রবিবার, ৩০ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

Netanyahu: Israel, U.S. coordinated 'on highest levels' on Iran nuclear program

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Saturday that his government is coordinated with Washington "on the highest levels" concerning the Iranian nuclear program, and that Israel reserves the right to defend itself against a nuclear-armed Islamic Republic.

In interviews to Israel's Channel 2 and Channel 10, Netanyahu said that "nothing has changed in the Iranian nuclear program? perhaps people did not know the pace of progress [of the Iranian program] and that is what my speech meant to present. Time is running out."

When asked about the possibility of an Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear facilities, Netanyahu said that "I have not limited for a minute Israel's right to act to defend itself at any time."

Concerning his speech at the UN General Assembly, during which he presented a diagram of the Iranian nuclear progress (and which became a subject of mostly satirical coverage worldwide), Netanyahu said that "there is always a difficult cerebral, intellectual mission, how to take a complex issue and make it simple."

Netanyahu added he had "a pretty long talk" with U.S. President Barack Obama, followed by "a one-on-one meeting with [Secretary of State Hillary] Clinton. Our teams are talking on the highest levels. I think Israel and the U.S. can reach much more concrete understandings than what commentators may think."

On Friday, Obama and Netanyahu expressed solidarity on the goal of preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon, amid signs of easing tensions over their differences on how to confront Tehran.

Obama, who opted not to meet Netanyahu on his U.S. visit, spoke by phone to the Israeli leader, who used his UN speech on Thursday to keep up pressure on Washington to set a "red line" for Tehran. But in a softening of his approach, Netanyahu also signaled that no Israeli attack on Iran was imminent before the November 6 U.S. presidential election.

"The two leaders underscored that they are in full agreement on the shared goal of preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon," the White House said in a statement. But it stopped short of saying Obama had given any ground on his resistance to issuing an ultimatum to Tehran as Netanyahu has demanded.

Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney focused in his weekly podcast on criticizing Obama on not meeting Netanyahu.

"President Obama continues to show that he does not grasp the dimensions of what?s occurring and has no strategy to protect and advance our interests," Romney said of Obama's foreign policy. "We?ve seen a confused, slow, and inconsistent response to the terrorist attack in Libya, a refusal to be frank with the American people about what happened, and a complete failure to explain the growing terrorist threat we face in the region. Instead of standing with Israel?our closest ally in the region?he downgrades Israel to merely, quote, one of our closest allies in the Middle East. And he refuses to meet with Israel?s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, at a moment when a show of solidarity before the world is needed."

Both candidates spoke with Netanyahu by phone on Friday, and Romney also released statement of support of Netanyahu's speech at the UN General Assembly. The Republican candidate complimented the speech, but joked to reporters that he wasn't as satisfied with the cartoonish chart of the Iranian bomb the Israeli leader presented at the UN to illustrate his speech. "I complimented him on his address at the United Nations and suggested that his graphic was not up to the normal Boston Consulting Group standards," Romney said, immediately adding: "no, I didn't actually do that, but I was thinking that."

Source: http://haaretz.feedsportal.com/c/34191/f/620528/s/23f4b185/l/0L0Shaaretz0N0Cnews0Cdiplomacy0Edefense0Cnetanyahu0Eisrael0Eu0Es0Ecoordinated0Eon0Ehighest0Elevels0Eon0Eiran0Enuclear0Eprogram0E10B4674580DlocalLinksEnabled0Ffalse/story01.htm

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Any cases that increase you Memory in the iPhone 5? And clear case.

Hi Everyone Ive been watching Chris's Volg's all weekend and his geekouts and what caught my fancy is Chris's iPhone 5's case and was wondering were l would pick one up (I'm from Australia so it wouldn't be mall shop) a website would be handy. Secondly do any of you guys know or have heard of a case that is thin and you can add your own expandable storage for your iPhone. I have heard of iExpandable but its to thick for my liking if you know of a case that supports this if you don't mind can you send me a link to it.

Thank's for you cooperation Blake Condron

Source: http://lockergnome.net/questions/196931/any-cases-that-increase-you-memory-in-the-iphone-5-and-clear-case

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শনিবার, ২৯ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

China's lines around islands suggest more conflict

In this Sept. 19, 2012 photo, a costumer picks copies of newly-published maps of disputed islands, called Diaoyu in China and Senkaku in Japan, at a state-owned book store in Beijing, China. China hastily published the map to help maintain public outrage over the Japanese government?s purchase of some of the islands from their private Japanese owners. Beijing also has engaged in another type of mapmaking that may end up escalating the conflict. (AP Photo) CHINA OUT

In this Sept. 19, 2012 photo, a costumer picks copies of newly-published maps of disputed islands, called Diaoyu in China and Senkaku in Japan, at a state-owned book store in Beijing, China. China hastily published the map to help maintain public outrage over the Japanese government?s purchase of some of the islands from their private Japanese owners. Beijing also has engaged in another type of mapmaking that may end up escalating the conflict. (AP Photo) CHINA OUT

FILE - In this Sept. 2, 2012 file photo, the survey ship Koyo Maru, left, chartered by Tokyo city officials, sails around Minamikojima, foreground, Kitakojima, middle right, and Uotsuri, background, the tiny islands in the East China Sea, called Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese. China hastily published a map to help maintain public outrage over the Japanese government?s purchase of some of the islands from their private Japanese owners. Beijing also has engaged in another type of mapmaking that may end up escalating the conflict. It has drawn new territorial markers, or baselines, around the islands, and submitted them to the United Nations. That could lead to a more serious attempt to claim the land, and broad swaths of valuable ocean around it. (AP Photo/Kyodo News, File) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, HONG KONG, JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA AND FRANCE

In this Sept. 19, 2012 photo, employees of a state-owned book store roll up newly-published maps of disputed islands, called Diaoyu in China and Senkaku in Japan, at a state-run book store in Beijing. China hastily published the map to help maintain public outrage over the Japanese government?s purchase of some of the islands from their private Japanese owners. Beijing also has engaged in another type of mapmaking that may end up escalating the conflict. (AP Photo) CHINA OUT

FILE - In this Sept. 14, 2012 file photo, the Chinese surveillance ship Haijian No. 51, left, sails near a Japan Coast Guard vessel near disputed islands called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, seen in background, in the East China Sea. China hastily published a map to help maintain public outrage over the Japanese government?s purchase of some of the islands from their private Japanese owners. Beijing also has engaged in another type of mapmaking that may end up escalating the conflict. It has drawn new territorial markers, or baselines, around the islands, and submitted them to the United Nations. That could lead to a more serious attempt to claim the land, and broad swaths of valuable ocean around it. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, HONG KONG, JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA AND FRANCE

(AP) ? One of the hottest items in bookstores across China is a map for a place that is closed to visitors, home only to animals such as goats and crabs, and the reason China's relations with Japan are at their lowest point in years.

China calls them the Diaoyus; Japan, the Senkakus. The new map shows a satellite image of a kidney-shaped main island with splotches of green and a list of 70 affiliated "islands" that are really half-submerged rocks.

China hastily published the map to help maintain public outrage over the Japanese government's purchase of some of the islands from their private Japanese owners. Beijing also has engaged in another type of mapmaking that may end up escalating the conflict.

It has drawn new territorial markers, or baselines, around the islands and submitted them to the United Nations. That could lead to a more serious attempt to claim the islands, and broad swaths of valuable ocean around them.

"The status quo has been broken in the last month by Japan's purchase and China's publishing of the baselines," said Stephanie Kleine-Ahlbrandt of the International Crisis Group. She said friction is likely to reach its worst level since the 1980s when China and Japan tacitly agreed to set aside the dispute in pursuit of better overall relations.

Beijing has been firm rhetorically. On Saturday, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said the country must safeguard its territorial integrity at a reception celebrating the upcoming National Day.

State television on Saturday reported that the country's navy and air forces conducted joint military exercises with live fire targeting a small island in the East China Sea.

More than lines on paper are at stake. By submitting the baselines to the U.N., China is spelling out its claim to the waters, the fish in them and the oil, gas and other minerals beneath them. Up until now, China has sought to jointly exploit resources with Japan through negotiation.

Japan says it bought to islands to maintain stability, noting that the nationalist governor of Tokyo had been pushing a more radical plan to not only buy the islands but develop them. China, however, was outraged, and considered Japan's move a violation of their earlier agreements.

The dispute has brought nationalism and patriotism to the fore, and sparked sometimes-violent protests in China targeting Japanese businesses, restaurants and cars. A Chinese man driving a Toyota Corolla was beaten unconscious by a mob in the tourist city of Xi'an and left partially paralyzed, according to state media. Chinese and Japanese coast guard vessels have been facing off in the contested waters.

The dispute is testing perhaps the most important economic relationship in Asia, between the world's second- and third-largest economies.

Japan has claimed the islands since 1895. The U.S. took jurisdiction after World War II and turned them over to Japan in 1972. China says they have been part of its territory since ancient times, and that it opposed and never acknowledged the deal between Japan and the United States. Taiwan also claims them.

The islands make a strange setting for a potential conflict zone. The largest is less than 4 square kilometers (1.5 square miles). It is home to a growing population of goats ? the offspring of a pair brought there by right-wing Japanese activists in 1977 ? as well as moles, crabs, Okinawan ants, albatross and lizards, and plants including azalea.

The islands themselves are remote, "intrinsically worthless features" that were largely forgotten for decades, said Clive Schofield of the Australian National Centre for Ocean Resources and Security at the University of Wollongong.

"The reason why there is uncertainty over the ownership, sovereignty is because they have essentially been ignored over a large period of time," Schofield said.

A U.N. survey in the 1970s that said oil and gas may lie beneath the surrounding waters changed that. Then, the Law of the Sea Convention introduced the idea of 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zones, or EEZs, which give coastal countries sole exploitation rights over all natural resources contained within.

China's new baselines are a prelude to defining that exclusive zone. It has drawn straight lines around the main group of islands and a separate set around isolated Chiwei Island, some 50 nautical miles to the east.

It also plans to submit a document outlining the outer limits of its sea bed ? those that stretch beyond 200 nautical miles from land ? in the East China Sea to a U.N. commission. The move is a way for China to underscore its claim, but has little real impact. The commission, which comprises geological experts, evaluates the markers on technical grounds but has no authority to resolve overlapping claims.

"That puts a line in the sand, but it doesn't have any legal impact," said Ian Townsend Gault, director of the Centre for Asian Legal Studies at the University of British Columbia in Canada.

He doubts whether the islands would be capable of generating a 200-nautical-mile EEZ because they are too insignificant ? too small and without a population.

"They are not important in the economic sense, no matter how beautiful they look on postcards," he said.

Legal questions aside, China sees the waters within its baselines as its internal waters under Beijing's administration.

That raises the risk of a confrontation in the clear waters around the disputed islands between Japanese coast guard vessels and Chinese fishing boats and law enforcement vessels, and even Taiwanese vessels ? all ostensibly with orders to patrol the area.

Already there has been sparring the past two weeks, with Chinese maritime surveillance vessels entering waters Japan claims, and the Japanese coast guard firing a water cannon at Taiwanese boats approaching the islands.

The parties could legally resolve their dispute if they submit it to the International Court of Justice in The Hague, the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea in Hamburg, Germany, or their own court.

"Both would be equally terrified of losing on flimsy grounds," said Townsend Gault. "They have snookered each other legally and diplomatically speaking. They have driven each other into a corner. We need some third party to say can you put this to bed so we don't have this enormous disruption in your bilateral relations whereby people are smashing up Toyota dealerships."

___

Associated Press writer Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contributed to this report.

___

Follow Louise Watt on Twitter at http://twitter.com/louise_watt

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-09-29-AS-China-Japan-Mapping-Trouble/id-f6483432462e4f4ba39ecf25cce85498

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Deal of the Day ? 17.3? Dell Inspiron 17R Ivy Bridge Core i7 Quad-core Laptop

Friday’s LogicBUY Deal is the?17.3″ Dell Inspiron 17R (5720) 3rd generation Core i7-3612QM 2.1GHz Quad-core laptop for $699.99. ?Features: 8GB RAM 1TB Hard Drive Intel HD 4000 graphics 8X DVD burner 4 USB 3.0 ports 802.11n WiFi Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit OS Adobe Elements 9.0 Photoshop and Premiere Bundle $20 Shutterfly Credit 15-months McAfee [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2012/09/28/deal-of-the-day-17-3-dell-inspiron-17r-ivy-bridge-core-i7-quad-core-laptop/

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RolePlayGateway?

You've been created for this moment. Created for this specific purpose. You have the potential to continue a person's life, to give them another chance. Allow them the honour of going further. The cost?
Your life.

Okay, so I have four spots open (both male and female) in my new roleplay "Cultured"
Please note, this is a literate, and advanced rp, so you need to be thinking of this as you make your character profiles.

Plotline:
Clones have now been legalised. And almost every person able to afford them has at least one. They are nothing special. Simple cells taken from an embryo implanted with an identical nucleus to the baby that was wanted. The cultured embryo's grow into an exact replica of their accepted human. They are kept in a Cultured Village, and most of them live there happily until the end of their life span. That is if they aren't needed. If something goes wrong with the Accepted Human, then there are always spare parts on hand. Since technically the clone has the same cells, and due to their intensive care, are normally healthier, the organs or tissue are much less likely to be rejected by the body as foreign material. Thus the human race now will never have to live in fear of waiting for an organ donor. And it isn't as though the clones are human. They were created, their not born. And technically speaking the embryo's would have been discarded, so really we have given them a better life. Not only that, but not all are needed, not everyone gets sick.
Your characters are the clones. They live in the Cultured Village. They don't know there purpose, or that there are people outside their dome that are identical to themselves. They live in complete ignorance until one particular error...One escapes.
Not to fear, he was recaptured and for a while he was held under the intensive care unit to make sure he wouldn't endanger the whole project. After months of good behaviour he was released back into his original village, though he is under careful watch and is not permitted to speak of his discoveries.
He now wants to get out (obviously), however
Now that he knows what dangers the others are in, he also may wish to get others out. The problem is he will have to be fairly discreet, as the Carers are watching.

If you are still interested in joining please look at the available slots and read through the full information Here

Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/RolePlayGateway

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শুক্রবার, ২৮ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

Daytrading, Stock Trading, Investing and Forex Trading ...

There are numerous opportunities to be had with stock option daytrading it can be a good way to earn some additional money if you're following the right methods and trading pointers. You've probably heard varied opinions about stock option daytrading that leave you pondering if it is a great idea or not, and a few of the people will even tell you it's a bad form to get yourself concerned in. While others will make it obvious that securities dealing is the ideal way to make a return on your investments. The most important factor to figure out your success is whether you've got the right coaching and systems to help your stock trades be profit-making. To find success with your career in daytrading remember that you're also going to want to contemplate how much you can invest. The more constantly and consistently you can work, even if you're only able to give a few hours each week, the more sorted you will be. One of the most vital rules about daytrading is that you will need to understand how much you stand to benefit and how much you stand to lose at the close of the day. Too many folks know how much they stand to benefit, but then they don't weigh that against what they stand to lose.

But because a day trader recognizes that wildly oscillating industrial info and also fooling information which will ultimately become public data will create the V word ( which is generally Adored by day traders ) VOLATILITY Volatility, to the average, each day financier is an exceedingly bad thing, and creates big risk, and most likely leads to great losses. There are that many reasons that you must pause and consider what type of losses and wins that you may take, but the most vital thing to recollect is you will need a clear view of what your options will be. Standard , buy-and-hold speculators like nice smooth, slow, steady ( upward ) movement. Volatility to a normal financier can be particularly straining psychologically, and regularly leads to the sickening phenomenon among long term speculators of ?buy high, sell low? ( which is, naturally, extraordinarily opposite of what the goal is ). ) You like the concept of trading a fashion that has the highest possible cost ( commissions, spread paid, needed set-up and technology, investment in ?learning how? ) and lowest possible margins ( money ? costs ). Fluctuating ) markets represent?IF they know what they are doing.

Please consider : You don't earn money in this game by emulating what everybody else thinks, by jumping onto the next hot indicator that other traders are talking about, or by attempting to prove how smart you are to the market by being a ?high frequency? retail trader. ( Do all of your trading mates gloat about ?scalping? the market? Hard luck for them, don't make the very same gaffe. ) At one time traders HAD to pay tons to trade because all commissions were high. Today, many traders Opt to pay through the nose in commissions by selecting to be, ?highly active day traders?. This made short-term trading not too much better than a bet at a casino. Hyperactive daytrading is a concept promoted by brokers as it pulls the most possible cash out of your account and places it in their income stream.

Source: http://traders101.com/2012/09/28/daytrading-daytrading-2/

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How to Fight Your Online Addiction and Regain Control of Your Attention [Habits]

How to Fight Your Online Addiction and Regain Control of Your AttentionHow much time do you spend each day responding to email, checking Facebook, sending and reading Tweets, aimlessly surfing your favorite websites and buying things you don't need? How much time, in other words, do you spend doing stuff online that doesn't add much value in your life, or in anyone else's? Too much, I'm going to guess.

I let it happen to me when I woke up Sunday morning, got on my laptop and started reading the New York Times. Ninety minutes later, I was still surfing from one bookmarked website to the next, vaguely aware that there were other things I wanted to do and that none of what I was taking in was very nourishing. And yet I remained narcotically glued to that screen?a baby bird with its mouth open, forever eager to be fed.

"There are few things ever dreamed of, smoked or injected that have as addictive an effect on our brains as technology," writes Stanford psychologist Kelly McGonigal in her terrific book The Willpower Instinct.

"The definitive Internet act of our times," she adds, "is a perfect metaphor for the promise of reward. We search. And we search. And we search some more...clicking that mouse...looking for the elusive reward that will finally feel like enough."

Or, as Nobel Prize winner Herbert Simon put it way back in 1978: "A wealth of information creates a poverty of attention." And retention. Taking in endless bits and bytes of information is akin to pouring water into a glass already full?in this case our severely limited working memory.

A growing body of research suggests that up to 95 percent of our behaviors occur on automatic pilot, out of habit or in reaction to an external demand or stimulus. We spend a crazily disproportionate amount of time seeking the next source of instant gratification, rather than pursuing the more challenging goals that ultimately deliver more long-term value and greater satisfaction.

It's not about summoning the strength to say "no." Each time we intentionally forgo something desirable, we deplete our already limited reservoir of will and discipline. When was the last time you resisted the seductive ping of an incoming email?

So how, then, to withstand this Pavlovian pull? And how, in turn, to take back control of your attention, so you can put it to better and richer use?

A few suggestions:

1. Lead yourself not into temptation. Instead, consciously choose times to turn off your technology entirely. The best time of all is at the start of your day, when you've typically got the most energy. Specifically, that's the best time to take on your most important and challenging tasks, without interruption, for anywhere from 30 to 90 minutes.

2. Carry a notebook with you throughout your workday. Download any ideas that come to you as quickly as possible?not just to ensure you'll remember them, but also to clear space in your working memory for whatever comes at you next. Alternatively, type the ideas into a memo pad on your smart phone.

3. Between meetings and obligations, take some time to breathe deeply?in through your nose to a count of three, out through your mouth to a count of six. In as little as one minute, you can completely clear your bloodstream of the stress hormone cortisol. You'll feel calmer, and you'll be better able to focus.

4. Take a 15- to 20-minute nap between 1 and 4 p.m.?especially on days when you've not gotten sufficient sleep and you find yourself dragging. Even a very short nap can dramatically increase your alertness and your productivity over the subsequent several hours. (This assumes, of course, than you can get your boss on board. Make the case that it'll improve your productivity.)

5. Designate and put in your calendar specific times each week to think reflectively, creatively, and/or strategically. Get up from your desk and take a walk outside, or find a comfortable, relaxing place to hang out. Leave your smart phone at your desk. The idea is to give the verbal left hemisphere of your brain a rest from its usual overload?and to rely instead during these periods on the more visual, imaginative right hemisphere of your brain. You'll know you're doing the right thing if you lose track of time.

Battling Your Online Addiction | Harvard Business Review


Tony Schwartz is the president and CEO of The Energy Project and the author of Be Excellent at Anything. Become a fan of The Energy Project on Facebook and connect with Tony on @tonyschwartz and @energy_project.

Image remixed from Mike Elliot.

Want to see your work on Lifehacker? Email Tessa.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/MvkvXEO_aSM/how-to-fight-your-online-addiction-and-regain-control-of-your-attention

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Askewl dot com ? Convenient Secrets In Loan Workout ? The Facts ?

Melisa D. M. Fraser ? Caused from the latest home property crash, The particular Aboard of Governors of the Fed banking technique granted and followed an insurance plan affirmation last March in read more. The federal government Hold and also the other economic regulators issued this plan statement to revise historical guidance in connection with workout of Commercial Property loans. Federal government government bodies are finding in which prudent Way s of gener mortgage loan workouts are often inside the needs in the standard bank and also the individuals.

According to the specialists within the field, there?s roughly 3.Five mil us dollars valuation on real estate debt in the united states leading to half is incorporated in the hands regarding community as well as local lending institutions. The majority of this kind of debts are in danger since the re-finance markets are currently non-existent. Add to that the actual rapidly declining price of these kinds of components plus you?ve got a commercial financial debt situation just like we?ve got in no way knowledgeable prior to on this land.

The sole useful reply in the near future can be a professional mortgage loan modification which is just what the Federal Reserve will be hoping for. The Current is preparing bonuses for commercial loan companies to stop the multi-trillion greenback downturn that will looms. Many financiers search really upon industrial home loan alterations, and so are much more prepared to use certified organizations about problem bank loan workouts. An industrial mortgage loan changes is an alteration for your current loan that might result in the conditions simpler for the company to afford. An advertisement house loan can be secured through accommodations, courses, shopping centers, apartment buildings, office buildings, shipping and delivery stores, or another kind of professional property that does not get into the actual 1-4 unit residential property explanation.

An industrial Home loan modification is not a fairly easy thing to risk-free and should end up being arranged through a lawyer informed about a and one who?s the particular supporting documents necessary to be capable of tactic your current lender which has a doable workout remedy. A good work out answer usually takes the form of an interest rate lowering, term file format, principal forgiveness, temporary forbearance, small refi choice or perhaps any blend of these kinds of.

Source: http://askewl.com/convenient-secrets-in-loan-workout-the-facts/

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USA Harvest founder charged with looting charity

The founder of charity group USA Harvest, which has ties to celebrities Scarlett Johansson, Hillary Duff, the Goo Goo Dolls and Green Day has been charged by the Justice Department with stealing more than $553,000 from the organization.

Hugh "Stan" Curtis, the founder of USA Harvest, has been charged by the US Attorney's Office in Kentucky with mail fraud, money laundering and filing false income tax returns with the Internal Revenue Service.

Curtis allegedly stole over $180,000 between September 2005 and September 2007 of donations that he solicited on behalf of the organization-a tax-exempt charity. The theft included some large donations meant for the USA Harvest. According to the criminal charges Curtis allegedly deposited checks into his bank account for the charity that included a $20,000 and a $25,000 check from donors.

The charity provides food and meals for individuals in need by partnering with restaurants, hospitals to get leftover food to soup kitchens and food banks. According to the USA Harvest website, which highlights their ties with celebrities such as Johansson, the charity works with 5,400 agencies to provide food and notes that they have provided over 437 billion pounds of food to organizations since their founding in 1989.

The criminal charges filed by the Justice Department allege that Curtis failed to pay taxes on approximately $553,891.67 in personal income which included $183,000 in donations and over $370,000 in personal travel expenses that he billed to the charity.

According to a press release from the US Attorney's Office in Western Kentucky, "None of the charities Curtis has been associated with - USA Harvest, Kentucky Harvest, and Blessings In A Backpack - have been accused of any wrongdoing or impropriety. The only charitable organization to have suffered any loss as a result of the conduct charged in the information was USA Harvest."

A request for comment from USA Harvest by ABC News has not been returned. A review of the court docket did not reveal a defense attorney for Curtis. If convicted of the charges Curtis could face a maximum of 52 years in prison.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/usa-harvest-founder-charged-looting-charity-195116745--abc-news-politics.html

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৭ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

Remarks of Assistant Secretary Strickling at Columbia Institute for ...

Address by Lawrence E. Strickling,
Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information
The State of Telecom ? 2012

Columbia Institute for Tele-Information (CITI) and IDATE

New York, New York
September 24, 2012

-As prepared for delivery-

I would like to thank my close friends, Eli Noam and Bob Atkinson, from the Columbia Institute for Tele-Information (CITI) and Yves Gassot from IDATE for organizing today?s event and inviting me to participate.? Today?s discussion is indeed timely as the international community weighs whether to impose 20th Century regulations on the 21st Century Internet. The Obama Administration is committed to fighting back proposals to hobble the Internet with telephone-era regulations and will work to preserve the Internet as a vibrant and growing tool for economic development and social expression.

Over the next few months, countries around the world, including the United States, will be considering their positions on these important issues as they prepare for the World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT), to be held under the auspices of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Dubai in December. There, member countries will consider updates to the International Telecommunications Regulations (ITRs), a multilateral treaty that governs international telephone traffic.? Much is at stake.

Today I will share why the Obama Administration strongly believes that the best way to resolve Internet policy issues, including those associated with investment in broadband networks, is through multistakeholder processes ? not intergovernmental treaties like the ITRs.

Our position is non-partisan. While there?s not much Republicans and Democrats can agree on in Washington, we are united in our embrace of the multistakeholder approach for Internet policymaking. Both party platforms include support for the multistakeholder model and concurrent resolutions approved by both the House and Senate support the approach.

And our support for the multistakeholder model of Internet policymaking is also shared by many countries.? Last year, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) adopted a set of principles for Internet policymaking that strongly endorse multistakeholder cooperation.? The OECD principles state that ?multistakeholder processes have been shown to provide the flexibility and global scalability required to address Internet policy challenges.?? Members of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) organization endorsed these principles last month, broadening this consensus.

The case for preserving and enhancing the multistakeholder model as the preferred tool for dealing with Internet policy issues is a strong one.? Multistakeholder organizations are directly responsible for the Internet?s success.? They have played, and continue to play, a major role in its design and operation.? These multistakeholder processes have succeeded by their very nature of openness and inclusiveness.? They are most capable of attacking issues because they can bring the speed and flexibility required in this rapidly changing Internet environment. ?Maintaining and extending this model is important for ensuring the continued growth and innovation of the Internet.???

A key factor in the success of multistakeholder processes is participation ? the fact that policy development is open to all interested parties.? Such parties can include industry, civil society, government, technical and academic experts and even the general public. Contrast this approach with more traditional telecommunications regulatory processes which, by their very construct, have a more limited set of stakeholders and are often designed to limit direct participation, or at least make it difficult for others to participate.? Top-down regulatory models too often can fall prey to rigid procedures, bureaucracy, capture by incumbents and stalemate.

Internet policy issues, on the other hand, draw a much larger range of stakeholders given that the Internet is a diverse, multi-layered system that thrives only through the cooperation of many different parties.? Solving policy issues in this space requires engaging these different parties. Indeed, by encouraging the participation of all interested parties, multistakeholder processes encourage broader and more creative problem solving. This is essential when markets and technology are changing as rapidly as they are.

Widespread participation by all flavors of stakeholders will be important to the ultimate success of any Internet policy initiative. Our role needs to be one of supporting more inclusion.? We must stand firm against the efforts of one faction or another to allow decisions to be made or unreasonably influenced by only certain stakeholders to tip the outcomes in their favor.

As we turn our attention to Dubai and the upcoming WCIT conference, the world should weigh proposals to add new international regulations against the spectacular progress that the Internet has experienced free of such treaty controls. ?To his credit, Secretary General Hamadoun Toure has promised to run the WCIT on the basis of consensus, and that is as it should be.? Given how well the Internet has grown and flourished over the years, any nation seeking to impose new restrictions on the Internet, no matter how ?light? the regulatory touch, should bear the burden of developing consensus support for such proposals.

One suggestion raising a lot of discussion is a proposal from the European Telecom Network Operators (ETNO) to assign governments the role of ensuring that service providers provide satisfactory quality of service commitments to each other and require providers to negotiate a sustainable system of compensation between providers applying the principle of ?sending network pays.?

Let me be clear:? the United States government is unequivocally opposed to this proposal for two reasons.? First, a treaty conference where only member states have a vote is the wrong place to debate a change of this magnitude.? Second, the proposal is a bad idea.? It is a solution in search of a problem and it most likely would disadvantage the developing world which has the most to gain from continued growth and expansion of the Internet.

On the first point, I have already described the benefits of the multistakeholder approach to dealing with Internet issues.? Contrast that open, inclusive approach with what will happen at the WCIT.? Only the member states will have a vote.? Industry, civil society and other organizations may observe and may have a chance to speak, but at the end of the day, this is no multistakeholder process where our interests are fairly represented.

Moreover, a treaty conference based on regulations written in another era is hardly an appropriate forum in which to discuss issues that are fundamentally different from the circuit-switched voice telecommunications that were the basis of the 1988 ITRs.

The ITU was established as the International Telegraph Union in 1865 to facilitate the interconnection of nationally administered telegraph networks.? As communications evolved, the ITU changed its names in 1932 to once again facilitate interconnection of national networks, this time the circuit-switched telephone networks based on national borders.? The definition of telecommunications used by the ITU today was adopted in Geneva in 1959, more than 50 years ago.? Throughout this history leading up to and including the 1988 conference, the focus was on the country-to-country exchange of traffic between government-owned or monopoly networks.

Over time, the relevance of the ITRs negotiated in 1988 has steadily dwindled.? A recent study reported that less than two percent of the international voice traffic of US operators is terminated under the traditional settlements arrangements of the 1988 ITRs.? So we have a situation where 98% of this traffic is exchanged without reference to the ITRs, yet a group of incumbent carriers now wants to extend this regime to Internet traffic?

The Internet does not operate under the anachronistic model of monopoly telephone providers that control all aspects of their networks within their countries.? Rather, it is a diverse, multi-layered system that thrives only through the cooperation of many different parties.? All of these parties together from the ?network of networks? that we call the Internet.? But the magic is that the system works without requiring all of these parties to have a commercial relationship with each other or even to know everyone else involved in a given communications.

Just as important is the fact that international treaty organizations, indeed most government bureaucracies, are not engineered to move with much speed and flexibility.? In January and February of this year, ITU held the World Radiocommunication Conference in Geneva where one of the most hotly debated issues was what should be on the agenda of the next conference in 2015.? Do we really want to subject the Internet to the glacial pace of decision-making that takes place in international treaty organizations?

Turning to the substance of the proposal, it simply is not a good idea.? First, what is the problem the proposal purports to solve?? Private negotiations between providers of peering and transit agreements have worked well on the whole in the absence of international treaty requirements.? There should be a compelling showing of how the current system is not working before this matter is taken up in treaty negotiations, and that case simply has not been made.? It may be the case that the regulatory framework the European incumbent carriers live under constrains their returns in a manner that reduces their incentive to invest ? I have not studied the matter and have no opinion on that.? But even if that is the case, that is no justification for upsetting the well-settled Internet interconnection regime with a proposal to raise revenues from other providers in the communications pathways as opposed to addressing the problem at its source.

Second, the proposal is a relic of an industry and network structure that no longer exists.? I understand ETNO takes issue with the fact that critics of its proposal have raised the concern that the proposal will impose new burdens throughout the chain of Internet connections, reaching both content providers and end users.? But that almost certainly will be the case since any company facing increased costs in the form of an access charge will seek to recover that cost from its customers, including other providers, content creators and end users.? To think otherwise is to ignore the massive transformation that has occurred in the industry since 1988.

Implementing a sending-party-pays regime would require a cascading series of payments across all involved networks.? A new study by Michael Kende at Analysis Mason demonstrates what will happen next and the news is not good for developing countries.? Foreign operators ?would likely raise the price of hosting websites serving countries with high settlement rates, which might lead websites to develop less content targeted at a particular country in order to limit their costs.?[1]? The report goes on to conclude that ?providers would be reluctant to invest in providing infrastructure to a particular country to which it is expensive to deliver traffic.?[2]

And we have not even talked about the issues of attempting to meter and bill for Internet traffic, what happens to network performance if such a system is grated onto the Internet, and the likely reduction of overall Internet usage that might result.? The potential harm this proposal could cause, particularly when balanced against the absolute failure of the proponents to make a case for why change is needed, demonstrates how foolhardy it would be for nations to take this proposal seriously at the WCIT.

Apart from the ETNO proposal, Secretary General Toure has raised the question of the sustainability of the Internet and the need for more investment, particularly in developing countries.? That is an important debate we should have, but it should be held in a venue where all stakeholders can participate and where all issues can be discussed.

For example, several months ago, UNESCO, OECD and the Internet Society released an important study on the relationship between local content, Internet development and access prices.[3] ?The report found a strong correlation between the growth of local content and the development of network infrastructure.? While the study reaches no conclusion as to causality, if the development of local content is a key factor in growing the Internet in developing nations, perhaps the global Internet community should be focusing on how to encourage content development in such countries, and not how to gum up the plumbing of the Internet.? That?s not a matter for discussion at WCIT and it?s not a discussion that only governments should have among themselves.? But it is an appropriate discussion for the global Internet community and we should work to determine where and how this important issue can be developed.

Stepping back from the specifics of the ETNO proposal, what the WCIT brings into stark relief is the fact that our international institutions originally designed for a world of monopoly providers operating within national borders do not work well in the borderless, global, multi-layered world of the Internet.? And governments quite naturally are struggling with how to define their roles in this new reality.? It is critical to the future of Internet freedom and openness that multistakeholder institutions demonstrate to governments that they can be heard and their issues dealt with in the multistakeholder process.? I believe increasing the meaningful engagement of governments in multistakeholder organizations is one of the strongest arguments we have, and indeed is a necessary precondition, to opposing the views of some nations to have international intergovernmental bodies replace multistakeholder organizations in important areas of Internet governance.

Although, as Secretary General Toure will tell you in his remarks this afternoon, the issues of ICANN and the governance of the domain name system are not today on the WCIT agenda, we in the Obama Administration have been thinking about the idea of ?enhanced cooperation? and the need to find ways for the global Internet community to have a more direct say in matters of Internet governance where historically he United States has a played a more central role.? In fact, we have made great strides in the last three years to ?internationalize? ICANN.? In 2009, the United States executed the Affirmation of Commitments with ICANN.? This agreement provides a model of enhanced cooperation by establishing mechanisms and timelines for the multistakeholder review of ICANN?s performance of its core tasks.? We expanded what had once been a unique role for the U.S. government to include the participation of the international community through review teams.

In 2010, I served on the first of these review teams which focused on evaluating ICANN?s accountability and transparency. Our team, which included representatives from the governments of China and Egypt as well as representatives from South America, Europe and Australia, made a series of recommendations to the board, all of which the Board adopted last year in Singapore.? The new CEO of ICANN, Fadi Chehade, has committed to complete the implementation of all but one of the recommendations by next month?s meeting in Toronto, which will provide a good start for the next review team, which will begin its work in January.

More recently, we made a concerted effort to employ the principle of enhanced cooperation and expanding international participation in Internet governance with respect to the IANA functions contract.? Last year, in anticipation of the expiration of the IANA functions contract, NTIA undertook two consultations of stakeholders, both domestic and international, on how to best enhance the performance of the functions. Based on input received from stakeholders around the world, we added new requirements, such as the need for a robust conflict of interest policy, to exercise heightened respect for local country laws and to increase transparency and accountability.

This spring, we took the unprecedented action of cancelling the initial request for proposals (RFP) because we received no proposals that met the requirements requested by the global community.? We then reissued the RFP and at the end of June. ?We awarded the contract to ICANN, whose submission in response to the reissued RFP did adequately meet the new requirements.? This contract is consistent with the global community?s input and will provide all stakeholders greater visibility into the performance of the IANA functions.? One priority task for ICANN, Verisign and NTIA will be to automate the root zone management system over the next several months, which will be important as we face the prospect of a large influx of new global top level domain names.

This brief summary demonstrates that multistakeholder organizations have the ability to move quickly to respond and evolve to better meeting the needs of governments without abandoning the model and should serve as guidance to all of us as we continue to face calls to ?regulate? the Internet through international treaty language.

Finally, I would like to close on a note of caution as the world prepares for Dubai.? Earlier this year in July, the United Nations Human Rights Council adopted a landmark resolution on the promotion, protection and enjoyment of human rights on the Internet.? The Council affirmed that the same rights people have offline must also be protected online, in particular, freedom of expression.[4]? Moreover, the Council recognized that the ?global and open nature of the Internet? is a ?driving force towards development.?? We all need to remember that the issues some countries wish to present at WCIT may be styled as matters of economics. But given how the Internet affects so much of our lives, they are just as much matters of human rights and freedom.

Last Thursday, I had the privilege to hear the President of Estonia, Toomas Hendrik Ilves, speak at the annual Freedom House awards dinner.? His topic was the ?universals of democracy and despotism? yet he reserved his closing remarks for a discussion of WCIT.? Here is a little of what he said:

The enemies of open society prefer the imposition of a regulatory system [on the Internet]. . . . The authoritarians will present proposals that would undermine the current multistakeholder model of the Internet, replacing it with a scheme that would allow them to expand control of their own populations and economies, extending their control to undermine the freedom and openness we value today.[5]

He closed with the words: ?Let?s not let them do it.?? It?s a call to action that the United States and all freedom-loving nations should follow.? Thank you.



[3] See Internet Society, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, and United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, The relationship between local content, internet development and access prices, 2012.? Available at http://www.internetsociety.org/localcontent (last accessed 20 September 2012)

[5] President of the Republic of Estonia Toomas Hendrik Ilves, ?The universals of democracy and despotism? (Speech delivered at the Freedom House Annual Awards Dinner, Washington DC, 20 September, 2012).

?

Source: http://www.ntia.doc.gov/speechtestimony/2012/remarks-assistant-secretary-strickling-columbia-institute-tele-information

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বুধবার, ২৬ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

Buying Your Dream Home? You Might Have to ... - AOL Real Estate

buying dream homeBy Marilen Cawad

With interest rates at record lows, it's hard to ignore the constant "buy now" real estate pitches. If you're renting and thinking now is a good opportunity to see what house you can afford, you are probably also thinking about what you may have to give up to buy that house.

In a survey released by Century 21 Real Estate, renters said they are willing to contribute less to their 401(k) to buy their dream home. Not a good idea, says Eve Kaplan, a financial adviser with Kaplan Financial Advisors in Berkeley Heights, N.J.

"The problem we often face as planners is convincing folks to postpone the 'here and now,' including enjoyable things, and focusing more on the future," Kaplan says. "It is really difficult to live on Social Security, which never was designed to be the sole source of retirement savings."

Americans are just not saving enough for retirement. According to a recent BlackRock survey, 58 percent of all 401(k) plan participants were not saving the maximum with their plans. The survey also found that eight in 10 retirees regret that they did not save more for retirement through their 401(k) plans.

"Contributing less to one's 401(k) could often mean sidestepping a valuable company match," Kaplan says. "It's OK to sacrifice for a home, but a better sacrifice would be to forgo the dream home -- gourmet kitchen, media room, etc. -- and retain 401(k) deferrals."

Instead of reducing or stopping your 401(k) contributions, Ron Howard, managing principal at Siena Wealth Management in San Jose, Calif., recommends reducing or eliminating some other expenses.

Even if you are buying a house you can afford, Howard says, you will still need to give up certain things that you were used to doing or spending on as a renter. That's because on top of your mortgage, you will have to deal with many unexpected costs as a first-time homeowner.

Sure, you could afford the house, but what about the property taxes, homeowner insurance, carpet replacement, general maintenance of the home and landscaping? To pay for these, Howard says you may have to do away with exotic vacations, expensive technology gadgets, dining out regularly or going to a coffee shop every day. Now might also be a good time to give up smoking and reduce your bar tab.

With soaring demand pushing rents to an all-time high, homebuying is looking more attractive these days. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage fell to a record-low 3.72 percent for the week ending Sept. 14, down from 3.75 percent the previous week.

"Now could be a great time to buy and lock in your housing costs," says Jessie Foster, financial planner at Raskin Planning Group. "If you are in an area where the rental market is booming, you will most likely see your rent increase each year."

To determine if you can afford to buy your dream home, use this rent vs. buy calculator. This tool would show you the fees, taxes and monthly payments to compare with your current rent. Use this mortgage loan calculator to see how much interest you could pay and your estimated principal balances.

"Another cautionary element here is folks buying more house than they can afford with an adjustable-rate mortgage. Interest rates may move much higher in the longer term, pricing some people out of the homes that seem more affordable now," Kaplan warns.

If you truly know that you can afford to buy that dream home, Howard says, go for it. But prepare to make lifestyle changes for the unexpected expenses that come with homeownership.

Just don't touch that 401(k), Kaplan says. "No home is worth jeopardizing future funding goals."

See more on TheStreet.com:
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Source: http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2012/09/25/buying-your-dream-home-you-might-have-to-give-up-some-things/

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How Vicious Spyware Contaminated Hundreds of Thousands of Rental PCs [Security]

Hundreds of thousands of PCs are rented every year in the United States. And, it turns out, a huge chunk of them have absurdly invasive, incredibly dangerous spyware preinstalled—by the company that rents them. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/C14vbiAVIyY/how-vicious-spyware-contaminated-hundreds-of-thousands-of-rental-pcs

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More investment ideas to cope with changing deposit protection ...

Home ? opinion ? More investment ideas to cope with changing deposit protection

guru speak

Asset Plus Fund Management September 25, 2012 1:00 am

In this column we will explore more complex types of investment.

Complex-return fund with capital protection: This fund invests mainly in low-risk assets such as government bonds, designed to protect the investment principal. The remaining minority investments are put into derivatives whose returns are based on changing underlying assets, such as equities, oil or gold. Risk level changes depending on what specific fund you choose, while investment capital is guaranteed under the capital protection policy.

Target fund under fund manager: Most target funds are mixed, with adjustable investment portions allocated between a fixed-income instrument and equity. We recommend that you invest in funds that gradually take profit whenever the Net Asset Value-per-unit hits the target.

Since a target fund's risk level is equal to that of an equity fund, this fund suits those with high-risk tolerance and with little time for market timing.

Equity fund managed to match or outperform benchmark index: As a rule, most of these funds feature high liquidity and daily trading. However, in trading profits, the investor will have to follow movement of the stock market on their own. The fund can be divided in two types:

_ Local equity fund - This features different investment policies - stocks that replicate the SET 100 or SET 50 Index, or dividend stocks, or large-market capitalisation stocks.

_ Foreign equity fund - Also known as a feeder fund, it invests in unit trusts of foreign mutual funds or exchange traded funds (ETF). Each fund features a different investment policy on foreign stocks.

One alternative for high-risk investors seeking high returns is daily trading in volatile commodity funds like gold and oil.

Investors must be aware, however, that seeking potentially higher returns inherently carries higher risk, so they must weigh their own risk tolerance against the expected returns. Equally critical is the need to study the fund details and policy before investing.

Investment Products Strategy Group, Asset Plus Fund Management

Latest stories in this category


Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/opinion/More-investment-ideas-to-cope-with-changing-deposi-30190998.html

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Scientists shed light on riddle of sun's explosive events

ScienceDaily (Sep. 24, 2012) ? Four decades of active research and debate by the solar physics community have failed to bring consensus on what drives the sun's powerful coronal mass ejections (CMEs) that can have profound "space weather" effects on Earth-based power grids and satellites in near-Earth geospace.

In a paper just published in Nature Physics, an international team of space scientists, including a researcher from the University of New Hampshire's Space Science Center (SSC), explains the mysterious physical mechanisms underlying the origin of CMEs. Their findings, based on state-of-the-art computer simulations, show the intricate connection between motions in the sun's interior and these eruptions and could lead to better forecasting of hazardous space weather conditions.

CMEs are clouds of magnetic fields and plasma ?- a hot gas composed of charged particles. The fastest and most powerful of these events can explode from the sun at speeds of more than a million miles per hour and release more energy than the current worldwide stockpile of nuclear weapons.

"By studying CMEs we learn not only about the drivers of space weather but also about the structure of the atmosphere of the sun and other sun-like stars," says lead author Ilia Roussev of the Yunnan Astronomical Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and the Institute for Astronomy at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.

Geomagnetic storms caused by CMEs can disrupt power grids, satellites that operate global positioning systems and telecommunication networks, pose a threat to astronauts in outer space, lead to rerouting of flights over the polar regions, and cause spectacular auroras. The storms occur when a solar eruption hits Earth's protective magnetic bubble, or magnetosphere.

The Nature Physics paper provides an explanation of the origin of fast ejections of magnetized plasma from the sun's atmosphere and associated X-ray emissions. It thus demonstrates a fundamental connection between the magnetic processes inside the sun's interior and the formation of CMEs.

"Through this type of computer modeling we are able to understand how invisible bundles of magnetic field rise from under the surface of the sun into interplanetary space and propagate towards Earth with potentially damaging results," says SSC researcher No? Lugaz of the UNH Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space. He adds, "These fundamental phenomena cannot be observed even with the most advanced instruments on board NASA satellites but they can be revealed by numerical simulations."

A long-standing goal of the solar physics community has been the forecasting of solar eruptions and predictions of their impact on Earth. In the paper, the authors note, "the model described here enables us not only to capture the magnetic evolution of the CME, but also to calculate the increased X-ray flux directly, which is a significant advantage over the existing models."

The work was supported by a CAS grant and two National Science Foundation grants in the U.S. -- one at the University of Hawaii and another at UNH. In addition to Roussev and Lugaz, the international team includes Klaus Galsgaard from the Niels Bohr Institute in Denmark, Cooper Downs from Predictive Science, Inc. in California, Igor Sokolov from the University of Michigan, Jun Lin from the Yunnan Astronomical Observatory, and Elena Moise from the Institute of Geodynamics of the Romanian Academy of Science.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of New Hampshire. The original article was written by David Sims.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Ilia I. Roussev, Klaus Galsgaard, Cooper Downs, No? Lugaz, Igor V. Sokolov, Elena Moise, Jun Lin. Explaining fast ejections of plasma and exotic X-ray emission from the solar corona. Nature Physics, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/nphys2427

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/x10MZTfga8I/120924144056.htm

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Mass. gas prices tumbles 7 cents per gallon

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শনিবার, ১৫ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

Collins Center director looks back on 20 years of music, theater ...

When Collins Center for the Arts Executive Director John Patches arrived in Orono 20 years ago, he didn?t expect to stick around for long. After all, he was only serving as interim director of the Maine Center for the Arts, as it was known then. A year, perhaps, and then Patches would return to his beloved New York City.

?I thought I?d just be filling in for a little while,? said Patches, who came to Maine with his wife, Elizabeth, a professor of vocal music at Colby College. ?Little did I know how my life would change.?

Maine and all its charms grew on Patches, now 69 years old, and within a year he?d accepted a permanent position at the center. As is his nature, Patches also quickly made friends in the surrounding community, from patrons and donors to restaurant owners and folks on the street. Anyone who has worked with him closely knows that John Patches is definitely a people person.

?He definitely creates a lighthearted atmosphere here,? said Brett Ziegler, CCA manager of special projects, who has known Patches since 2002, when he was a student at UMaine working backstage for the tech crew. ?We work in the arts and entertainment business, which is a fun business to be in, and John certainly lives that. He?s got a great sense of humor. He?s probably one of the most social people I?ve ever met. He can?t go to lunch anywhere without running into four or five people he knows.?

As with each of the previous seasons Patches has crafted, the upcoming 2012-2013 CCA season ? which starts this Sunday, Sept. 16, with a concert by the Afiara String Quartet, and kicks off officially on Sept. 29 with a gala performance from Ben Vereen ? boasts a diverse lineup, featuring a Nov. 7 concert with Dr. John and the Blind Boys of Alabama, and big-name Broadway shows such as ?Hair? and ?A Chorus Line.?

?I think John is steadfast in his commitment [to the CCA],? said David Whitehill, executive director of the Bangor Symphony Orchestra, which has made the facility its home since it opened. ?If you look throughout its history, the one strain you can see is John. He brings out the best things there. It?s remarkable for one person to have remained at the head of an arts organization for that long, but if you look at all the successful places around the country, they all have that kind of sustained leadership. He?s certainly brought that.?

Lots of things have changed in those 20 years ? including technological advances such as updated sound, lighting and computer technology throughout the center and an ever-evolving philosophy behind the programming.

?As audiences have changed, so too have we changed,? said Patches. ?We are dealing with a different kind of situation now, in 2012, than we were in the early ?90s. It?s always a challenge to create programming that is of the highest quality, but also gives people what they want.?

The list of major milestones in Patches? 20-year tenure is long. There were performances from major stars such as Dave Matthews, George Carlin, David Sedaris, Liza Minnelli, Bill Cosby and many others. This season, Garrison Keillor and the ?Rock of Ages? Broadway tour are some of the big-ticket items. There was Patches? work in cementing the long-standing relationship between the Collins Center and the Bangor Symphony Orchestra. And, perhaps the biggest and most visible milestone: the $11 million lobby and facade renovation, which was completed in early 2009 and gave the facility its current name (the MCA originally opened in 1986).

?It?s still growing and evolving,? said Whitehill. ?I think that?s a tribute to his understanding of the growing needs of our community, and of the arts in general. A lot of that growth and expansion is driven by him.?

Patches professes an undying love for chamber music, which he expresses in part in the wide array of concerts by world-renowned string quartets and recitals by piano and violin virtuosos that are offered several times each season at Minsky Recital Hall, one of UMaine?s several performance facilities. But he?s also an astute observer of the national and international performing arts world ? and with the economic downturn, he sees a very real crisis unfolding for musicians, dancers and other artists of all stripes.

?It is a very difficult time for the arts. What happens at the highest levels, financially, affects the artists, as funding begins to dry up,? said Patches. ?That?s why we, as an organization, always have to keep evolving. It affects us just as deeply. Couple that with the increasing age of some of our patrons and it presents a true challenge.?

To that end, Patches and his staff ? which includes, among others, Associate Director Adele Adkins and Technical Director Jeff Richards ? are always tweaking the schedule. In the coming years, expect to see more and more rock and pop artists. Patches noted that last year?s Bret Michaels concert was a huge success.

?Now there was a crowd we hadn?t seen in the Collins Center,? he said. ?It was really exciting to see all kinds of new people enjoying our facilities. And they really had a good time. The fashion choices were very interesting.?

There?s a lot of Broadway this year, which has emerged as an extremely popular offering for the CCA. The only problem with that? The CCA stage isn?t deep, wide or high enough to hold full productions of touring shows, which often have huge set pieces that simply won?t fit onstage.

?That?s the next step, of course. We need a bigger, better stage,? said Patches. ?We?ve made do with what we?ve got, and we?ll continue to do so. But that?s the dream. That?s my dream, to see that.?

Though he still does a fair bit of jet setting ? New York, Los Angeles, Europe ? Maine has turned into a home for him. Twenty years in a community like the Bangor area that, as Patches says, is uniquely welcoming and generous, will do that to you.

?I think the best part of this area is the people,? said Patches. ?The love and support we see from our patrons is outstanding. It?s what makes it very special.?

The 2012-2013 Collins Center for the Arts Schedule, at a glance

  • Afiara String Quartet, Sept. 16, Minsky.
  • Asphalt Orchestra, Sept. 19, CCA.
  • Comedian Gabriel Iglesias, Sept. 23, CCA.
  • Ben Vereen, gala performance, Sept. 29, CCA.
  • Bangor Symphony Orchestra, ?American in Paris,? Oct. 7, CCA.
  • Comedian Bob Marley, Oct. 12, CCA.
  • Philharmonia Quartett Berlin, Oct. 14, Minsky.
  • ?The Price is Right ? LIVE!? Oct. 17, CCA.
  • ?Voltaire and Frederick: A Life in Letters,? play, Oct. 30, Hauck Auditorium.
  • Bangor Symphony Orchestra, ?Heroic Beethoven,? Nov. 4, CCA.
  • Dr. John and Blind Boys of Alabama, Nov. 7, CCA.
  • Dream Factory, ski film, Nov. 8, CCA.
  • Shaolin Warrior, Nov. 27, CCA.
  • Bowfire?s Holiday Heart Strings, Dec. 4, CCA.
  • BSO and Robinson Ballet, ?The Nutcracker,? Dec. 15 and 16, CCA.
  • Danish String Quartet, Jan. 20, Minsky.
  • Bangor Symphony Orchestra, ?Bach, Mozart, Mahler,? Jan. 27, CCA.
  • ?Music of the Sun,? with ETHEL and Robert Mirabal, Feb. 1, CCA.
  • ?A Chorus Line,? national Broadway tour, Feb. 11, CCA.
  • The Midtown Men, members of ?Jersey Boys? cast, Feb. 13, CCA.
  • Jennifer Koh violin recital, Feb. 24, Minsky.
  • Bangor Symphony Orchestra, ?Vivaldi?s Four Seasons,? March 3, CCA.
  • Jonathan Biss piano recital, March 10, Minsky.
  • Celtic Nights, March 14, CCA.
  • Bangor Symphony Orchestra, ?The Pops: Simply Sinatra,? March 23, CCA.
  • ?Rock of Ages,? national Broadway tour, March 29, CCA.
  • Bangor Symphony Orchestra, ?Dvorak?s Stabar Mater,? April 14, CCA.
  • ?Hair,? national Broadway Tour, April 25 and 26, CCA.
  • Mnozil Brass, April 28, CCA.
  • Garrison Keillor, May 23, CCA.

The Metropolitan Opera in HD broadcasts at the CCA

Donizetti?s ?L?Elisir D?Amore,? Oct. 13; Verdi?s Otello, Oct. 27; Ades? ?The Tempest,? Nov. 10; Mozart?s ?La Clemanza di Tito,? Dec. 1; Verdi?s ?Un Ballo in Maschera,? Dec. 22; Verdi?s ?Aida,? Dec. 29; Berlioz?s ?Les Troyens,? Jan. 5; Donizetti?s ?Maria Stuarda,? Jan. 19; Verdi?s ?Rigoletto,? Feb. 23; Wagner?s ?Parsifal,? March 9; Zandonai?s ?Francesca da Ramini,? March 16; Handel?s ?Giulio Cesare,? April 27.

For tickets and additional show information, call 581-1755 or visit collinscenterforthearts.com.

Source: http://bangordailynews.com/2012/09/14/living/collins-center-director-looks-back-on-20-years-of-music-theater-community/

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11 Dos & 9 Don'ts Of Online Dating: Photo Edition [EXPERT]

11 Dos & 9 Don'ts Of Online Dating: Photo Edition [EXPERT]
Say cheese!

Poorly selected images will all but destroy your chances of finding love online!

When it comes to online dating, your photos really make a difference. You'd be surprised how easily you can sabotage your results with a poor choice of pictures. Some of the most innocent errors can become huge mistakes when you are looking for love online. Online Dating: How To Weed Out Bad Matches [EXPERT]

Here are some common errors you'll want to avoid:

  1. Photos with your children. People want to date you, not your kids.
  2. Photos with your pets. If it's just one pet photo, you seem normal. Lots of pet photos make people wonder about you.
  3. Messy stuff in the background. Clean up before you snap the photos! Neatness counts.
  4. Cutting someone out of the photo.?That's just tacky!
  5. Distance shots.?People want to see what you really look like, and they can't see anything in a long distance.
  6. Sunglasses. Sunglasses hide your eyes which really are the windows to your soul.
  7. Headshots. Yes, people want to see your entire body, please.
  8. Group shots.?Who can figure out which person you are in the shot if there are multiple people in every shot?
  9. Cocktail in your hand.?You're a social drinker and fun person, but you don't want to seem like an alcoholic, do you?
  10. The same outfit for different photos. Mix it up for different looks.
  11. Landscape shots or vacation photos. This is not your private art gallery. There are other sites for that purpose.

Stop and think for a moment. With online dating, site members read into everything you write and each photo you post. They literally make stuff up and add meaning to everything they see about you.

This is normal human nature and everyone does it. Given that, you want to take precautions so your photos show you at your very best, without any distractions or elements that polarize viewers or create stories. Top 20 Tips For Online Dating Over 40 [EXPERT]

More dating advice from YourTango:

Want more advice? Find an expert near you!

Source: http://www.yourtango.com/experts/coach-ronnie-ann-ryan/online-dating-photo-disasters-sabotage-your-love-life

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