Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Beware malware networks in search engines

WebPulse Collaborative Defense/Blue Coat

The network of components that comprise the prominent "malnet" known as Shnakule.

By Athima Chansanchai

A new security report warns of malware networks ("malnets") lurking within Google and other search engines, driving unsuspecting Web surfers to sites where they might share their personal or financial information to unintended parties.

The Blue Coat Systems 2012 Security Report?details the online threats that snared victims in 2011 ??and will probably continue to do so this year. At the top of the list of vulnerable places online are search engines, where Blue Coat's research found was still the main way people access any kind of information on the Internet.?

WebPulse Collaborative Defense/Blue Coat

Malnets exploit search engine, email, social networks to lure users.

The report makes these central points:

It's clear from this data that cybercriminals are increasingly using the path of least resistance to create entry points into malnets. The two most popular entry points are Search Engines/Portals and Email. To exploit these as entry points, cybercriminals need only use them as they?re intended to be used by anyone ...

What is known as search engine optimization by businesses is called search engine poisoning when used the same way by cybercriminals. To exploit search engines, cybercriminals need only ensure that their sites rank high in the search results page by providing relevant content.?They can exploit the?very algorithms that search engines rely on to deliver meaningful results to users to ensure that their malicious results are delivered as well.?

And, while not every part of a malnet is malicious, the red dots in the first image above show a preponderance of malicious components such as exploit servers or malware payloads?found in search engine attacks coordinated through the largest malnet, Shnakule. According to this research, it dominated malicious activity on the Internet in 2011. Within its bag of tricks for the average consumer, Blue Coat found fake anti-virus programs, pornography, gambling, "malvertising" and work-at-home scams.?

Cavka, with a focus on scams, was another malnet prominent in North America.

Search engines were especially prone to malnet infection on and prior to Cyber Monday. The unofficial sales day, which falls on the Monday after Thanksgiving, has grown in popularity over the years, reaching a record of $1.25 billion in sales in November. It's such a landmine for consumers, security experts usually give advice on how to play it safe on Cyber Monday.

While search engines are vulnerable on a daily basis, they are protected, to some extent from malware that thrives on the traffic from headline makers. In 2011, the events that were likely to snag victims through emails and social networks were the Japan tsunami and earthquake, Prince William's royal wedding, and the deaths of Osama bin Laden, Steve Jobs and Amy Winehouse.?

Blue Coat's research explains why search engines are, in these cases, a little safer:

Interestingly, attacks that use search engines as the primary entry point typically do not target these big news events. Rather, they target a variety of search terms to cast a wide net. Potential victims searching for news about the current big event are often shielded from malicious results by the sheer volume of legitimate sites with actual content.

The report warns of these 2012 events as potential magnets for malware to tap into: presidential elections, the release of the new iPhone and iPad, the summer Olympics in London and the "End of the World" on Dec. 21.

More stories:

On Twitter, follow?Athima Chansanchai, who is also trying to keep her head above water in the?Google+?stream.

Source: http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/13/10392663-beware-of-malware-networks-in-search-engines-report

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Tuesday, February 14, 2012

How Physical Activity and Exercise Can Make Your Life Better | New ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]How Physical Activity and Exercise Can Make Your Life Better. New Health And Fitness.Org - Health Information You Can Use. While it is easy to get lost in some subjects, there is so much with benefits of physical activity and ...

Source: http://newhealthandfitness.org/2012/02/13/how-physical-activity-and-exercise-can-make-your-life-better-2/

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Monday, February 13, 2012

A Weekly Roundup of Small-Business News - NYTimes.com

Dashboard

A weekly roundup of small-business developments.

What?s affecting me, my clients and other small-business owners this week.

The Big Story: Feeling Better

Two surveys released last week say that small-business owners are feeling better than they?ve felt in more than three years and most have a positive outlook for growth and hiring. The skeptical speculator says the global economy gives no hint of recession in 2012. Some?bloggers see a bleak but improving economic outlook. But the chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab says it?s unlikely there will be a really strong recovery. Floyd Norris says United States and global growth is well below expectations. John Hussman says we?re still going into a recession and stocks could fall 25 percent. Rick Newman lists six things that could derail the economy. Some people think the United States is heading in the right direction.

The Economy: Payroll Taxes Again

Talks stall on extending the payroll tax cut. All measures of unemployment are falling. Manufacturers are stepping up their domestic investments. Corporate profits are not what they seem and insiders are selling heavily. Shopping malls across the country are experiencing near-record vacancy rates. Office-building construction is experiencing a severe drought. Amid a plunge in petroleum use worldwide, the United States finds itself the closest it has been in almost 20 years to achieving energy self-sufficiency. Yet gas prices are at record highs. The Federal Reserve chairman appeared before the Senate Budget committee and continued to defend the Fed?s efforts to control inflation and unemployment. Caroline Salas Gage reports that the numbers are proving Ben S. Bernanke?s critics wrong. As defense cuts loom, the president evaluates cheaper weaponry.

Your People: Skip the Meetings

Rather than wasting his time in business meetings, Furious Pete develops an amazing physique in only five hours. A study estimates that small companies have saved $17.6 billion annually by using mobile apps. Julie Rains offers team-building activities that work. Jane Shelton calculates how much home-office space an employee needs. An unexpected side effect of remote work is denser communities. The debate continues: do employees or their employers own Twitter followers?

Managing: A Meaningful Life

Warren Rutherford offers five ways to improve your attitude and commitment. Naomi Garnice explains how to be a go-to person. A brain test helps improve memory. Five early birds share their everyday productivity strategies. Annie Mueller offers a few tips for creative efficiency, including, ?Think in five- to 10-minute blocks?: ?It?s different than having hours of unbroken time, but that kind of luxury isn?t always possible.? Julien Smith writes a 5,000-word epic guide to getting what you want. Umair Haque explains how to create a meaningful life with meaningful work. This guy spent a year on a bike.

Red Tape Update: O.S.H.A. Rules

The ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Small Business, Nydia M. Vel?zquez, says of the Small Business Administration, ?In examining the current state of the S.B.A.?s loan management systems, there can be no doubt that modernization is desperately needed.? Robert Levin says the government is waging a secret war against small businesses. Employers must comply with new Occupational Safety and Health Administration rules. A partnership introduces a first-of-its-kind Web site to help California businesses navigate 2,409 pages of the health care law. A new bill aims to simplify 1099-K forms for small businesses. Some small-business owners say that big businesses and millionaires are not paying their fair share of taxes. But this guy says he paid 102 percent of his taxable income in 2010. A corporate tax break for buyers of computers, engines and other equipment is proving surprisingly popular. Bankers are having a tough time, but Matt Taibbi says Wall Street should stop whining.

Start-Up: Talk to Cisco

A press page generator hopes to help start-up companies introduce themselves to the media (and Will Ferrell introduces the Hornets and Bulls). Jessica Bruder reports on what Startup America has accomplished in its first year. That next great start-up is probably coming from a coffee shop (in fact billions of dollars were created in this one). A Kauffman Foundation study says that pending legislation could help start-ups raise more than $7.5 billion over the next 10 years. If you want to sell your start-up, you may want to talk to Cisco.

Ideas: Top 10 Scams

A miraculous NASA breakthrough could save millions of lives. A revolutionary large-wheeled robot is strong enough to tow a car and dexterous enough to open its trunk using the handle. Floating cities will be a reality within a decade. A new company tries to simplify event booking. Two entrepreneurs create a textbook case study of success. The Better Business Bureau unveils its top 10 scams of 2011, including: ?Some hotels are warning about a scam in which guests receive calls in the middle of the night purportedly from the desk clerk, who needs to verify your credit information. Of course, it isn?t the desk clerk.? A couple of companies are bringing down the price of solar. Susan Cain explains how to succeed as an introvert: ?Introverts have to find the places where they are comfortable stretching themselves and pushing themselves a little bit, while giving themselves the recharge time that they need.? Jack in the Box introduces bacon milkshakes.

Marketing: The Difference Between Good and Bad

Stephanie Miles suggests these seven hyper-local tools to increase business during off-peak times. Three social media video contests aimed at small businesses have scored big. Christopher Carfi explains the difference between good attention and bad attention. Is everybody following up with your customers but you? Jeff Haden offers negotiating tips, such as: ?Never provide an estimate when you don?t have enough information. Keep asking questions instead.?

Bosses of the Week

Meet the young entrepreneurs remaking New Orleans: Brittany, Jennifer, Michael and Kimberly. ?All of the bright, go-getting, 20-somethings ? are part of New Orleans?s post-Katrina explosion of entrepreneurialism and development, which has made the city a hub for socially minded millennials.?

Around the Country: A Purple Squirrel?

Only 13 of the top 100 metros have bounced back from recession. But restaurants are looking forward to another booming year. The Stevie Awards plans a three-day event about entrepreneurship in New York in June. Counties in the contiguous United States with a greater concentration of small, locally owned businesses have healthier populations than do those that rely on large companies with absentee owners. Kansas City is getting super-fast Internet, thanks to Google. A purple squirrel is found in Pennsylvania. A Brooklyn legal incubator is helping the New York tech scene. A growing community of New Jersey social entrepreneurs looks for ways to establish its legitimacy. Macy?s Win A Million competition enters another year. A popular Seattle start-up leaves some lessons as it shuts down. Two academics from Georgia start a national tour to help small businesses grow.

Around the World: A Blueprint for Russian Businesses

As a parody video promoting the London Olympics hits YouTube, the British Cabinet Office warns of possible Internet failures during the Olympics. Finnish start-ups are flourishing. A Swedish company introduces a giant touch screen. Nestl? introduces a coffee machine for small businesses in Europe. Global research and development spending is expected to increase in 2012. Private firms are assisting American businesses in dealing with foreign currency and communication issues in complex markets like China (where problems and babies are growing fast). Vladimir Putin sets out a blueprint for Russian small businesses (while at Odessa, the Black Sea emits frightening sounds). During a session of Parliament, Indian ministers were doing what?

Technology: The iPhone Dwarfs Microsoft

Symantec expands its back-up options for small businesses. Amazon is cutting its storage pricing. Yahoo unveils a new app search. The iPhone alone is now bigger than Microsoft?s entire business. Perhaps in response, Microsoft kills off an old friend and starts opening stores near Apple?s stores. The United States mobile app industry accounts for 500,000 jobs. Here?s a graphic showing how small businesses have journeyed into the cloud. So let?s look at 10 must-have cloud apps for small business and 20 apps and services that were important to one company?s start-up. Christopher Null compares six small-business Web hosting plans. Kurt Marko asks, which tablet fits your enterprise? Amazon considers bricks and mortar. Charging systems that send power from afar will soon be on sale.

The Week?s Bests

Place to Get Advice. Ryan Waggoner says to get your advice from the second best, not the best: ?Now, you want to become a great athlete and you can ask either of these guys for advice. You ask the first guy, right? Most of us would, but I wonder if that?s the wise move. Yes, the first guy will have good advice. ? But he can?t share with you the heart and soul of earning it. ? He can?t tell you about the dark nights of incompetence and wondering if you should just give up. He can?t tell you how to change. In other words, if you want to be faster or stronger, don?t ask the one who has always been the fastest or the strongest; they were probably born that way. Ask the one who has improved the most.?

Diet Advice. Christopher Nagy says that this year we should all eat like a caveman: ?A Paleolithic diet consists primarily of whole foods, animal protein ? preferably from grass-fed and wild-caught species ? fruits in limited amounts, nuts and good oils (olive, fish and coconut oil). ? The advantage of the Paleo diet is that it controls and diminishes the release of insulin. High insulin levels promote aging and play a large role in many of the chronic degenerative diseases of aging, such as cancer and Alzheimer?s.?

Reason to Go Back to Bed. Robert Gonzalez says there are 10 reasons to go back to bed, including, ?If you don?t, you?ll die?: ?Experiments in rats have shown that continuous sleep deprivation for upwards of two weeks inevitably leads to death; and outcomes are also fatal in rare cases where humans are literally unable to sleep.?

This Week?s Question: You probably know what digital cameras have done to Kodak, but do you know who invented the digital camera? You can find the answer here.

Gene Marks owns the Marks Group, a Bala Cynwyd, Pa., consulting firm that helps clients with customer relationship management. You can follow him on Twitter.

Source: http://boss.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/02/13/this-week-in-small-business-the-bacon-milkshake/

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Staff at The Sun tabloid arrested in bribe inquiry (AP)

LONDON ? Britain's biggest-selling tabloid newspaper was fighting to contain the damage after five of its employees were arrested Saturday in an inquiry into the alleged payment of bribes to police and other officials, detectives and the newspaper's parent company said.

Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. said the five employees from The Sun tabloid had been detained and that police had searched their homes and the group's London offices, potentially deepening the scandal over British tabloid wrongdoing.

A 39-year-old female employee at Britain's defense ministry, a 36-year-old male member of the armed forces and a 39-year-old serving police officer with Surrey Police, were also arrested, police said.

The development follows the arrest of four current and former journalists at the newspaper last month in connection with the same bribery inquiry.

Sun editor Dominic Mohan expressed his alarm at Saturday's arrests, but insisted the six-day-a-week newspaper would continue its work.

"I'm as shocked as anyone by today's arrests, but am determined to lead The Sun through these difficult times," Mohan said in a statement. "I have a brilliant staff and we have a duty to serve our readers and will continue to do that. Our focus is on putting out Monday's newspaper."

Two people familiar with the matter, both of whom requested anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the issue, said Murdoch was scheduled to head to London in the near future to spend time with the company's journalists. One person explained that the trip had been planned for some time and wasn't in reaction to the latest arrests.

News Corp. declined to comment on Murdoch's travel plans, or on whether he planned to address staff at The Sun.

Murdoch closed down the 168-year-old News of The World tabloid in July amid public anger when the extent of its phone hacking of celebrities, public figures and crime victims was exposed.

A former News of the World executive, who also requested anonymity to discuss the ongoing investigations, said The Sun's current deputy editor Geoff Webster, picture editor John Edwards and chief reporter John Kay were among those arrested Saturday. Sky News and other British media reported that chief foreign correspondent Nick Parker and reporter John Sturgis were also being questioned. News Corp. would not publicly confirm the identities of those detained.

The executive ? who said he was in touch with the Sun's senior staff ? claimed that management there were "fighting to halt morale collapse" at the tabloid, describing Mohan as "somewhat shellshocked" by the arrests.

A total of 21 people have now been arrested in the bribery probe ? including three police officers ? though none has yet been charged. They include Rebekah Brooks, former chief executive of Murdoch's News International; ex-News of the World editor Andy Coulson ? who is also Prime Minister David Cameron's former communications chief; and journalists from both the News of the World and The Sun.

Police said the inquiry ? which is running in parallel to investigations into phone hacking and alleged email hacking ? had also now widened its remit. It was initially focused on whether reporters had illegally paid police officers for information, but will now examine whether other public officials were also targeted.

In a statement, police confirmed the latest arrests came after information was provided to detectives by the management standards committee of Murdoch's News Corp., set up to investigate alleged malpractice.

News Corp. also confirmed that it had supplied the police with information, but insisted it would "continue to ensure that all appropriate steps are taken to protect legitimate journalistic privilege and sources, private or personal information and legal privilege."

"News Corporation maintains its total support to the ongoing work of the management standards committee and is committed to making certain that legitimate journalism is vigorously pursued in both the public interest and in full compliance with the law," it said.

Britain's National Union of Journalists claimed some News International staff felt let down by managers over their cooperation with the police. "Journalists are reeling at seeing five more of their colleagues thrown to the wolves in what many sense to be a witch-hunt. They are furious at what they see as a monumental betrayal on the part of News International," the union's general secretary Michelle Stanistreet said.

"Once again Rupert Murdoch is trying to pin the blame on individual journalists hoping that a few scalps will salvage his corporate reputation," she said.

All eight people arrested Saturday are being questioned by police in London and at stations in the southern England counties of Kent, Essex, Surrey and Wiltshire.

Police said later Saturday that they had completed searches at the offices of News International, a division of News Corp., in east London.

The five journalists from The Sun ? aged between 45 and 68 ? are being quizzed on suspicion of offenses of corruption and aiding and abetting misconduct in a public office. Police said the three public servants were being questioned on suspicion of misconduct in a public office and corruption offenses.

Deborah Glass, deputy chair of the Independent Police Complaints Commission, said Britain's policing watchdog was cooperating over the inquiry. "Today's arrests are further evidence of the strenuous efforts being undertaken to identify police officers who may have taken corrupt payments," she said.

Assistant Chief Constable Jerry Kirkby, of Surrey Police, confirmed that one of his force's officers was being questioned. "The force takes matters of this nature extremely seriously and we will not hesitate to respond robustly to allegations where there is evidence to support them," he said.

Surrey Police was responsible for the investigation into missing 13-year-old girl Milly Dowler, who was later found murdered. A wave of public revulsion over the disclosure that reporters had intercepted her voicemails in 2002 led Murdoch to close down the News of The World.

Britain's ministry of defense declined to comment on the arrest of the defense official.

___

Raphael Satter and Paisley Dodds in London and Ryan Nakashima in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

___

David Stringer can be reached at http://bit.ly/b2tTK0

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/enterprise/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120211/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_britain_phone_hacking

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Sunday, February 12, 2012

Looking for kids, tweens and teens (Doral) - MyModelTalk Free ...

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View the full version of this Miami Craigslist casting here... MMT_Castings is offline ?

Source: http://mymodeltalk.com/jobs/miami-craigslist-castings/861398-looking-kids-tweens-teens-doral.html

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China premier meets govt-installed Tibetan cleric (AP)

BEIJING ? Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao told a government-installed Tibetan cleric Friday to uphold national unity in a meeting amid recurring anti-government unrest in Tibetan communities.

The government's account of Wen's meeting with the Panchen Lama did not mention the unrest, which sparked two weeks ago with protests in southwest China. Chinese security forces shot dead Thursday two Tibetan brothers who had been on the run since taking part in the protests, U.S.-funded broadcaster Radio Free Asia said.

Wen urged the Panchen Lama to play a bigger role in maintaining national unity and ethnic harmony, a statement on the central government's website said.

The Panchen Lama is the second-ranked religious leader to Tibetans, after the Dalai Lama, but most Tibetans do not accept him because he was appointed by Beijing. The original boy selected by the Dalai Lama in 1995 has not been heard from since.

Radio Free Asia said the two Tibetans ? 40-year-old monk Yeshe Rigsal and his 38-year-old brother, Yeshe Samdrub ? were killed Thursday in the high-altitude pasturelands used by nomadic herders where they had fled after the Jan. 23 protest in Luhuo county. Radio Free Asia cited sources in the area and in the Tibetan exile community in India.

Luhuo and other Tibetan areas of Sichuan province have been sealed off due to recurring, sometimes violent protests, so the Radio Free Asia report could not be independently confirmed. Telephone calls Friday to the Communist Party propaganda department and the public security office in Luhuo rang unanswered, as did a call to the party propaganda department in Ganzi prefecture, which oversees the county.

In the Luhuo protest, Tibetans besieged a police station, drawing fire that killed at least one person. It marked a return to the mass anti-government demonstrations periodically used by Tibetans in recent decades to protest Chinese rule. A widespread rebellion across Tibetan areas in 2008 prompted China to smother the region with police and tighten controls on the Buddhist practices and the clergy that are at the core of Tibetan identity.

As a result, Tibetans have felt further alienated, but largely turned to individual acts of protest, most dramatically by setting themselves on fire. At least 17 Tibetans have done so in the past year, many shouting as they burned for the return of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, from his exile in India, where he fled in 1959.

Radio Free Asia also reported another immolation ? that of a yet to be identified monk Thursday in Yushu, another restive Tibetan area in Qinghai province, next to Sichuan.

In another protest, several hundred monks from Sekha monastery in Yushu staged a demonstration Thursday, holding banners and shouting slogans demanding human rights and the release of political prisoners, according to accounts from overseas Tibet lobbying groups and a video provided by a person with contacts with the Tibetan community.

The person said that the monks originally planned to march to the county seat more than a mile (2 kilometers) away, but that local herders stopped them, worrying that the monks would be arrested. Officials, police and troops arrived and persuaded the monks to return to the monastery, said the person, who did not want to be identified for fear of being punished by the authorities.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120210/ap_on_re_as/as_china_tibet

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Friday, February 10, 2012

Biological computer can decode images stored in DNA chips, applications remain unclear

Scientists from the Scripps Research Institute and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology have taken biological computing one step further, with a new molecular machine capable of decoding images stored on a DNA chip. Though it's referred to as a "biological computer," the researchers' machine isn't much like a CPU at all -- unless your CPU was manufactured in a test tube filled with a smoothie of DNA molecules, enzymes and ATP. Once they found the right mix, the team proceeded to encrypt images on a DNA chip and used their Turing machine-like creation to decode them, with fluorescent stains helping to track its progress. The above image, read from left to right, gives a more literal idea of what the system can do -- basically, it takes a hidden image and extracts a given sequence. Storing data on DNA isn't anything new, but decrypting said data in this fashion apparently is. The applications for this kind of organic computing remain a bit fuzzy, but it's pretty clear that whatever follows probably won't look anything like a typical computer. The team's findings were recently published in a paper for the journal Angewandte Chemie, the abstract for which is linked below. For a slightly more readable explanation, check out the full press release after the break.

Continue reading Biological computer can decode images stored in DNA chips, applications remain unclear

Biological computer can decode images stored in DNA chips, applications remain unclear originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Feb 2012 15:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Extreme Tech  |  sourceAngewandte Chemie  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/DXFvTS4aawo/

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Thursday, February 9, 2012

Take A Class On Kitchen Renovating | Dvncn

Shower and tub supplies in TN; Randy M. Harrison

At some point in time, chances are you?ll consider redesigning your kitchen. You may want to just change the appearance of your home, increase its value, or it could be your kitchen is falling apart. It will not matter the reason, and for many people, they want to carry out the work on their own. Anyone who has carried out DIY projects before may feel right acquainted with remodeling the kitchen. For those of you without the experience, it is possible to get the needed training. Make your place beautiful with cultured marble, As a designer I recommend you this.

You can take a course about renovating a kitchen to see if this is something you can do. At some seminar courses, you will not only get to watch a kitchen remodeling project being done, but you will get to help in the work. This type of class will give you the skills you need to have to remodel a kitchen. It won?t only show you whether you want to do it, but also show if you?ve got what it takes to do it. You might realize that remodeling a kitchen is a bigger job than you thought. It might additionally show that it is exactly what you can do and you want the challenge of doing it. If you need it to be just right, do as much as you can to learn about how to do it.

You can locate details about these courses by going online or looking through your local newspaper. See your local home improvement stores, or building supply centers for their assistance, since that is where you might be getting your materials. You might discover remodeling courses that are tailored for those who want to make it a career which means the classes may be expensive. But when you have the money, it might be worthwhile to sign up for such a class. If you carry out the remodeling well, it could really make your home look great while a shoddy job could really make life unpleasant for you.

Whatever class you take for upgrading your kitchen will help you in one way or another. There are many home improvement stores that provide training classes so you may want to find out. The courses they provide could be anything from using your tools to popular home improvement ideas. Though a lot of these stores may not present an actual kitchen remodeling training, they probably do provide courses on how to install cabinets, drawers and maybe kitchen sinks. These lessons are commonly a couple hours long but offer a wealth of useful information.

Typically these classes can be attended by anyone, plus they are free. It?s free because people will be excited to buy their tools and equipment after class. The only warning is that you may need to take more than one class to learn everything you need to know about kitchen remodeling.

Source: http://www.dvncn.com/?p=826

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Monday, February 6, 2012

Wrestling Retribution Project Trailer [Vid] | The National Sports Review

Be sure to check out our HUGE detailed report of the TV tapings though no spoilers so you all can read them HERE!

It is released today via the WRProject Tiwtter and apparently they are releasing it via streaming & torrents as a sort of nod to the fact that they understand that is how the world is working nowadays when it concerns piracy.

For now download it here LEGALLY!

This entry was posted in daivari, Featured, NJPW, ring of honor, roh, trailer, Video, Wrestling Retribution Project, WRP and tagged Chris Hero, Jeff Katz, Joey Ryan, MVP. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://nationalsportsreview.com/2012/02/05/wrestling-retribution-project-trailer-vid/

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Sunday, February 5, 2012

Keeping Up with Down Syndrome NSW: Relationships and Private ...


Liz Dore supports anyone who wants counselling in the areas of friendships, relationships, sexuality and/or grief. Liz also offers coaching in dating skills for singles who would like to maximise their opportunities of meeting people and finding a partner. Currently working with individuals, couples, professionals, families, and people with disability, Liz helps people aged from ten to seventy-plus years to develop and maintain good personal relationships. See Relationships and Private Stuff for more information,

This Dating Life
Liz has often been asked to cater for the needs of single un-paid Carers and for single professionals. The following seminar is suitable for single carers and professionals from any field, and is aimed at assisting individuals to network for themselves (for personal ? not professional ? development).
Tuesday 14th February 2012 6.30 PM ? 8.00 PM
Woodstock Community Centre, 22 Church Street, Burwood

Liz Dore, counsellor and dating coach from Relationships and Private Stuff will deliver a talk entitled ?This Dating Life? in which she will highlight ways busy people can maximise their opportunities to connect to people and build relationships. Some professionals hide behind their titles and their suits but ultimately it?s skin to skin when the lights are out. The truly, madly, deeply in love phase is different to the long bonding phase. How do you ? find a partner who will want to be by your side supporting you while you?re vomiting from a virus or receiving an award for excellence in your ? field?

Registration Fee: $130 includes the seminar and an individual follow up consultation. To register, send registration form and cheque to Liz Dore PO Box 1060 Burwood North 2134 or email completed form to lizdore@bigpond.com and discuss other payment options.

Friendship and Relationship Skills Workshop
Saturday 3rd and Saturday 10th March 2012, 3 PM ? 6 PM?
Woodstock Community Centre, 22 Church Street, Burwood
For people with intellectual disability, ASD or brain injury aged 16 and over.

This workshop is held over two sessions, giving the participants an opportunity to meet and socialise with others, while learning through structured education activities. Topics include: Conversation and turn taking; Making friends; Steps in forming relationships; Touching, timing and consent; and Protecting yourself from unwanted touch. Informal activities, such as going to a local coffee shop, are used to reinforce learning.
To register, send registration form and cheque to Liz Dore PO Box 1060 Burwood North 2134 or email completed form to lizdore@bigpond.com and discuss other payment options.


Supporting people with disability in regional NSW:?Workshops
On behalf of Northcott Disability Services workshops supporting the needs of people with disability will be presented by Liz Dore in Dubbo, Coonamble, Warren and Broken Hill in late February, March and April. ?This workshop series will include three-hour Relationships and Private Stuff sessions for parents and Carers, and full-day Train the Trainer courses in Friendship and Relationships Skills for professionals. ?For more information, contact Laura Hayden at Northcott in Dubbo by phone (02) 6882 1099, email Laura.hayden@northcott.com.au or mobile 0458 330 190.



Counselling
Relationships and sexuality counselling and consultations sessions are available in Dubbo
Wednesday 22nd February 20112
To make an appointment for a private session, contact Liz Dore on mobile 0416 122 634 or email ?lizdore@bigpond.com

Source: http://keepingupwithds.blogspot.com/2012/02/relationships-and-private-stuff.html

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