Sunday, September 30, 2012

Schwarzenegger: Shriver changed tune on recall run

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Arnold Schwarzenegger says his wife, Maria Shriver, was told to "snap out of it" by her mother for her attempts to persuade him against running for California governor in 2003, a conversation that ultimately opened the door to his successful candidacy.

Eunice Kennedy Shriver told her daughter that her husband would be "angry for the rest of his life" if she stopped his ambitions, Schwarzenegger writes in his new autobiography, "Total Recall: My Unbelievably True Life Story."

The former governor says in the book that he had decided against running to recall Gov. Gray Davis after his wife implored him not to for the sake of their family. Maria Shriver announced his decision to their four children.

But he writes that when Maria Shriver told her mother about her efforts to thwart Schwarzenegger's political ambitions, Eunice ? sister of President John F. Kennedy and Sens. Robert Kennedy and Ted Kennedy ? told her daughter that women in their family "always support the men when they want to do something." Schwarzenegger says he didn't know about the conversation at the time, but learned of it later.

Maria Shriver then softened her stance, paving the way for Schwarzenegger to announce his candidacy on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno," where he says he felt most comfortable.

The announcement came after a week of wavering. Schwarzenegger says before he headed to the TV appearance, his wife handed him two pieces of paper with talking points she had written: one in case he decided to run, another in case he decided not to.

He writes that Shriver went on to become a key ally and adviser to his campaign and eventual governorship.

Schwarzenegger has often said that Maria's mother and her father, Sargent Shriver, were essential to his eventual decision to seek public office, and the most "extraordinary human beings I've ever met." But he also writes in the book that he often teased his wife that the close-knit Democratic Kennedy clan was "like a bunch of clones" because there was such conformity among them.

A spokesman for Maria Shriver, Matthew DiGirolamo, declined to comment on the contents of the book. Eunice Shriver died in 2009.

"Total Recall" will officially be published next week. The Associated Press purchased an early copy.

Schwarzenegger also writes he had a "hot affair" with actress Brigitte Nielsen at a time he and Maria Shriver were dating and already living together.

Schwarzenegger and Nielsen co-starred in the 1985 film "Red Sonja." Nielsen wrote in a memoir published last year that she and Schwarzenegger had an "outrageous affair" while making the movie and that she didn't know until later that he was involved with Shriver.

In "Total Recall," Schwarzenegger writes that he knew the fling with Nielsen wouldn't last and in fact it only made him realize that he wanted to marry Shriver.

The book is part of an effort by the onetime "Mr. Universe" and Hollywood action star to rebrand himself after leaving office with a mixed record and subsequent embarrassing revelations about a fling he had with the family's housekeeper. Schwarzenegger, who fathered a son with the housekeeper, says he also let the boy down.

Schwarzenegger, 65, said he avoided telling his wife for years about the boy, who is now a teenager, even when Shriver asked him, partly because of his longtime penchant for secrecy, and his fear that the news would become public and undermine his political career. He told his wife in January 2011, when she confronted him the day after he left office.

In an interview with "60 Minutes" scheduled to air Sunday, Schwarzenegger said having sex with his housekeeper was "the stupidest thing" he ever did to his now-estranged wife and caused great pain to her and their four children. CBS aired excerpts of the interview Friday.

"I think it was the stupidest thing I've done in the whole relationship. It was terrible. I inflicted tremendous pain on Maria and unbelievable pain on the kids," Schwarzenegger tells "60 Minutes."

Shriver filed for divorce in July.

In his book, the usually ebullient Schwarzenegger admits to some loneliness, even though he packed his schedule with speeches, projects and movie-making after Shriver and the children moved out of the house. He said his career had been fun for 30 years because he shared it with Maria.

They had done everything together, he writes.

The former GOP governor also writes about a 2003 White House meeting with Karl Rove in which the top GOP strategist told him the recall would not happen and instead introduced the actor to then-national security adviser Condoleezza Rice as his pick to run for California governor in 2006.

Schwarzenegger felt snubbed.

He asks, "How could Rove have been so wrong?"

Rove's office said he was traveling Friday and could not be reached for comment.

Rice's chief of staff at Stanford University, Georgia Godfrey, said Rice cannot recall "any conversation on this subject."

"She has stated many times in the past that she has no desire to run for public office and those sentiments have still not changed," Godfrey said in a statement emailed to the AP.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/schwarzenegger-shriver-changed-tune-recall-run-000243315.html

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Israel's Looming Attack - Responding to an Israeli Strike on Iran's Nuclear Complex

Although an Israeli military strike against Iran?s nuclear program is far from certain, the potential consequences for the United States are clear. Such a development would present major crisis-management challenges?and, perhaps, opportunities to advance U.S. interests.

The immediate challenge would be to limit escalation by constraining Tehran?s freedom to act, minimizing the damage caused by its retaliation, and keeping Hizballah and other Iranian proxies out of the fray. Moreover, by curbing Iran?s escalatory options in the Persian Gulf, Washington might prevent a prolonged spike in oil prices. This could in turn help preserve international support for efforts to prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons. To accomplish these objectives, Washington would need to take a number of steps both prior to and immediately after a strike. It must also be prepared to respond quickly to miscalculations?whether its own or those of friends and adversaries?as well as other unintended consequences that could complicate poststrike diplomacy.

For the Obama administration, there is the additional challenge of preparing for an event that it is clearly trying to avoid without appearing either ?complicit? in Israeli actions (in the words of Joint Chiefs chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey) or unwilling to support a close ally in its hour of need. And in the aftermath of a strike, Washington would need to subordinate its pique at the Israeli government to the task of managing the crisis in a way that furthers U.S. interests and enhances America?s standing in the eyes of its regional partners.

Working with Israel to prevent escalation

Minimizing Israeli casualties as a result of Iranian retaliation would be a key element of any effort to limit poststrike escalation. During some past conflicts (e.g., the 1991 Gulf War), Israel has absorbed rocket and missile barrages and terrorist attacks without retaliating, at least when the resulting casualties were limited. Accordingly, the United States should be prepared to rapidly augment Israel?s missile defenses with SM-3s, Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense systems (THAADS), and Patriot PAC-2s, with the aim of limiting casualties caused by Iranian missiles and, perhaps, Hizballah?s long-range rockets.

Some administration officials may wish to maintain a studied distance from Israel poststrike in order to demonstrate their disapproval, but the imperative to prevent further escalation by rapidly dispatching missile defenses should trump all other considerations (except for the need to deploy such systems to defend U.S. facilities in the Gulf). Washington would also need to work with Israeli and other intelligence services around the world on thwarting retaliatory terrorist attacks against American interests (to limit potential U.S. involvement in the fray) as well as Israeli and Jewish targets (to limit further Israeli military action).

Although the main actions associated with an Israeli strike are unlikely to last much more than a day or two, the Israeli military might decide to conduct a follow-up strike several days later against targets inadequately damaged during the initial attack. This could pose further challenges to U.S.-Israeli relations, especially if Washington believed that it had averted major escalation after the first strike. Such scenarios underscore the need for close bilateral consultation throughout the crisis, with U.S. and Israeli decisionmakers comparing the benefits that a follow-on strike might confer versus its escalatory potential given the situation on the ground.

Signaling Iran

Washington?s ability to influence Tehran?s calculus is limited, but it can do a number of things well before any strike to constrain the regime?s freedom of military action and capacity to respond. These include:

  • Quietly informing Tehran that in the wake of recent provocations?namely, plots to assassinate the Saudi ambassador in Washington last year and U.S. embassy personnel in Azerbaijan earlier this year, both linked to Tehran?the United States will respond to future Iranian or proxy attacks on its interests in a forceful manner. This message should be reiterated now even if it has been delivered in the past.
  • Intensifying surveillance of suspected and confirmed Iranian intelligence agents serving overseas, and making this enhanced scrutiny visible to Tehran. If the regime knows that its agents are being watched, it may be less willing to use them to conduct retaliatory actions. And in the immediate aftermath of an Israeli strike, Washington should take this approach a step further, pressing allied governments to declare Iranian agents personae non grata.
  • Maintaining a strengthened air and naval presence in the Gulf to limit Iran?s poststrike military options. In addition, the United States should relocate the two aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman, where they will be less vulnerable to an Iranian surprise attack and better positioned to wage an ?outside-in? campaign to restore freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz. It should still maintain a naval presence in the Persian Gulf, however, both to reassure its allies and deny Tehran the ability to claim that it expelled U.S. forces.
  • Persuading allies and partners?especially those dependent on Gulf oil?to warn Tehran against disrupting oil shipments. In doing so, they should remind Tehran that it lost the Iran-Iraq War in large part because it took a variety of actions (including the ?tanker war?) that alienated the international community. They should also be prepared to release large quantities of oil from their strategic reserves to dampen a possible oil price spike.

After a strike, Washington should emphasize that the proximate cause of the crisis was Tehran?s refusal to dispel persistent doubts about the peaceful nature of its nuclear program. The United States and its partners should then reiterate their willingness to help Iran enjoy the benefits of nuclear technology for peaceful purposes, provided that Tehran clarify outstanding issues about its program and agree to adequate safeguards. In addition, Washington should work to deter Tehran from breaking out or withdrawing from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), reminding the regime that the international community has detected its previous efforts to build clandestine enrichment facilities, that it would face even stiffer sanctions were it to do so again, and that withdrawal from the NPT is not a legal option given its likely violation of its treaty obligations.

Sidelining Hizballah

Iran has the ability to do a fair amount of harm on its own in response to a strike. First, some Iranian missiles would likely penetrate Israeli missile defenses (though it should be recalled that the forty-one Iraqi missiles that hit Israel in 1991 led to the death of only one citizen). Second, some Iranian-sponsored terrorist attacks are likely to succeed, though the regime has recently shown a degree of incompetence in this area. Third, Tehran could roil world oil markets by threatening Gulf oil shipments, assuming it were willing to brook international censure for doing so.

Yet Iran?s potential for harm would be greatly magnified if it convinced Hizballah to join the fight. For example, the organization could use its inventory of more than 50,000 rockets to bombard Israel from Lebanon, perhaps sparking a war in the Levant. It could also undertake terrorist attacks against U.S., Israeli, or Jewish targets overseas. Hizballah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah recently stated that the group?s response to an Israeli strike would depend on the circumstances. Although he subsequently stated (probably in response to Iranian prodding) that Hizballah would retaliate in some way, the group is still smarting from its 2006 war with Israel and is facing domestic pressure due to the travails of its cosponsor, the Assad regime in Syria. Therefore, it will probably try to avoid another war.

Washington should help Hizballah stay on the sidelines of a potential conflict by quietly indicating that any retaliation on Iran?s behalf would likely increase regional and international support for strong countermeasures. These include robust Israeli military action aimed at causing long-term damage to the group, sanctions that greatly constrain its fundraising and organizational activities in Europe and elsewhere, U.S. efforts to hinder resupply from Iran (though Hizballah already has enough rockets for several major conflicts), and more robust support for opposition forces in Syria.

Maintaining international support

One of the greatest sources of anxiety concerning an Israeli strike is that it could undermine international support for preventing a nuclear-armed Iran. Under such conditions, Tehran could rebuild its destroyed nuclear infrastructure with few if any constraints, including the export controls that have slowed its centrifuge and missile programs.

In this respect, an Israeli strike would be less disruptive than an American strike. Washington has made a very public effort to warn Israel against such a course, so a U.S. strike might alienate those countries that have cooperated with U.S. sanctions in the belief that they were aimed at averting military action. Moreover, a successful Israeli strike that sets Iran?s nuclear program back by several years might increase the international community?s motivation to prevent a vengeful Tehran from acquiring the bomb, since that development could precipitate an even more dangerous crisis later. Paradoxically, then, an Israeli attack might increase both Tehran?s desire to obtain nuclear arms and the international community?s resolve to prevent it from doing so. This resolve could take the form of more stringent application of existing export controls on sensitive materials and dual-use items critical to the nuclear program.

Finally, any Iranian threats or attempts to disrupt the global economy after a strike would be fraught with risk for the Islamic Republic. On one hand, if Washington succeeded in deterring Iranian retaliation in the Gulf or mitigating its consequences, then international support for export controls and sanctions designed to prevent Iran from acquiring the bomb might well continue unaffected. Conversely, should Tehran manage to destabilize the Gulf, it could alienate its supporters, strengthen the determination of those countries working to prevent it from getting the bomb (including Russia and China), and ensure that an Israeli strike has a greater impact on the regime?s ability to rebuild than would have otherwise been the case.

Conclusion

Because an Israeli military strike on Iran would be a high-risk move with significant potential for escalation, resolving the nuclear impasse diplomatically is greatly preferred. Yet even as Washington continues to warn Israel against such a move, it would be well advised to prepare measures aimed at mitigating the adverse consequences of a strike, averting further escalation, and impeding Iran?s efforts to rebuild its nuclear program.

Michael Eisenstadt is director of the Military and Security Studies Program at The Washington Institute, from where this article is adapted.

Source: http://www.thecuttingedgenews.com//index.php?article=76272

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Fan bites Danny Bonaduce at Wash. state casino

(AP) ? Former child TV star Danny Bonaduce says a crazed fan bit him during an event at a Washington state casino.

The former "Partridge Family" actor tells The News Tribune of Tacoma (http://is.gd/u3wfjM ) the woman asked him if she could kiss him and then sank her teeth into his cheek for about a minute until others pulled her off.

Bonaduce, who works these days as a radio DJ in Seattle, said the woman was taken into custody Friday, but he doesn't plan to press charges.

His face had a bright red mark a day later, when he said what he was thinking during the attack, "Bath salts," he said, referencing a designer drug linked to bizarre and violent behavior in users.

Bonaduce's wife, Amy, says her husband was treated with antibiotics.

___

Information from: The News Tribune, http://www.thenewstribune.com

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-09-30-Danny%20Bonaduce-Attack/id-750ba2160c6549e89ab75310792b3133

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Black Keys Rock Global Citizen Festival Today: Tune In!

Foo Fighters, Neil Young, Band of Horses and K'Naan also perform at NYC fest, beginning at 4:30 p.m. ET today on MTV.com and elsewhere.
By Kara Warner


Global Citizen Festival
Photo:

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1694678/black-keys-global-citizen-festival.jhtml

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As debate looms, Romney looks to Pennsylvania

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney campaigns at American Legion Post 176 in Springfield, Va., Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney campaigns at American Legion Post 176 in Springfield, Va., Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Following his campaign speech at Farm Bureau Live in Virginia Beach, President Barack Obama leans in to listen to a supporter along the rope-line Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012, afternoon. (AP Photo/The Virginian-Pilot,Stephen M. Katz ) MAGS OUT

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney gestures during a campaign event at American Legion Post 176, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012, in Springfield, Va. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)

President Barack Obama speaks at a campaign event at Farm Bureau Live, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012, in Virginia Beach, Va. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney holds a baby after making a campaign stop at American Legion Post 176, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012, in Springfield, Va. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)

(AP) ? His path to victory narrowing, Mitt Romney is looking to Pennsylvania to help slow President Barack Obama's momentum ahead of a high-stakes meeting on the debate stage next week.

The Republican presidential nominee was to campaign Friday in the Philadelphia area, first courting donors at a high-dollar fundraiser and then meeting voters at a midday rally.

Fresh off a promise to spend more time in the swing states that matter most, Romney will pass much of the day in a state that has not supported a Republican presidential candidate in nearly a quarter-century. His campaign is not running any television ads in Pennsylvania, and aides privately concede that Obama has a significant advantage just 40 days before Election Day.

They suggest that Romney's visit ? his first to the state in more than two months ? is largely designed to raise the money needed to narrow Obama's edge in more competitive states. After raising $5 million at a Washington event Thursday, Romney is expected to generate more than $1 million in Philadelphia and an additional $7 million at a Boston fundraiser later Friday.

"We're going to have to make the right choice on Nov. 6, and you're going to make that happen," Romney told cheering donors in Washington.

Obama will also focus on raising cash Friday as he keeps his campaign close to Washington, where he has three fundraising events scheduled.

He is set to deliver remarks at a finance event at the Capital Hilton in Washington, where tickets start at $250 but go as high as $10,000 per couple. Obama will attend a smaller fundraiser at a private residence before returning to the Capitol Hilton for a third event.

On Thursday, Romney and Obama campaigned a few hundred miles apart in Virginia.

The president pledged to create many more jobs and "make the middle class secure again," while Romney focused on threats beyond American shores, accusing Obama of backing dangerous cuts in defense spending.

The Republican's message, including questions about the president's response to recent violence in Libya, comes as he tries to move beyond his long-held economic focus to help score political points and reverse a slide in the polls.

"The idea of cutting our military is unthinkable and devastating. And when I become president we will not," Romney declared at an American Legion hall in Springfield, Va.

He is expected to push a similar message on Friday in suburban Philadelphia during a rally at Valley Forge Military Academy and College.

While Romney aides are not optimistic about their chances in Pennsylvania, Republicans are not giving up on the state.

"We have an aggressive operation and ground game in place," campaign spokesman Rick Gorka said.

The state GOP is set to begin running a television ad Friday assailing Obama's economic leadership. Pennsylvania's unemployment rate, at 8.1 percent, is slightly less than the national average.

Obama and Romney are scheduled to face off Wednesday in Denver for the first of three presidential debates, which may represent the challenger's best remaining opportunity to change the trajectory of his campaign. Romney has struggled through a series of perceived missteps in weeks amid signs that confidence in the nation's economy is on the rise.

The Obama campaign released a political memo on Friday saying it expects Romney "to be a prepared, disciplined and aggressive debater."

However, it said that while the president would be laying out his vision for the coming years, Romney has "signaled that he will come to indict the president for the fact that the economy has not fully recovered from the collapse of 2008."

The Obama memo and an accompanying web video also aim to debunk claims by Romney that the president has mischaracterized the Republican's positions on the auto industry bailout, abortion and raising taxes on wage earners to cover tax cuts for multimillionaires.

Obama was expected to meet with advisers Friday to prepare for next week's debate. The president was departing Sunday for Nevada, where he planned to hold debate practice sessions near Las Vegas.

Romney has been focused on fundraising and debate preparation for several weeks, raising some questions from within the GOP about his strategy. Earlier in the week, Romney said the time had come in the campaign when he would start spending less time with donors and more time with voters in swing states.

Following his stop in Pennsylvania, Romney heads to Boston for an evening fundraiser and a weekend focused on more debate preparation.

In an election centered largely on the economy, each side got some new ammunition on Thursday. The Commerce Department lowered its earlier estimate of tepid growth for the April-June quarter, while the Labor Department said the economy added 386,000 more jobs from April 2011 through March 2012 than previously believed.

Romney compared the American economy to that of Russia as he ignored signs of growth and pounced on the Commerce Department's downward revision.

"By the way, Russia's GDP growth is at 4 percent. And we're at 1.3. This is unacceptable," he said. "The president does not understand how to get this economy to work for the American people."

___

Obama campaign video: http://tinyurl.com/cllgnau

___

Associated Press writers Jim Kuhnhenn and Ken Thomas contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-09-28-Presidential%20Campaign/id-aebe0b817ad94b798d2cbebc23e50cae

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Maine Sports Legends inductees include Hackett, Kiah, McNally ...

WATERVILLE, Maine ? Maine Sports Legends will honor 10 individuals as inductees into its Hall of Honors on Sunday, Oct. 7, at the Alfond Youth Center.

The inductees are Charles Lockhart (posthumous), Ralph Sweetser (posthumous), Woodrow ?Woody? Dunphy, Dave Maxcy, Albert F. Hackett, Dennis B. Kiah, Moe McNally, John Osbourne, Bob Bourget and Karol L?Heureaux.

The inductees were chosen by regional committees for their accomplishments and contributions to youth and sports in Maine. Their participation will aid in the Maine Sports Legends fundraising for eight scholar athletes who will each receive $500 awards.

The eight scholar-athletes are: Brooke M. LaBelle, Ashland; Isaac L. LaJoie, Presque Isle; Mary Carmack, John Bapst; Tyler Beardsley, Ellsworth; Hannah Chavis, Lawrence; Taylor James Watson, Maranacook; Jessica MacDonald, Bonny Eagle; and Shawn Grover, Cheverus.

The banquet begins at 12:30 p.m., following a social half hour which begins at noon. Tickets are $35 at reserved tables of eight and can be obtained by calling 622-1539 or by email to PaulMcClay@msn.com.

Sweetser was a member of the 1928 County champion Presque Isle High basketball team and captained the team to two straight EM titles and a state title in 1932. He also competed in track and field and set a state-meet record in the shot put. In his later years he became an outstanding golfer, winning many tournaments locally, statewide and in New Brunswick.

Dunphy, a longtime athlete, principal, educator and coach, graduated from Houlton High and attended Ricker College for two years before transferring to the University of Maine. He was a four-year starter on the varsity baseball team and was captain for the 1955 and 1956 seasons. Elected to the Maine Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996, he was an outstanding shortstop, making only two errors in two years at UMaine.

Maxcy, a former high school and college athlete, was a longtime educator, assistant principal and coach before his retirement. He lettered at Scarborough High School in track and field, cross country, swimming and basketball. He was a member of the freshman track team at Bates College, transferring to UMaine his sophomore year, where he lettered in both indoor and outdoor track and field. He coached high school and college teams in Presque Isle and was a teacher at Presque Isle from 1958 to 2006.

Lockhart helped promote athletics in Fort Fairfield and became one of the town?s biggest volunteers and fans. For 37 years, Lockhart was scorekeeper for the Fort Fairfield High School basketball games. A 1938 graduate of Fort Fairfield High School, he participated in cross country skiing, tennis and Alpine skiing. Later in life he was an avid golfer and a member of the Aroostook Valley Country Club. In 2001 the Fort Fairfield Athletic Complex Field was named for him.

Hackett, who was born in Milo and is a graduate of Milo High School and the University of Maine, started working with youngsters in the 1950s when he became recreation director for his hometown. He played baseball all four years at the university and basketball for two. He went on to teach and coach baseball and basketball at Foxcroft Academy and then went on to Schenck High School in East Millinocket, where he served as guidance director and assistant principal before returning to UMaine as assistant director of admissions.

Kiah is a Bangor native who began coaching at Brewer High School even before graduating from the University of Maine. He was an assistant football coach at Brewer in 1970. The John Bapst grad played football and baseball in high school and played football for one year and baseball for four at UMaine. He coached and taught at Foxcroft Academy and Brewer High School and held administrative positions at Hermon High and Brewer until retiring last June.

McNally, a Gardiner native and 1970 Gardiner High grad, has been teaching for 33 years. She played three sports in high school and four in college. She became Gardiner?s field hockey coach in 1979 and her teams went on to compile a record of 384-134-21 with four Eastern Maine titles and two state crowns. She is a founding member of the Maine State Field Hockey Association and also also coached basketball and softball at the high school.

Osbourne, a native of Hull, Yorkshire, England, settled in Waterville in 1957, and became a founder of soccer in the Waterville area. He volunteered to begin league play at the Boys Club in Waterville in the late 1950s and continued into the 1980s. He serves on the Heritage Circle, the Alfond Boys and Girls Club and YMCA of Greater Waterville.

Bourget began his coaching career in 1969 and in 1978 he served as director of recreation for Standish. He later became men?s soccer coach at Saint Joseph College while still serving as a teacher at Bonny Eagle High School, where he also coached boys? basketball, softball, soccer, boys and girls track and field and girls basketball. His soccer teams won more than 300 games and his girls basketball teams made four consecutive tournament appearances.

L?Heureux completed her 31st year as head women?s volleyball coach at UNE this past season. Her teams have won 616 matches and have made an appearance in the postseason tournament in each of the last 10 seasons. Twice during the early 1990s, L?Heureux?s teams qualified for the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics national tournament. She oversees UNE?s club sports programs.

Source: http://bangordailynews.com/2012/09/28/sports/maine-sports-legends-inductees-include-hackett-kiah-mcnally-dunphy/

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German Jewish leader deters racist attack with gun

A leading member of Germany's Jewish community had to point to a gun he was carrying to ward off a young man shouting anti-Semitic abuse, the latest in a string of racist incidents in Berlin that has shocked Jews and city authorities.

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The Central Council of Jews in Germany said its general secretary, Michael Kramer, had endured a barrage of threatening insults from the man after leaving a Berlin synagogue with his two daughters on Wednesday.

"The man threatened us and made clear he would have lashed out if the children had not been there," the council quoted Kramer, 44, as saying on its website.

Kramer then pointed to a gun he is allowed to carry for his personal protection to deter the man from attacking him.

A retired teacher's courageous crusade: Tackling neo-Nazi hate

Germany's top-selling Bild newspaper carried a photograph of the young man that Kramer himself had taken at the time with his mobile phone. The man, with a partially shaven head, has an arm raised towards the phone as though about to push Kramer.

Bild quoted the man as having said to Kramer: "What are you doing here? Go back to where you came from."

Video: Retired teacher tackles neo-Nazi hate in Berlin (on this page)

Both Kramer and his adversary are pressing charges against each other, German media said.

Last month, one of the first rabbis ordained in Germany since the Holocaust, Daniel Alter, was beaten up on a Berlin street in front of his young daughter by four attackers, prompting a seminary to advise its students to avoid wearing skullcaps in public.

Click here for more World news stories

Germany's official Jewish population, now at around 120,000, has grown more than 10-fold in the last 20 years, thanks largely to an influx of Jews from the former Soviet Union, but anti-Semitic attacks are commonplace and policemen guard synagogues around the clock.

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49212199/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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Sprint Black Friday ad reveals $50 Galaxy S III on November 23rd only

DNP Sprint Black Friday ad reveals $50 Galaxy S III

As the holiday season draws closer, bargain hunters and retailers alike are starting to map out their Black Friday game plan. However, if you're balling on a budget and looking to score a stellar smartphone, then allow us to lend a helping hand. An anonymous tipster has shared a peek at one of Sprint's post-Turkey Day attractions, with the gory details shown in the image above. Both current and prospecting customers will have a chance to snag a Galaxy S III for $50 on a new two-year agreement, with Sprint no doubt hoping to use its unlimited data policy to lure to-be network switchers. Supplies are expected to be limited, so you'd be wise to get up entirely too early if you're hoping to guarantee yourself a unit.

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Sprint Black Friday ad reveals $50 Galaxy S III on November 23rd only originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Sep 2012 15:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/27/sprint-black-friday-ad-galaxy-s-iii-sale/

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Dot Earth Blog: How Rachel Carson Spurred Chemical Concerns by Highlighting Uncertainty

9:09 a.m. | Updated below |
Rachel Carson?s work and legacy are being actively assessed at the moment, given that her landmark book, ?Silent Spring,? was published 50 years ago this week.

A good starting point is??How ?Silent Spring? Ignited the Environmental Movement,? a fascinating feature by Eliza Griswold in last Sunday?s New York Times Magazine. And of course there?s ?On a Farther Shore: The Life and Legacy of Rachel Carson,? the new book by William Souder (I?m reading it now; here?s the Times review). If you?re in the Boston area, I?ll be on a panel at Harvard University later today with the author and climate campaigner Bill McKibben and Frances Beinecke, the president of the Natural Resources Defense Council, to discuss the book in the broader context of science and environmental advocacy.

But of all the fresh considerations of Carson?s work, there?s one that stands out for me at the moment ? a recent paper by two researchers of rhetoric and writing who dug in on ?Silent Spring? drafts, notes and revisions and found that Carson had a remarkable and rare trait for someone so committed to raising public concern about a pressing environmental issue. Rather than downplay scientific uncertainty and gaps in understanding, she progressively amplified what was unclear about the human impacts of DDT and other synthetic compounds on humans and wildlife.

The authors, Kenny Walker, a doctoral candidate at the University of Arizona, and Lynda Walsh,?an assistant professor of English at the University of Nevada, Reno, describe how surprised they were by this pattern, given a large body of work, including ?Merchants of Doubt,? the book by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway, showing that inflating uncertainty has mainly been the task of industry-backed efforts to blunt public concern and policy.

With Carson?s approach to conveying risk, they write, she appears to have created ?a bridge across the is?ought divide in science-related policy making, using the uncertainty topos to invite the public to participate by supplying fears and values that would warrant proposals for limiting pesticide use.?

This stands in stark contrast to the ?Be Worried? approach that some have tried (in vain) on global warming over the years. Mind you, Carson?s book has plenty of passages, from beginning to end, warning powerfully of the ?grim specter? of a poisoned future.

But this look inside Carson?s five-year writing process shows an approach to conveying risk that seems relatively rare in environmental messaging these days. [9:09 a.m. | Updated | William Souder offered an invaluable reflection on the paper after reading my post, which you can read in full below.]

I invited Walker, whom I met while visiting the University of Arizona in January, to write a ?Your Dot? post describing what he and Walsh found in researching the paper,???No One Yet Knows What the Ultimate Consequences May Be? ? How Rachel Carson Transformed Scientific Uncertainty Into a Site for Public Participation in?Silent Spring??(published in January in the Journal of Business and Technical Communication). Here?s his essay:?

Kenny Walker on Rachel Carson?s use of uncertainty to raise public concerns about DDT:?

The 50th year anniversary of ?Silent Spring? invites reflection not just on the book, but on how we have paid attention to it for half a century. We tend to celebrate ?Silent Spring? from the moment of publication forward, and this tendency ignores the rich history before publication?the five-year long process of meticulous research, writing, and rewriting. We tend to forget that ?Silent Spring? did not just arise from Rachel Carson?s head fully formed. It was part of an ongoing conversation about the uncertainties of life in the postwar period. If we focus on the process behind ?Silent Spring,? and not just the product, what lessons might we learn about the strategies Carson used to enter the conversation and frame the scientific debate around toxic chemicals?

In a study published last January, Dr. Lynda Walsh, an associate professor of English at the University of Nevada, Reno, and I sought to answer this question by researching Carson?s composing process, with a particular focus on the crucial topic of uncertainty. We defined uncertainty as both ignorance (we do not know) and risk (a probability distribution of likely outcomes), and identified 33 places in ?Silent Spring? where Carson expressed uncertainty. I then went to the Carson Papers archive at the Beinecke Library at Yale University to examine her sources, and her drafting process at these 33 locations. What I found was that not only did Carson underline, circle, and annotate her sources with particular attention to uncertainty, she amplified its use in later drafts. Sitting there at the archives, I witnessed where and when Carson crossed out entire sections, and inserted expressions of ignorance and risk in order to frame her carefully selected case studies. In our paper we argued that Carson adapted and adopted uncertainty from her sources and deliberately used it to provide a site for public participation in scientific debates.

For example, chapter 3 is titled ?Elixirs of Death.? In an early draft of one section, she tells us about the storage and accumulation of DDT in the human body, and how even small amounts have been shown to cause acute liver poisoning. She ends this section by telling us: ?There has been no such parallel situation in medical history. We have some intimations as to what the ultimate consequences may be, but it is too early to know the full story.? Here she gives her readers some basic facts about DDT, and then claims ignorance: ?[I]t is too early to know what will happen.? But the final version foregrounds uncertainty, ??Scientists do not agree upon how much DDT can be stored in the human body,?? and ends with a double dose of uncertainty as ignorance and risk: ?All these facts . . . caused Food and Drug Administration scientists to declare as early as 1950 that it is ?extremely likely the potential hazard of DDT had been underestimated.? There has been no such parallel situation in medical history. No one yet knows what the ultimate consequences may be.?

These revisions are one example of a strategy we saw Carson use consistently: Add uncertainty at the level of ignorance to destabilize the science, then articulate the harms, hazards, or consequences behind our current actions, and drive it home with a visceral image of risk (which she does in this example through images of liver damage, the accumulation of DDT in milk and butter, and the ability of toxic chemicals to pass to breast-fed human infants, and to a fetus in utero). Other revisions from certainty to uncertainty show up in her direct quotes from soil scientists, and in a section about estrogen and uterine cancer. Only in her last draft does she add: ?Although medical opinion is divided on the question, much evidence exists to support the view that similar effects may occur in human tissues.? These additions connect to her general thesis about ignorance and risk: ?I do contend that we have put poisonous and biologically potent chemicals indiscriminately into the hands of persons largely or wholly ignorant of their potentials for harm.?

Carson?s choice to deliberately increase her use of uncertainty in ?Silent Spring? came as a bit of surprise since in the well documented cases of tobacco, acid rain, and global warming, it was the skeptic?s strategy to amplify doubt, not the scientist?s. In Carson we saw a counter-example: her composing process suggested that uncertainty is a crucial site for public participation and precautionary action. Uncertainty?s ability to disrupt knowledge (?we don?t know?) and actualize risk (?potential for harm?) gave the public a place to draw their own inferences, make their own evaluations, assert their right to know the potential hazards they face, and to motivate policy action. Uncertainty provided the readers of ?Silent Spring? a clearly defined role in an otherwise inaccessible scientific controversy. Uncertainty shaped the promise of Carson?s book: to let the public decide for themselves.

Of course, I am not claiming that Carson?s use of uncertainty is the cause behind the success of ?Silent Spring.? But if you take the same strategy and follow the reception of uncertainty through the media, such as the CBS broadcast on ?Silent Spring,? and in the President?s Science Advisory Committee policy documents, in Carson?s testimony before Congress, and in the E.P.A.?s ban on DDT, you can witness the same strategy to assert ignorance and risk, and use visceral images to transform scientific uncertainty into a political certainty.

One of the primary lessons 50 years after the publication of ?Silent Spring? is that expressing uncertainty is not just a skeptic?s position. Uncertainty is a way to manage scientific ethos and provide grounds for the public to participate in scientific controversies. Strategically managing uncertainty offers scientists a way to appear trustworthy, protect against bias, and assert their practical wisdom, moral virtue, and goodwill toward the audience. Scientists need to make it a habit to express uncertainty skillfully. They must do so in ways that provide an accurate assessment of choice in the face of our perpetual ignorance, and our inevitable uncertainties.

In a followup exchange after he sent his piece, Walker provided what I think is a valuable capping thought:

If you can be accurate yet still use uncertainty to frame the impact, you?re not only trustworthy, you?re interesting, and you effectively shape the terms of debate. We?ve all got to stop ignoring uncertainty, and instead learn to manage it. Fifty years later, I think that?s one of the primary lessons of ?Silent Spring.?

9:09 a.m. |Update

William Souder, the author of ?On a Farther Shore,? sent this invaluable note this morning:

This is an illuminating and important study of ?Silent Spring? and how Rachel Carson understood and deployed scientific uncertainty in making her arguments in the book?which turns 50 on this very day. And the conclusions reached by these authors make sense in light of Carson?s approach. A relentless reviser, Carson also depended in all of her books on a vast network of experts, scientists, scholars, and physicians who reviewed and commented on her work in progress. Carson listened to these reviewers.

This was particularly true in the section of ?Silent Spring? dealing with cancer, which Carson re-wrote several times, in the process moderated her claims of a link between pesticides and the disease in part on the advice of her own oncologist (Carson was being treated for the breast cancer that eventually ended her life at 56).

I also think the authors of this study offer wise advice to those of us writing today about issues like climate change: Rather than cede the useful concept of uncertainty to those who would deny scientific consensus, we?d do better to embrace and explore uncertainty for what it is?a valuable and inevitable part of scientific discovery.

One more thing that makes this study of Carson?s approach so fascinating is that I think you have to try to imagine the context Carson was working in in the late 1950s/early 1960s. The idea of chemicals contaminating what Carson called ?the total environment? was novel at the time. And it was her recognition of an exact parallel with the steady rain of fallout from nuclear testing that helped her explain what we knew?and didn?t know?about the consequences and potential collateral damage from heedless tampering with global ecosystems. It?s no accident that Baby Boomers became the vanguard of the environmental movement. They grew up drilling for Armageddon (?Duck and Cover?), and when they read Silent Spring they GOT IT.

Source: http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/27/how-rachel-carson-spurred-chemical-controls-by-highlighting-uncertainty/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Ann Romney explains Mitt's airplane window remark

Ann Romney said the air scare she had last week happened so fast there wasn't time to panic and recalled the details of the flight diversion, resulting in her plane making an emergency landing in Denver.

"I was just watching a movie and I could see out of the corner of my eye there were a lot of hustle and bustle going by me," Ann Romney told Jay Leno on the Tonight Show, "and all of a sudden my movie goes off and I turn around and I look at everybody and I'm like 'oh, there's smoke in the cockpit and there it was.'"

Get more pure politics at ABCNews.com/Politics and a lighter take on the news at OTUSNews.com

She explained her husband's subsequent comment afterward at a fundraiser when he joked that he didn't know why the windows on the plane don't open.

"It's his way of making light of how worried he is about me," she said. "It's his way of dealing with the panic of knowing how dangerous this was."

Mrs. Romney appeared for the first time on the sofa of the late-night host and also revealed that after she-amid criticism over her husband's campaign last week-said in an interview on Radio Iowa, "stop it. This is hard," that she at first thought she might have gone a little too far.

"I stepped out of the interview and I was like, 'oh dear, was that a little strong?'" she recalled thinking. She said since though "everyone I've seen has given me high fives."

Leno asked Mrs. Romney about the videotape of her husband's saying the 47 percent comment made at a closed-door fundraiser. She called the aftermath "frustrating."

"it's very frustrating thing because you try so hard to get your message out," she said. "You don't like those things to get misinterpreted as to what, why we're running and how strongly I believe and how important it is to what Mitt can bring to this country."

She added, "we care about the 100 percent."

Mrs. Romney said that four years ago she made a video tape and on the tape she looked into the camera and said, "Mitt, this is for you, sweetheart. I'm never doing this again."

She showed her husband the clips and he quipped, "you know, Ann you say that after every pregnancy."

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ann-romney-explains-mitts-airplane-remark-leno-140038311--abc-news-politics.html

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Scientists Go Deep On Genes Of SARS-Like Virus

Coronaviruses get their name from the crown-like tentacles that surround their rims. Enlarge BSIP/UIG via Getty Images

Coronaviruses get their name from the crown-like tentacles that surround their rims.

BSIP/UIG via Getty Images

Coronaviruses get their name from the crown-like tentacles that surround their rims.

When an unknown virus emerges, disease detectives turn to gene sequencers ? not magnifying glasses ? to identify the culprit.

So when a new type of coronavirus killed a man in Saudia Arabia and hospitalized another in the U.K., investigators got cracking.

Both patients showed symptoms similar SARS. But thanks to fast and accurate gene sequencing, health officials quickly realized that this isn't SARS or even a known coronavirus that causes colds. Rather it's a totally new virus that needs to be handled with caution until more is known about it.

Yesterday scientists at Britain's Health Protection Agency partially decoded the new virus's genetic sequence. They've placed the virus on the family tree of coronaviruses. And even given the virus a temporary name, which I have to warn you is quite a mouthful: London1_novel CoV 2012.

The virus appears to be most closely related to a cluster of bat viruses, and "it is genetically very different than SARS," Ralph Baric, a microbiologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, tells Shots.

But the DNA sequence isn't just a tool for hanging the virus on the right branch of the family tree. It has helped health workers rapidly respond to the disease in ways they couldn't when SARS emerged in China in 2002.

? The new coronavirus has been tentatively named London1_novel CoV 2012. A small piece of its genome tells researchers how closely related the virus is to other known coronavirus, such as SARS. Courtesy of Health Protection Agency.

The new coronavirus has been tentatively named London1_novel CoV 2012. A small piece of its genome tells researchers how closely related the virus is to other known coronavirus, such as SARS.

With the new virus's DNA at their fingertips, health workers alerted the WHO about the potentially dangers of the virus just three weeks after the second patient showed symptoms.

With the SARS epidemic, it took over three months ? and hundreds of infected people ? before the WHO was contacted. That epidemic caused over 8,000 infections and killed nearly a thousand people.

This rapid detection of new viruses, Baric says, is due in part to a technology, called deep sequencing. The method allows scientists to differentiate closely related viruses and ones that are rapidly mutating. Deep sequencing decodes genes at a very high level of accuracy so even small changes are visible.

Since the SARS epidemic, virologists have used deep sequencing to discover dozens of new coronavirus in bats, badgers, birds and humans from around the world. They've built a family tree of coranviruses with these sequences showing how the viruses relate to each other.

When a new virus appears on the scene, like the London strain, scientists can quickly sequence it and figure out where it fits in. If it sits on top of a known pathogen, then doctors may have a good idea of how to counter it. If it's completely new, as in this case, health workers can alert the WHO and take extra precautions before it spreads.

The genetic code for the new coronavirus also gives doctors a tool for quickly finding new cases, Baric say. They can even go "back in time and see if the virus caused other strange respiratory illnesses over the past few months," Baric says.

"It is fairly common for doctors to keep samples from fatal respiratory cases," Baric says. Doctors can now sequence the samples and look for the new virus's genes.

Baric thinks these types of tools make deep sequencing "one of the most important advances in public health."

"There's tremendous expertise and capabilities for identifying and tracking new viruses" he says. "This is a huge public health advantage and it's been put in place [since the SARS epidemic] to protect the global health."

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2012/09/25/161770135/scientists-go-deep-on-genes-of-sars-like-virus?ft=1&f=1007

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Chinese IT Outsourcing Market Fuelled by Increasing Investment ...

Chinese IT Outsourcing Market Fuelled by Increasing Investment

The Chinese information technology (IT) outsourcing market has been forecast to increase at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15.1% through the years to 2015.

Growth within the Chinese IT outsourcing industry looks set to be driven by a number of factors including the rapid development of IT infrastructure and mobility services, along with the increase amount of investment from a number of multinational corporations.

However, increasing competition from other offshore destinations could pose a challenge to the growth of this market.

In addition to cheap labour, other drivers for the expansion of the Chinese IT outsourcing market include market deregulation, large-scale investment in technical education, better intellectual-property protection, IT core standards and infrastructure development, and the flourishing Chinese economy.

Despite promising growth, however, China still needs to consolidate its workforce capabilities in terms of English-language proficiency, project-management skills, and experience to step up its challenge to the global market.

While Chinese IT companies are increasingly bidding for international outsourcing projects, they are also leveraging their proximity to markets such as Japan and South Korea, where they have an advantage in both geography and language. The Korean electronics firm Samsung outsourced about US$18.5 billion of business to China in an attempt to lower production costs.

The best Chinese IT outsourcers are gradually incorporating more advanced applications, integration and infrastructure services into their offerings. Some are developing strong embedded software capabilities to work with makers of mobile phones and other hardware devices.

Key companies dominating the Chinese IT outsourcing market include Digital China Holdings Ltd., Fujitsu Ltd., Hewlett Packard Co., and IBM Corp.?The Chinese information technology (IT) outsourcing market has been forecast to increase at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15.1% through the years to 2015.

Growth within the Chinese IT outsourcing industry looks set to be driven by a number of factors including the rapid development of IT infrastructure and mobility services, along with the increase amount of investment from a number of multinational corporations.

However, increasing competition from other offshore destinations could pose a challenge to the growth of this market.

In addition to cheap labour, other drivers for the expansion of the Chinese IT outsourcing market include market deregulation, large-scale investment in technical education, better intellectual-property protection, IT core standards and infrastructure development, and the flourishing Chinese economy.

Despite promising growth, however, China still needs to consolidate its workforce capabilities in terms of English-language proficiency, project-management skills, and experience to step up its challenge to the global market.

Source: The Outsource Blog

Source: http://thesauce.net.au/chinese-it-outsourcing-market-fuelled-by-increasing-investment/

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Buyers Closing Costs for Commercial Real Estate Purchases | Red ...

U.S. ? (www.realtybiznews.com) Closing a commercial real estate deal involves many of the same costs as you would find in a residential closing. The main difference is the costs are normally much higher for a commercial deal due to the additional research required in not only closing on the physical property but the financial aspects as well.

It is normal for commercial real estate closing costs, even for an inexpensive property, to run into the thousands of dollars. As a buyer you need to be aware of these costs and factor them into your overall price for obtaining the property.

All of the closing costs are negotiable between the seller and buyer. As a buyer you can, and should, have it stated in the contract which party will be responsible for each cost at closing such as title insurance, deed stamps, surveys and settlement fees just to name a few. However, since RESPA (Real Estate Settlement and Procedures Act) does not apply to properties that have more than 4 residential units, your lender is not restricted in what they can collect from you at closing.

For example, in a residential closing the lender can only collect a certain amount of money to hold in escrow for expenses like real estate taxes and insurance. In a commercial real estate transaction there is no limitation and your lender could require you to put significantly more money into escrow or charge higher loan administration fees, points or any other cost they deem acceptable. Because of this it is critical you negotiate all of the fees for your loan with your lender well in advance of closing.

While there is nothing stopping you from closing a commercial real estate transaction on your own, it is highly recommended you use the services of a qualified real estate attorney. Although this presents an added expense at closing that can run anywhere from $1,000 to $5,000 or more depending on the size and complexity of the deal, it is money well spent. A mistake made at the closing table can cost you untold tens of thousands of dollars over your entire length of ownership of the property.

With all of this in mind, here is a basic breakdown of what you can expect each party to pay for in a commercial real estate closing.

Seller Paid Expenses
Title Policy covering the basic insurance requirements but if your lender requires specific endorsements to the title policy then the buyer can expect to pay for those endorsements.

ALTA Survey. Most lenders will require a new survey before lending on a commercial property. These surveys can cost anywhere from $800 and up depending on the property involved.

UCC Searches. These are similar to title searches except they are done on any personal property or equipment that is being sold as part of the transaction. The UCC is similar to a mortgage that is placed on property. The UCC search tells the prospective buyer if there are any remaining liens on the property and equipment being transferred.

State and County Transfer Taxes. This is normally the deed stamps required by the local jurisdiction to be paid whenever title changes hands on a piece of property. The rate collected is set by the state or county.

Pro-rated expenses up until the day of closing. For example any utility bills such as water/sewer or electric that are paid on a monthly or quarterly basis will be paid by the seller up to and including the day of closing. This is also true for any real estate taxes that are owed on the property. The seller is responsible for paying all taxes owed up to the day of closing.

Costs to clear title. This includes any amounts needed to pay off the sellers existing financing on the property, record satisfactions of liens or mortgages, payoffs to municipalities, or any other expense that must be paid in order for the seller to deliver clean title to the buyer?

Read original article here

Source: http://www.rednews.com/index.php/2012/09/buyers-closing-costs-for-commercial-real-estate-purchases/

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Gonna Want Seconds: Crock Pot Cashew Chicken


I confess......I'm totally, Crazy, addicted to Pinterest! ?I simply can NOT help myself. ? There's just so much amazing stuff to see on it.....

Well, ?sometimes the recipes I find on it are sadly, terribly disappointing!!! Honestly, when you find a recipe that's been pinned over a zillion times you really get your hopes up that it's going to be fantastic.....

Then, sometimes, you hit pay dirt! ?A recipe that's yummy.... that maybe the whole family loves.....that's easy......that you can't wait to make again! ?Well, my friends, I give you pay dirt! ?Yes, this has been pinned a zillion times and it deserves to be. ?Crock Pot Cashew Chicken is just that...yummy, family loved, easy, and it will have a permanent place at our dinner table.




Crock Pot Cashew Chicken

Ingredients:

For the chicken:
2 lbs boneless, skinless chicken thigh?
1/4 cup all purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1?tablespoon?vegetable oil

For the sauce:?
1/2 cup soy sauce
4 tablespoon rice wine vinegar
4?tablespoon?ketchup
2?tablespoon?brown sugar
2 garlic clove, minced
1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger?
pinch teaspoon red pepper flakes
1 cup cashews-chopped

3 green onions, sliced for garnish
Cooked Rice

Instructions:
1. Trim any visible fat off the chicken.?
2. Combine the flour and black pepper in 1 gallon resealable bag. Add the chicken and shake to coat with flour mixture.?
3. Heat oil in skillet over medium-high heat. Brown chicken about 2 minutes on each side. Place chicken in slow cooker.?
4. Combine soy sauce, vinegar, ketchup, sugar, garlic, ginger, and pepper flakes in small bowl then pour over chicken. Cook on LOW for 3-4 hours. ?Add cashews and stir. Serve over rice. Makes 4-6 servings.




Source: 365 Days of Slow Cooking?via The Girl Who Ate Everything

Source: http://gonnawantseconds.blogspot.com/2012/09/crock-pot-cashew-chicken.html

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Are there any fighters who can beat Jon Jones?

Jon Jones' win on Saturday night was awe-inspiring. He survived a grotesque armbar, and came back to win with fourth-round submission. He seems to keep getting better and better with each fight, this time incorporating jiu-jitsu skills into his win. At the moment, he appears unbeatable.

Are there any fighters in the UFC who can eventually take him on and win? Any fighters who can take time to study Jones, figure out his every move, and then finally solve the Jon Jones puzzle?

Dan Henderson: The one-time PRIDE and Strikeforce champion was supposed to fight Jones before he was injured and UFC 151 was canceled. He has already put in the time and effort to fight Jones, and may already have him figured out. His age is an issue, but Henderson still wants the fight.

Alexander Gustaffson: One of Jones' biggest advantages is his reach. He was able to hold Belfort at bay throughout the fight by simply extending his arm. At 6-foot-5, Gustafsson is an inch taller. He has a fight lined up with former champ Mauricio "Shogun" Rua who will show if "The Viking" is ready for the next step.

Chael Sonnen: Based on Sonnen's inability to handle Anderson Silva in their last fight, there is no reason to believe Sonnen could beat Jones. However, the run-up to the fight would be so much fun. Considering the UFC put Jones up against a middleweight who lost a title shot, integrity of the belt doesn't matter as much as entertainment or making money. Sonnen has already shown he can get under Jones' skin in a way no one else has, and that just may give him the edge in a bout.

Anderson Silva: Could he beat Jones? Yes. Will this fight ever, ever happen? No. Silva keeps talking about wanting a fight with welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre, and he does have a few challenges waiting for him at middleweight.

Who is missing from this list? Speak up in the comments, on Facebook or Twitter.

Related UFC video from Yahoo! Sports:

Other popular content on the Yahoo! network:
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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/fighters-beat-jon-jones-142406430--mma.html

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Bees decrease food intake, live longer, when given compound found in red wine

ScienceDaily (Sep. 24, 2012) ? The idea that drinking red wine may provide health benefits -- or possibly even extend your life -- is an appealing thought for many people. Now, there may be added attraction. Researchers have found that when given resveratrol, a compound found in red wine, bees consume less food.

Previous scientific studies on resveratrol show that it lengthens the lifespan of diverse organisms ranging from unicellular yeast to fruit flies and mice. Since bees are social animals like humans, a team of scientists from Arizona State University, the Norwegian University of Life Sciences, and Harvard Medical School, decided to test the effects of the chemical on the honey bee.

In a series of experiments published in the journal Aging, the scientists tested the effects of resveratrol on the lifespan, learning ability, and food perception in honey bees.

Their research has confirmed that not only does this compound extend the lifespan of honey bees by 33 to 38 percent, it also changes the decisions that bees make about food by triggering a "moderation effect" when they eat.

"For the first time, we conducted several tests on the effects of resveratrol by using the honey bee as a model," said Brenda Rasc?n, an ASU alumnus and doctoral student with Gro Amdam, an associate professor in ASU's School of Life Sciences and the Norwegian University of Life Sciences. "We were able to confirm that under normal living conditions, resveratrol lengthened lifespan in honey bees."

Since resveratrol is an antioxidant, researchers also questioned whether it would be capable of diminishing the damaging effects of "free radicals" -- often released during stressful conditions. Free radicals are believed to cause damage to cells, and have an effect on how we age. Resveratrol did not, however, prove to extend lives of bees living under stressful conditions.

Yet, since the bees tested with the compound were living longer, researchers asked the next question: What's happening that is causing them to live longer?

"Because what we eat is such an important contributor to our physical health, we looked at the bees' sensitivity to sugar and their willingness to consume it," said Amdam. "Bees typically gorge on sugar and while it's the best thing for them, we know that eating too much is not necessarily a good thing."

Interestingly, Amdam, Rasc?n, and their research team discovered that bees given the compound were less sensitive to sugar. By using different sugar solutions -- some very diluted and some with stronger concentrations -- they found that bees receiving resveratrol were not as interested in eating the sugar solutions unless the sugar was highly concentrated. The bees basically changed their perception about food.

In a final experiment, they measured how much food the bees would consume if given the opportunity to eat as much sugar water as they possibly could.

"Surprisingly, the bees that received the drug decreased their food intake," said Rasc?n. "The bees were allowed to eat as much as they pleased and were certainly not starving -- they simply would not gorge on the food that we know they like. It's possible resveratrol may be working by some mechanism that is related to caloric restriction -- a dietary regimen long known to extend lifespan in diverse organisms."

The Research Council of Norway and the PEW Charitable Trust funded this study.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. brenda Rasc?n, Basil P. Hubbard, David A. Sinclair, and Gro V. Amdam. The lifespan extension effects of resveratrol are conserved in the honey bee and may be driven by a mechanism related to caloric restriction. Aging, 2012 [link]

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/nutrition/~3/fIpKhwk0Tng/120924142135.htm

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THE WALL OF PICTURES!! ;D ? Hourly Book

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

Source: http://javedshaikm.wordpress.com/2012/09/25/the-wall-of-pictures-d/

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The Romney In-Flight Fire Scare: Cut Mitt Some Slack (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/250763692?client_source=feed&format=rss

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