Friday, November 30, 2012

Casting away my nets; just following: more engagements...

just received news from a close brother in church that he has proposed, and is getting married!

exited and happy for him, yet at the same time with so many friends around my age group getting married, I'm getting broke! giving out too many Ang Bao le.. hahaha..

nervous n excited, "what does it really mean to be engaged!" he shared..

well, I wouldn't know would I? hahaha for me that has made so many mistakes in my past relationships, and has more or less given up on a romantic relationship.. I can't seem to put a finger on it.. it's not that I'm not happy when friends around me get hitched but it's just me.. I guess maybe I can't be tied to just one person.. But don't get me wrong, it's not that I dot love anyone, it's just that I love too many.. It's not that I don't need someone to care for me or someone to support me, but I find that in so many close people beside me... of course antagonists will say that my logic is warped and these are two very different types of relationships..

well, I agree that they are totally different, but to me, being those relationships in the past has made me realize several things... when you're together with someone, you look forward to the other person showing care concern n love, so much so that you are swayed inside out by that person.. a great friendship can actually be degraded in a way once a romantic relationship has been started..

okok, maybe I'm not making any sense to you, let me try to re-summarize...

I believe in love, I'm happy for my friends who have found someone they can spend their lives with (I really am!).. I can't sand all those lovey dovey young kids around that think that what they know is love.. I have given up in finding someone, as I feel that it's really quite impossible to find someone that can match my character n personality n lifestyle.. (With man some things are impossible; with God all things are possible!). So now I'm just moving along with my life, using my life n time to look into more meaningful areas, I guess I've gone past the romantics... and learnt the hard way..

the greatest love there is comes from a cross upon a hill...

Source: http://enzeru21.blogspot.com/2012/11/more-engagements.html

matt kenseth bridge to nowhere primary results dale earnhardt jr michigan primary school shooting daytona 500 winner

Video: Biden visits Costco

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/50017321#50017321

focus on the family packers vs giants giants score 2012 golden globe nominations texans lana del rey snl enemy of the state

Kelly Clarkson, Pitbull, More Added To 'VH1 Divas' Lineup

Annual girl-power party airs live on VH1 December 16, with Adam Lambert set to host.
By Jocelyn Vena


Kelly Clarkson
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1698181/kelly-clarkson-pitbull-vh1-divas-lineup.jhtml

san antonio spurs greta van susteren tony parker the five year engagement chris kreider correspondents dinner 2012 white house correspondents dinner 2012

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Buying an apartment in Paris, an agent's perspective

Posted on November 28, 2012 by Lindsay McCallum

Jen Angotti, a licensed Virginia real estate agent, interviewed PPG founder?Miranda Bothe?about the ins and outs of investing in Paris real estate.?This post was featured on her blog Concrete Jungle DC. ?

While I was researching my??Buying a flat in Paris? post, I discovered a real estate blog called?This Paris Life?by the?Paris Property Group. It was in English, well written and it was the most comprehensive?guide?I found to investing in Paris real estate. ?I was immediately intrigued.

After scrolling through a number of?posts, I noticed a tab called??Ask Miranda?. It?allows you to ask the founder of the group, Miranda Bothe, questions about real estate in Paris. Inspired, I emailed Miranda and inquired if could interview her about working as a real estate agent in Paris. ?She kindly agreed and below are the answers.

When did you start your business in Paris and why??
My husband and I moved to Paris in 2003, and soon after started looking for our own apartment to buy in the city. It took us nearly a year of combing listings, visiting useless properties, and a lot of misleading information and visits with numerous real estate agents and with owners selling their properties directly, before we found the great apartment we were looking for. The process felt all wrong: without an MLS, the market is disorganized and often dishonest, with inconsistent information and incomplete listings. We made dozens of property visits that lasted only minutes, just long enough to confirm that the listing description was way off and the apartment was not at all what we wanted.

The closing process was similarly confusing: unfamiliar laws and procedures, wordy documents in French legalese, building regulations dating back decades that importantly define your rights and obligations as a co-owner? All these overwhelming challenges, and I am a US attorney and we both speak French!

I decided that what the Paris market needed was honest, straightforward buyer?s real estate services, targeted specifically at the international community who otherwise suffer the added challenge of not speaking the language. We bring an MLS approach to real estate buyers in Paris, representing their interests in the market to bring them all the available properties, screening and previsiting properties on their behalf, so that they can see only the ones that match their search criteria the best. For the closing process, we have sourced the best resources for our clients, from legal and financial advisors who ensure that the purchase structure is best suited to their needs,?to renovation and decoration experts who realize the buyer?s?vision for the property. Our buyer services quickly expanded to representing properties for sale, as word spread of our service approach and sellers too wanted to find a more dynamic and comprehensive strategy for marketing their properties. And so came about Paris Property Group.

Is there a real estate licensing process in Paris? ?Is it similar to ours in the US?
There is a very strict licensing approach in fact. Real estate brokers must obtain a?carte de transaction immobiliere?from the Paris Prefecture in order to represent buyers or sellers in the Paris real estate market. Applicants must have either worked a number of years in real estate, or have a relevant degree in finance or law to be eligible for the license. The broker can then license agents to work on under their comprehensive license. Unfortunately, many of the ?buyer?s agents? Paris who market their search services to the international community are not licensed, or legal, in France. A number of buyers have had disappointing forays into the Paris real estate market with these unlicensed entities, who often require huge balloon payments upfront for the search, take additional fees through the selling agent on top of the fees they demand from their clients, or sell to international clients at inflated prices that the French-speaking community would scoff at. We unfortunately find ourselves having to undo a lot of the damage done, in particular deals as well as more generally for the reputation of licensed buyer agents in Paris.

What is the average price of a 1 bedroom? ?A 2 bedroom? ?(Or is it possible to determine that given there?s no MLS?)
The average price of an apartment Paris-wide is a bit of a meaningless number, given the vast difference in price depending on the location, features and condition of the apartment. That?s probably true anywhere, but in Paris more than others: it?s a small, dense city encircled by the highway that runs around it (the?peripherique) that cannot organically expand as other cities can (London, New York, San Francisco) to encompass new neighborhoods as old ones rise in price. Within the city walls then, property further out from the center can be as much as 8-10 times less expensive than the most coveted properties in the city center.
What?s more, Paris property is valued not so much on number of bedrooms as on square meter size (1 m2 = 10.76 square feet). How the property is measured is strictly determined by law (the?loi carrez) so that sizes remain consistent from one property to the next. Layout of an apartment is important of course, but ultimately it?s the square meter size, and the going rates from one neighborhood to the next, that will determine the price.

Two neighborhoods of particular interest to international buyers are the Marais (3rd/4th arrondissements, on the right bank) and Saint Germain des Pres (6th/7th arrondissements, on the left bank). A fantastic, renovated apartment with good features (a view, a high floor, an elevator) will run upwards of?13,000 euros/m2 in the Marais, upwards of 18,000 euros/m2 in Saint Germain (the record last year was 50,000 euros/m2. In these same neighborhoods, a less spectacular apartment or building, or one requiring substantial renovation can be had for up to 30% less than that.

How do you determine list price? ?
We take a comprehensive look at recent sale figures and current listings, as well as trends in the particular neighborhood, street and even building we are evaluating. We also give a lot of thought to how and to whom we will market the property: is it more suitable for an international clientele, a family moving to Paris, or the artist community? Finally, on property sales we create our own Paris MLS: we work on an exclusive contract with the seller, but then actively promote and share the listing with other agents to ensure that we are accessing the widest possible pool of interested buyers. We often consult with trusted colleagues in determining the right list price, to suss out what their recent sales experiences have been and what buyer interest they may already have for the property. Once we take the listing, we have a full marketing strategy in place to maximize the value for the seller in a time frame that best suits their interests.

Are you clients mostly English speakers? ?Are you fluent in French plus additional languages?
Historically our clients were primarily English-speaking clients, from the US, Canada, UK, Australia. Often they are French expats living in these countries, who appreciate a level of service that they have become accustomed to abroad and find otherwise lacking in the Paris real estate market. We have recently started to work with more clients from elsewhere in Europe, the Middle East and China, as investors from these markets have more and more come to appreciate the long-term value that Paris real estate offers. Besides English and French, our team speaks German, Italian, Russian and Hebrew.

How long does a real estate transaction take from start to finish? ?It?s usually 2 to 3 months on but is it more commonly 2 or 3? ?What causes delays? ?The same as in the US: financing? Or bureaucracy?? ?
The period between the signing of the preliminary sales agreement (the?promesse de vente) to the signing of the final version (the?acte de vente) varies depending on a number of factors: whether the buyer is seeking financing, whether there are conditional clauses on the sale that have to be satisfied prior to closing. During that period, the?notaire?overseeing the purchase on behalf of a buyer (a specialized lawyer who oversees real estate transactions, wills and estates and other formal transactions in France) will check the title and encumbrances on the property and other formalities. Among these, certain neighborhoods in Paris are subject to a right of first refusal by the city to intervene in the purchase in the place of the buyer; the process of verifying that the local city office declines that right can take up to a month. When the buyer is out of the country, there is often a delay in getting documents notarized at a French consulate abroad. What?s more, buying through a?Societe Civile Immobiliere?? a French company structure designed specifically for owning real estate by 2+ persons ? is often beneficial for non-resident clients looking to avoid the strict forced inheritance laws that apply to all property owned in France.

All this to say: as an international buyer, unless there is a specific time pressure to close quickly (for the buyer or the seller), the best is to plan on a 3-month maximum which can be shortened toward the end if the extra time is not needed.

Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Miranda!

Related posts:

Source: http://parispropertygroup.com/blog/2012/buying-apartment-paris-agents-perspective/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=buying-apartment-paris-agents-perspective

guernsey nit colcannon dystonia tourettes gonzaga rosie o donnell

Wal-Mart, Disney clothes found in Bangladesh fire

Boxes of garments lay near equipment charred in the fire that killed 112 workers Saturday at the Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory,on the outskirts of Dhaha, Bangladesh, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2012. Garments and documents left behind in the factory show it was used by a host of major American and European retailers, though at least one of them ? Wal-Mart ? had been aware of safety problems. Wal-Mart blames a supplier for using Tazreen Fashions without its knowledge. (AP Photo/Ashraful Alam Tito)

Boxes of garments lay near equipment charred in the fire that killed 112 workers Saturday at the Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory,on the outskirts of Dhaha, Bangladesh, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2012. Garments and documents left behind in the factory show it was used by a host of major American and European retailers, though at least one of them ? Wal-Mart ? had been aware of safety problems. Wal-Mart blames a supplier for using Tazreen Fashions without its knowledge. (AP Photo/Ashraful Alam Tito)

A Disney brand sweater lays among equipment charred in the fire that killed 112 workers Saturday at the Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory, on the outskirts of Dhaha, Bangladesh, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2012. Garments and documents left behind in the factory show it was used by a host of major American and European retailers, though at least one of them ? Wal-Mart ? had been aware of safety problems. Wal-Mart blames a supplier for using Tazreen Fashions without its knowledge. (AP Photo/Ashraful Alam Tito)

Walmart's Faded Glory label is seen on a piece of clothing laying among equipment charred in the fire that killed 112 workers Saturday at the Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory, on the outskirts of Dhaha, Bangladesh, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2012. Garments and documents left behind in the factory show it was used by a host of major American and European retailers, though at least one of them ? Wal-Mart ? had been aware of safety problems. Wal-Mart blames a supplier for using Tazreen Fashions without its knowledge. (AP Photo/Ashraful Alam Tito)

A Disney brand sweater lays among the equipment charred in the fire that killed 112 people Saturday at the Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory, on the outskirts of Dhaha, Bangladesh, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2012. Garments and documents left behind in the factory show it was used by a host of major American and European retailers, though at least one of them ? Wal-Mart ? had been aware of safety problems. Wal-Mart blames a supplier for using Tazreen Fashions without its knowledge. (AP Photo/Ashraful Alam Tito)

A piece of clothing with a label referring to German brand KIK as the buyer lays among equipment charred in the fire that killed 112 workers Saturday at the Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory, on the outskirts of Dhaha, Bangladesh, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2012. Garments and documents left behind in the factory show it was used by a host of major American and European retailers, though at least one of them ? Wal-Mart ? had been aware of safety problems. Wal-Mart blames a supplier for using Tazreen Fashions without its knowledge. (AP Photo/Ashraful Alam Tito)

(AP) ? The garment factory in Bangladesh where 112 people were killed in a fire had been making clothes for Wal-Mart, Disney, Sears and other major global retailers ? some of whom say they thought they had stopped doing business with the place.

The apparent confusion underscored what some industry experts say is a major obstacle to improving factory safety in developing nations: Many retailers in the U.S. and Europe rely on such a long and complex chain of manufacturers, vendors and middlemen to keep their shelves stocked that it is difficult to keep track of where certain products are made.

Amid the blackened tables and melted sewing machines at Tazreen Fashions Ltd., an Associated Press reporter discovered clothes and account books Wednesday that indicated the factory was used by a host of U.S. and European retailers.

Among the items discovered: children's shorts with Wal-Mart's Faded Glory label, hooded sweaters marked "Disney Pixar," shorts with hip-hop star Sean Combs' ENYCE tag, and sweaters from the French company Teddy Smith and the Scottish company Edinburgh Woollen Mill. Sears was among the companies listed in the account books.

The tragedy is putting a spotlight on dangerous workplace conditions around the world, with no clear answers to how consumers should react or who is ultimately responsible.

Wal-Mart said that it received a safety audit that showed the factory was "high-risk" and had decided well before the blaze to stop doing business with Tazreen. But it said a supplier had continued to use Tazreen without authorization.

When pressed for an explanation of how a supplier could use a factory without the retailer's approval and whether it happened often, Kevin Gardner, a Wal-Mart spokesman, did not directly address the issue in emails to The Associated Press.

Sears said it learned after the blaze that its merchandise was being produced there without its approval through a vendor, which has since been fired. Walt Disney Co., which licenses its characters to clothing makers, said its records indicate that none of its licensees have been permitted to make Disney-brand products at the factory for at least a year.

Retailers like Wal-Mart have contract clauses that require suppliers to disclose all factories and subcontractors producing merchandise for sale. But it's hard to crack down on unauthorized subcontracting, said Josh Green, chief executive of New York-based Panjiva, which tracks shipments for factories outside the U.S.

"The reality is you have to have round-the-clock monitoring of every aspect of the supplier's operations," he said. "It's just not feasible."

Green noted that subcontracting is pervasive as suppliers look for ways to cut costs.

"You have relentless pressure that consumers put on retailers and that retailers put on their suppliers to deliver lower and lower prices," he said. "And that pressure is a key reason why you see factories cutting corners."

Bangladesh's fast-growing garment industry ? second only to China's in exports ? has long provided jobs and revenue for the desperately poor country, while turning out the low-priced products shoppers in the U.S. and other countries have come to enjoy. But the industry has a ghastly safety record; more than 300 workers have died in garment factory fires in Bangladesh since 2006.

Labor activists have seized on the blaze ? the deadliest in Bangladesh's nearly 35-year history of exporting clothing ? to argue that retailers must insist on more stringent fire standards.

Charles Kernaghan, director of the Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights, said nothing will change unless clothing companies protect workers as vigorously as they do their brands.

"The labels are legally protected," he said. "But there are no similar laws to protect rights of the worker."

Green said some companies are more conscientious than others in selecting factories. Some pick a manufacturer and do little or no investigation, he said, while others analyze factories' past infractions and pay monthly visits.

"There's a fundamental difference between companies who do the check-the-box approach and companies who are serious about due diligence," he said.

On Wednesday, police arrested three factory officials suspected of locking in the workers who died in Saturday's blaze on the outskirts of Dhaka. Police Chief Habibur Rahman said the three will be questioned. He said the factory owner was not among those arrested.

About 1,400 people worked at the factory, about 70 percent of them women. Survivors said exit doors were locked, and a fire official said the death toll would have been much lower if the eight-story building had had an emergency exit.

The fire broke out on the ground floor, where a factory worker named Nasima said stacks of yarn and clothes blocked part of the stairway. Nasima, who uses only one name, and other workers said that when they tried to flee, managers told them to go back to their work stations.

"Everyone was screaming for help," Nasima said. "Total chaos, panic and screaming. Everyone was trying to escape and come out. I was pulling the shirt of a man. I fainted and when I woke up I found myself lying on the road outside the factory. I don't know how I survived."

Workers expressed support for the factory owner, Delwar Hossain. Mohammad Rajib said he is "a gentle man" who heeded workers when they protested for more pay and against rough treatment by some managers.

"He took action and fired some of them," he said. "He did not sack any worker. He told us: 'You are my people. If you survive, I will survive.'"

___

Associated Press writers Farid Hossain in Dhaka and Mae Anderson and Anne D'Innocenzio in New York contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-28-Bangladesh-Factory%20Fire/id-7b83cb1fd1cd4f1ca1e1b00b854a5c79

cab calloway melissa gilbert deadliest catch dwts sean hannity bobby petrino fired buffett rule

Hump Day Hero: Molly Adler - The Center for Sexual Pleasure and ...

Every Wednesday The CSPH highlights a Sexuality Professional you should keep your eye on. Their backgrounds are very diverse in order to bring attention to the wide variety of amazing people working in the field. This week we bring you Molly Adler!

1. What do you do in the field of sexuality?

I am a Sexuality Educator and the co-owner of Self Serve Sexuality Resource Center in Albuquerque, NM.

2. Where are you based out of?

Albuquerque, NM

3. What is your focus? What do you do?

About six years ago, along with my business partner Matie Fricker, I opened Self Serve Sexuality Resource Center, the Southwest?s first safe, sex-positive, healthy space for adults to learn about sexuality. The center has established a much-needed community center for women, LGBT folks, kinksters, polyamorous families, new parents, and all adults in Albuquerque. We have a brick & mortar shop where adults can find all things pleasure related, from gourmet chocolate to gourmet sex toys. We answer questions, help people find resources and offer sex and relationship classes throughout the year.

We also run an online store at www.selfservetoys.com

4. What are your particular goals and passions in the field?

I am passionate about helping people have a stronger, healthier body image, better communication in their relationships, and for folks to find new ways to experience pleasure. I truly believe a sex positive approach to relationships and one?s sexuality will lead to a happier life.

I am currently pursuing my MSW, and hope to do more one-on-one counseling in the future. I also offer trainings for health professionals on sexual cultural competency.

5. Why did you choose to work in this field?

Sex is everywhere, and yet access to accurate and honest information, and products for promoting healthy sexuality is limited. At Self Serve, we offer a healthy alternative to the way we ?consume? sexuality information in our culture. This sex-positive approach was, and still is in many ways, radical: It posits that sex is healthy, and pleasure is good for you. Sex-positive spaces like Self Serve encourage each person to find accurate sexual health information, define his or her own sexual identity, and choose relationships without judgment. Like the sign at the front of our space says, Self Serve is for everyone.

I am passionate about spaces like Self Serve existing, someday I hope in most cities and towns. People deserve a space to ask questions, find resources and find toys and treats that help them feel more joy and pleasure. In our society, most people only find sex information (in a very limited way) through peers, medical professionals and the internet. Folks have few resources they can trust, and I?m proud Self Serve offers that safe space.

6. Where did you go for school/training?

I graduated with a BA cum laude from George Washington University in Washington, DC. I majored in Psychology and Women?s Studies. The human mind, gender and identities are all tied to sexuality and our everyday experience.

I learned many valuable lessons working for Grand Opening in Boston, MA from 2003-2005. I discovered how much I loved working in a women-run sex shop. Much of my formative learning was passed down from other sex educators I worked with. During my time there I was lucky to learn on the job as well as attend trainings in safer sex and public health.

I am currently pursuing a Masters in Social Work. I plan to pursue more sexuality training, as well.

7. Do you have any literature out (websites, articles)?

I am proud of the website, blog and videos we?ve created through Self Serve:
selfservetoys.com
self serve on youtube

8. What would you recommend to future professionals attempting to get into the field?

Figure out in what context you get excited about the work. Do you love counseling individuals? Do you like talking to a big group? Work with different populations (older women, gay men, leather folk, transgender people, survivors of sexual assault, etc) and see who you?re most interested in working with. You can definitely talk to everyone about sex, but sometimes we feel most excited about a certain group or experience, or benefit from working in the communities we?re part of.

Consider whether an institution like a University or Non-Profit is right for you, or if you?d rather carve your own path. I am personally inspired by how many great Sex Educators, Performers and Writers are starting their own business, website, movement or educational forum.

9. What is the most challenging aspect for you working in this career?

One of the toughest challenges can be the most liberating: there aren?t a wide range of ready-to-wear jobs in sexuality. One reason so many Sexuality Educators are entrepreneurs is because they have to be in order to realize their dreams. It is still challenging to fight for the importance and legitimacy of Self Serve and sex ed with a predominantly sex negative public.

One defining moment I recall with pride is when Matie and I won the Tough Cookie Awards in 2008 from NAWBO (National Association of Women Business Owners, Northern New Mexico).

The Tough Cookie Award was recognition of all we?ve accomplished in starting and growing our business, despite the obstacles. We told the awards committee of the discrimination against our business: in funding, finding retail space and zoning regulations. We live in a society that writes off all sex-related businesses as prurient, harmful and unsafe. We were told SBA funding is off-limits to us, we learned how zoning would limit how we merchandise every square foot of our store, and landlords rejected us when we sought retail space. I see myself as a culture-shifter, hoping our world will relax and become more positive in attitudes around sex, relationships and body image. The process in which we help make that shift involves a lot of uphill battles. I am very proud of the moment we won the Tough Cookie awards, and I?m proud of the business organization NAWBO for publicly valuing the work we do.

10. One must read-what would you recommend? Why?

My favorite sex book varies day to day, but lately I find myself recommending Mating in Captivity by Esther Perel a lot. I love how she breaks down the unhealthy way we typically view long term relationships in our culture, and introduces a more playful, creative, erotic view. The subtitle is ?unlocking erotic intelligence? which I think is aptly titled. Many women, men and couples in American society lack a critical understanding of co-dependence and interpersonal relationships. Perel?s book provides a new outlook that is freeing and positive.

?

Source: http://thecsph.org/hump-day-hero-molly-adler

doj dept of justice weather chicago swizz beatz mpaa south carolina debate lauren scruggs

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

US crude oil inventories fall by 0.3m barrels

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.forexfactory.com/news.php?do=news&id=397713

young jeezy world wildlife fund gsa keith olbermann andrew bynum the time machine michelin tires

Climate Change Threatens to Create a Second Dust Bowl

A cool October broke a 16-month streak of above average temperatures across the Lower 48, but temperatures are projected to remain above normal across most of the western half of the country in the coming months. In addition, the latest climate change projections put future temperature gains on the high side of various models.

As of November 6, 59.5 percent of the contiguous U.S. was experiencing persistent drought conditions that are most severe in the Great Plains?North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Montana, Wyoming and Colorado?where drought is expected to persist or intensify in the foreseeable future.?On October 17?18 those drought conditions combined with high winds to create a large dust storm across Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and Wyoming, closing major highways.

To Katharine Hayhoe, professor and director of the Climate Science Center at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, this heralds big changes for agriculture on the Great Plains. "In a nutshell," Hayhoe says, "we're seeing major shifts in places and times we can plant, the types of crops we can grow and the pests and diseases we're dealing with. If you talk to seed companies, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and even farmers, they tell you we can modify our way out of this, that we can overcome all these problems with technology. There's no question we can adapt to some of the change, but whether we can adapt to all of it is a very open question."

In the 1930s Dust Bowl a land speculator? and government-encouraged plowing frenzy removed windbreaks and grasslands that stabilized soil. The dry, windy weather that followed created one of the worst man-made ecological disasters ever. Powerful winds scoured bare soil from the ground and carried it long distances. Farms failed across Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.

This October's dust storm, which followed preparation of fields for fall planting, could be the first act of an encore performance. "If the drought holds on for two or three more years, as droughts have in the past, we will have Dust Bowl conditions in the farming belt," says Craig Cox, an agriculture and natural resources expert with the Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit using public information to protect public health and the environment. "It could be in a sense an invisible Dust Bowl?not like the big storms before, but withered crops, dry streams and other disasters that accompanied the Dust Bowl. Wind erosion is tremendously damaging and hard to control. A lot of practices that control wind erosion require growing things, and if those weren't in place when the drought hit, it's almost impossible to put them in place now."

Since the 1940s agriculture on the semiarid southern Great Plains?Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas?has relied on irrigation. On the high plains of Texas, tens of thousands of wells pumping from the 10-million-year-old Ogallala Aquifer have depleted it by 50 percent. Given variation in its depth and the difficulty of pumping at low water levels, most of the remaining reservoir will likely be useless for irrigation within about 30 years. At the same time, climate change has brought less rain as well as hotter temperatures that increase evaporation?forcing farmers to use even more water for irrigation. "We have agriculture systems in semiarid areas," Hayhoe says. "We built these vulnerabilities into the system and climate change is the final straw that may break the camel's back."

Agriculture on the southern plains isn't necessarily doomed, though, Hayhoe stresses. "There are techniques being developed already, such as dry-land farming, rotating crops and using waste as biofuel that will keep the economy going." Actions also can be taken at the local level to reduce the vulnerability of agriculture, she says, including using energy more efficiently and developing sounder management and development policies.

Other adaptations include switching to more heat-tolerant breeds of livestock and even away from cattle altogether, says Wayne Polley, research ecologist at the USDA's Grassland, Soil and Water Research Laboratory. "Major changes in agricultural land use will mean changes in our eating habits and our family budgets as well."

"There are absolutely things farmers could do to deal with climate change," Cox says. "This is not a technical problem. There is a whole suite of practices that would make farming systems more resilient and able to stand up to climate change. Yet instead of making farming more resilient to the challenges, current government agricultural policy actually takes us in the opposite direction." Ending mandates for corn ethanol and once again tying crop insurance to land conservation would help reduce erosion and drainage of wetlands on farmland, he says, reducing the risk of returning Dust Bowl conditions.

The good news, Hayhoe adds, is that whatever happens, the land will still be here. "In the southern Great Plains we may have a major shift to dry-land crops. We may have to shift when we plant. But we have the option of trying different things?as opposed to, say, Bangladesh, where cropland is being lost to sea-level rise.

"We can save ourselves by wise planning," she says. "But a lot of change has been hampered because people don't want to do anything that has a 'climate change' label on it, and also because industrial, large-scale systems are resistant to changes because changes are expensive. But that's true only in the short term. Not doing anything will be way more expensive in the long term. Business as usual is not going to be a viable option 30 years from now, or even sooner."

Fifty miles south of Hayhoe's Texas Tech office, agricultural fields line an arrow-straight highway. On a dry, windy day, in circular fields created by wheeled irrigation contraptions that spin from a well in the center, water sprays onto new autumn crops. Enormous bales of recently harvested cotton stacked up at nearby gins render bits of the snowy fluff to the wind, which catch the grass along the road's edge to gather into miniature drifts. As temperatures rise and the aquifer levels fall, these iconic images of high plains agriculture may be blown away with the dust.

Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2012 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/climate-change-threatens-create-second-dust-bowl-130100552.html

mike d antoni resigns holes ncaa brackets 2012 odd lamar d antoni fashion star

What might Democrats give up in 'fiscal cliff' talks?

OK, Republicans have ceded ground on tax revenues. Now, under Obama's 'balanced' approach to averting the fiscal cliff, Democrats presumably would consent to spending cuts on entitlement programs or Obamacare. But what Dems would accept may not be what GOP has in mind.

By Peter Grier,?Staff writer / November 27, 2012

President Barack Obama acknowledges House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio while speaking to reporters in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, as he hosted a meeting of the bipartisan, bicameral leadership of Congress to discuss the deficit and economy earlier in November.

Carolyn Kaster/AP/File

Enlarge

What might Democrats give up in ?fiscal cliff? talks? That question arises Tuesday as Republicans complain that they?ve acceded to increases in government revenue but Democrats haven?t detailed any spending cuts they?d accept.

Skip to next paragraph Peter Grier

Washington Editor

Peter Grier is The Christian Science Monitor's Washington editor. In this capacity, he helps direct coverage for the paper on most news events in the nation's capital.

Recent posts

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

President Obama has talked about his preference for a ?balanced? solution to the crisis, with about $1.6 trillion of new revenue as part of a $3 trillion deficit-reduction package spread over 10 years. He?s been largely silent on the spending reduction side of this balance, however, and some Democrats have indicated they?ll fight if Mr. Obama tries to slash entitlement programs, as the GOP wants.

?In the past, Democrats have demanded tax hikes now for spending cuts that never happened. Not this time. A balanced approach means real cuts, now,? said Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky on the Senate floor Tuesday.

Of course, to some extent GOP lawmakers have also fuzzed their proposed fiscal cliff solutions. While House Speaker John Boehner and others have talked vaguely about ?new revenues,? they?ve haven?t said how those new revenues might be produced. Plus, they?ve continued to resist allowing Bush-era tax cuts to expire for the very wealthy, as Obama wants.

But Republicans say that they?ve stepped out of their comfort zone by even discussing revenue hikes, and that in return Democrats must talk about sweeping entitlement changes. What sorts of changes? Consider the provisions of a 10-year, $4.5 trillion deficit-cutting plan that Sen. Bob Corker (R) of Tennessee is currently circulating. He calls for a gradual increase in the Social Security retirement age to 68 and in the Medicare eligibility age to 67, plus a less generous mechanism for adjusting Social Security outlays due to inflation, among other things.

The GOP also wants provisions of the Affordable Care Act, aka ?Obamacare,? revisited.

?It?s ridiculous to suggest that we make changes to Medicare and Medicaid, while leaving $1.6 trillion in new Obamacare spending untouched,? said Senator McConnell on Tuesday.

The White House, for its part, continues to make noises about the big entitlement programs, saying they?re on the table as part of a multipart deficit solution that also includes increased revenue.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Zrn9k35evE8/What-might-Democrats-give-up-in-fiscal-cliff-talks

golden state warriors free agents nfl 2012 milwaukee bucks bear grylls us news law school rankings gael glen rice jr

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

'DWTS: All-Stars': The Season's Top Moments

From fringe to foxtrots, relive the most memorable moments of DWTS' season 15 before the new Mirror Ball Trophy winner is crowned on Nov. 27

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/dancing-stars-all-stars-seasons-top-moments/1-b-504447?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Adancing-stars-all-stars-seasons-top-moments-504447

superbowl 2012 kickoff time what time is the super bowl 2012 nfl mvp lana del rey snl performance nick diaz sheryl sandberg superbowl recipes

Bangladesh factory fires highlight working conditions

Just after a fire killed at least 112 workers at a garment factory in the outskirts of Dhaka, Bangladesh, another 10-story factory caught fire Monday morning, and thousands took to the streets to protest the factories? poor safety standards.

Though no one was killed in the second fire, during both fires the main doors to the factories were reported to be padlocked, blocking easy escape.

The protests put a spotlight on the poor working conditions, lack of fire escapes, and garment owner negligence that has wracked the world's second-largest garment-exporting country, where firms produce clothing for high-profile brands including Gap, H&M, and Wal-Mart.

?Every time these incidents occur, the owners get away without making any change to their working conditions inside the factories,? says Sultan Uddin Ahmmed, assistant executive director of Bangladesh Institute of Labor Studies (BILS). ?These incidents will have to be treated as an offense in order to stop such occurrences.?

[QUIZ: How well do you know Asia?]

Bangladesh's garment industry employs 4 million people, 3 million of them women, at some 4,500 factories, says Siddiqur Rahman, acting president of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA). And between 1990 and 2012, there have been at least major 33 fires in garment factories, claiming some 500 lives, according to BILS.

The 2006 Bangladesh Labor Law and the Factories Rules of 1979 would be strong laws if they were applied effectively, says Babul Akhter, president of the Bangladesh Garment and Industrial Workers? Federation, a national trade union federation. Both legal frameworks stress the welfare of workers and settlement of disputes between workers and employers. To date, however, none of the factory fires have had a conclusive investigation, nor has anyone been found responsible.

The Factories Rules require specific provisions for escape in the event of an emergency for factory buildings housing explosive or highly flammable materials: "The means of escape shall include at least two separate and substantial stairways permanently constructed either inside or outside the building and which afford direct and unimpeded access to ground level."

Garment factories have had problems since the early 1990s, when the industry was developing. ?Unfortunately, the owners pay no heed to ensure the minimum safety standards inside the buildings,? says Mr. Selim.

That's because the rules are easy to get around, say observers.

Though international buyers often require factories meet the safety and requirements, often the auditors representing them are not well trained, says Selim, enticing owners to save money by only appearing to adhere to standards.

When the industry was just starting, there was a government push to expand, says an insider within the fire service. That push encouraged looking the other way when it came to safety inspections, at least temporarily. ?In the initial stage, for the expansion of industry, the fire service issued warehouse or workshop license to buildings, overlooking many compliance issues,? says the insider.

But the practice has continued even as Bangladesh's garment industry, which currently makes up some 80 percent of its export revenue, has boomed. The sector earned $19 billion in the financial year that ended in June 2012.

Many activists and workers blame the factory owners.

The gates are padlocked primarily for two reasons, says Mr. Akhter, ?so that workers do not leave the workplace or raw materials and goods do not get stolen.?

But he says that if cameras were installed and security guards present, they wouldn?t have to lock the doors.

?It comes as a moral responsibility for the owners to ensure the fire safety standards," he says. "Locking the exits at the stairways means that the owners prioritize their goods and raw materials over the lives of the workers,? he says.

Related stories

Read this story at csmonitor.com

Become a part of the Monitor community

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/deadly-bangladesh-garment-factory-fire-spotlights-poor-working-182611219.html

autism awareness angelman syndrome total recall troy tulowitzki katie couric good morning america the rock vs john cena acm awards 2012

Catalan Election - Business Insider

The Spanish region of Catalonia had an election today, which was seen as a quasi-referendum on independence, which is an aspiration of many in the wealthy Spanish region.

The basic gist is that pro-separatist parties did well, but the main party, which had run on a platform of moving forth with a real independence referendum, did very poorly.

That subtlety is resulting in very different takes across media.

For example, Reuters declares that the separatists had a big day.

FT declares that the region took a step towards independence, and that it's a major blow to Rajoy.

And WSJ declares that voters also strongly endorsed autonomy.

Now compares that to big Spanish media. It's instead focusing on how the election was a disaster for the main party, lead by Artur Mas, which lead votes.

Here's El Pais.

El Mundo also focuses on Artur Mas losing seats.

image

The website ABC.es declare: Mas's Challenge Fails, Spain Wins.

Note that it's not just national media declaring it a Mas defeat.

Regional media is seeing it the similarly.

Here's Catalan-based LaVanguardia.com, declaring it a hard setback for Artur Mas.

Here's another Catalan outlet, declaring a "stumble" for Mas.

So the world sees a strong showing for separatists overall, while Spanish media focuses on Mas's specific setbacks.

Either way, it may be awhile before the political ramifications totally shake out, and it's unclear yet what this means for Spanish PM Rajoy, and whether he has the political capital to ask for a bailout.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/catalan-election-2012-11

new york philharmonic marines urinating on taliban critics choice awards super pac dre kirkpatrick mls superdraft school cancellations

94% The Sessions

All Critics (144) | Top Critics (39) | Fresh (136) | Rotten (8)

Achieves its sunny disposition by pulling punches.

A funny, tender and mostly unsentimentalized movie about physical and emotional triumph.

Forced to do all his acting with his face, Hawkes displays the kind of camera-arresting capability that has earned others Oscar nominations.

This is a crowd-pleaser of the finest sort.

Using only his tilted head, his eyes, nose, and mouth and that quizzical voice, Hawkes brings O'Brien to life.

Raw, unrestrained and sympathetic without giving in to melodrama, 'The Sessions' is about a man facing a physical challenge who decides he wants to become intimate with a woman.

An intelligent, funny, insightful film that offers a frank examination of sex. It's not prurient or titillating, just truthful.

A remarkable actor, John Hawkes, gives a remarkable performance as a remarkable character.

Surprisingly funny and touching.

Presents the sensitive O'Brien as a brave, funny, unselfish and unlikely romantic-fantasy dream hero for disappointed, weary or jaded older female moviegoers.

The uplifting struggle for living a life of dignity for paralyzed from the neck down polio victim Mark O'Brien.

The sex scenes are frank and explicit, but never cheap and exploitative. (Yes, they get naked. Grow up.) The nudity isn't airbrushed pin-up perfection, but raw and real - and all the more lovely and moving because of it.

Taking the good with the bad, this isn't a terrible movie, though it is being rather overhyped. I found myself laughing a lot and enjoying the transformations the actors go through, but an unengaging story only serves to drag it down.

A film, inspired by the life of the late poet-journalist Mark O'Brien, that celebrates the relationship between physical and emotional intimacy.

Not just another weepy drama of overcoming odds, a My Left Foot with a different appendage. The Sessions is often brazenly funny, not from shocking dialogue but characters reacting the way people do, especially with such a flustering subject as sex.

an unusually frank and frequently humorous meditation on the transformative power of connection

Take away the nudity and the frank sex talk and you'd pretty much be left with a high-minded TV movie -- with unusually good actors.

Hunt's tangible disregard for false modesty does justice to the misunderstood surrogacy profession, while Hawkes' committed yet matter-of-fact portrayal of O'Brien masterfully avoids theatricality or sappy heartstring tugging.

Lewin has never had talent like Hawkes, Hunt, and Macy as his instruments before, and he makes the best of them.

Popular sex therapist Dr. Ruth once said that sexual surrogates are "illegal." The Sessions makes them mainstream.

An adult film that approaches the serious subject of sex with refreshingly explicit honesty.

The honest performances and assured direction makes The Sessions an extremely accomplished film that celebrates sexuality.

John Hawkes and Helen Hunt generate an endearing chemistry, here, turning in a couple of virtuoso performances deserving of serious consideration come Oscar season.

Writer-director Ben Lewin has made the decision to position the film somewhere between the comedic and dramatic genres.... and it works.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_sessions/

what is autism the giver march 30 rimm george h w bush pauly d project adrienne rich

Monday, November 26, 2012

Bones Simplifies the Process of Creating a WordPress Theme

Bones Simplifies the Process of Creating a WordPress ThemeWordPress is a wonderful blogging platform and CMS?a reader favorite, in fact?but creating a theme isn't easy if you don't know the ropes. Bones simplifies the process by providing you with starting code that's already optimized, functions across browser types and versions (especially mobile), and is easy to understand.

We've walked you through creating a WordPress theme before, but ours isn't optimized for mobile browsers and doesn't offer the added features and simplicity of bones. While either will work, Bones is built on some great existing platforms and is geared to making the process easy for you. You don't have to just dive into the code, either. There's already a great tutorial to help you get started. If you're looking to build a WordPress blog with your own custom theme, be sure to check it out.

Bones | via One Thing Well

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/7mWMfCRD-e4/bones-simplifies-the-process-of-creating-a-wordpress-theme

chocolate covered strawberries shrimp scampi kate upton si cover lobster recipes hearts roses flower delivery

The 11 Most Important Guns in History

China had developed a wide variety of gunpowder weapons known as "fire lances" and "fire dragons," as well as flamethrowers and fireworks, as far back as the 10th century. The first true firearms that used gunpowder to launch a projectile can be dated to the Yuan Dynasty in the 13th century. These included bronze hand cannons, which could be held by one man and touched off by another. The range was short and accuracy poor, but the smoke, fire, and roar must have intimidated opponents of the time.

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/military/weapons/the-11-most-important-guns-in-history?src=rss

Alexis Wright Zumba binder full of women Microsoft Surface Candy Crowley binders of women Alexis Wright presidential debates

US defender Bocanegra out for 6 weeks

Associated Press Sports

updated 8:47 p.m. ET Nov. 24, 2012

SANTANDER, Spain (AP) -Spanish club Racing Santander says United States defender Carlos Bocanegra will be sidelined for six weeks with a muscle tear in his left leg.

Racing says Bocanegra suffered the injury during the United States' 2-2 draw with Russia on Nov. 14.

Bocanegra is playing for Racing in Spain's second division on loan from Scottish side Rangers.

He should not miss any time with the American national side, which next plays Honduras on Feb 6.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


advertisement

More news
Chelsea is held 0-0 by Man City

??Rafa Benitez endured a hostile reception and gave the restless Chelsea fans nothing to cheer about as his first match in charge ended in a drab 0-0 draw with Manchester City on Sunday.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/49951439/ns/sports-soccer/

ann coulter Iron Man 3 Trailer minecraft Pretty Little Liars Ben Wilson Latest Presidential Polls trump

Honduras busts alleged drug gang, seizes $100 million in assets

TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) - Honduran anti-drug agents on Saturday broke up an alleged gang of synthetic drug producers and seized $100 million in assets, a government spokesman said.

Anti-drug trafficking agents carried out raids on 24 sites in the northern part of the country, seizing 700 heads of cattle and 150 vehicles in one of the biggest organized crime seizures in the last decade, spokesman Carlos Vallecillo said.

Vallecillo said the group laundered money through companies and property, but did not specify which drug cartel the group belonged to.

The agents detained a local police official, a Honduran civilian, and two Colombian pilots, he added.

The Mexican government's campaign to tame its drug cartels has driven Mexican drug traffickers to set up shop in Honduras. Colombian Cartels also operate in the country.

Criminal violence in the Central American nation has escalated thanks in part to the Mexican cartels' presence. According to the United Nations, Honduras has the highest per capita homicide rate in the world, with 86 homicides for every 100,000 inhabitants.

(Reporting By Gustavo Palencia; writing by Alexandra Alper; Editing by Paul Simao)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/honduras-busts-alleged-drug-gang-seizes-100-million-054553416.html

acm awards the killing april fools global payments eli young band wrestlemania country music awards 2012

Auto Loan Rate Deal of the Day: Eastman Credit Union at 1.65% APR

Auto Loan Rate Deal of the Day: Eastman Credit Union at 1.65% APR
News from Go Banking Rates:

Buying a car doesn?t have to conjure images of haggling with auto dealers for prices that are never low enough to be affordable. By opting to finance a new or used car through a credit union, where members are the first priority, soon-to-be motorists can become new motorists, and with low interests, too. Working with the?Eastman Credit Union?means qualifying for a lower-than-low, 1.65% APR?auto loan rate.

Auto Loan Rate Terms and Conditions

Terms and details for Eastman CU?s 1.65%?auto loan rate?are for new and used auto loans up to 36 months. The listed APR is the credit union?s best rate ? consumers should note that their individual rate may be higher depending on credit history, underwriting criteria, loan amount and loan to value ratios.

Other benefits to financing a car through Eastman include:

  • No application fees;
  • No pre-payment penalties;
  • Up to 100% financing, with pre-approval availability.

About Eastman Credit????? continues on Go Banking Rates

? Read the full article
.


.
Borrowers Find Affordable Financing with PenFed Auto Loans
News from Go Banking Rates:

Pentagon Federal Credit Union?offers military servicemen and government employees an easy and quick solution to vehicle financing. While PenFed currently serves over 1.1 million members of the Army, Air Force, Coast Guard, Department of Defense, and other government organizations, anyone can join ? providing they meet one of the following eligibility requirements:

?

  • Member of the United States Military or Uniformed Services
  • Employee of a qualifying organization or association (including volunteer service)
  • Employee of the U.S government
  • A relative or housemate of a qualifying member
  • Live or work in an eligible location

Like banks, credit unions accept deposits, issue loans and provide a variety of financial products. However, credit unions are operated by its members, who have a say in how the financial institution functions. Credit unions typically feature lower costs and rates on credit cards and loans, which makes Pentagon Federal Credit Union an ideal choice for an auto loan. And if you?

? Read the full article

.


Source: http://www.autoloanconsumers.com/2012/11/24/auto-loan-rate-deal-of-the-day-eastman-credit-union-at-1-65-apr/

amanda bynes dui ghost ship tiger woods masters jet crash virginia beach petrino clayton kershaw tyler perry

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Cloud Hosting Consolidation In Europe: Star (MessageLabs? Founders Other Startup) Sold To Claranet For $88M

claranet and starSome consolidation is afoot in the world of enterprise cloud services in Europe: Claranet, a managed service provider, is paying $88 million (?55 million) to acquire Star, a provider of cloud-based managed technology services. The move is a sign of how, while enterprise cloud services continue to grow in popularity, there is increasing consolidation as companies look for better service margins through scale, and value-added services. Claranet says the deal will make it the largest provider of integrated hosting and network services to the mid market in the UK and continental Europe, with some 4,500 customers on its books.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/g5SAlDVRbwE/

protect ip act jim caldwell internet blackout jessica capshaw seattle times seattle times walker recall

Saturday, November 24, 2012

philiptanes: seder shetland: cbc news: Eco-Innovation Observatory ...

The Eco-Innovation Observatory (EIO) would like to invite you to share your views on the role of eco-innovation in the shift towards a resource-efficient, low-carbon Europe. We would like to consult representatives from academia, business, civil society and public administration by taking part in our questionnaire. Your insights will be used in the upcoming reports of the Observatory, including our final flagship annual publication. The survey has only three questions and is entirely anonymous.

Please follow this link to the questionnaire.

For more information on the Eco-Innovation Observatory, see www.eco-innovation.eu

-->

Source: http://seri.at/resource-use/2012/11/15/eco-innovation-observatory-launches-online-questionnaire/

Fox News Live Obama 2016 philadelphia eagles Who Is Winning The Election 2012 Election Coverage 2012 cnbc the blaze

Source: http://ratececa.posterous.com/eco-innovation-observatory-launches-online-qu

gary johnson gary johnson walking dead where do i vote dixville notch Remember Remember The 5th Of November African painted dogs

Source: http://blog-cbc-news.blogspot.com/2012/11/eco-innovation-observatory-launches.html

2013 srt viper scott walker recall fisker atlantic social darwinism jamie lynn spears wisconsin recall election april 4

Source: http://seder-shetland.blogspot.com/2012/11/cbc-news-eco-innovation-observatory.html

the fray seahawks new uniforms 2012 tornadoes in dallas anchorman 2 kentucky basketball oaksterdam the fray national anthem

Source: http://monographs-felike.blogspot.com/2012/11/seder-shetland-cbc-news-eco-innovation.html

flip saunders academy award nominations cynthia nixon cspan state of the union drinking game oscar noms capital gains

Source: http://philiptanes.blogspot.com/2012/11/seder-shetland-cbc-news-eco-innovation.html

mark sanchez obama open mic jefferson county colorado extenze tenacious d steve smith zou bisou bisou

Area Auto Sales Spiking In Aftermath of Sandy; Inventories Running ...

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y.? (CBSNewYork) ? Business is booming for new and used cars after thousands of vehicles were damaged or destroyed by Superstorm Sandy.

As CBS 2?s Jennifer McLogan reported Friday, dealers are finding it hard to keep up with demand.

Jared Siegelman is a Lido Beach firefighter. He is among the many Sandy victims whose cars floated away.

?Everybody?s cars [that] were in the firehouse, lost them. It was intense. [I?m] looking for a Jeep. Five of my firehouse buddies and I are looking to purchase from this location,? Siegelman told CBS 2?s McLogan on Friday.

Tens of thousands of vehicles totaled by Sandy must be replaced. And that is translating into a phenomenal boon for local dealerships.

Sales are on fire along auto alley in Hempstead, where the Smiths from Far Rockaway were hoping to find another 2012 Nissan.

When asked what the insurance company said about her car problems, Nicole Smith said, ?It was a loss, total loss.?

But with new car sales business booming, the Smiths and others are finding slim pickings.

?We are about 85 percent up, month over month, and it is tremendous, tremendous. We are trying to do everything we can to help people out, but we are running out of inventory at this point,? said Michael Villani of Garden City Jeep Chrysler Dodge.

Marianne and Rich Belziti were also stressing out while shopping on Friday.

?We had two vehicles that were total loss ? a Mercedes and a Highlander,? Rich Belziti said.

?[They] were totally submerged in water in the garage, just gone,? Marianne added.

The Belzitis said they have been housebound in Howard Beach, 400th on a waiting list.

?My Highlander was only a month old, so that was a total replacement. I had ?gap? insurance, which picked up the rest. And I had total protection on my car,? Rich Belziti said.

Not everyone had an insurance policy that covered total loss. Some with older model cars received a settlement check that was not large enough to buy a new car.

It?s estimated at least 250,000 vehicles in our area were damaged or destroyed by Sandy.

Please offer your thoughts in the comments section below ?

Source: http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2012/11/23/car-dealers-say-business-in-booming-after-sandy/

mario manningham mario manningham williams syndrome hoya casa de mi padre corned beef and cabbage diners drive ins and dives

Young teachers drawn to kids, career starts tricky

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) ? Jordan McNeil offered skills in high demand by public schools when she graduated from college with a dual major in special education and elementary education in 2011. She needed just one interview to find the right spot for her, a classroom where she and two assistants spend all day teaching eight autistic children.

A year into her career, she says the greatest satisfaction comes from the skin-tingling "light bulb moments" when someone's knowledge really opens. Moments "when something really clicks with one of my students and I can see it, that they've figured it out and they understand," she said. "It's the little moments that make it worth it."

But the hard truth is that by some estimates as many as a half of new teachers like McNeil will quit the classroom in their first five years. That turnover is costly, since states spend hundreds of millions of dollars every year to recruit, hire and prepare replacements.

The struggle to retain good teachers isn't getting easier. An annual survey of teachers last year by MetLife and Harris Interactive found the lowest level of overall job satisfaction in two decades. A survey this year of more than 4,000 New York City middle school teachers found 39 percent considered changing school or leaving teaching.

A 2007 study by California State University's Center for Teacher Quality found that teachers driven from the state's classroom most often cited bureaucratic frustrations like excessive paperwork, too many meetings, and frequent classroom interruptions. Satisfied teachers most often pointed to having a meaningful role in school decision-making, collaborative relationships with colleagues, adequate planning time, sufficient classroom materials, and supportive principals.

"When these conditions were in place, teachers often viewed their compensation as adequate and a reason for staying in the profession," the California study said.

The Associated Press talked with promising new teachers a year into their careers. All graduated from Elon University in May 2011. All were North Carolina Teaching Fellows, a program which annually selected 500 promising high school seniors to receive four-year scholarships allowing them to graduate with little or no college debt as well as extra professional coaching and networking. The fellows promised to work in North Carolina public schools for four of their first seven years after graduation. State lawmakers quit funding the program two years ago.

Three teachers, all 23 years old, agreed they loved their profession for those light bulb moments, but all found surprises in their first year.

Eric Hale's leaving the country for a while.

He landed his first job in North Carolina's second-largest school district that includes Charlotte. But he says in retrospect he didn't ask enough questions about whether he and the school would be a good match. The school hadn't hired a new teacher in years, and it was undergoing an extensive curriculum revamp that forced changed on veteran colleagues, he said.

"I spent at least 60 hours a week in the school and a large chunk of that time was spent filling out paperwork or going to meetings. I rarely got time in my classroom to prepare things for my students. With the amount of time I put in I should have seen greater results in my students' growth, but I didn't have time to focus on that because I was always catching up on pointless things I had to do for my school," Hale said. "The new teacher support was minimal and I received very little planning time. I was exhausted by the end of it."

He quit and spent much of the summer in Italy, trying to land a job teaching English. He's now aiming to teach in Thailand or South Korea, and he's back home to assemble to certifications and other documents required. He didn't burn bridges. When the successor who moved into his 4th-grade classroom at Blythe Elementary in Huntersville fell ill, Hale stepped back in to work as the substitute for several months. The school was closed for the Thanksgiving holiday this week and its principal unavailable for comment.

"When I left college, I thought I would be able to just close my door and teach how I thought was best. But over time your colleagues and the overall mentality of the school can change you," Hale said. "The year I had definitely stimulated that thinking of what are my options, where else can I go."

Hale says he always wanted to teach abroad and plans to try for a year, maybe two, while he has no family responsibilities, then get back to a North Carolina public school to make good on his scholarship before he's obliged to pay the money back.

"I do plan on coming back to the United States and teaching in schools. I still love it," Hale said.

Sam Jennings said his first year teaching math at one of the state's highest-rated high schools was "absolutely wonderful."

"I know friends that had an absolutely crazy experience, from discipline problems to teaching issues with content materials," Jennings said. "I fell into a department that supported me 100 percent, sat down every week with me and helped me plan lessons. They gave me the support I needed in the classroom to survive without having major issues."

But this being real life, nothing's perfect. The eager Jennings said his surprises at South Brunswick High School came from students, and fellow teachers, who seemed less motivated than he expected.

"I think in general, the society we live in today, things are just given to students. They don't have to work for it anymore," Jennings said. "They expect us, when we go into the classroom, just to give them a grade rather than them trying to earn it and work for it."

Jennings has seen peers who've become jaded, for example hearing colleagues confess that they planned to teach little or nothing on a half-day with shortened course meeting time.

"That disheartens you because, here I am, I've got a lesson planned. I'm teaching. I'm rocking and rolling and going to get every bit of that 30 minutes out of my students. Then you hear a teacher that doesn't necessarily care," he said.

McNeil teaches a year-round program at South Graham Elementary School, about 25 miles east of Greensboro. She arrived to a bare classroom and a lot of on-the-job training.

"You come in as a first-year and you're expected to do what a 20-year teacher is doing. That's a really hard thing just to step into and there's no such thing as an entry-level teaching position. We don't climb the corporate ladder," she said. "It's all at once. All right away."

Learning how to run a classroom was the biggest task, from how to handle behavior and enforce discipline in her special-needs students to working with adult assistants. She said she landed grants for four iPads, which helps her students focus and work more independently. Overall, she feels she found a good fit in a mid-sized school district, which she knew from student teaching days.

But the end of her first year on the job came with some drama with a large group of unhappy teachers leaving.

"We had huge turnover for this year, which has turned out I think to really help the school turn around. But I think it was disappointing for me to see so many people kind of disillusioned with their jobs and the school, the school system, whatever it was," McNeil said. "I think a lot of what I learned from it is not taking things personally and separating your professional from your personal and just really problem-solving instead of just getting down in the dumps and letting things burn you out."

___

Emery Dalesio can be reached at http://twitter.com/emerydalesio

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/young-teachers-drawn-kids-career-starts-tricky-162656172--finance.html

stacy keibler all star game oscar red carpet daytona 500 start time ryan zimmerman oscars red carpet jennifer lopez wardrobe malfunction

Friday, November 23, 2012

In His Own Words: Bill Gates Dishes on Computers, Religion and Being Smart [Excerpt]

In Impatient Optimist: Bill Gates in His Own Words readers get a glimpse of the visionary Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist's philosophy on business, technology and life via some of his most memorable quotes


gates,microsoft,computer,internet,philanthropy Image: Reprinted with permission from Impatient Optimist?by Lisa Rogak, Agate B2, September, 2012

Editor's note: The following excerpt is reprinted with permission from Impatient Optimist: Bill Gates in His Own Words, edited by Lisa Rogak and published September 2012 by Agate Publishing: B2 Books.

Love him or hate him, Bill Gates has been a venerable worldwide business icon for more than three decades, ever since the first mass-produced personal computer debuted in 1981. Alternately described as an ingenious visionary and a tyrannical, sometimes less-than-scrupulous businessman, he has been all but impossible to ignore. But despite one's opinion of Gates, even his most prominent naysayers have no choice but to admit the obvious: He helped to spearhead one of the greatest revolutions in modern history by turning the inaccessible computer technology of the 1970s into an invaluable and easy-to-use tool for the masses, while also providing jobs and wealth to many along the way.

Gates has consistently been ranked as one of the world 's wealthiest men?as well as one of the most controversial founders and CEOs in history?and businesspeople of all stripes have taken their cues from him, using his words and business strategies to help create and grow their own companies. And in contrast to his hard-nosed reputation, after he left running the day-to-day operations of Microsoft in 2008 to devote himself full-time to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, a kinder, gentler side began to emerge. As a result, people who are actively involved in their own philanthropic efforts, whether in a professional or part-time capacity, have begun to take a second look at the man.

Despite the fact that he's no longer at the helm of one of the world's most powerful companies, Gates has steadfastly remained in the news. His friendship and philanthropic partnerships with U2's Bono and investing titan Warren Buffett attract the attention of both the media and public, which only helps to gain more attention for his charitable acts, whether he is testifying with former President Bill Clinton about increasing federal aid to earthquake-ravaged cities and villages in Haiti, or making the rounds at the Sundance Film Festival to promote the topic of public education reform. And unlike Gates's days at Microsoft, where he was entrusted with protecting a bevy of corporate secrets, today his life is virtually an open book, featuring regular updates on Facebook and Twitter and blog posts at TheGatesNotes.com.

Bill Gates's second act is no less compelling than his first. Anyone interested in his personal life or looking for inspiration to drive forward his or her own business endeavors can find enlightenment through reading Gates's own words.

"If a kid if addicted to a personal computer, I think that's far better than watching TV, because at least his mind is making choices."
Programmers at Work, 1986

"Computers are great because when you're working with them you get immediate results that let you know if your program works. It's feedback you don't get from many other things."
The Road Ahead, 1995

"I've never done anything solo, except take tests."
Working Together, 2010

"I think short of the transporter, most things you see in science fiction are, in the next decade, the kinds of things you'll see. The virtual presence, the virtual worlds that both represent what's going on in the real world and represent whatever people are interested in. This movement in space as a way of interacting with the machine. I think the deep investments that have been made at the research level will pay off with these things in the next 10 years."
D5 Conference: All Things Digital, May 30, 2007

"If being a nerd means you're somebody who can enjoy exploring a computer for hours and hours late into the night, then the description fits me, and I don't think there's anything pejorative about it. But here's the real test: I've never used a pocket protector, so I can't really be a nerd, can I?"
The New York Times Syndicate and News Service, August 5, 1996

"I devote maybe ten percent to business thinking. Business isn't that complicated. I wouldn't want to put it on my business card. [I'm a] scientist. Unless I've been fooling myself. When I read about great scientists like, say, Crick and Watson and how they discovered DNA, I get a lot of pleasure. Stories of business success don't interest me in the same way. Say you added two years to my life and let me go to business school. I don't think I would have done a better job at Microsoft."
Playboy, July 1994

"Just in terms of allocation of time resources, religion is not very efficient. There's a lot more I could be doing on a Sunday morning."
Time, January 13, 1997

"There are one hundred universities making contributions to robotics. And each one is saying that the other is doing it all wrong."
The World Is Flat, 2005

"Humanity's greatest advances are not in its discoveries, but in how those discoveries are applied to reduce inequity. Whether through democracy, strong public education, quality health care, or broad economic opportunity, reducing inequity is the highest human achievement."
Commencement address, Harvard University, June 7, 2007

"Smartness is an ability to absorb new facts. To walk into a situation, have something explained to you, and immediately say, "Well, what about this?" To ask an insightful question. To absorb it in real time. A capacity to remember. To relate to domains that may not seem connected at first."
The Rich and How They Got That Way, 2001

"Everybody should watch chemistry lectures?they're far better than you think. Don Sadoway, MIT?best chemistry lessons everywhere. Unbelievable."
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, June 23, 2008

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=3141d272d813db4d573fadb1e818bb8c

florida panthers tannehill joel ward mock draft washington redskins north country brian mcknight