Saturday, November 3, 2012

South Africa unlikely to play a four-pronged pace attack ? Cricket ...

South Africa unlikely to play a four-pronged pace attack ? Cricket News Roundup ? Part 1 ? November 2, 2012

South African assistant coach, Russell Domingo, has ruled out the possibility of fielding an all? pace attack when his team tackles Australia in the opening Test at Brisbane.

Given the pacy nature of the tracks Down Under, it was expected that the touring Proteas could prefer uncapped seamer Rory Kleinveldt ahead of leg-spinner Imran Tahir for the first Test, but Domingo said that the latter will hold his place in order to give the side an added option.

Also with Jacques Kallis in the side, it gives the South Africans further depth in the pace bowling department. "Gone are the days when a South African team goes without a spinner," Domingo said.

England fast bowler, James Anderson, said that his side was satisfied with their performance in the opening warm-up game on tour of India.

Anderson picked up two wickets in each of the innings, while Alastair Cook showcased his batting prowess by notching up 119. Moreover, the likes of Samit Patel and Tim Bresnan also impressed, with the former scoring a well-crafted hundred, while the latter took four wickets during the game. The match further saw Kevin Pietersen returning to the England set-up for the first time since August.

"I think it was pretty good," Anderson said. ?The bowlers got a decent bowl under the belt, a few [batsmen] got decent hits out in the middle and that's pretty much all we could expect."

Australian teenage fast bowler, Pat Cummins, has been ruled out of the upcoming Australian season after suffering a lower back injury.

The pacer will miss his second consecutive home summer since making his Test debut last year against South Africa. The 19-year-old picked up the injury during the recently concluded Champions League T20, where he represented the victorious Sydney Sixers.

He is also likely to take little part in the team?s trip to India (in February), and could be further sidelined from the Ashes series in mid next year.

"We expect he will recover fully from this injury and will be closely monitored to determine his return to the playing field, but expect that he will miss most of the 2012-13 domestic cricket season," Alex Kountouris, the team physio, said.?

Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/South-Africa-unlikely-to-play-a-four-pronged-pace-attack-Cricket-News-Roundup-Part-1-November-2,-2012-a198552

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Video: Romney camp to make up ground after pausing for Sandy (cbsnews)

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Angkor Wat Temple mystery solved

The massive sandstone bricks used to construct the 12th-century temple of Angkor Wat were brought to the site via a network of hundreds of canals, according to new research.

The findings shed light on how the site's 5 million to 10 million bricks, some weighing up to 3,300 pounds (1,500 kilograms), made it to the temple from quarries at the base of a nearby mountain.

"We found many quarries of sandstone blocks used for the Angkor temples and also the transportation route of the sandstone blocks," wrote study co-author Estuo Uchida of Japan's Waseda University, in an email.

In the 12th century, King Suryavarman II of the Khmer Empire began work on a 500-acre (200 hectare) temple in the capital city of Angkor, in what is now Cambodia. The complex was built to honor the Hindu god Vishnu, but 14th-century leaders converted the site into a Buddhist temple.

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Archaeologists knew that the rock came from quarries at the base of a mountain nearby, but wondered how the sandstone bricks used to build Angkor Wat reached the site. Previously, people thought the stones were ferried to Tonle Sap Lake via canal, and then rowed against the current through another river to the temples, Uchida told LiveScience.

To see whether this was the case, Uchida's team surveyed the area and found 50 quarries along an embankment at the base of Mount Kulen. They also scoured satellite images of the area and found a network of hundreds of canals and roads linking the quarries to the temple site. The distance between the quarries and the site along the route Uchida's team found was only 22 miles (37 kilometers), compared with the 54 miles (90 km) the river route would have taken.

The grid of canals suggests the ancient builders took a shortcut when constructing the temple, which may explain how the imposing complex was built in just a few decades.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook? and Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49642111/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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What You Can Learn From 'The Sessions' | Psychology Today

The new movie The Sessions tells the true story of poet Mark O?Brien who lost the use of his body?s muscles in childhood as a result of Polio. The movie is based on the essay ?On Seeing a Sex Surrogate? which Mark wrote in 1990 about his experience of seeing a sex surrogate at the age of 36 to learn about sexuality with a partner for the first time in his life. Due to the requirement of spending all but a few hours a day in a contraption called an iron lung, Mark had been isolated from peers from the age of 6 through adolescence and robbed of the common experience young adults have of experimenting with sexual relationships thereby learning what they like and don?t like from different experiences. It?s not until his mid-twenties when he attended the University of Berkeley where he studied journalism that he even gets to develop his social skills.

The lessons learned from this film offers the audience a critical opportunity to contemplate the ways in which most people in American society are robbed of a positive accurate sexual education. I have seen non-disabled clients over the years who have felt the same fear, self-loathing and frustration about their own particular sexual desires as Mark did. Similar to Mark, these are people who were well-educated, intelligent, and successful in their livelihoods but had either been taught negative things about sexuality by parents, teachers and spiritual leaders or had been raised in a vacuum of no information at all. This led them to believe as Mark did, that their desires were perverted and/or sinful. He wrote: ?The attitude I absorbed was not so much that polite people never thought about sex, but that no one did. I didn?t know anyone outside my family, so this code affected me strongly, convincing me that people should emulate the wholesome asexuality of Barbie and Ken, that we should behave as though we had no 'down there?s' down there.?

Many of my clients are filled with misconceptions, myths, and extreme shame about the erotic desires and physical arousal that are part of most people?s sexual response cycle. Whether they have been brought up in a religious faith that forbids any romantic contact before marriage like practicing Muslims, traditional Indians (or Indian-Americans), or Orthodox Jews, or clients who had families that made negative comments about sex as they were growing up, these clients all struggle to find a way to integrate their belief systems with their erotic desires and or behaviors.

It is my role as a therapist to ask the right questions to find out what a client?s goals are regarding their sex life and to determine what emotional, psychological and physical impediments need to be addressed and by whom. I am respectful of a client or a couple?s desire to adhere to their religious traditions while offering them basic information that will allow them to begin to decide for themselves what they want in their sexual life.

Mark struggled with his Catholic faith and his family upbringing as he contemplated seeing a sex surrogate writing: ?What would my parents think? What would God think?? Mark O?Brien had fallen in love with people in his life (including a caretaker and a fellow student at University of Berkeley) but his feelings had not been reciprocated and he felt the opportunities to give and get sexual pleasure within a marriage seemed few as he couldn?t even get a date. He consulted with both his therapist, another therapist who specialized in sex therapy and a Catholic priest to help him come to the decision to work with a sex surrogate. All these counselors gave Mark their perspective and useful information without putting pressure on him one way or another.

What people can learn from this film is that the many people who grow up feeling ashamed of their sexual thoughts have few people to whom they can go to who are willing and able to tell them the facts as well as process the feelings that can go along with sex. Instead, misinformed lessons are learned through the romanticized Hollywood romantic-comedies in which the amount of time it takes for a woman to get thoroughly turned on is reduced to some short period of making out before the clothes are ripped off. The hot passionate scenes abound in American films in which safer sex is never discussed before sex, men never stop to put on a condom and women climax with delight without any foreplay and through intercourse alone.

And more recently, there is the modeling for teens and young men of partner-sex based solely on the viewing of porn which is a format created solely for erotic entertainment and fantasy. Porn has little realistic information to offer young men in terms of how mutual sexual relationships should be negotiated, the wide variety of women?s sexual desires and response cycle and the visual modeling of how partners can be both givers and receivers of pleasure. Porn does not illustrate the way in which feelings of love might be integrated into a sexual union. And porn, like the movies never exhibits a man losing his erection and the many reactions he might experience and receive from a partner in that situation.

After getting his priest?s blessing, Mark learns that his body can be a source of immense playful, sensual pleasure and that he can give pleasure to a woman through his sessions with Cheryl, a sexual surrogate whom he hires to teach him about sexuality. Through body awareness exercises he finds out what types of touch he enjoys, what tickles and which ones are annoying. He asks Cheryl in a direct way whether she enjoys having her ear licked and she answers no but that some women might and supports him in his asking. Verbal discussions and non-verbal total body touching are critical skills to develop as part of anyone?s sexual repertoire.

When he eventually learns how to have intercourse he finds out that all the sensual play beforehand and after intercourse can be part of a tremendously moving and sensual experience, and is an important part of a person?s life. Mark also comes to feel entitled to express that part of him. He writes: ?Another lesson learned: sex is a part of ordinary living, not an activity reserved for gods, goddesses, and rock stars. I realized that it could become a part of my life if I fought against my self-hatred and pessimism.? Important lessons indeed.

?

Source: http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/sex-esteem/201211/what-you-can-learn-the-sessions

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Jos? Andr?s Dishing Out Food Politics, Policy This Spring | Heard ...

Restaurateur Jos? Andr?s is exporting his insights into the intersection of food and culture to George Washington University. And he will share the sum total of his experience?with those who carve out room in their spring schedule to join his inaugural ?World on a Plate? course.

The class marks a new chapter in Andr?s? relationship with the university. He has previously served on GWU?s Urban Food Task Force, advised GWU President Steven Knapp on food policy issues and assisted in the development of the School Without Walls pilot program.

?Food is that thread that runs through the fabric of society: culture, energy, art, science, the economy, national security, the environment, health, politics and diplomacy,? Andr?s said in a release touting his leap from Think Food Group boardroom to classroom, adding, ?Eating is the one thing, besides breathing, that we all do from the day we are born until the day we die.?

The globe-trotting toque and newly minted American Chef Corps member ? part of a group of 90-odd cheflebrities tapped to be ?chef ambassadors? by the State Department earlier this year ? won?t lead every class discussion but is expected to help craft the curriculum.

While the syllabus remains a work in progress, a GWU aide held out hope that themes including ?food and public health,? ?food and national security,? ?food and international aid,? ?hunger? and ?obesity? would be addressed throughout the semester.

??Food and Politics? will not only look back at how the government shaped many of our food choices, but also to today at agro-business lobbyists, the farm bill, the food pyramid and food plate discussions,? the GWU spokeswoman suggested.

Those tentatively expected to pinch hit when Andres steps away from the plate include: Agriculture Department Food Safety Deputy Administrator Philip Derfler, ?What?s Cooking Uncle Sam?? exhibit curator Alice Kamps, ?On Food and Cooking? author Harold McGee and ?Bizarre Foods? host Andrew Zimmern.

Andr?s? course is just the latest in a string of food-related discussions GWU has fostered at its Foggy Bottom campus. The school has explored the primal topic across various disciplines, including: ?Sociology of Food? (sociology), ?People, Land and Food? (geography), ?Let?s Eat: Food and American Culture? (Judaic studies program), ?Recipes, Politics and Power? (writing program) and ?Global Food Security? (international affairs), as well as a non-credit ?Seminar on Food? delving into topics as diverse as the politics of ?fresh? food to school lunches. A separate dean?s seminar on ?Food Politics? is also being added to the course catalog in early 2013.

Source: http://www.rollcall.com/news/jos_andrs_dishing_out_food_politics_policy_this_spring-218629-1.html

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

Nadia G Spices Up Your Dishes | Mademan.com

nadia-g-likes-her-some-bacon

Nadia Giosia isn?t your average food show host. On Cooking Channel?s Bitchin? Kitchen, she?s a sexy, tattooed Julia Childs for a younger, edgier audience. The 32-year-old Montreal native started cooking at the age of 11 and, in her words, ?sucked pretty hard at it.? But making meals was an important part of her family growing up. ?We were food obsessed. Cooking was how we expressed ourselves.?

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?Everyone likes to have a good meal made for them. If you cook for a woman you?re going to get a lot of? props.?

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Her show attempts to breathe new life into the cooking show genre. ?We wanted to bring a bit of comedy to it and do things around themes, like breakup brunches and dysfunctional family dinners.? You don?t need a special theme to eat right, however. Nor does Nadia G think it?s terribly hard for a single man living alone to eat right. ?In general, people eat too much meat,? she advises. We can only imagine that this is doubly true of the man who eats out a lot or microwaves just about every meal he consumes, but G has some easy answers.

Chicken breast is an excellent choice for the man who wants a no-frills, protein-rich dinner. ?Marinate it for 24 hours in full-fat yogurt and add some cilantro,? advises Miss G, who says that not only does the yogurt provide flavor and tenderize the meat, it also supplies healthy bacteria. And now you?ve got some versatility. Do you want fajitas? Something simpler like chicken breast drizzled in olive oil? Greek-style wraps? Make any of these dishes happen easily with a few extra ingredients.

What? Oh, like you don?t keep a shiny silver skull on your stove at all times?

Stews are another good option for the single guy on the go. ?Stew doesn?t take a lot of time to prepare and you can eat it for days.? It also allows you to make use of all the bits and pieces of other food you might otherwise throw out.

Pasta is an old standby from the days of Top Ramen for breakfast, but G suggests doing it in a healthier, more adult fashion. ?Pasta fazool is Italian for ?broke ass,?? she jokes, adding that if you?re going to dare to be lazy, you absolutely, positively must have organic stock.? When dressing it, never use cheap canned parmesan. Always get the real thing. ?Calling that powdered junk ?parmesan? is like calling Nickelback a rock band.? And that?s coming from a Canadian!

Of course, at the end of the day, well-prepared food isn?t just about your health. It?s also a great way to woo the ladies. ?Everyone likes to have a good meal made for them,? says G. ?If you cook for a woman you?re going to get a lot of? props.? Interpret that anyway you want, then check out the relatively simple, positively bitchin? chicken, pasta and bacon chocolate dishes on the following pages. (We threw in some bonus shots of our new favorite chef as well.) Bon appetit!

Mango-Avocado Chicken

Ingredients:

2 cups plain yogurt
3 garlic cloves plus a little extra, degermed
1 tbsp fresh ginger, peeled
1 cup fresh cilantro plus a little extra, chopped
Salt
Pepper
2 chicken breasts
2 limes
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 tbsp honey
1/2 tsp dijon mustard
1 jalapeno pepper
3 ripe mangos
1 ripe avocado
Brown rice, optional

Method:

Chicken marinade: In a food processor, combine yogurt, garlic, peeled ginger, 1 cup cilantro and a small pinch of sea salt and freshly cracked pepper to taste. Blend until smooth. Pour the marinade into a large Ziploc bag. Rinse the chicken breasts, pat dry and add to the marinade. Smush them around and place the bag in the fridge for 24 hours.

Lime-cilantro dressing: In a jar, combine the juice of 2 limes, olive oil, honey and Dijon mustard. Add a big pinch of finely chopped fresh cilantro, a small pinch of garlic, 1 teaspoon minced jalapeno pepper flesh (add seeds if you like it hot), a small pinch of sea salt and lots of freshly cracked pepper. Cover the jar and shake until thick.

Heat the grill to high and sear the marinated chicken breasts in a skillet for 2 minutes per side. Turn grill to medium-low and cook for an additional 5 to 6 minute per side. In a bowl combine slices of ripe yellow mango and ripe avocado. Drizzle with 2 tablespoons of lime-cilantro dressing and mix to coat. Combine with chicken breasts and serve with a side of brown rice (optional).

Like we said, not your average food show host?


Source: http://www.mademan.com/f4f-nadia-g-spices-up-your-dishes/

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Methodological pluralism ? media/anthropology

by Geoff Payne via The SAGE Dictionary of Social Research Methods (2006)

Print pages: 174-176

Definition

An approach that advocates flexibility in the selection of social research methods, based on the principle of choosing the most suitable methods for the nature of the problem being researched. More generally, methodological pluralism calls on the researcher to be tolerant of other people?s preferred methods even when they differ from one?s own.

Distinctive Features

From time to time, disagreements among social scientists about which are the ?best? social research methods become more vocal and indeed, confrontational. An example of this is the competition between older, ethnographic research styles associated with sociologists at the University of Chicago, and the (then newer) work based on social surveys being promoted by Harvard and Columbia after World War II. In the UK a conflict between quantitative methods and several newer forms of qualitative research took place during the 1970s. These disputes are usually marked by antagonistic criticisms of published work, lengthy expositions in defence of particular methods, and even personal abuse.

Methodological pluralism, promoted by Bell and Newby (1977), rejected the idea that one type of methods was automatically better than another. They argued that it was healthy for sociology to contain a number of different theoretical perspectives, and that while each perspective tended to imply a given method of research, each new research project should be tackled on the basis of its own particular features. The research methods selected for the project should be the ones that best fitted the characteristics of the phenomena being studied.

For example, studies of the national rates at which something was occurring, or projects dealing with simpler concepts that could be relatively easily measured, were better suited to social surveys, pre-coded questionnaires and other quantitative methods. On the other hand, when more detail was required, or phenomena were complex, subtle, or unclear, this was more suited to research by observation, less structured interviews, ethnographic description and other qualitative styles. Not every researcher would use every style of research during their careers, nor should they be proficient in all research methods. The plurality would be achieved in the total research output of the discipline as a whole (Bell and Roberts, 1984).

Evaluation

Despite the common sense of methodological pluralism, more sociologists pay lip-service to it than actively adopt it as a philosophy. The main reason is that during their education and early careers, each researcher acquires a set of personal preferences for one type of social science over others. This is not just a question of technical skills, but rather an interest in certain topics and a philosophical view of the social world and how it can be analysed.

There are genuine differences between schools of research, from those seeking to involve and empower the people being researched, through to those that regard ?respondents? merely as sources of information, and from those that see the social world as intricately interconnected and difficult to ?know?, to those that concentrate on the generality of patterned associations between small sets of ?variables?. While not always consciously returning to the complex social theories that underlie their positions, researchers read mainly a sub-set of the literature written by like-minded colleagues, defining research problems in specific ways, and therefore carry out their research using a narrow repertoire of methods.

In some cases, this results only in a rather focused approach, without much concern for other approaches. In others, the intellectual context of the research is strongly associated with a particular method: the context defines what is worth researching, how it should be researched and what order of interpretations can be made. In its more extreme form this results in ritualized denunciation of alternatives often becoming a part of publication. Where some researchers adhere to a ?standpoint? position, their intention is an explicitly ideological one which goes beyond just making new discoveries, to the promotion of the interests of one particular group. Challenging other researchers? methods is one way of undermining the position of rival interest groups (Payne and Payne, 2004: 89-93, 152-7).

Such out-of-hand dismissal because of the type of methods a study has used is a different matter from legitimately debating the competency of its research basis, when that is part of a general evaluation. However, it would be wrong to portray academic life as consisting solely of calm, rational, philosophical debate. Academics also compete for resources (research funding, access to journals, tenured posts, career promotion) in just as determined a way as do people in other walks of life. Attacking the type of research methods used by rivals is one weapon in the struggle between individuals, and institutions, for supremacy.

Not surprisingly, methodological pluralism?s failure to recognize these processes has meant that its call for toleration has largely gone unheeded. For example, in the UK the sociology that has been published in recent years has depended heavily on a narrow range of qualitative methods. A recent study of journal papers found only a minority using quantitative methods: only 2.6 per cent ?involved bivariate analysis and were written by sociologists at British universities, and only 8 (3.5%) involved multivariate techniques ? This can hardly be described as methodological pluralism? (Payne et al., 2004: 160).

Geoff Payne

Associated Concepts:

Key Readings

Bell, C. and Newby, H. (1977) Doing Sociological Research. London: Allen & Unwin.

Bell, C. and Roberts, H. (eds) (1984) Social Researching. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

Payne, G. and Payne, J. (2004) Key Concepts in Social Research. London: Sage.

Payne, G., Dingwall, R., Payne, J. and Carter, M. (1981) Sociology and Social Research. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

Payne, G., Williams, M. and Chamberlain, S. (2004) ?Methodological pluralism in British sociology?, Sociology, 38 (1): 153-63.

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Source: http://johnpostill.com/2012/10/31/methodological-pluralism/

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