Sunday, September 30, 2012

String of Iraq car bomb blasts kill at least 17

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - A string of car bomb blasts targeting mainly police checkpoints killed at least 17 people across Iraq on Sunday, police and hospital sources said.

No one has claimed responsibility for the attacks.

Violence in Iraq has eased since its height in 2006-2007 when sectarian fighting killed thousands of people, but Sunni Islamists and an al Qaeda affiliate still launch regular attacks, seeking to undermine the Shi'ite-led government.

The most deadly explosion took place in Taji, 20 km (12 miles) north of the capital Baghdad, where bombs in three parked cars went off separately, killing eight people and wounding 22.

A suicide bomber in a car blew himself up in the city of Kut, 150 km (95 miles) southeast of Baghdad, killing four policemen, police and local officials said.

In Baghdad, a parked car bomb killed two people in a northwestern district. Another blast near a public market in Khan Bani Saad, 30 km (20 miles) northeast of the capital, killed one civilian and wounded several policemen.

Two more policemen were killed when a car bomb went off in the town of Balad Ruz, 90 km (55 miles) northeast of Baghdad.

(Reporting by Kareem Raheem; writing by Isabel Coles; Editing by Diana Abdallah)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/string-iraq-car-bomb-blasts-kill-least-17-070324488.html

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Christie: GOP Still Shouldn't Back Akin

PARIS, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Clubs and players lashed out after the French government unveiled its 2013 budget on Friday, saying new tax plans would have a "disastrous effect" on domestic soccer. Tax hikes include a "temporary" 75 percent levy on annual earnings in excess of one million euros ($1.29 million) and a new rate of 45 percent on incomes above 150,000 euros. The existing rate is 40 percent on earnings above 69,505 euros. The government said the new "temporary" levy would be in operation until the country's debts were cleared. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/christie-gop-still-shouldnt-back-akin-102402111--politics.html

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$40 off select Sony VAIO T Series laptops starting at $699.99 and Free Shipping. at Sony Store

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Mickelson and Bradley gel in Ryder Cup debut

MEDINAH, Illinois (Reuters) - Phil Mickelson looked on like a proud father as he watched Keegan Bradley enjoy a spectacular Ryder Cup debut teaming up with his young protege to contribute two wins to the United States 5-3 lead over Europe on Friday.

Mickelson, the most experienced member of the U.S. Ryder Cup brigade with nine appearances, provided the knowhow and Bradley the youthful energy.

They combined to brush aside Briton Luke Donald and Spaniard Sergio Garcia 4&3 in the morning foursomes then followed up with a 2&1 victory over the Northern Ireland duo of world number one Rory McIlroy and Graeme McDowell.

"His (Bradley) energy is so positive, it's so good," Mickelson gushed. "His driver and his putter is off the charts.

"We've had a lot of fun, and that brings out best golf out."

When Bradley joined the PGA Tour in 2011, he and Mickelson struck up an instant friendship that has blossomed into a full-fledged bromance.

The two golfers displayed an obvious chemistry, enjoying every minute they spent inside the Ryder Cup pressure cooker, playfully slapping each other on the back, trading fist-pumps and high-fives and charming the pro-American galleries who roared their support.

"I just loved every second of it," said Bradley, who won the PGA Championship in his rookie season. "To be able to walk down the fairway with Phil and do this is just a dream come true.

"It's another moment in my life that I can't believe I'm a part of. It could be the best day of my life. It's just a blast.

"This is literally what I've dreamt about since I was a little kid and I got to do it next to my idol all day."

Bradley dropped the decisive putt to cap the morning match and did much of the heavy lifting in the afternoon, carding six birdies.

But it was Mickelson who delivered the decisive blow with a pinpoint tee shot at the 17th that ended the match with a handshake as McIlroy and McDowell conceded defeat.

"It's awesome and right here on the 17th, it was incredible," said Mickelson. "We've had so much fun and it's what brought our best golf out and to close out with that shot feels spectacular.

"This is one of the most emotional days playing a Ryder Cup that we'll ever have.

"I felt young, and it felt great. To finish it like this was just great."

(Editing by Julian Linden)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mickelson-bradley-gel-ryder-cup-debut-022837116--golf.html

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Essential Tips On Lighting Up Your Home | What is How to

Do you want to know a secret that will help you transform your home without having to tear down any walls or spend a crazy amount of money? Well it is actually quite simple; it is all in the lighting. Put that expensive antique piece that you think you need for your bathroom down first, it will not do you much good if your home lighting is not in order. Lighting is one of the most important elements of your home d?cor.

light

So many homeowners jump on to every home improvement wagon that comes their way but they miss out on this one crucial thing. You can get your house looking pretty good with some home improvement projects, but if you want it to look great, then you will need to do something about your lights.

This is easier said than done though. Home lighting is an intricate process that requires you to know the function of every room, and the type of lighting that will best complement that function. This article breaks the process down for you.

Most of the time spent within this room will be with the lights off, but for those few minutes before you turn them off you want your lights to create a good, relaxing mood. Whether it is the children?s bedroom or the master suite, there is one thing you will need to do in terms of lighting that is similar in both of them; you have to make it calming.

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The bedroom is the retreating place for most people, children and adults combined, when life throws at them things that they find hard to handle. A couple of lamps that are well positioned should work to relax the person and calm them down. Bright, harsh lights should be avoided at all costs, as they just increase anxiety.

However, some aspects of bedroom lighting that will differ depending on whose bedroom it is. The color of the lights for example, can be determined by the gender of the occupant. For younger children as well, you should have a nightlight on the standby for them-most children are afraid of the dark. As for the master bedroom, well the lighting should be able to create the mood you need to get things going.

The lighting requirements in the kitchen are the complete opposite of those in the bedroom. In the kitchen, the brighter the room the better. You will be handling elements that are potentially dangerous; you had better be able to see what you are doing!

This however does not translate into using lighting that is harsh to the eyes. There are creative ways in which you can provide adequate lighting in the kitchen, which is at the same time beautiful and decorative.

  • Family room and dining room

The family room is essentially, where you should spend most of your time as a family. Seeing as it is going to be a hub of activity most of the time, you want light fixtures that cannot easily be knocked over by someone playing. You also want lighting that is soft to relax the family but not romantic as such, that would be out of place. As for the dining room, a chandelier hanging over the dining table would produce a grand effect that everyone will love!

This is where you groom yourself every single morning; you should have enough light so that you can see yourself properly. You will not be able to make much use of natural lighting here, as large windows will tend to make the occupant of the bathroom feel too exposed, so you should make artificial lighting work to your full advantage.

Hanging a couple of nice light fixtures by the mirror is a neat trick. It makes the lights reflect throughout the room and makes the bathroom look so beautiful. You will also have the lights just where you need them to be, so that you can see yourself properly.

You should note that when it comes to lighting up your home, natural lighting is best. In all these rooms with the exception of the bathroom, installing bigger windows to allow in more sunlight would completely transform your house.

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Byline

Chad is a blogger for Access Fixtures, a provider of quality light fixtures.

Source: http://www.whatishowto.net/2012/09/28/essential-tips-on-lighting-up-your-home/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=essential-tips-on-lighting-up-your-home

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Health care reform ? what do physicians think? ? Health ? Bangor ...

Physicians agree on ? maybe ? two things. First, they agree they don?t agree on anything. Actually, some probably disagree about that. Second, they usually agree that everyone who disagrees with them is wrong. It should therefore come as no surprise that physician opinions about health care reform cover more territory than a bad rash.

That is reflected in physician opinions about President Obama?s Affordable Care Act, or ACA, in particular. Talk to five physicians and you get five opinions that sometimes overlap, sometimes don?t, and are almost always strongly held. And as we know, opinions are like bacteria ? everyone has them and some of them are nasty. That?s why a Florida urologist who probably had a big prostate clouding his thinking put a sign on his office door telling Obama supporters to seek care elsewhere.

The difficulty understanding what physicians think about all of this is compounded by the fact there are few really good surveys of them on these issues, and results of them seem contradictory. One of those ? a survey of 2,694 physicians commissioned by the Jackson Healthcare System ? found 55 percent felt the ACA should be scrapped, but one-third of respondents felt the act did not go far enough and a single-payer health system was needed. That means some of those who felt the law should be scrapped did so because they thought it went too far, and others thought so because it did not go far enough.

On the other hand, a 2009 survey of 2,130 physicians found 62.9 percent supported universal insurance through public (government-sponsored) and commercial options. They differed on how to achieve that universal insurance, with 25 percent supporting commercial insurance as the only option, and less than 20 percent supported government-sponsored insurance as the only option.

Despite this diversity of opinion, general patterns of physician perspective have emerged. Perhaps two-thirds support some kind of insurance for all Americans, because most recognize that lack of insurance puts their patients in jeopardy. Just as there seems to be an emerging consensus among physicians, there is also one among their professional associations (such as the American Medical Association and the American Osteopathic Association) that all Americans need access to comprehensive, affordable health care, and that some kind of insurance is required to ensure that access. That evolution is part of what brought the AMA from its position in the 1960s opposing the formation of Medicare to its position in 2011 in support of the ACA.

In fact, the AMA?s website suggests continued advocacy on the issue; it has a banner running across its website policy page detailing some of the impact of the ACA since its implementation: 3.1 million Americans under age 26 insured under their parents? insurance plans, 54 million Americans who have had expanded coverage of preventive health care, 5.1 million Americans on Medicare who have paid less for prescriptions, etc.

This growing consensus among physicians that all Americans must have access to ongoing, affordable health care has probably been driven, I believe, by the tremendous suffering that lack of insurance causes our patients. We cannot escape seeing it every day. Our experience is reflected in a painful avalanche of studies that has now proved beyond a doubt that lack of insurance kills thousands of Americans each year ? friends, colleagues, family members, and other fellow Americans. You cannot watch this parade of preventable misery walk through your ER or office each day and not be moved to conclude that something must be done.

Despite the range of opinions among physicians, here?s my prediction: If most Americans are not insured in another five years, a large majority of physicians will support any means necessary to make that happen, even a single government insurance plan such as Medicare for all. We don?t agree on much, but most of us agree we cannot sit by and watch millions of our patients suffer, and thousands of them die each year, for lack of comprehensive, affordable care.

Erik Steele, a physician in Bangor, is chief medical officer of Eastern Maine Healthcare Systems.

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Source: http://bangordailynews.com/2012/09/27/health/health-care-reform-what-do-physicians-think/

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The Big Reveal?Kid Friendly Cookbook is Finally HERE! // Vegan ...

I know, I am crazy to make two back to back huge announcements? on the same day, but I do know my readers :) . I know that those of you who need a Green Smoothie cleanse, will follow the instructions on the previous post, and those of you who waited for this? well, you will know what to do, or get both things going ;) )

The Big Reveal!

It has been a long time coming, but the long promised and awaited kid-friendly vegan ebook is here! Rachelle Marsden, a Vegalicious Boot Camp graduate, has been working tirelessly putting it together, with a few of my ideas thrown her way. ?Since my little one is not old enough to tell me what her favorite kid meal is, it was best to leave the task up to the Mom of four cute vegan kids to handle.

I have read the book and even learned a few new things for myself. One of them, and it is my favorite: ?Learn to Like It? principle the Marsden family follows.

When trying new foods they never say ?I do not like it?, instead they say ?I am learning to like it.?

Don?t you love that?

The ebook is filled with Rachelle?s insight, since she too had to walk the path from a SAD (Standard American Diet) to a whole foods ?vegan diet, bringing her family along.

In the ebook you will find kid friendly breakfast, lunch and dinner recipes, as well as Lunch Box ideas?goodies you can pack for your little ones to take to school or the playground with them. Oh, and did I mention that there are dessert recipes there too, as well as smoothies?! Yes, some fun yummies you can make with your little ones.

My most favorite part of Rachelle?s book is the fact that HER KIDS helped her to write it ;) ! Now, that is a sure proof that kids do love to eat healthy, and that your kids will love these recipe too.

Pre-Sale

The official release date for the book is the morning of 10/4/12. ?Rachelle and I are putting some finishing touches on it. ?However, we want to give Vegalicious readers a chance to pre-order it and save $$ that way.?

The cost of the book is $11, but if you place your order between today and midnight of 10/3/12, you can save $3!

kids vegan recipes

?$11 (before discount)

?$8 pre-order price

Buy Now

How to Pre-Order

  • click on BUY NOW button (above)
  • on the next screen enter?MARSVEG into the DISCOUNT CODE box
  • click update, or simply hit enter
  • click on Checkout with Paypal

You will receive a confirmation email, and a copy of your HOW DO WE VEGAN? will be delivered to you next Thursday morning.

NOTE

The sale is done through Rachelle, so, unfortunately, you will not be able to combine this purchase with any of my ebooks. ?It has to be done separately.

Questions?

Feel free to drop any questions. Rachelle and I will be happy to answer them.

Related posts:

  1. Introducing New Delightful Bundle (Vegan Recipes: Green Smoothies, Soups, Raw Recipes)
  2. Freestyling Has Never Been This Fun (Raising Vegan Kids)
  3. E-Book Pre-Release Announcement: Vegan Cooked & Raw Soup Recipes (Fat Free & Heart Healthy)
  4. Update: B-12 Deficiency and Cookbook
  5. Raw Food Vegan Recipes: Day 6 of Raw Eatings

Source: http://www.vega-licious.com/more-yummies/the-big-reveal-kid-friendly-cookbook-is-finally-here-vegan-recipes-for-kids/

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Soldier's death shines light on Afghan insider killings

In the weeks before his death, 21-year-old Mabry Anders had grown increasingly worried that he might not come home from Afghanistan. The Army specialist was battling insomnia and would send brief, worried messages back to his family.

"He talked to me in the day, which would be in the middle of his night," his father, Dan Anders, said. "He didn't sleep. He was just worried."

There were good reasons for concern. During his six-month tour, the Taliban staged a major attack at his base, a suicide bomber had killed one of his brigade's most revered leaders, and an Afghan villager threw a fire-bomb at a vehicle he was traveling in.

But what Anders may not have expected is that his killer would be an Afghan army soldier, one of those the U.S. military is supposed to be training to take over security of the country ahead of the withdrawal of most U.S. troops by the end of 2014.

A surge in insider attacks (also known as "green on blue" attacks) has prompted NATO to temporarily curtail some joint operations. The move casts doubt on what exactly international forces can accomplish in those places where they cannot work alongside their Afghan allies.

Analysis: What's leading Afghan troops to turn on coalition forces?

Interviews in Afghanistan and the United States have uncovered new details about the attack on August 27, which also took the life of another U.S. soldier, Sergeant Christopher Birdwell. These include Taliban claims that the insurgents prepared the Afghan soldier for the killings.

"After the shooting incident a group of Taliban came to my house and said that Welayat Khan was their man," said Nazar Khan, the brother of the Afghan soldier who was killed by U.S. forces after he opened fire on the Americans.

"'We have trained him for this mission and you must be proud of his martyrdom,'" the brother quoted a local Taliban commander as saying.

Interviews with Afghan officials suggest that Welayat Khan was not properly vetted. He was admitted to the force seven months before the attack, despite presenting a fake birth certificate and having gotten a flimsy recommendation from a commander who vouched for him simply because the two men were ethnic Pashtuns, according to Afghan sources speaking on condition of anonymity.

Insider attacks now account for one in every five combat deaths suffered by NATO-led forces in Afghanistan, and 16 percent of all American combat casualties, according to 2012 data. The rising death toll has alarmed Americans and raised new, troubling questions about the unpopular war's direction.

The Pentagon is promising better vetting of Afghan recruits like Welayat Khan, and NATO last week announced it was scaling back cooperation with Afghans to reduce risk to Western troops. That includes Anders' unit, stationed at Combat Outpost Xio Haq in Laghman province, in eastern Afghanistan, which, for the moment, has halted joint operations.

Last of 33,000 surge troops leave Afghanistan

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But it's unclear whether the United States or NATO or the Afghan government forces they're training will be able to stop the next Welayat Khan before he strikes.

Khan was raised in a deeply religious family in the mountain village of Shor Khil, a collection of about 100 mud-built houses near the Tora Bora mountains not far from the Pakistan border.

'Very upset and angry'
Relatives said they were taken by surprise when he joined the Afghan army. His cousin Rahman recounted that Welayat had lambasted Western military forces.

"Welayat had a small radio and liked to listen to news about Afghanistan. He became very upset and angry when there were reports about civilians being killed by airstrikes," Rahman said. "'May Allah save us from the hands of these infidels,'" he quoted Welayat as saying.

According to family members, Welayat had shown signs of mental instability since an accident at work when he slipped on a mountain while breaking rocks for construction. Nazar Khan, Welayat's older brother, said he would suffer mental breakdowns and "get angry at minor things."

In Welayat's pictures, provided by his brother Nazar Khan, he appears clean-shaven, young, stern looking, with a mass of thick black hair. He has a long face and slender build. In one picture he is gently holding his green beret in his right hand, with his left hand resting on the barrel of a machine gun.

Work with the Afghan army meant steady paychecks of about $240 a month, helping his 15-member family. Still, his relatives asked him to quit out of fear of reprisals by the Taliban, who have warned villagers not to join the Afghan security forces.

Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads (on this page)

"We have all warned him to leave the army and find another job," Rahman said.

Reprisals from the Taliban, it turns out, wouldn't be a problem.

In cold blood
Although the Taliban claim to have trained Khan for his mission, there is nothing to suggest at this point that he knew where, when or even if he would strike on the morning of August 27. By all accounts, he did not know the two U.S. soldiers he shot.

Anders, an Army mechanic from a small town in Oregon, and Birdwell, from Windsor, Colorado, were part of an early morning clearance mission near the Afghan town of Kalagush when the lead vehicle in their convoy hit a bomb.

Improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, are hardly a novelty and, after 11 years of war, troops know how to respond. Soldiers in the convoy quickly secured the area and Anders went to help load the damaged vehicle for transport.

Hundreds of Afghan soldiers detained, fired over 'links with insurgents'

The American patrol had the road blocked to ensure security. But the Afghan soldiers approaching in another convoy were not seen as a potential threat, and were allowed to pass. On board that convoy was Welayat Khan.

"They are trained to trust the Afghan soldiers," Anders' mother, Genevieve Woydziak, said.

Welayat Khan was sitting at the gun turret mounted on a vehicle in the Afghan convoy. At 8:10 in the morning, as his vehicle passed Anders and Birdwell, Welayat Khan took aim at the Americans and fired.

"The rest of the Afghan soldiers at that point laid their weapons down" to avoid being shot, Woydziak said.

Welayat Khan then jumped out of the Afghan vehicle and started to run. But he didn't get very far.

An American helicopter arrived in minutes and shot Khan dead less than a kilometer away, according to a U.S. Army spokesman.

Khan's older brother said the body was so riddled with bullets that it was unrecognizable.

Video: Marines dive for cover in Afghanistan firefight (on this page)

"The coffin was sealed," Nazar said, adding that the government declined to provide any money for the funeral because of Khan's links to the Taliban.

In hunting for an explanation, Reuters learned of an alternative narrative. Khan's brother heard from Afghan forces and an Afghan eyewitness that there was a dispute at the American roadblock, involving a pregnant women who needed to pass. In this scenario, an American at the scene told her to wait and Khan retaliated.

"My brother is a martyr and the whole family is proud of his martyrdom but we blame the Americans for inciting him to shoot," Nazar Khan said.

But a U.S. Army spokesman said there was no indication so far that Khan had any interaction with the American soldiers he killed, or with any of the other American forces, for that matter. The Army investigation is ongoing.

Video: Deadline looms as US troops leave Afghanistan (on this page)

The Taliban appears to be claiming they were in on the attack from the start, before Welayat Khan even joined the army.

"Mullah Abdul Samad and his men came to my house a day after I buried my brother and they were saying that Welayat joined them before enrolling in the army," Nazar Khan said, referring to the village Taliban commander.

It's unclear what, beyond perhaps Welayat Khan's fake birth certificate, NATO might have caught with its newly enhanced steps to weed out dangerous Afghan soldiers, announced in the weeks after the shooting.

Many of the attacks are chalked up to personal grudges, in a country where disputes are frequently settled at gunpoint and where asking after a wife's health could be seen as offensive.

Donkeys and dust as day breaks in Afghanistan

Brigadier General Roger Noble of Australia, deputy chief of staff of operations in Afghanistan, said NATO was working on creating "shooter profiles" from past cases to see if it is possible to identify worrying traits or characteristics.

Ryan Crocker, U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan until July, warned that "the Taliban have found a niche."

"I think they're finding that ... relatively easy to do," he said at an event hosted by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "And our own vetting in the U.S. military is not that great, let's face it."

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, speaking by phone from an undisclosed location, told Reuters that "a large number" of fighters have infiltrated the Afghan security forces.

'A hero comes home'
Anders' mother was at her office on August 27 when she got a call from workers at her house in Baker City, Oregon. They told her that two Army soldiers had arrived at her doorstep.

"I served in the Army myself. We knew why they were there," she said.

It was a long, 15-mile drive back to her home, where she would learn with certainty about her son Mabry's death earlier that day on the other side of the world. She has learned more details about it since then.

The parents are still wrestling with agonizing questions.

Video: General Allen: ?We?re working hard to eliminate threat? to coalition forces (on this page)

Dan Anders, Mabry's father, who lives in Wyoming, is concerned about the U.S. rules of engagement - saying, for example, that he had learned the helicopter that shot Welayat Khan as he attempted to flee had to request authorization to fire, even though Khan had just killed his son and Birdwell.

His mother is deeply concerned about the insider threat itself, saying that her son's Army friends in Afghanistan are afraid of some of the Afghans they serve with.

"They're training with these Afghan people and they're doing their thing and they know it's wrong," she said. "They know who they can trust. They know who they can't trust. They are in fear. Every day."

More Afghanistan coverage from NBC News

Some analysts see NATO's decision last week to scale back some joint operations as a worrying sign.

Nora Bensahel at the Center for a New American Security think tank said it raised serious questions about the U.S. strategy in Afghanistan. "This will create a vicious cycle, where an emboldened Taliban increases its threats against any future joint patrols in order to make this temporary suspension permanent," Bensahel wrote.

Other critics of the war, including in Congress, have seized upon the insider attacks as an additional reason to accelerate the American withdrawal from the country.

Still, the Afghan conflict is not a top issue in the U.S. presidential election campaign and the insider attacks have not yet sparked widespread national outrage.

Video: How the war has changed (on this page)

Mabry Anders' home town of Baker City, Oregon appears to have been largely untouched by the war until his death. His hometown newspaper noted in an editorial that Anders' killing had "erased our collective complacency" about the 11-year-old Afghan war.

The newspaper, the Baker City Herald, estimated that some 2,000 people turned out on the streets for Anders' funeral procession. Hundreds held tiny flags.

Anders was just 10 years old at the time of the September 11, 2001 attacks, and he enlisted in the Army shortly after graduating from high school. He posted lots of photos on Facebook - many showing his sense of humor, even in Afghanistan.

More international stories from NBC News

On the day of his service, the Herald wrote a touching article called "A Hero Comes Home," noting the different ways people in the community paid tribute to Anders. Among them was a story about a man who went to a bar after the procession and bought a shot for Anders. He left it untouched, along with a handwritten note.

"It said: 'Mabry Anders, thank you, all gave some and some gave all,'" bartender Sarah Heiner told Reuters. She kept the shot until it evaporated, days later.

More world stories from NBC News:

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(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49190766/ns/world_news-south_and_central_asia/

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Mitt Romney: 'Pleased With Some Polls, Less So With Other Polls'

ABC News' Michael Falcone reports:

On the same day that polls in two key battleground states - Ohio and Florida - showed President Obama growing his lead over Mitt Romney, the Republican presidential candidate acknowledged that he is "pleased with some polls, less so with other polls."

"Frankly at this early stage, polls go up, polls go down," Romney said in an interview on Wednesday with ABC's David Muir on the campaign trail in Toledo, Ohio.

Romney pointed to the first presidential debate - one week from tonight - as a potential turning point in the race.

"We have a chance during the debate to make our message clear to the American people," the former Massachusetts governor told Muir, "and I'm absolutely convinced that when people see the two of us talk about our direction for America they're going to support me because I know what it takes to make the economy going again, and the president has proven he does not."

Romney spoke to Muir at the end of his busiest day of campaigning in the Buckeye State in months. Romney held rallies in Westerville and Toledo and a manufacturing roundtable in Bedford Heights.

A New York Times-CBS News-Quinnipiac University poll out Wednesday morning found President Obama's edge over Romney in the crucial state growing to double digits, 53 percent to 43 percent. That's up from the president's 50 percent to 44 percent lead in a similar poll released on August 23.

In response to today's new numbers as well as a series of other public polls in the state, ABC News moved the state of Ohio, with its 18 electoral votes, from "Toss Up" territory to "Lean Obama."

But Romney said he was not deterred.

"I'm tied in the national polls, both Gallup and Rasmussen have the numbers at even," he told ABC News. "State by state you've got some advertising going on from the Obama people , which expresses their views on my positions which frankly, I think are inaccurate, and in some cases, dishonest."

In the interview, Romney declined to respond directly to the voices of critics, some from within his own party, who have been urging him to shift his strategy after several trying weeks for his campaign.

"There are critics and there are cheerleaders, we have people of all different persuasion," Romney said, noting that "every day there are improvements and new messages that come out."

"What the president said just the other day about 'bumps in the road' with regards to the events in the Middle East," he added. "That obviously was a whole new area to be discovered and discussed."

The Republican presidential hopeful was making his way across the state on the same day that President Obama campaigned at two Ohio colleges - Bowling Green State University and Kent State University. At those events the president did not miss an opportunity to refer to the comments made by Romney in a hidden camera video released last week showing the GOP candidate saying that "47 percent" of the American people are dependent upon government and would not vote for him.

Romney said he will be offering a different message to voters in the battleground states he will be visiting between now and Election Day.

"Mine is a campaign about 100 percent of the people, not 99 and one, not any other percent," Romney said. "It's about getting 100 percent of the people in this country to have a brighter future, better job prospects and higher take home pay."

And responding to his wife, Ann's recent comments to an Iowa radio station that running a presidential campaign "is hard" and that fellow Republicans should not be too quick to criticize her husband, Romney called her a "very strong character."

"She doesn't like it when people go after me, but I'm just fine. I got broad shoulders, and I'm happy to fend off the attacks that come my way," Romney told Muir. "And frankly, all of this is diversion from what the people of America care about. What they want to know is, who's going to make their life better, who's going to make sure we have more jobs, who's going to make sure we have more take home pay, who's going to keep America strong abroad?"

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mitt-romney-pleased-polls-less-other-polls-223552589--abc-news-politics.html

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Logo design for accounting business | Graphic Design | Logo Design

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Invite is for Raheelah only - need a logo done for an accounting business I am starting up. If you bid we can discuss designs etc.

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Source: http://www.freelancer.com/projects/Graphic-Design-Logo-Design/Logo-design-for-accounting-business.2516785.html

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Tom Rothman to Join Steven Spielberg on "Robopocalypse"

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Countering recent rumors that Steven Spielberg may not even direct "Robopocalypse," DreamWorks issued a press release Monday saying that Spielberg would direct and produce the movie and that Tom Rothman is coming on board also as a producer.

The film, a DreamWorks and Twentieth Century Fox co-production, will begin principal photography in early 2013 and will be released on April 25, 2014 worldwide. The Walt Disney Studio's Touchstone Pictures will distribute the film domestically with Twentieth Century Fox handling international distribution.

Exploring the fate of the human race following a robot uprising, "Robopocalypse" is being adapted for the screen by Drew Goddard and is based on the novel of the same name by Daniel H. Wilson. DreamWorks acquired the rights to Wilson's unpublished manuscript in November 2009. Published by Doubleday on June 8, 2011, the book soon appeared on the New York Times best-sellers' list.

"When someone like Tom is a free agent, you snatch him up fast," Spielberg said in a statement. "He has proven himself to be a necessity of this industry. At Fox he had already been an enthusiastic partner on ?Robopocalypse,' and it is to our advantage that he would come produce this film with me."

Rothman recently resigned after 18 years at Twentieth Century Fox, the last 12 as Chairman and CEO.

"If you are in politics, you dream of a call from the White House, in baseball, from the Yankees, in movies, from Steven Spielberg," Rothman said in a statement. "'Robopocalypse' is the kind of important epic entertainment, a big movie with big ideas, that Steven does better than any filmmaker on earth ... I enjoyed the idea of being unemployed for a week, but this will be way more fun."

Meanwhile, CAA could not confirm reports that Anne Hathaway is circling the project.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tom-rothman-join-steven-spielberg-robopocalypse-193713462.html

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White matter, old dogs, and new tricks at Dartmouth

White matter, old dogs, and new tricks at Dartmouth [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Sep-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Amy Olson
amy.d.olson@dartmouth.edu
603-646-3274
Dartmouth College

Most people equate "gray matter" with the brain and its higher functions, such as sensation and perception, but this is only one part of the anatomical puzzle inside our heads. Another cerebral component is the white matter, which makes up about half the brain by volume and serves as the communications network.

The gray matter, with its densely packed nerve cell bodies, does the thinking, the computing, the decision-making. But projecting from these cell bodies are the axonsthe network cables. They constitute the white matter. Its color derives from myelin--a fat that wraps around the axons, acting like insulation.

Alex Schelgel, first author on a paper in the August 2012 Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, has been using the white matter as a landscape on which to study brain function. An important result of the research is showing that you can indeed "teach old dogs new tricks." The brain you have as an adult is not necessarily the brain you are always going to have. It can still change, even for the better.

"This work is contributing to a new understanding that the brain stays this plastic organ throughout your life, capable of change," Schlegel says. "Knowing what actually happens in the organization of the brain when you are learning has implications for the development of new models of learning as well as potential interventions in cases of stroke and brain damage."

Schlegel is a graduate student working under Peter Tse, an associate professor of psychological and brain sciences and a coauthor on the paper. "This study was Peter's idea," Schlegel says. "He wanted to know if we could see white matter change as a result of a long-term learning process. Chinese seemed to him like the most intensive learning experience he could think of."

Twenty-seven Dartmouth students were enrolled in a nine-month Chinese language course between 2007 and 2009, enabling Schlegel to study their white matter in action. While many neuroscientists use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in brain studies, Schlegel turned to a new MRI technology, called diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). He used DTI to measure the diffusion of water in axons, tracking the communication pathways in the brain. Restrictions in this diffusion can indicate that more myelin has wrapped around an axon.

"An increase in myelination tells us that axons are being used more, transmitting messages between processing areas," Schlegel says. "It means there is an active process under way."

Their data suggest that white matter myelination is precisely what was seen among the language students. There is a structural change that goes along with this learning process. While some studies have shown that changes in white matter occurred with learning, these observations were made in simple skill learning and strictly on a "before and after" basis.

"This was the first study looking at a really complex, long-term learning process over time, actually looking at changes in individuals as they learn a task," says Schlegel. "You have a much stronger causal argument when you can do that."

The work demonstrates that significant changes are occurring in adults who are learning. The structure of their brains undergoes change.

"This flies in the face of all these traditional views that all structural development happens in infancy, early in childhood," Schlegel says. "Now that we actually do have tools to watch a brain change, we are discovering that in many cases the brain can be just as malleable as an adult as it is when you are a child or an adolescent."

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


White matter, old dogs, and new tricks at Dartmouth [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Sep-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Amy Olson
amy.d.olson@dartmouth.edu
603-646-3274
Dartmouth College

Most people equate "gray matter" with the brain and its higher functions, such as sensation and perception, but this is only one part of the anatomical puzzle inside our heads. Another cerebral component is the white matter, which makes up about half the brain by volume and serves as the communications network.

The gray matter, with its densely packed nerve cell bodies, does the thinking, the computing, the decision-making. But projecting from these cell bodies are the axonsthe network cables. They constitute the white matter. Its color derives from myelin--a fat that wraps around the axons, acting like insulation.

Alex Schelgel, first author on a paper in the August 2012 Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, has been using the white matter as a landscape on which to study brain function. An important result of the research is showing that you can indeed "teach old dogs new tricks." The brain you have as an adult is not necessarily the brain you are always going to have. It can still change, even for the better.

"This work is contributing to a new understanding that the brain stays this plastic organ throughout your life, capable of change," Schlegel says. "Knowing what actually happens in the organization of the brain when you are learning has implications for the development of new models of learning as well as potential interventions in cases of stroke and brain damage."

Schlegel is a graduate student working under Peter Tse, an associate professor of psychological and brain sciences and a coauthor on the paper. "This study was Peter's idea," Schlegel says. "He wanted to know if we could see white matter change as a result of a long-term learning process. Chinese seemed to him like the most intensive learning experience he could think of."

Twenty-seven Dartmouth students were enrolled in a nine-month Chinese language course between 2007 and 2009, enabling Schlegel to study their white matter in action. While many neuroscientists use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in brain studies, Schlegel turned to a new MRI technology, called diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). He used DTI to measure the diffusion of water in axons, tracking the communication pathways in the brain. Restrictions in this diffusion can indicate that more myelin has wrapped around an axon.

"An increase in myelination tells us that axons are being used more, transmitting messages between processing areas," Schlegel says. "It means there is an active process under way."

Their data suggest that white matter myelination is precisely what was seen among the language students. There is a structural change that goes along with this learning process. While some studies have shown that changes in white matter occurred with learning, these observations were made in simple skill learning and strictly on a "before and after" basis.

"This was the first study looking at a really complex, long-term learning process over time, actually looking at changes in individuals as they learn a task," says Schlegel. "You have a much stronger causal argument when you can do that."

The work demonstrates that significant changes are occurring in adults who are learning. The structure of their brains undergoes change.

"This flies in the face of all these traditional views that all structural development happens in infancy, early in childhood," Schlegel says. "Now that we actually do have tools to watch a brain change, we are discovering that in many cases the brain can be just as malleable as an adult as it is when you are a child or an adolescent."

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-09/dc-wmo092412.php

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Monday, September 24, 2012

Apple iPhone 5: Top Tips to Increase Battery Life

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Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/387115/20120923/apple-iphone5-tips-increase-battery-life-ios6.htm

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MacOS KenDensed: MacOS KenDensed: iPhone 5 on Parade

Now taller and thinner: Ken RayApple's iPhone 5 is in the wild, and iOS 6 is loading up on iOS devices as fast as users can click the Install button. There are plenty of opinions on what Apple got right and what the company got wrong, and Mac OS Ken's Ken Ray is ready to wrap them all up with a pretty bow just for you.

iPhone 5: It's Shiny and New!
In the wake of the quick sellout of first-round iPhone 5 pre-orders I said, I'd love it if Apple issued one of those nifty press releases the company puts out from time-to-time, saying, "Man alive, you won't believe it. We sold "X" million iPhone 5s in the first hour/day/weekend of availability, making iPhone 5 the fastest selling smartphone ever."

I also said I'd also like a whisky river flowing through my backyard, as long as we're making wish lists. I will spend the rest of the day in my backyard with a tumbler.

Apple's sent out a press release following saying that pre-orders of the iPhone 5 topped two million in just 24 hours. That, the company says, is "more than double the previous record of one million held by iPhone 4S." And yes, they're out of iPhone 5s for the time being, unless you want to do the stand-in-line-shuffle.

Quoting Apple, "Demand for iPhone 5 exceeds the initial supply and while the majority of pre-orders will be delivered to customers on September 21, many are scheduled to be delivered in October."

Kind of wish I'd wished for something bigger, now.

Even before Apple's fun with numbers with numbers release, we had heard that sales had gone well for one of iPhone 5's U.S. carriers. AllThingsD had AT&T saying early Monday that iPhone 5 was the fastest-selling iPhone it had ever offered, and that day-one and first weekend pre-orders were better than day-one and first weekend pre-orders for any iPhone before the 5.

Is that not the same as "fastest selling iPhone ever?"

In the wake of the Apple and AT&T announcements, financial analysts -- who were already pleased with iPhone 5's prospects -- are starting to guess at sales numbers for the current quarter, which ends in about a week and a half.

A lot of them seem comfortable in the 10-million unit or higher range, according to AppleInsider. Canaccord Genuity analyst T. Michael Walkley thinks between 9 million and 10 million iPhone 5s by the end of this quarter is doable at this point. Additionally the shuffles in the line, sending the iPhone 4S down to $99, the iPhone 4 down to free and the iPhone 3GS to sleep with the fishes, those shuffles have led to "solid sales" of legacy models according to his checks with Verizon, Sprint, and AT&T.

Topeka Capital Markets analyst Brian White had said before yesterday's Apple announcement that iPhone 5 sales could hit between 10 million and 12 million units by the end of this quarter, though now he says those estimates "look conservative."

He heard demand was exceeding supply, right?

CNET has Piper Jaffray analysts Gene Munster staying on the -- suddenly -- conservative side, saying he thinks Apple will sell between 8 million and 10 million iPhone 5s before Monday, though sales could be as low as 6 million. And "low" is a relative term in this case. Last year's first weekend sales for iPhone 4S came in around 4 million units. 6 million in Uncle Gene's estimate would be a "worst case scenario."

So he thinks the worst Apple could do with the first weekend of iPhone 5 sales is 33 percent growth over the first weekend of iPhone 4S sales.

Finally, one analyst is excited, but not so much for this quarter as for next. Wells Fargo Securities analyst Maynard Um is taking the shortfall between supply and demand to heart. He thinks Apple's supply constraints could lead to numbers that aren't as stellar for this quarter as they will be for the next. But next quarter hang on to your hats.

Mr. Maynard thinks whatever supply hiccups Apple has will be worked out in short order, and that the company will catch up to customer demand for iPhone 5 soon.

Fortune ran bits and pieces of several reviews of iPhone 5, starting with the Wall Street Journal's Walt Mossberg:?"The world's most popular smartphone becomes significantly faster, thinner and lighter this week, while gaining a larger, 4-inch screen?all without giving up battery life, comfort in the hand and high-quality construction."

Time's?Harry McCracken:

Apple's mojo remains fully operational. The iPhone 5 features?some upgrades?which, though not groundbreaking in the least, are welcome, like its slightly-larger screen and zippy 4G LTE broadband. It sports an improved version of what was already the single best camera in phonedom. It makes Siri smarter. In short, it's the most polished version yet of what was already easily the most polished phone on the market.

TechCrunch's MG Siegler:?

You pick it up and it almost feels fake. That's not to say it feels cheap; because it doesn't ? quite the opposite, actually. It just doesn't seem real. Certainly not to someone who has been holding the iPhone 4/4S for the past two years. It feels like someone took one of those devices and hollowed it out.

And finally Scott Stein at CNET: "It's absolutely the best iPhone to date, and it easily secures its place in the top tier of the smartphone universe."

I say "and finally," though there were plenty more where that came from. In fact throw a cyber-rock in cyberspace and it's likely you'll hit an iPhone 5 review. And it's even more likely that that review will be overwhelmingly positive.

iOS 6: Don't Get Lost
iOS 6 hit iPhones, iPads and iPod touches of the world, yesterday. It came "over 200 new features" about which the company spoke at last week's Yerba Buena Center event as well as the WWDC keynote back in June.

Few if any surprises, though one fear was apparently realized by a number of people. They thought they would hate the Apple Maps app, replacing the built-in Google Maps application in iOS 6, and a whole vocal lot of them do, indeed, hate it. Fortune rounded up a few.

The Wall Street Journal's Walt Mossberg says Apple's Maps app is "step backward" and is iPhone 5's "biggest drawback." Time's Harry McCracken says urbanites "may mourn the iPhone 5's inability to provide public-transportation routes."?

Bloomberg's Rich?Jaroslovsky says the app is "too easily confused." He writes:

At one point, as I was driving south on San Francisco's Embarcadero, it thought I was going north; at another point, it mistakenly thought I was on Fremont Street, a couple of blocks away. I encountered a similar issue walking in downtown San Francisco.

If you're looking for good news around the Maps thing, there are a few bright points: the 3D flyover thing is really awesome looking on my iPad 2, it stands to reason that Apple's Maps app can only get better, and Google has said it will make a native version of its maps app for iOS 6. So, assuming it's approved by Apple, the old way of doing things should be back on iThings soon. As long as users download it on their own. And as long as they're cool with ads, since the app will apparently display them, with no way to opt out.

It is worth noting, users can access maps.google.com through Safari on iThings as well. I did that and the first thing the site did was suggest I put a link to Google Maps on my home screen, and it gave me quick and easy instructions on how to do it. But I didn't because I don't hate the Apple Maps app. I don't love it, but I don't hate it.

I will say, though, the nearly universal hatred of Maps in iOS 6 will likely be forgotten by people who pick up iPhone 5.

One of the biggest complaints about the app is the lack of public transportation information. For this comes Apple's third plan for turning around the Mapocalypse... Developers, developers, developers.

TechCrunch has a pretty in-depth piece on the opportunities being made for those developers, though it doesn't sound like it's actually going to improve the Maps app itself anytime soon. if you haven't tried it yet, there is an icon under directions in the iOS 6 Maps application for public transit. But, when you put in points A and B, then click for directions, the app opens up a page of "Routing Apps," ranging in price from free to $40.

Just to try it out, I downloaded a free one, then went back to Maps and ran my search again. This time I had my free app to choose, but here's the disjointed bit: the information doesn't come up in the Maps App. Rather, users are kicked out to whatever "Routing App" they've chosen to use.

Chris Cieslak, one of the developers of the Buster app for Chicago city transit, sees kicking people to another app as a downer for end-users, even if it is better for him. What he'd like to see is Apple giving developers a way to display their routing information in the iOS 6 Maps app. And this is something that Embark co-founder David Hodge says is not going to happen. Embark makes a number of transit apps for U.S. cities.

While Hodge might agree that such a system would make a better end user experience, he just doesn't see it as feasible. Ultimately, he thinks after being kicked to a thrid-party app a few times, people will just start going straight to those. And that'll work out for him, assuming his is the app people end up choosing.

Big opportunity for developers. While people wait for a standalone Google Maps app for iOS.

Apple's plans for taking care of its built-in Maps app for iOS 6 -- Mapocalypse I saw one head line call it -- are multi-faceted. They started with an explanation. Apple PR person Trudy Muller offered a statement to AllThingsD. On Apple's stab at Maps, Muller says:

We are excited to offer this service with innovative new features like Flyover, turn by turn navigation, and Siri integration. We launched this new map service knowing it is a major initiative and that we are just getting started with it. Maps is a cloud-based solution and the more people use it, the better it will get. We appreciate all of the customer feedback and are working hard to make the customer experience even better.

Based on the customer lash-back, a lot of people think better is the only direction it could go from here.

Steve Jobs: Now in Wax
And finally this week, as we approach the one-year anniversary of the passing of Steve Jobs, word of something I feel fairly certain he'd have hated.

A Cult of Mac piece says Madame Tussauds Wax Mueseum in Hong Kong will unveil a wax figure of Mr. Jobs on Thursday, September 27th. The piece says the figure was modeled after the photos taken for Jobs' Fortune Magazine cover in 2006. The house of wax has also dressed the pseudo CEO in the Jobs' uniform, consisting of a black turtle neck, Levi 501 jeans and New Balance sneakers.

Which do you think he'd have disliked more: a wax mannequin of himself? of the guy from "That 70s Show" playing him in a movie?

Source: http://feeds.macobserver.com/click.phdo?i=5bd4b35a4565f9feea626da043daf02a

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Sunday, September 23, 2012

The Magical Potion Referred to as COFFEE | My Handy Infos

Coffee is really a true mate in many human beings. I would state that the whole planet ought to bestow coffee a lot more credit owing to how awesome it is as well as how substantially it helped most people during, well desperate circumstances. You couldn?t pin the consequence on people as being a coffee addict, as a matter of fact according to expert, the normal U.S. citizen drinks around Three cups of coffee each day and consequently 54% of Americans inside the legal age consumes this! Wow, good to find out I am not alone during this voyage.

What?s excellent with regard to coffee is it keeps everyone wake and even motivated, all at once, coffee cleanses too! The only bad thing is that once you set about sipping coffee, there?s absolutely no way over. The reason why? On the grounds that it?s really definitely appealing and also terrific! Coffee is one of the great things in life that we all really expect upon waking or perhaps what ever time period of the day it is. This provides us the relief we?d like and it encourages our intellect, making us undertake extraordinary jobs. One cup of coffee is like a time away from the stress we are dealing in the time, most of us halt for a time for coffee breaks and therefore that?s the time period everyone rest and appreciate a a couple of chitchat or two along with your acquaintances or pals.

For coffee addicts to be found who would like to test a number of coffee tastes, well then, this blog provides everyone perfectly. Be able to make some of the favorite coffee flavours out of them all!

Irish Coffee

I?m offering you the coffee everybody loves, not just for Irish men alright? Okay, so figure out how to make this amazing powerful coffee properly within your kitchen area basically because oftentimes it is really better once you learn steps to make coffee in comparison to buying it in coffee shops. What is great with this Irish coffee is the sole reason that it features prime two of the people?s desire, coffee and liquor. Sure, that?s correct, it?s definitely some sort of cocktail containing whiskey and sugar topped along with fluffy cream. Hhhmm! You should try it!

Ingredients:

1 cup strong hot coffee, 1 tablespoon of granulated white sugar, 1 tablespoon of Irish whiskey, 1 tablespoon of whipped cream,

Directions:

Establish your typical coffee recipe, strong black coffee

The moment completely ready, pour Irish whiskey and stir. And then, blend sugar and cream.

Voila you now have your alcohol and coffee in a single drink.

Serve and enjoy!

The blogger is definitely a coffee addict and he has his own cafe from his family. He likes to share coffee recipes to people all over the globe through his website. Check it out and find Irish coffee recipe and many more great coffee recipes!

Source: http://myhandyinfos.com/food-drink/the-magical-potion-referred-to-as-coffee.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-magical-potion-referred-to-as-coffee

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Friday, September 21, 2012

House bill to increase high-tech visas defeated

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How to Buy and Sell a Car Like a Mother | RichmondMom.com

Women account for 85% of all consumer purchases including 65% of new cars. ?Source: ?She-conomy

Recently, this mother was on the buying end of a new car and the selling end of an old car. ?Both for the first time, both within 1 week?s time.? Starting out, I felt like buying and selling cars was steeped in mysterious transactions with unwritten rules, where discriminatory practices against women abound.? Despite my fear, I had to step up to the plate because my husband had car fever and was not in his right mind.? It was go time.? Here?s how it went down.

Our 10-year-old old car was just getting to be too much trouble. ?We couldn?t keep taking time off work to deal with an ailing car.? Here are some tips that made my car buying experience pretty pleasant:

  1. We did all our research on prices and car features online.? Get a good idea of what new cars are going for compared to used cars.? Sometimes, used models are listed?for higher prices than the new ones!? Know the facts before you walk into a dealership.? Look at the websites like?Cars.com, Edmunds?and Kelly Blue Book?to start your research.
  2. We worked out all our financials, knew exactly what we wanted to pay for the brand new car and how we planned to pay for it.? Know what you?ll accept for trade-in value of your old car.? Have a plan for what to do with your old car.
  3. We were fully prepared to walk away if we couldn?t reach an agreement (i.e., we got the price we wanted).
  4. We weren?t afraid to travel.? Thankfully we didn?t have to, but there was a dealership in nearby state who was offering a good no-haggle price on the car we wanted.? Tip:? Try to get your local dealer to match the price of a car you find elsewhere.

All was good and we walked out very happy with my first brand new car.? The dealership was pleasant and they came across as honest and forthright.? We actually got a better deal than we wanted! ?A few tips on what to do after the purchase:

  1. As soon as you can, get your new car on your insurance.
  2. Make sure it gets registered ASAP with the DMV.? If the dealer handles it for you, it can take a few weeks to get in the system so keep your paperwork on the new car in the glove box.? (We got pulled over on vacation in Virginia Beach because our tag wasn?t registered yet!)??Tip:? If you have old tags that haven?t expired yet, you can get a refund for them at the DMV.? It took me about 10 minutes.
  3. If you have an EZ-pass, don?t forget to update it to reflect changes in your car usage!

Great ? we had a new car, but we were suddenly a 3-car family!? We had to get rid of the old one.? Here are my car-selling tips!

  1. Don?t be scared or intimidated by the thought of selling the car yourself.? It?s not hard, and you?ll probably get the most money that way.
  2. Know what the car is worth, taking its age, mileage and condition into consideration, and what you?d be happy with getting for it.? Accept less as a last resort or in an emergency.? Don?t sell yourself short ? literally.
  3. Get it in tip-top shape as best you can, if it makes sense. ?At least give it a good detailing. ?Clean cars make more money than dirty ones!
  4. We first took it one of those big places that will give you a no-haggle offer, but the offered us far less than we thought it was worth.? It was hard to turn down an instant cash offer, but I KNEW I could get more.? I learned that for cars over 100,000 miles, these big places aren?t buying them to resell, they?re buying them for auction so they?re priced to sell quickly (and you get less money).
  5. I listed my car on craigslist.? Tips for posting your ad: ?List the details of your car the way a dealer would, with the correct lingo.? Avoid acronyms.? (Example:? I put ?FWD? which meant front-wheel-drive but one inquirer thought it meant four-wheel-drive.) ?Describe any obvious shortcomings.?Take GREAT pictures and put them on your post. ?Ask for serious inquiries only.?Clarify you are selling the car in as-is condition.?Have people respond to your ad by e-mail only. ?Ask for cash or cashier?s check only.
  6. Once you have a potential buyer, ask them to meet you in a public place and have your spouse/friend with you in another car close by.? I met the interested gentlemen at my bankwhen it opened?with my husband in the other car??so we could handle the entire transaction all at one time.
  7. Plan to allow the buyer to test drive the car.? Hold the keys to his/her car while they test drive.
  8. Bring the following 2 documents with you to the transaction: 1) A Bill of Sale (a receipt).? I used this one and it worked just great!? Have 2 copies on hand ? one for you and one for your buyer.? Have most of it filled out before you get there. ?Bring a good pen. ?2)?The title.? Visit the Virginia DMV site here that will tell you all the ?official? stuff you need to do to transfer the car to the other person. ?Tip:? If they are coming from another state, you may need to work out license plate issues.
  9. Make signing the title the last thing you do.? I had the ca$h in hand, filled out the bill of receipt, and I deposited the cash in my bank while the buyer waited in the parking lot.? (At first I felt bad making the buyer wait while I deposited the money, but he said he would have done the same thing ? that it was very smart of me.)? Then, we signed the title and gave him the keys.
  10. Wave goodbye to your old car and congratulate yourself on a job well done!

Final words of advice:? You?ll feel like you?re playing musical chairs with your cars; always keep the car?s documents with the car ? especially the registration and insurance.? Finally, call on the experience of friends and family.? We were lucky to have my mom and dad there to help guide us through the process based on their knowledge and experience of car buying and selling.? It?s not rocket science, but there is a little art and finesse to it.? My mom and I actually negotiated the price of the new car together!? It was a team effort ? Two mothers doing a bang-up job.? Thanks mom!

?

Mary Beth Cox

Mary Beth is full-time working, married mom. She is a military brat with southern roots who served in the Peace Corps, survived government employment, and currently works for a Richmond-based healthcare nonprofit. With her 2 kids emerging from the toddler years, she?s here to report that parenting is the toughest job she's ever loved.

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Source: http://richmondmom.com/2012/09/20/how-to-buy-and-sell-a-car-like-a-mother/

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