosnia striker detests the term "super-sub", claiming it does not show him enough respect, but he again showed his worth as a late replacement after coming on for Carlos Tevez.
Dzeko exchanged passes with David Silva before slamming an unstoppable shot past Brad Friedel - his sixth league goal of the season and his fifth as a substitute.

- BBC.co.uk




Healthy school food praised - in concept



In a taste test of new lunch items last year in the Long Beach Unified School District, the fiesta salad received a nearly 73 percent approval rating. One student even declared that the dish of pinto beans, cilantro, corn, tomatoes and cayenne pepper was "better than McDonald's."
Yet the salad was a flop when the district put it on the menu this year.
Long Beach Unified isn't the only district in California dealing with lunchtime trial and error. In an effort to get children to eat healthier foods, new federal nutrition standards require schools to offer more fruits and vegetables, regulate calories and emphasize whole grains, among other changes.
A recent statewide survey shows that although students overwhelmingly support the new nutrition standards, most are tossing the foods they don't like. About 40 percent of students say they eat school lunches in their entirety, according to the survey commissioned by the California Endowment, which provides funding to a number of media organizations, including California Watch.
Schools are "trying to expose kids to more fruits and vegetables and whole grains; that kind of behavior doesn't happen overnight," said Nicola Edwards, a nutrition policy advocate at California Food Policy Advocates, which works to improve the diet of low-income people.
The survey, conducted this month by the public opinion research firm Fairbank, Maslin, Maullin, Metz and Associates, found that 73 percent of students in grades 7 through 12 were aware of changes to school lunches this year and that 82 percent supported the changes.
But what students support and what they'll actually eat are not always aligned. At Long Beach Unified, vegetables, in particular, have been a tough sell.
"We've seen them just take the item and just put them in the trash can," said Cecelia Slater, the district's nutrition services director.
Slater is working with school administrators to help them understand and promote the new nutrition standards and figure out which foods students will eat. (Lessons learned so far: Spicy jicama sticks are a hit, and prepackaged edamame is less popular than anticipated.)
Slater plans to do the same with parents - 91 percent of whom, according to the survey, support the new meal standards.
Families can face many challenges in getting healthy meals on the table, including time and access to healthy foods. Still, Edwards said, many schools are trying to involve parents by sending menus home, sharing recipes and providing nutrition education resources.
Slater said she hopes parents will encourage their children to make healthy food choices and not be wasteful. "Good nutrition that's not eaten is not really good nutrition, after all," she said.

Prop. 30 OK doesn't stop student protests



Public university students in the Bay Area staged protests Thursday against possible tuition hikes, saying the passage of Proposition 30 provided only a temporary reprieve from cuts to higher education.
At UC Berkeley, about 200 students and faculty members braved a steady rain at noon on Sproul Plaza to rally against the specter of increased fees. They brought out a giant No. 2 pencil reading, "Kids R No. 1" and a sign that said, "We got the money, we want the power."
"Hey, rain or shine, the cuts are coming - stay here," a woman who helped organize the event said on a speaker, imploring fellow students not to let the weather stop them from taking part in the protest.
Speakers demanded tuition rollbacks, saying that because Prop. 30 guaranteed only that tuition will not rise this school year, cuts in the future remain likely.
"I'm glad that Proposition 30 passed, instead of not passing, but it doesn't actually do anything more than at most delay or defer plans to raise tuition," said Geoffrey O'Brien, an associate professor of English. "We understand that we have, unfortunately, a permanent struggle. Without raising a stink and raising some noise, we're not going to do anything except passively watch burdens increase for undergraduates."
Ridhima Vemula, 19, a sophomore double majoring in public health and economics, huddled under an umbrella with Madhavi Muralidharan, 18, a freshman economics major as they watched the demonstration.
"It's a really important dialogue to have right now, especially now that Prop. 30 has passed," Vemula said.
Muralidharan said she never fully understood the struggles facing public schools until she found herself having to "take out huge loans to try to get to Berkeley."
"I'm here because I think this is really relevant to all of us here right now," Muralidharan said.
The UC Berkeley protest was one of several demonstrations on UC campus Thursday in advance of a university regents meeting next week in San Francisco on whether to raise fees for seven professional degree programs.
California State University students also staged protests, with Bay Area demonstrations at Cal State East Bay, San Francisco State and San Jose State.
CSU trustees will vote next week in Long Beach on a proposal to impose hefty new fees on thousands of students who repeat courses, take far more credits than they need to graduate and take more credits in a single semester than strictly necessary.
CSU officials said their proposal is actually beneficial to students because it is designed to free up thousands of classroom seats so that fewer qualified applicants, as well as students who are currently enrolled, will be turned away or shut out of courses. CSU says it has turned away 20,000 students a year since the state's budget crisis began four years ago.
But protesters call the proposal "student fee extortion" and say there are legitimate reasons why many students need to take additional credits or repeat courses.

Stone Age skeletons found in well a mystery to Israeli archaeologists



Israeli archaeologists are scratching their heads after unearthing two skeletons of over 8, 000 years old at the bottom of an ancient water well.
The mystery widened when researchers found that remains belong to a young woman of 20-year-old and an older man between 30 and 40. Archaeologists believe that either both of them accidentally fell into the well or were murdered and then dumped inside.
"We're still investigating what happened to the couple, we have to do an autopsy to find out if they were murdered and also look into the artifacts and rocks found over them," excavation director Yotam Teper told Xinhua Thursday.
The well is eight-meter deep and was used by farmers during the Neolithic period to bring water to the settlement. The numerous artifacts that have been excavated so far from the well indicate that the well ended up being used as a dump after it became polluted.
Among these finds are a pair of sickle blades used for harvesting as well as arrow heads and other stone artifacts that are helping researchers shed light on how Neolithic farming settlements lived.
"We found a small water channel used to bring water from the well to the small farms around it. We're still excavating the area, but so far, what we have found will help us understand more about this period," Teper said. "There's only two more wells from the Neolithic that have been unearthed so far in Israel, and not that many in the world, so this find is of great significance."
The well was discovered in September at the archaeological site of Enot Nisanit, by archaeologists who were excavating in the Jezreel Valley.
"The exposure of these wells makes an important contribution to the study of man's culture and economy in a period when pottery vessels and metallic objects had still not yet been invented," Dr. Omri Barzilai, head of the Prehistory Branch of the Israel Antiquities Authority said.
"It seems that ancient man tried to devise ways of protecting his drinking water from potential contamination by the animals he raised, and therefore he enclosed the water in places that were not accessible to them," Barzilai said.
The Israel Antiquities Authority will preserve the well and exhibit it as part of the sites around Tel Megiddo in the different periods.

Fla. students walk on water for class assignment

Claudia Fernandez celebrates as she crosses the finish line
during a "Walk on Water" event at Florida International
 University in Miami, 

MIAMI (AP) -- Students from Florida International University have been walking on water for a class assignment.
To do it, they wear water shoes that they created. The students had to make it to the other side of a 175-foot lake on campus Thursday while wearing the aquatic shoes in order to earn an "A'' on the assignment. Alex Quinones was the first to do so in just over a minute, earning himself $500 and major bragging rights.
Architecture professor Jaime Canaves says the annual race is a lesson in in life as well as architecture. He says he wants to show his students that as long as they research and test their work, anything is possible -- even "walking on water."

Coke calculator's calorie burners

Online tool lists the exercise needed to work off sugary drinks - but it's not as guilt free as it seems.


The online calculator lists the exercise needed to work off sugary drinks -
buit is not as guilt free as it seems.

Feel like a can of Coke? Seventy minutes of ironing should burn it off. A calculator launched by Coca-Cola in Britain aims to help soft drink consumers justify the indulgence by coming up with some "unusual, fun and interesting ways" of balancing it out.

However, it's not as guilt-free as it seems. A well-known New Zealand-based nutritionist warns that it focuses solely on cancelling out calories which impact on weight and disregards other health negatives linked to the drinks.

The Work It Out calculator was developed by the beverage giant's British arm in conjunction with an expert in exercise physiology and sports performance, Dr Greg Whyte, and the figures are calculated based on the energy expenditure of a female weighing 60kg.

Click here to go to the 'Work It Out' calculator.

It tells you 17 minutes of Zumba will make the 139 calories from a 330ml can of Coke disappear, as will a fast nine-minute run, a 10-minute boxing session or 14 minutes of salsa dancing. Cherry Coca-Cola and Sprite have been identified as the most calorie-laden beverages so require more effort to ease your weight-conscious mind.

Those opting for the Coke Zero or Diet Coke can just stay put on the couch, according to the calculator, which says no work is required to burn off the 0.05 calories in a can.

Surprisingly, Sprite Zero requires slightly more effort be put in to dissolve the four calories - a one-minute ski, ice skate or two minutes paddling a canoe should do the trick.

There are also options for Fanta lovers, Powerade drinkers, Glaceau Vitaminwater connoisseurs and even those fancying a Schweppes Indian Tonic.

Healthy Food Guide nutritionist Claire Turnbull said while the calculator was correct in terms of what it took to burn the calories, it didn't take into account any other factors which could be detrimental to health. The fewer sugary drinks consumed the better, she said.

"It's not good for you to have that much acid, it's not good for your teeth, it's not good for your stomach whether they've got sugar in or not. Even though Coke Zero doesn't have any sugar in it, it doesn't mean it's good for [you] it just means it doesn't take as long to burn off as the other ones."

She said comparison calculators were helpful in highlighting the difference in calories between beverages but shouldn't become a justification tool, because calories could be spent on better quality foods.

The application is targeted at the British market and some drinks listed are not available in New Zealand.

Coca-Cola NZ's website provides a more generic hydration and energy counter. The serving sizes also differ, as a Coca-Cola can in NZ is 355ml compared to 330ml in Britain.

A Coca-Cola NZ spokeswoman said the calculator could be used to update information on the company's website here. "Education is a key factor in helping people make informed decisions."

- nzherald.co.nz

Student Protesters Ejected From OSU Board Meeting

Columbus, Ohio: A group of Ohio State University students opposed to sweatshop labor was ejected by the university's president from a trustees' meeting.
 
The Columbus Dispatch reported Saturday that about a dozen students showed up at Friday's Board of Trustees meeting to object to an athletic apparel contract the university is considering with the merchandising arm of the Dallas Cowboys.
 
The newspaper reported that the students interrupted OSU President E. Gordon Gee to ask that the contract be dropped from consideration. They alleged the contract supports sweatshop labor.
 
The report said Gee told them he doesn't "negotiate in public" and demanded they leave.
 
Campus police escorted the students out.

NBC4i.com

Asians boost global investment in student housing


MILLIONS of young Asians studying in developed countries have fuelled a $190 billion global market in student housing, according to an international property group.

More than half of the estimated 165 million students currently enrolled overseas come from Asia, with China, India and South Korea the top sources, Jones Lang LaSalle said in a press statement issued in Singapore.

The US, Britain and Australia are the top destinations of overseas students, whose numbers are expected to reach 263 million by 2025.

"Strong economic growth in the key Asian markets has fuelled higher education enrollments globally," said Philip Hillman, lead director for the student housing market at Jones Lang LaSalle.

"Over the past decade, countries like China, India and Vietnam have experienced rapid growth in the wealthier middle class, which has spurred demand for higher education and better housing options in destination countries," he added.



Developer-operators have traditionally dominated the market but equity funds, sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, investment managers and real estate investment trusts are entering the sector.

It said the sector is seen as a good investment owing to high occupancy rates and strong demand as well as positive income and rental growth.

- AFP

Bullying filth on school Facebook pages

An investigation of more than 4800 Australian primary and high schools has
revealed more than 10 per cent have a Facebook page on which students are
taunting each other and teachers with abusive language and offensive pictures. 


AUSTRALIA: Students at almost 500 schools are running Facebook sites dedicated to humiliating their peers as more and more children are forced to carry the incessant burden of cyber-bullying outside the school gates.

A News Ltd investigation of more than 4800 Australian primary and high schools has revealed more than 10 per cent have a Facebook page on which students are taunting each other and teachers with abusive language and offensive pictures.

Many of the posts are too offensive to reprint, but include graphic sexual discussion of students and teachers, shocking gore photos of suicide and accident victims, underage girls labelled ``sluts'', male teachers named as paedophiles and references to Nazism.

The majority of pages - many which carry the school's full name and logo - contain homophobic, racist and misogynist jokes and drug references.

Some of the most insidious pages, typically called ``burn books'' or ``goss pages'', name and tag students in vicious rumours, which are then ``liked'' and shared around other students' social networks.


Of 285 schools surveyed in WA, 38 had Facebook ``burn'' pages or similar. One Facebook page for Ballajura Community College school featured a photograph of a male teacher and female students overlaid with the logo of a pornography website, accompanied by snide comments joking that he was a paedophile.

The page, which accrued more than 600 fans since its launch in mid September, also featured photographs of students fighting, jokes about female Year 7s being "sluts'' and arguments between students using extremely offensive language, all underneath the school's official logo.

That page has since been deleted, however two others using the school's name still exist.


Cyber-bullying expert Dr Barbara Spears, from the University of South Australia, said ``liking'' nasty Facebook posts was the new face of schoolyard bullying.

"Clearly, `liking' such pages contributes to the ongoing humiliation of others, and bystanders - those who contribute to bullying by not doing anything about it - are actively supporting it,'' she said.

Studies suggest 15 to 30 per cent of children are bullied at school, and around 10 per cent have been cyber bullied.

Dr Spears said bullying was not shifting from the schoolyard to the screen, but ``expanding'' there.

Constant access to technology meant "there is no escape'', she said.

- perthnow.com.au