Sunday, September 30, 2012

Beyond The Forecast with David Chandley: Republicans and Isaac head to Florida

By David Chandley

Activity is heating up in the Atlantic tropical season. Tropical Storm Isaac formed earlier today and most computer models have it moving to the WNW and strengthening. Long range models pull it toward Florida next week and the GFS have Isaac as a hurricane off the west coast of Florida. There is plenty that can change, but Tampa is especially interested in the path of this storm.

Next week the Republican National Convention will convene in Tampa. Local officials had a mock hurricane drill for Tampa back in May. In their exercise, a category 3 storm with 111 mph winds was bearing down on the city on day 2 of the convention. Their recommendation; cancel the remaining sessions. Interesting.

It has been nearly 7 years since a major hurricane has hit Florida, that was Wilma in 2005. The Tampa/St. Pete metro area has been spared for 90 years. Back in 2004, Hurricane Charley was heading toward Tampa and then abruptly turned west and slammed into Port Charlotte.

This will be one to watch in the coming days, so check back for updates. Peace.

David Chandley

About David Chandley

David Chandley, AMS certified meteorologist, appears on Channel 2 Action News at 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and is involved in team coverage whenever severe weather breaks.

Connect with David Chandley on:TwitterFacebook

Send David Chandley an email.

Source: http://www.wsbtv.com/weblogs/david-chandleys-weather-blog/2012/aug/21/republicans-and-isaac-head-florida/

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Angels, Rangers rained out in Texas

Angels, Rangers rainout

A fan waits through a rain delay between the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim and the Texas Rangers. (Rick Yeatts / Getty Images / September 29, 2012)

September 29, 2012, 5:04 p.m.

ARLINGTON, Texas ? The Angels and Texas Rangers were rained out? Saturday, forcing the Angels into an unwanted doubleheader on Sunday.

The first game Sunday will start at noon local time, or 10 a.m. Pacific time. The second game will start at 6 p.m. local time, or 4 p.m. Pacific time.? No rain is in the forecast for Sunday.

Although Saturday?s game was scheduled to start at 3 p.m. local time, the game was not called off until 7 p.m. Rain did not cease in the interim, getting heavier as the hours wore on.

The Angels would have been willing to wait all night to avoid a doubleheader. The Angels must now finish the regular season with five games in four days. If they can force a Thursday tiebreaker for the final American League wild-card spot, they probably would have to choose between Zack Greinke and Ervin Santana on three days? rest.

Santana was scheduled to start Saturday, which would have left him as an option to start a tiebreaker on regular rest. Greinke was scheduled to start Sunday.

As the rain fell earlier Saturday, Manager Mike Scioscia said he would have been fine with an 11 p.m. start.

?However, a? forecast that originally showed a 60% or 70% chance of rain into evening turned into 100%.

?I don?t know if I?ve ever seen a weather report that said 100% chance of rain,? Scioscia said.

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Source: http://www.latimes.com/sports/sportsnow/la-sp-sn-angels-rangers-rained-out-20120929,0,470262.story?track=rss

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We're a family 3 adults looking for lot for new triple/double ... - Zillow ...

Houses to rent or buy are expensive and don't know the area well enough.Husband will teach there. I read North Charleston near mall, Goose Creek near mall, Hanahan as safest, Ashley Phosphate Road, Dorchester Road, West Ashley, Outside Mark Clark Expressway, Summerville, but I don't know! I want less crime and less sex offenders around. A hospital that's good and close and good reputation is important. We shop malls, Walmarts, Targets, Best Buys, Woodforest Bank, love water parks, spray splash areas ONLY for children who visit, parks along river trails, swimming areas not just the ocean but ponds and rivers with parks, and new areas to travel close to where there is adding of new shopping. We are so tired of living in the same VERY nice apartment home for years wanting no one above or beside or next to us and no HOA fees. Nor do we want country or rural to have to drive 3 miles or more to shopping. WE NEED ADVICE PLEASE AND NO SPAMS!

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Source: http://www.zillow.com/advice-thread/We're-a-family-3-adults-looking-for-lot-for-new-triple-double-wide-home-or-a-house-to-rent-advice/461925/

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How Music Websites Should Work - By Manny Palmer

There are major concerns when you listen to music or download music.
Fans of course get shafted sometimes paying high prices for material, and fearing that most of that income does not go to the artists themselves.
Instead of trying to prevent piracy completely as this never works, we should instead aim to provide a space for artists and fans to directly interact, to come to an equilibrium point with price---supply meets demand, and everyone will feel comfortable downloading that music because it is worth what you pay for it. Songeist.com is aiming at doing this I believe, and it should definitely work.
They are non-exclusive; so don't worry about signing your life away.
Right from their site: www.songeist.com
"With record sales declining and declining, and more and more music distribution sites launching--- we wanted to allow our artists and fans to point us in the right direction. To download music or to upload music these days is a challenge...
Organizing your music life as a fan or as an artist is important. We aim to make this as simple as possible with some unique tools for each to encourage a positive environment for new music to be found, listened to, downloaded, and understood.
We are only as good as you tell us we are, so we want your feedback on any level. Whether you are an artist, a fan, a blogger, or a venue owner, let us know what you think so far
info@songeist.com
Our strategy since day one has been about maximizing artists' exposure throughout the Internet. Before launch we are using this holding site to promote artists around the world for free.
We hope that this will become a self-regulated version of other music websites, communally promoted site that gives the voice back to the people that make the music, and those that listen to it.
Be one of the first to capitalize on this unique opportunity...we're artists too, and we're confident that this framework has the potential to reach international audiences around the world.
Right now, we have founder members from across the globe and they are all people who are in the heart of each industry, up and coming, or make music that you might not have heard before."
We all as users have a chance to make enough money to eat, stay transparent with our business dealings with fans and give them value for money, listen to communal feedback, and encourage other artists that might not have had the means before. This sounds like a REAL music community. I think that as we continue to listen to music and want to know about new music, Songeist.com will fill the space that few music websites have not before.
I think as users we should let this positive and precise music community develop well in this ever-changing world! Go to Songeist.com and tell them what you think!

Source: http://www.artipot.com/articles/1389497/how-music-websites-should-work-by-manny-palmer.htm

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Innovation Or Authenticity? | Bill Plake Music

There seems to be a conflicting theme these days expressed by some veteran jazz musicians (from the widely know to the more obscure)?about the current culture of young, ?up and coming? artists.

On the one hand, I hear many complaints about the lack of individuality in sound and approach perceived in many of these young musicians: ?They sound generic. There?s nothing that identifies them immediately in what they play. When Coltrane, Miles or Monk played, ?you could tell it was them in one note.? (I?m paraphrasing here.)

On the other hand, there are complaints about a ?culture of innovation? amongst younger artists ?that is sometimes perceived as being overly self-conscious: ?What they?re playing sounds so forced, so unnatural. It doesn?t have a strong enough connection to the tradition. It comes across as too cerebral. It doesn?t swing.? (Again, I?m paraphrasing.)

I?m not here to agree or disagree with the sentiments expressed above. Rather, I?d like to talk about this conundrum specifically. I?ll start with this rhetorical question: As an artist, is it more important to be innovative or authentic?

Both innovation and authenticity have great value in art. In the world of jazz, some of the greatest, most influential improvisers have been stunningly innovative.

Besides the three I mention above, we have Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Lester Young, Ornette Coleman, and Charlie Christian, Kenny Clarke, to name but a few. All of these artists have radically opened up the possibilities of self-expression in jazz by expanding and redefining the role and/or capabilities of their respective instruments in the act of improvisation (or in the case of Mr. Ellington, compositional and orchestral possibilities).

But we also have a wealth of artists who are less innovative, yet highly influential and highly valuable to the jazz lexicon. For example, Cannonball Adderley, Kenny Dorham and Kenny Barron, though they didn?t ?expand? the boundaries of the music to the degree some others have, are strong and vital influences to the music. ?(Great artists with distinctive voices on their respective instruments!)

Whether more an ?innovator?, or more a ?traditionalist?, or ?stylist?, all great artists have one thing in common: Clear, immediate authenticity.

As Thelonious Monk said (another powerful innovator in jazz!), ?A man?s a genius just for looking like himself.? I think it?s safe to say all the musicians I?ve mentioned above most certainly fall within Mr. Monk?s definition.

Which brings me to my point: Whatever you want to do as a musical artist, place authenticity first.

By allowing for authenticity (yes, allowing), you free yourself from expectations. (You have nobody to answer to but your own muse, your own impulse to make music.) You free yourself from lots of stifling judgements about your music. (It doesn?t matter how ?unique? your music is, as long as it flows freely and generously from you.)

In essence, when you express yourself authentically through your music, you are in a constant state of gratitude. You accept the music that comes through you as a gift, and you share it with the world. You are open and welcoming to so much: ideas, sound, connections with other musicians, time, rhythm and more.

I think it?s important to keep in mind that the vast majority of innovators in the history of jazz weren?t trying to be innovators. They were just working with the materials of music as they found their way to their own need for artistic expression. They were?looking like themselves? as they followed their curiosity and passion.

It?s probably impossible to consciously try to make music that is ?innovative?. For music to be deemed innovative, it must, by definition, change the course of the art form, and significantly expand the vocabulary of the expressive language. It must have a measurable, lasting influence on the artists of the present and of the future. That?s huge. You can?t force that happen out of sheer will. It either does or doesn?t.

Just like the greats, all you can do is follow your curiosity and passion.?If your music is?innovative, it will most likely rise from ?a natural and authentic curiosity. Curiosity about the materials of music, curiosity about your instrument, curiosity about yourself. And passion as the fuel for action (practice and study).

Aim for making music that is truly beautiful to you.?Don?t second guess it. If it touches you, it will, without doubt, touch others. And that makes what you do so valuable. Don?t let the need for innovation steer you into making music that isn?t beautiful to you. (Likewise, don?t let the fear of unknown artistic territory keep you from surprising yourself with new musical discoveries.)

Allow the possibility that your viewpoint (tastes, ideas, values, perception, etc.) can change and grow. As I get older, my music making seems less conceptual and ?cutting-edge? to me, but so much richer, more clearly conceived, more expressive and more beautiful than ever before. (It?s more me than ever before.)

Whether or not your musical expression falls well inside the mainstream, or far from it, if you hear and feel something that lights you up, ?go after it. As long as it?s it?s truly yours, you?ll be glad you did.

?Who are you?? is the question that can best guide you. So take plenty of time to stay on the path of self-discovery as you cultivate your curiosity and expand your possibilities. Enjoy the beauty you create along the way.

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Emmerson?s quote?

Source: http://billplakemusic.org/2012/09/28/innovation-or-authenticity/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=innovation-or-authenticity

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98 per cent of tablet-based web browsing is done ... - PCR-online.biz

Email

98 per cent of tablet-based web browsing is done on Apple iPad

Onswipe has released a study revealing that the iPad accounts for nearly all web traffic originating from tablets.

The study found that Apple?s tablet represented 98.1 per cent of 29.5 million unique impressions over 1200 sites from September 13th ? 20th 2012.

The iPad stormed into first place with a huge margin between itself and second place winner Samsung Galaxy Tab, which got a mere 1.53 per cent.

Motorola?s Xoom managed only 0.21 per cent of tablet-based traffic, Amazon?s Kindle Fire came fourth with 0.11 per cent and Asus tablets made up only 0.6 per cent of traffic.

Onswipe?s results reveal that iPad users spent 56.9 per cent more time per web surfing session that iPhone owners. iPad?s 54.5 per cent share of total mobile web traffic is more than double the iPhone?s share of 19.05 per cent.

Apple?s iOS owns 75.12 per cent of total mobile content consumption across Onswipe?s monitored network, with Android taking 22.3 per cent and all others having just 2.5 per cent of the market.

Want to receive up-to-the-minute tech news straight to your inbox? Then click here?to sign up for the completely free PCR Daily Digest and Newsflash email services. You can also follow PCR on Twitter?and Facebook.

Tags: Internet, Apple, Samsung, Amazon, iPhone, asus, tablets, ios, ipad, motorola, xoom, galaxy tab, kindle fire, Onswipe, web browsing

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Source: http://www.pcr-online.biz/news/read/98-per-cent-of-tablet-based-web-browsing-is-done-on-apple-ipad/029265

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

PowerBlock Personal Trainer Set ? 5-50 Lbs ... - Body Health & Fitness

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This entry was posted in Women's Fitness and tagged Hand, Lbs., Personal, PowerBlock, Trainer. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://www.bodyhealthandfitness.net/powerblock-personal-trainer-set-5-50-lbs-per-hand-5/

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

NAACP takes bid to ensure US ex-con voting to UN

GENEVA (AP) ? The NAACP is taking to the U.N. its effort to ensure that all former convicted felons in the United States can vote.

A delegation from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People was holding meetings Tuesday at the United Nation's Geneva office in part to press the world body to send observers to the U.S. for this year's elections.

The diplomatic push comes against the backdrop of a related ? and vigorous ? debate about requirements in some states for would-be voters to provide proper identification before they can cast ballots.

The NAACP says nearly 6 million U.S. citizens are barred from voting because of previous felony convictions. According to The Sentencing Project, an advocacy group that seeks policies to make it easier for felons to vote, the United States has the world's largest prison population ? 2.2 million ? and more than 60 percent of inmates are ethnic or racial minorities.

In a statement, the NAACP said it sent a first delegation to the U.N. Human Rights Council in March "in the face of a mounting attack on voting rights in the United States." This week's visit followed up on that trip.

Hilary Shelton, a NAACP vice president, said the issue of voting rights could affect the outcome of the election between President Barack Obama and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

"The reality is that you're seeing two candidates who are going back and forth with slim leads between each other," he told The Associated Press in a vast conference hall. "A voting bloc like those who are formerly incarcerated ? like racial and ethnic minorities ? can make a tremendous difference."

According to the nonpartisan National Conference of State Legislatures, most states and the District of Columbia automatically restore the right to vote to felons once their sentences are finished. Five states either require a waiting period or require ex-detainees to apply to recover their voting rights.

Four states ? Florida, Iowa, Kentucky and Virginia ? bar former felons from voting for life unless they receive pardons from the governor, said the NCSL. Maine and Vermont don't strip voting rights from felons at all.

"Our overall end goal is that there is really no good reason to strip the vote away from anyone," the NAACP's Shelton said. "We have some shining examples of states in the United States that don't take your vote away at all when you're in prison."

___

Suzanne Gamboa contributed reporting from Washington.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/naacp-takes-bid-ensure-us-ex-con-voting-203254588--politics.html

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BlackBerry Jam Americas live stream available ... - Know Your Cell











If you're curious to know what's going on with BlackBerry Jam, RIM's BlackBerry 10 event taking place today, you can watch the live stream and see what goes on as it happens.

Just click on this link here and you can watch the event as it takes place live on the west coast!

We may see one or more new devices, and get a bit more news on BlackBerry 10. So be sure to tune in if you can and keep a tab or bookmark saved for us as we bring you follow-up news from the event.

?

Source: http://www.knowyourcell.com/news/1605142/blackberry_jam_americas_live_stream_available.html

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Entire Field of Particle Physics Is Set to Switch to Open-Access Publishing

A consortium has brokered an agreement with 12 journals to ensure that nearly all particle-physics articles are made immediately free on journal web sites


particle physics, open access, Sponsoring Consortium for Open Access Publishing in Particle Physics Freeview: experimental results from high-energy physics, such as this fireball of quarks and gluons, should soon be published in open-access papers. Image: CERN

From?Nature magazine

The entire field of particle physics is set to switch to open-access publishing, a milestone in the push to make research results freely available to readers.

Particle physics is already a paragon of openness, with most papers posted on the preprint server arXiv. But peer-reviewed versions are still published in subscription journals, and publishers and research consortia at facilities such as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) have previously had to strike piecemeal deals to free up a few hundred articles.

After six years of negotiation, the Sponsoring Consortium for Open Access Publishing in Particle Physics (SCOAP3) is now close to ensuring that nearly all particle-physics articles ? about 7,000 publications last year ? are made immediately free on journal websites. Upfront payments from libraries will fund the access.

So that individual research groups do not need to arrange open publication of their work, the consortium has negotiated contracts with 12?journals (see ?Particles on tap?) that would make 90% of high-energy-physics papers published from 2014 onwards free to read, says Salvatore Mele, who leads the project from CERN, Europe?s high-energy physics laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland, and home of the LHC. According to details announced on 21 September, six of the journals will switch their business models entirely from subscription to open access. It is ?the most systematic attempt to convert all the journals in a given field to open access?, says Peter Suber, a philosopher at Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana, and a proponent of open access.

The consortium invited journals to bid for three-year open-access publishing contracts, and ranked them by an undisclosed algorithm that weighed their fees against their impact factors and the licences and delivery formats they offer. Under the deal, the journals will receive an average of ?1,200 (US$1,550) per paper. Physical Review D, the journal that publishes most papers in the field, negotiated a fee of US$1,900 per article ?on the principle that we should maintain our revenue?, says Joe Serene, treasurer and publisher at the American Physical Society, which owns the journal. But the society?s prestigious Physical Review Letters missed out because its bid was too high, says Serene (the journal currently charges authors $2,700 for individual open-access articles). CERN and SCOAP3 will continue to negotiate individual open-access agreements with journals not included in the deal, and more could join when the contract is renegotiated in 2016.

Mele says that the goal of SCOAP3 is to switch the discipline?s journals to open access without researchers noticing any effect on their grant funding or on the way they publish papers. The consortium will pay the contracts from an annual budget of ?10 million, which is funded not by authors or research grants, but by pledges from more than a thousand libraries, funding agencies and research consortia across the world. In effect, existing journal subscription fees are being repurposed to provide the open-access funds.

Before any contracts can be signed, however, publishers must reduce the price of their subscription packages to offset the income from SCOAP3 ? a complex calculation to ensure that libraries don?t pay twice for the same content. Then SCOAP3 must collect its pledges ? not a foregone conclusion, as some libraries may be tempted to renege, figuring that their institution won?t lose access to the free papers anyway.

Mele hopes that success could trigger a domino effect in fields such as astronomy and astrophysics. ?I personally believe that once this is demonstrated to work, some variations, fine-tuning and adaptation of the idea will emerge,? he says.

But Serene and others caution that SCOAP3 may be hard to replicate. It has unique advantages in that most high-energy-physics papers are published in just a few journals, and that the field can be driven and coordinated by one central organization, CERN.

Suber notes the stark contrast between the quiet brokering of SCOAP3 and the battles playing out over mandates for open-access publication by research funders such as foundations and government agencies (see Nature 486, 302?303; 2012). ?I call it the peaceful revolution,? he says.

This article is reproduced with permission from the magazine Nature. The article was first published on September 24, 2012.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=05383d682b8c3b06f9805d3bbb220b60

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Five questions for Romney's Medicare plan

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Medicare is the one health insurance plan that will cover virtually every American at some point in life, and Republican Mitt Romney is proposing the biggest changes since its creation nearly 50 years ago.

With important details still hazy, The Associated Press asked the Romney campaign five questions about how his Medicare plan would affect consumers on critical matters of costs and benefits.

Some of the questions remained unresolved after the campaign's responses. It may take electing Romney to find out how his plan would work. (The AP also sent President Barack Obama's campaign a set of questions about his plans for Medicare, and those responses are the subject of a companion report.)

"One of the things that concerns me about both campaigns is that they tend to use jargon terms like 'competition' or 'protection for benefits' without spelling out how they would deal with the challenges that come up," said economist Marilyn Moon, a former trustee overseeing Medicare finances. "Their answer is to attack the other side, or simply reinforce the same jargon, rather than explaining how things would work."

Broadly speaking, Romney calls for shifting people now age 54 and younger into a different sort of Medicare. Once eligible, these people would get a fixed payment from the government, adjusted for inflation, to pay for either private insurance or a government plan modeled on Medicare. Current beneficiaries and those nearing retirement could stay in the traditional program.

Romney says it's time for bold action because Medicare faces insolvency in 2024, the tip of its long-term financing woes. Private insurance plans would get waste out of the system while protecting quality and affordability, he says.

Some Medicare questions for consumers to keep in mind, along with answers from the Romney campaign and the views of several experts:

Q: What happens if Romney's fixed health insurance payment for future retirees fails to keep up with rising medical costs?

A: Thousands of dollars in costs could get shifted to retirees, punching holes in household budgets. Health care inflation is now in a lull, but historically it has grown faster than the economy, overall inflation and workers' wages.

Romney's campaign says his goal is to avoid cost shifting and to secure for future Medicare beneficiaries affordable coverage options at least as good as what's available for today's seniors. Lower-income Medicare recipients would get more money from the government for their health insurance.

Competition among insurers will keep costs in check, says the Romney campaign. The government payment will be based on competitive bids. "As plans compete with each other to provide better care more efficiently, the growth in (health) costs will slow dramatically and place Medicare on a sustainable long-term footing," writes Romney policy director Lanhee Chen.

Earlier this year, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office analyzed a similar Medicare plan by Romney's running mate, Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan. It found that by 2030, seven years after the proposal would take effect, Medicare would be spending about $2,200 less on a typical 66-year-old than would be the case under current policies.

That may not be a problem if competition works. But Obama's first Medicare administrator says the numbers are so big he doesn't see how Romney can avoid cost shifting.

"I would hope through quality improvements we can mitigate rate increases. But Romney has not been clear about how he will cause improvements in care to happen," said Don Berwick. "I think the consequences will be that costs will continue to rise."

Tom Scully, Medicare administrator under President George W. Bush, says Congress would intervene to make up the difference. "The reality is if inflation outstrips that payment, Congress will probably make an adjustment," said Scully.

Q: Will there be a set of guaranteed benefits that private plans must cover in Romney's revamped Medicare?

A: The question is important because having a basic set of benefits would allow consumers to make apples-to-apples comparisons among plans. The Medicare prescription drug program and private insurance plans currently available through Medicare Advantage have a floor of protection.

The Romney campaign website says, "All insurance plans must offer coverage at least comparable to what Medicare provides today."

Some experts say that's too vague. "Comparable" can mean similar in dollar value, but quite different in terms of coverage. Insurance companies can design benefits to cherry-pick healthier customers. A high co-payment for home health care, for example, would discourage frail patients.

Romney said Sunday on "60 Minutes" that private plans will have to offer "the same benefits" as traditional Medicare, but did not get into details.

Q: Romney has said he would repeal Obama's health care overhaul. Would he reinstate Medicare benefits improved by the law? They include closing the prescription drug coverage gap ? the "doughnut hole" ? and expanding coverage of preventive care with no copays.

A: The campaign is silent on this issue, although Vice President Joe Biden is hammering the GOP nominee, saying Romney's repeal of the health law would lead to an immediate loss of benefits for millions of current Medicare recipients.

"I think it would be very hard for (Romney) to take that away," said Berwick.

Q: Romney would turn the Medicaid program for low-income people over to the states, sharply limiting its future growth. The costliest Medicaid cases are some 9 million elderly and disabled people who also have Medicare, more than 1 million of them in nursing homes. Would Romney require states to institute special protections for this vulnerable group?

A: The campaign says Medicaid spending would grow under Romney's plan, and states will have the flexibility to design programs that serve low-income people most effectively. But several experts said the federal government also has to require accountability from states.

"If there is no protection for these people a lot of states are going to start knocking them off the rolls," said former AARP CEO Bill Novelli, now at Georgetown University in Washington. "These are the most vulnerable among us. There has to be a way to deal with Medicaid without leaving it entirely to the states."

Q: Romney's privatization plan would not affect current beneficiaries or anyone joining Medicare before 2023. But does Romney also guarantee that he will protect traditional Medicare from any future cuts?

A: The campaign is silent on this issue. Moon, the former trustee, says it's an important question, and deserves an answer.

"I would be very nervous about remaining in a program that it has been announced is going away," said Moon, now with the nonpartisan American Institutes for Research. "Because there will be fewer and fewer people who will speak up for it over time."

On "60 Minutes," Romney said: "I don't want any change to Medicare for current seniors or for those that are nearing retirement. So the plan stays exactly the same."

Still, it's unclear if that means a guarantee of no future cuts for those remaining in traditional Medicare, or if Romney is merely saying that the overall design of the program will stay the same.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/romney-medicare-plan-key-details-still-flux-121937758--election.html

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Man's failing heart heals itself on day of emergency transplant

A miraculous thing happened the day Michael Crowe was set to receive a potentially life-saving heart transplant. Doctors had determined the surgery would be ineffective - but his heart suddenly started beating again.

Crowe, a 23-year-old pharmacy student from Omaha, had been diagnosed with acute myocarditis, or inflammation of the heart muscle, likely caused by a viral infection. When his mother brought him to the emergency room at his local hospital on Aug. 14, doctors found his heart was only functioning at about 25 percent efficiency. The hospital referred him to the Nebraska Medical Center, and by the time he was admitted to the intensive care unit there, his heart's efficiency had dropped below 10 percent.

"If he had come to us any later, his heart would have just stopped," Dr. John Um, Surgical Director of Heart Transplantation at Nebraska Medical Center told ABC News.

Doctors hooked Crowe up to a heart-lung machine that would essentially act as his heart for him, pumping blood throughout his body.

"When the heart stops, that's defined as clinical death," Dr. Um said. "In this case, his body only stayed alive because the machine was pumping his blood for him."

Crowe was immediately placed on a list for an emergency heart transplant, and remained on the heart-lung machine in a medically induced coma until an appropriate donor heart became available.

After nearly three weeks, a heart was found. The good news was followed by bad, though: tests revealed he had contracted a blood infection. Doctors said he probably would not survive the transplant surgery.

About an hour later, one of his doctors noticed something strange - his blood pressure was going up, something that would be impossible if his body was only receiving blood through the machine.

"His heart started working again on its own," Dr. Um told ABC. "The left side of his heart was pumping blood again. The right side was still weak, so we slowly eased him off the machine. At this point, he was in pretty good shape."

Dr. Um said this was the first time one of his patients has been on an external heart-lung machine for this long before his heart started beating again.

"He's home now, doing great," Dr. Um said. "He's really, really lucky."

Um said doctors seem to be seeing more cases similar to this, in which a failing heart heals itself.

"The interesting thing is that if he had gotten a transplant right away, we would have never known if he could have recovered on his own," Um said. "Now that we have technology that allows people to remain on external heart machines longer, we could see this more."

In the simplest terms, Dr. Um explained, the heart got sick, triggering an immune response that shut the heart down to fight the infection, and eventually healed itself. Technology kept Crowe's body alive while his heart healed.

Although there could be effects on his heart in the future, Dr. Um said young people who suffer from acute heart problems like Crowe's tend to make a full recovery, healing fully.

Also Read

Source: http://gma.yahoo.com/blogs/abc-blogs/mans-failing-heart-heals-itself-day-emergency-transplant-100256688--abc-news-health.html

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Monday, September 24, 2012

Cheeky! Sofia Vergara Tweets Her Wardrobe Malfunction

Sofia Vergara's dress ripped during the Emmys -- and she shared the damage with her followers! Plus, check out more stars' cute, candid and crazy Twitter photos

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/celebrity-twitter-pictures/1-b-229669?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Acelebrity-twitter-pictures-229669

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White matter, old dogs, and new tricks at Dartmouth

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

###


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

?


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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

###


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

?


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


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

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Incipio DualPro iPhone 5 Case Review

Legit Mods and Ends Reviews

Manufacturer: Incipio Technologies
Product: DualPro Case - IPH-819
Date: Sun, Sep 23, 2012 - 12:00 AM
Written By: Nathan Kirsch -
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Protecting The iPhone 5 w/ Incipio

Now that the Apple iPhone 5 has been released there is a rush to find a case to protect these gorgeous new phones. Because the iPhone 5 is made out of aluminum, it is supposed to be less likely to crack or shatter, but do you rally want to leave your phone naked?? Having a better made iPhone is good news, but videos of dropped and cracked phones started being posted online just hours after the iPhone 5 was launched. Spending a little extra for a high-quality case could keep you from having to replace a phone, which could save you hundreds!

The case that we are looking at today is the DualPro, which is made by Incipio Technologies. The Incipio DualPro is a hard shell case with an inner silicone sleeve that can be found online for $26.95 shipped. Incipio officially states that the two-part DualPro case is a "unique hybrid design combining a Plextonium hard shell frame with a shock absorbing silicone frame." What is Plextonium you might ask? Plextonium is a proprietary blend of Polycarbonate made by Incipio that is said to deliver better drop and scratch resistance while also allowing easy, reliable manufacturing.?

Incipio DualPro iPhone 5 Case Colors:

  • Cherry Blossom Pink / Charcoal Gray
  • Obsidian Black / Obsidian Black
  • Indigo Violet / Charcoal Gray
  • Optical White / Charcoal Gray
  • Charcoal Gray / Citron Yellow
  • Cyan Blue / Haze Gray

Having an iPhone 5 case doesn't mean it has to be ugly and Incipio gives you six different color combinations to pick from for the DualPro case series. The color that we will be looking at today is the Charcoal Gray & Citron Yellow.

Inside the DualPro retail box you'll find vanity kit (screen protector, cleaning clock and application instructions), plastic folding smartphone stand and the case.

The image above better shows how the Incipio DualPro earns its name. On the left you can see the Citron Yellow impact absorbing silicone sleeve and then to the right the Charcoal Gray Rigid Plextonium shell.

Incipio DualPro iPhone 5 Case Measurements:

  • Length: 5.00 in (127.00 mm)
  • Thickness: 0.11 in (2.72 mm)
  • Width: 2.50 in (63.50 mm)
  • Depth: 0.50 in (12.70 mm)

Here is a shot of the Incipio DualPro installed on our black iPhone 5. The case has a thickness of 0.11 inches or 2.72mm, which makes the phone feel a bit bigger. The entire two part case weighs 1.11oz. The Apple iPhone 5 weighs 3.95 ounces by itself, so you are looking at 5.06 ounces at the end of the day. This is a 28% increase in weight, but the iPhone 5 with the DualPro case still feels great.

The mute switch remains open for easy access, but the volume buttons are covered up with silicone for protection.? The fit of the DualPro is excellent and the volume buttons still feel crisp when you press them through the case.

The Apple iPhone 5 has a bunch of stuff taking place on the bottom edge, so we need to spend a second here. The DualPro case fits great, but it does cover two of the openings on the redesigned microphone and speaker grills. The headphone jack and Lightning connector port were both unabated.

With the iPhone 5 resting on its face you can see that the camera lens and flash have plenty of room. The hard shell feels smooth and does not collect lint and dirt.

The inner silicone sleeve wraps around the iPhone 5, but do not impair the 4-inch Retina display. This is great news as you want to make sure that you see everything on that larger 1136 x 640 pixel display!

The Incipio DualPro comes with a plastic folding stand that can be used to hold the iPhone 5. Not too many people are going to take this with them, but it does work.? The stand is ideal for watching long Youtube videos where you can sit your phone on the stand and not need to hold it. The image above shows the stand being used while we were showing Gangnam Style to some friends that had never heard of PSY before.?

Final Thoughts & Conclusions:

The Incipio DualPro case turned out to be a very nice case that fit and complemented the iPhone 5 nicely. Some cases are too thick and take away from the smartphone, but that was not the situation with the DualPro. It also feels like it has the ability to protect the iPhone 5 with the two layers of protection and we love that. Silicon sleeves by themselves tend to stretch and wear out, so it is nice to have the hard shell keeping it in place.

When it comes to pricing the Incipio DualPro has an MSRP of $29.99, but it can be found online for $26.95 shipped. Not a bad price and it comes backed by a 1-year warranty should anything be wrong with the case. If you drop and break your iPhone 5 16GB smartphone the no commitment replacement price is $649.99. Spending under $30 to protect a $650 investment is a simple and wise choice. Be sure to put the Incipio DualPro on the list of cases to look at if you are shopping around!

Legit Bottom Line: The Incipio DualPro iPhone 5 case looks great, offers good protection and does not block any of the phones functions. This is everything you can ask for in a sub $30 case!

Questions or Comments? View this thread in our forums!

Return to Mods and Ends Home or Return Home



Source: http://www.legitreviews.com/article/2041/1/

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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Libya orders 'illegitimate' militias to disband

Soldiers from the Libyan National Army get ready to enter Rafallah al-sahati Islamic Militia Brigades compound, one of the compound buildings which can be seen behind the wall, in Benghazi, Libya, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012. On Friday evening hundreds of protesters angry over last week's killing of the U.S. ambassador to Libya stormed the compound of the Islamic extremist Ansar al-Shariah Brigade militia suspected in the attack, evicting militiamen and setting fire to their building. After taking over the Ansar compound, protesters then drove to attack the Benghazi headquarters of Rafallah Sahati where militiamen opened fire on the protesters, who were largely unarmed leaving at least 20 wounded, and several killed according to hospital sources. (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon)

Soldiers from the Libyan National Army get ready to enter Rafallah al-sahati Islamic Militia Brigades compound, one of the compound buildings which can be seen behind the wall, in Benghazi, Libya, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012. On Friday evening hundreds of protesters angry over last week's killing of the U.S. ambassador to Libya stormed the compound of the Islamic extremist Ansar al-Shariah Brigade militia suspected in the attack, evicting militiamen and setting fire to their building. After taking over the Ansar compound, protesters then drove to attack the Benghazi headquarters of Rafallah Sahati where militiamen opened fire on the protesters, who were largely unarmed leaving at least 20 wounded, and several killed according to hospital sources. (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon)

Soldiers from the Libyan National Army get ready to enter Rafallah al-sahati Islamic Militia Brigades compound, one of the compound buildings can be seen behind the wall, in Benghazi, Libya, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012. (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon)

Soldiers from the Libyan National Army get ready to enter Rafallah al-sahati Islamic Militia Brigades compound, the compound buildings can be seen behind the wall, in Benghazi, Libya, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012. On Friday evening hundreds of protesters angry over last week's killing of the U.S. ambassador to Libya stormed the compound of the Islamic extremist Ansar al-Shariah Brigade militia suspected in the attack, evicting militiamen and setting fire to their building. After taking over the Ansar compound, protesters then drove to attack the Benghazi headquarters of Rafallah Sahati where militiamen opened fire on the protesters, who were largely unarmed leaving at least 20 wounded, and several killed according to hospital sources. (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon)

(AP) ? The Libyan army on Sunday said it raided several militia outposts operating outside government control in the capital, Tripoli, while in the east, the militia suspected in the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Consulate said it had disbanded on orders of the country's president.

President Mohammed el-Megaref said late Saturday all of the country's militias must come under government authority or disband, a move that appeared aimed at harnessing popular anger against the powerful armed groups following the attack that killed the U.S. ambassador.

The assault on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, which left Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans dead, has sparked an angry backlash among many Libyans against the myriad of armed factions that continue to run rampant across the nation nearly a year after the end of the country's civil war.

On Friday, residents of Benghazi ? the cradle of the Libyan revolution last year that toppled dictator Moammar Gadhafi ? staged a mass demonstration against the militias before storming the compounds of several armed groups in the city in an unprecedented protest to demand the militias dissolve.

The government has taken advantage of the popular sentiment to move quickly. In a statement published by the official LANA news agency, the military asked all armed groups using the army's camps, outposts and barracks in Tripoli, and other cities to hand them over. It warned that it will resort to force if the groups refuse.

On Sunday, security forces raided a number of sites in the capital, including a military outpost on the main airport road, which were being used as bases by disparate militias since Gadhafi was driven from the capital around a year ago, according to military spokesman Ali al-Shakhli.

Tripoli resident Abdel-Salam Sikayer said he believes the government is able to make this push now because, thanks to the country's first free election in decades that took place in July, the public generally trusts it.

"There was no trust before the election of the National Congress that is backed by the legitimacy of the people and which chose the country's leader. There is a feeling that the national army will really be built," he said.

The government faces a number of obstacles, though. It needs the most powerful militias on its side to help disband the rest. It also relies on militias for protection of vital institutions and has used them to secure the borders, airports, hospitals and even July's election.

Some of the militias have taken steps over the past several weeks to consolidate and work as contracted government security forces that are paid monthly salaries.

In the western city of Misrata, for example, resident Walid Khashif said dozens of militias held a meeting recently and decided to work under the government's authority. He said the militias also handed over three main prisons in the city to the Ministry of Justice to run.

Since Gadhafi's capture and killing, the government has brought some militias nominally under the authority of the military or Interior Ministry, but even those retain separate commanders and often are only superficially subordinate to the state. El-Megaref told reporters late Saturday that militias operating outside state authority will be dissolved, and that the military and police will take control over their barracks.

But it remains unclear if the government has the will ? and the firepower ? to force the most powerful militias to recognize its authority.

Backers of the ousted regime continue to hold sway in some parts of the country, particularly the western city of Bani Walid and parts of the deep south. Gadhafi loyalists near the southern town of Barek al-Shati clashed with a pro-government militia for several days, killing nearly 20, and abducted 30 militiamen working with the authorities from a bus this week, according to Essam al-Katous, a senior security official.

Over the past 11 months, a series of interim leaders has struggled to bring order to a country that was eviscerated during the eccentric dictator's 42-year rule, with security forces and the military intentionally kept weak and government institutions hollowed of authority.

Powerful militias like Ansar al-Shariah in eastern Libya say there is no clear system in place for how the head of the joints chief of staff decides which militias are legitimate and which are not. The extremist group, which is suspected in the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Consulate, was not deemed legitimate by the state.

Rather than join the military, the Ansar militia, viewed as the most disciplined and feared one in the east, said it disbanded on Sunday.

"Now, we have only light personal weapons," said Youssef Jihani, a senior figure in the group.

He said the group turned over heavier weapons to Libya Shield, a major militia in Benghazi relied on by authorities. Senior figures from Libya Shield in Benghazi could not be immediately reached for verification.

The move to disband comes after some 30,000 people took to the streets of Benghazi for a mass protest against the militias on Friday. The protesters drove out Ansar gunmen and set fire to cars in their compound ? once a major base for Gadhafi's feared security forces. Others stormed into the Jalaa Hospital, driving out Ansar fighters there.

The militias, born as people took up arms to fight Gadhafi's regime, are organized largely along local lines and bristle with heavy weapons. Many pay little attention to national authorities and have been accused of acting like gangs and carrying out extrajudicial killings. Islamist militias often also push their demands for enforcement of strict religious law.

____

Mohamed reported from Tripoli, Libya. Associated Press correspondent Aya Batrawy contributed to this report from Cairo.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-09-23-Libya/id-e40d7b1cc0dd404fb48807e44f442fe7

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Bad postcard of the week: Plenty of room for ArtPrize entries in the Gerald R. Ford Museum lobby

GRAND RAPIDS, MI ? Thousands of people are heading to Grand Rapids this weekend for ArtPrize, flooding venues including the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum.

Luckily they?ll find a lobby that looks a little better than this.

I couldn?t resist pulling this classic bad postcard from the archives to coincide with the festival and the apparent new trend of incorporating our native son into some of the spectacular entries.

Yes, good places can produce bad postcards. Let me be perfectly clear, the Ford Museum is my favorite place in Grand Rapids.

It has outstanding exhibits. I routinely bring my journalism students to listen to fascinating guest speakers. And, this presidential history buff fills his Christmas list with items in the gift shop.

But none of those things are apparent in this boring postcard.

There are some pretty neat things in that atrium ? somewhere beyond the impressive collection of potted plants.

Looks like one of those ashtray/garbage can things. And take a look at all those hangers! Yes, you can bring your coat, there is plenty of room on that rack. The floor sure is shiny.

The museum has hosted some incredible ArtPrize entries during the past three years, though for some reason, the artwork featuring President Ford has been housed elsewhere in the city.

Take last year?s ?President Gerald Ford Visits ArtPrize? by Sunti Pichetchaiyakul. It was down the block from the museum, at the corner of Monroe and Pearl.

This year we have two. The Unknown Graffiti Artist has an image of the former president and first lady stenciled on the side of The B.O.B.

Then, also at The B.O.B, there is a massive Steam Pig-sized steel bust of Ford by Thomas Moran called ?Our President.? Oh, sure, there are Jerry-3P0 jokes out there. But it was the first one I voted for this year.

Now, pandering is an ugly word and I?m not going to use it. I know that these gifted artists were inspired by 38th president and wanted to pay tribute ? and would have done so even if the event was held in Buffalo. I happily hit the big ?thumbs up? icon on the iPhone for all of them.

Maybe, when ArtPrize is over and the crowds have gone away, ?Our President? can make its way over to the museum. There?s room for it in the lobby, once they move those potted plants away.

Readers, if you have a wonderfully dull or otherwise awful postcard to share, send me a scan and email me a copy. Or, you can mail the card to me at MLive Media Group, 169 Monroe NW, Suite 100, Grand Rapids, MI 49503. I can return the card, if you like.

Email Dave Murray at dmurray@mlive.com and follow him on Twitter @ReporterDMurray or on Facebook.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/michigan-news/~3/rz1VYahX3FY/bad_postcard_of_the_week_plent.html

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Fitness Exercise Workout: Fitness Exercise Classes

group, exercise, fitness, class, schedule, descriptions, aerobics Group Fitness URGENT: PLEASE NOTE THAT THERE WILL BE TEMPORARY CHANGES TO THE JULY SCHEDULE.

Group Exercise Classes Plainfield | Group Exercise Classes Joliet

Group Exercise Classes Plainfield | Group Exercise Classes Joliet

Hometown Fitness offers group exercise classes including boot camp, spinning class, silver sneakers, aerobics, kick boxing, cross training, belly dancing and more.

Healthworks Fitness Centers for Women: Class Descriptions

Healthworks Fitness Centers for Women: Class Descriptions

Pilates class incorporates props such as FlexBands, Fitness Circles or Toning Balls for an additional challenge. BarSculpt. BarSculpt? is a 55-minute, timed exercise class

Example Of Exercise Class Routines | LIVESTRONG.COM

Example Of Exercise Class Routines | LIVESTRONG.COM

Example Of Exercise Class Routines. Physical activity has been referred to as a means to achieving a healthy lifestyle. Group fitness classes provide instruction and

Fitness Program, Abs, Exercise Workouts, Fitness Programs and Free

Fitness Program, Abs, Exercise Workouts, Fitness Programs and Free

Fitness program and abs program, free exercises and exercise workouts, exercise and online fitness programs, free exclusive articles, my workout videos and reviews.

Ladies Only Workout / Fitness Classes in Lubbock, TX - Yahoo

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Searching for exercise classes in the Lubbock area? Here are some women-only fitness classes to consider.

Marysville Health & Fitness - Group Exercise Classes

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Marysville Health and Fitness group exercise programs give you a complete workout in a fun and invigorating class setting. We offer classes that combine

Dean's Fitness Center - Exercise Class Schedule

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To build a healthy lifestyle join Dean's Health and Fitness Center. You will find a caring certified fitness staff, workouts for all ages, group classes, Healthways

Aerobics, Aerobic Exercise, Group Classes, MA, NH, NY, PA

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Group Exercise - Aerobics & Aerobic Exercise. 15/30 Minute Abs: Power House on! 15 or 30 minutes of concentrated exercise for the core. Strengthen your abdominals

Source: http://www.sportsaddik.com/2012/09/fitness-exercise-classes.html

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Bill Clinton Has 'No Earthly Idea' if Hillary Wants to Run in 2016

Don't ask Bill Clinton for any clues pointing to a (Hillary) Clinton 2016 bid.?"I have no earthly idea what she'll decide to do," Clinton told Bob Schieffer on CBS's Face the Nation.?Hillary has "worked hard for 20 years and she's tired," Bill said. She's done eight years as FLOTUS, ?eight years as a New York Senater, and now four as Secretary of State. Okay, she's allowed to be tired.?"She's done a fabulous job, I'm very proud of her," he said. "But she wants to take some time off, kind of regroup, write a book," Clinton said. We can't pressure her into things, he advises.?"We ought to give her a chance to organize her life and decide what she wants to do. I just don't know," he said. If she does decide to make a run for the White House, her husband wouldn't mind moving back in.?"Whatever she does, I'm for her first, last and always," he said. "She has extraordinary ability ... she'll push a rock up the hill as long as it takes to get up the hill."

RELATED:

RELATED:

Mike Rogers, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said on CNN's?State of the Union?there is "no information" showing the attack on the American Embassy that resulted in Christopher Stevens' death was related to the anti-Islam video. The video, he says, was merely a convenient red herring.?"It was clearly designed to be an attack," Rogers said. He said it was "unclear" whether the Ambassador was a target. "There still is some indication they may have known the ambassador was there, or in the area at the time of the attack. But 9/11 is probably more important to that equation than even the ambassador," Rogers added. "I do think it was wildly successful beyond their dreams to be able to kill the American face in Libya, our United States ambassador."

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Reince Priebus told ABC's This Week with George Stephanopolous that he thinks the Republicans have a real shot at taking the senate in November, despite the Todd Akin non-factor.?"We're not going to play in Missouri with Todd Akin, I can tell you that. So it'll be yet to be seen whether he stays in or not," Priebus said. And despite Tommy Thompson's own reservations that Romney's hurting his chances to win in Wisconsin, Priebus is confident Thompson can deliver. He's like Coke, or Kleenex, or Band-Aids.?"[Thompson] is a legend. It's like Harley-Davidson, Miller Lite, Tommy Thompson. He is a brand. He's going to win," Priebus said.?"We've got great opportunities," he said. "We're going to win this race, because people know that we need a better future for this country, and so far the last four years have been a disaster. I don't think people are hoping for four more years of this mess."

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Priebus, at another point of his appearance on This Week, tried to argue it was a "good" week for the Romney campaign. David Axelrod did not agree!?"I don't think anybody else would define it as a good week," Axelrod said. "But it was an enlightening week. The week began with Governor Romney basically slandering 47 percent of America, saying that they were, you know, hooked on dependency, didn't pay their taxes, and so on. And at the end of the week, we saw him manipulating his own tax returns to try and plump up his portion of taxes to 14 percent."

In what's the funniest unsolicited advice someone's given Mitt Romney since Sarah Palin told him to "go rogue" yesterday, Gov. Scott Brown said the GOP nominee needs to have more?"fire in the belly" for the stretch run of the campaign on Fox News Sunday. Romney has to?"be more aggressive, just as they were days after Mitt Romney picked Paul Ryan."?Walker offered more advice for Romney, saying he's "gotta get off the heels and you gotta get out and charge forward." He has to show he' "gonna fight for the American people when he gets in the office," Walker said.?"I want to see more passion," he added. He described his Wisconsin voters as one who "want to know more than what's wrong with this president, they want to know what's right, and what's going to move this country forward. And I think Mitt Romney's got that plan." He added he thinks Romney has a chance to win his state, and that it's closer than most people think. (Wisconsin has traditionally been a Democratic state in Presidential elections for the last 25 years.)

Obama adviser Robert Gibbs thinks Romney has an upper hand in the approaching debates because he had to suffer through a competitive primary process. By?participating?in primary debates, Romney got a "spring training" of sorts that the President won't have.?"Mitt Romney I think has an advantage because he's been through 20 of these debates in the primaries over the last year," Gibbs said on Fox News Sunday.?Romney, "even bragged that he was declared the winner in 16 of those debates," Gibbs said. "So I think in that sense having been through this much more recently than President Obama, I think he starts with an advantage." While spring training is great in baseball, we're not sure we're buying it here.?

David Brooks made his disdain for the Romney campaign heard (again) on NBC's Meet the Press.?"Mitt Romney does not have the passion for the stuff he?s talking about," Brooks said. "He?s a problem solver. I think he?s a non-ideological person running in an extremely ideological age, and he?s faking it. So if I were him, I?d go to what he?s been for the last several decades of his life: be a PowerPoint guy. Say ?I?m making a sales pitch to the country here are the four things I?m going to reform. You don?t have to love me but I?m going to do these four things for you.? And so I?d do a much more wonky and detailed thing than he?s done so far."

In another interesting not from Meet the Press, host David Gregory dropped that MTP has a 'long-standing invitation' extended to the President that he hasn't taken them up on yet. "We hope he will choose [to appear on the show] before the election," Gregory said.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bill-clinton-no-earthly-idea-hillary-wants-run-181908233.html

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