Thursday, November 22, 2012

Turkeys as pets? It's 'complicated' | Metro

LOS ANGELES ? Turkeys: Main course or animal companion?

OK, so it isn?t even close. According to the industry group National Turkey Federation, more than 46 million of the big birds will be served as Thanksgiving dinner this year. Just a few hundred will get to experience the holiday as a pet, said turkey rescue Farm Sanctuary.

?I believe they make amazing companions, but they are different than cats or dogs,? said Susie Coston of Watkins Glen, N.Y. For one thing, turkeys get too hot and are too messy to come indoors, said Coston, the national shelter director for the Farm Sanctuary.

Taking the large bird on as a companion requires more responsibilities than owning a dog or a cat, experts say. ?If people are adopting domesticated turkeys, they should be aware that it?s not a simple endeavour and would take a considerable amount of work,? said NTF spokeswoman Kimmon Williams.

?Turkeys as pets is a complicated question,? she added.

Like other animals that serve as companions to humans, turkeys come in different breeds, with some weighing as much as 60 pounds, Williams said. Every turkey has its own personality ? and some can be aggressive, she said.

Most pet turkey owners agree the birds aren?t the kind of pets that can be walked on a leash or dressed for the Christmas family photo.

Coston said, for instance, that she wouldn?t sleep with her turkey ?like I do my dogs and cats. But I don?t love dogs more than I do pigs or dogs and cats more than chickens and turkeys. I have a different relationship with each of them.?

?Turkeys are inherently nervous and do not tend to be warm and cuddly. Turkeys also need plenty of space to run around in and be fed the appropriate diet,? Williams noted.

Still, Karen Oeh, who will be getting four pet turkeys just before Thanksgiving, said she preferred them over dogs.

?Dogs are needy to me. They need affection, attention, security, they always need you to do something for them. With the turkeys, I don?t feel guilty because I didn?t take them to the park and throw the Frisbee,? said the Ben Lomond, Calif., resident.

Despite their differences, turkeys and traditional pets share traits such as the ability to love unconditionally, loyalty and intelligence, owners said. Dr. Drucilla Roberts, a pathologist from Millis, Mass., pointed out a bonus: ?They give us manure and eggs.?

?I was always told that turkeys were the dumbest of farm animals. But that?s not true. They know us and protect us. If a stranger comes, the turkey is right in his face and clucking and raising its feathers. They make great noises,? Roberts said.

Like dogs, some turkeys grow attached to their owners. Oeh recounted how her last turkey, Ariala, followed her around the garden.

?She would stay by my right leg. When I was picking vegetables, she ate out of my hand. She let me pet her and kiss her,? Oeh said, adding that petting turkeys can put them into a trance-like state. ?She was so immersed in the moment that if you got tired of petting her and moved away, she?d wake up and look around as if to say ?What?s going on???

The part-time teacher and student services co-ordinator had to put Ariala to sleep last year due to her health problems, for which Oeh discovered a lack of available information. Through trial and error, she learned that it?s hard to give a turkey a pill or take them on trips, because crating them requires giving them bear hugs to keep their wings from flapping.

Experts and owners, however, are aware of at least one problem: owing to their large breasts, commercial turkeys have little balance and can fall easily. One of Roberts? turkeys, Turks, had to be put down after its weight caused a split sternum, she said.

Commercial turkeys are usually the ones that get adopted as pets: Coston said most turkeys rescued by the Farm Sanctuary come from factory farms and have been debeaked, detoed and fattened. Many arrive as victims of neglect, cruelty or hoarding; they fall off farm trucks; or they mysteriously show up in boxes on doorsteps, she said.

The sanctuary, which has locations in California and in New York, places about 50 turkeys a year and has found homes for more than 1,500 birds since it started 26 years ago, Coston said. Hundreds of other birds, including the weakest or those with special needs are not adopted out because the rescues can deal with their problems easier than adopters can, Coston said.

Such sanctuaries are the final stop for the most well-known turkeys to escape the dinner table: the annual National Thanksgiving Turkey (and an understudy), who are pardoned the night before the holiday. After much fanfare and a White House ceremony, this year?s turkeys will live on George Washington?s Mount Vernon estate in Virginia, with last year?s birds, Liberty and Peace.

Karen Dawn, an author from Los Angeles, gets two turkeys from Farm Sanctuary every year and socializes them before they move on. This year?s birds are going to live in Malibu.

They arrive stinky, so she gives them a bath and blow dry. ?They relax like this is the best day they have had so far,? said Dawn, who wrote ?Thanking the Monkey: Rethinking the Way We Treat Animals.?

Turkeys make great outdoor pets and ?make better pets than other birds that you have to keep in a cage indoors,? she said.

Dawn said her two 20-pound turkeys will be at her Thanksgiving dinner ? but as guests. Rosie and Martha will greet two dozen human guests in the garden and watch the sun set over the Pacific Ocean, while Dawn serves up Wild Turkey bourbon ? and tofurkey.

Source: http://metronews.ca/news/world/447966/turkeys-as-pets-its-complicated/

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Raining Cats And Blogs: Greenville and Anderson SC Short Sales ...

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Avoid foreclosure - Short Sale your home

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Feeling like there is no other option but foreclosure can be an overwhelming experience. Know that you are not alone. Thousands of homeowners in the Upstate of South Carolina ( Anderson, Greenville and surrounding areas )?are facing the same challenges as you every single day. Now more than ever before there are solutions.

You need help, guidance, and someone who understands the difficult choices you are facing about your home, your family, and your life. Quite often a homeowner facing a foreclosure thinks they have to go through the process alone, forced into a daunting situation caused by unforeseen circumstances beyond their control. Facing damage to your credit, and the possibility of not being able to purchase another home for 10 years can be a tough future to face, but by tapping into the expertise of a knowledgeable real estate agent, there are options available for you.

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We provide you with information about how to avoid a foreclosure, explain the effects it can have on you and your family, and offer other options that may be available to you. This includes a short sale, and we can help you determine if you qualify for a short sale in the Anderson or Greenville SC and surrounding areas.

Source: http://rainingcatsandblogs-snt.com/post/3526496/greenville-and-anderson-sc-short-sales-is-it-right-for-you-see-if-you-qualify

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Oppo to unveil Find 5 in Beijing on December 12th, but we all know what's coming

Oppo

We see what you did there, Oppo: a triple-12 date for the introduction of its next flagship phone, the Find 5. You'd think it'd be a tough act to follow after the Chinese company's crazy slim Finder from this summer, but as CEO Tony Chen's already teased previously, his next product will boast a five-inch 1080p (441ppi) display along with a quad-core Snapdragon S4 Pro APQ8064. It sure sounds a lot like HTC's Droid DNA, but we shall have to wait until the Beijing event to see what Oppo's "fifth element" actually looks like, as well as to see what other surprises it may have for us, so stay tuned.

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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Rights group: Bahrain fails on reform pledge

MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) ? Bahrain's leaders pushed back against criticism by a leading rights group Wednesday that the Gulf state has failed to follow through with promised political and security reforms in the wake of the kingdom's anti-government uprising.

Authorities cited a series of measures taken since an independent report on the crisis came out last November, including giving more oversight to parliament.

But Amnesty International says any progress has been overshadowed by harsh steps recently in attempts to quell the 21-month-old protests, including a ban on demonstrations and stripping 31 activists of citizenship.

"Bahrain is facing a stark choice between the rule of law or sliding into a downward spiral of repression and instability," Amnesty said in a report, issued on the one-year anniversary of the independent fact-finding inquiry into Bahrain's unrest.

The inquiry, led by Egyptian-born legal scholar Mahmoud Cherif Bassiouni, called for sweeping overhauls in Bahrain's political system and investigations into alleged abuses by security forces after protests began in February 2011.

So far, more than 55 people have been killed in clashes between Bahraini authorities and Shiite-led protesters demanding a greater political voice in the Sunni-ruled kingdom.

Amnesty claims that Bahrain's rulers have made no serious effort to open the political system and have turned to hardline measures to try to crush and intimidate the Shiite opposition. Last month, Bahrain imposed a blanket ban on political protests and later stripped 31 activists of their citizenship because of alleged protest links.

Both moves brought criticism from Washington, which has critical strategic ties with Bahrain as host of the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet. The base is one of the Pentagon's major counterbalances to Iran's expanding military presence in the Persian Gulf.

On Tuesday, a senior U.S. official expressed worries that Bahrain's "society is moving apart" and could offer Iran new footholds in the tiny island nations. There is no direct evidence that Shiite power Iran supports Bahrain's protesters, but the U.S. and its Gulf Arab allies are wary of any chance of Iranian inroads in the region. The official spoke on condition of anonymity as part of a background briefing for journalists.

Amnesty said continued arrests and crackdowns by Bahraini authorities have made "a mockery of the reform process."

"Indeed, it has become evident that the authorities in Bahrain do not have the will to take the steps necessary to reform. Protestations to the contrary only underscore the gap between their rhetoric and reality," said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Amnesty's deputy Middle East and North Africa director.

Bahraini authorities, however, blame protesters for stepping up the level of violence, including frequent attacks by homemade firebombs and a series of blasts earlier this month that killed two expatriate workers from India and Bangladesh.

Bahrain's rulers also say they have made serious concessions such as giving more oversight to parliament and investigating claims of abuse by security forces. Shiite leaders say it falls far short of demands for a role in high-level policymaking.

A Bahrain government progress report on the commission's recommendations says "ongoing reforms" are part of efforts to "combat violence and terrorism which has adversely affected the lives, security and wellbeing of citizens and residents."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rights-group-bahrain-fails-reform-pledge-071903155.html

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Taking a Shower the Green Way - Living Green - The Fun Times Guide

green showerGreen living extends to our daily shower habits. If you think about it, we use a lot of water and other resources when we take a shower each day. In fact, roughly 25 percent of indoor household water consumption goes to taking shower; a 10-minute shower uses about 40 gallons whereas a bath takes around 37 gallons. I never even realized just how much water I was using bathing and showering until I took an environmental studies course when I was in college.

So, as it would seem, living a green lifestyle would a shower no longer could include heat, steam, water pressure? all the things I love about taking showers. This, however, isn?t the case at all. You can still keep your shower routine green without having to give up the joys of hot showers.

Here are three tips that I have used to keep my shower habits green (and even help keep my wallet a little greener in the long run, too!)

#1 Install a low-flow shower head ? For as little as $10, you can go to your local home improvement store and buy a low-flow shower head, which can reduce water consumption by half or more and help keep your home more green. Installing a low-flow shower head is an investment that will definitely pay for itself very quickly, and will also conserve tons of drinkable water, too.

#2 Take a shorter shower ? If you love taking long, hot, steamy showers, then you may be less than inclined to heed this particular tip, but it is something I?ve forced myself to get used to, simply because shorter showers help contribute to saving more drinkable water and ? again ? will save on my water bills.

#3 Take Navy showers ? When my water heater wasn?t working properly a couple years ago and I couldn?t stand taking a cold shower, I used a method whereby I got my entire body wet under the shower head for about 30 seconds before turning the water off. I then lathered up my shampoo and soap, scrubbed my body, and then turned the water back on for about 1 minute to rinse away the soap.

Turned out, I took what is called a Navy shower ? and apparently these are quite popular for those who are practicing water conservation. In fact, this green shower technique uses only 3 gallons of water on average and can save a person up to 15,000 gallons of water every year!

As you may have noticed, my green shower tips start off at reducing shower pressure in the first tip, evolve into shorter showers for the second tip and, in the third, suggest turning your water off during the middle part of your shower. Green living in general often requires baby steps like these, for breaking habits that aren?t so good for our planet (or even our pocket books) can be hard. But, adopting a greener lifestyle is possible doesn?t have to be arduous, and these green shower tips represent just three of the many simple ways that we can help our lovely planet stay a little healthier in the long run.

Joshua

My love for coins and numismatics began when I was 11 years old. I primarily collect and study U.S. coins produced during the 20th century. I've also been studying meteorology and watching weather patterns for years. I enjoy sharing little-known facts and fun stuff about coins, weather, travel, health, and living green with others.

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Source: http://green.thefuntimesguide.com/2012/11/green-shower.php?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=green-shower

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Black Friday Gaming Deals (Nerdy News) - Video Games Blogger

?Nerdy News? is a mini-news show geared towards gamers, technosexuals, and all other geeky peeps.

In this ninety-first episode of Nerdy News, I?ll be reporting on:

Here?s the new episode of Nerdy News!

What do you think?

Where do you usually shop on Black Friday? Is Black Friday the best time of the year to get deals on game and tech? Do you prefer to shop online or in person? What games are you looking forward to giving and getting this year? Do you set a budget when you are gift buying? Do you buy ?gifts? for yourself?

If you have any advice or tips on how I can improve these videos let me know in the comments! Thanks for all of your opinions! ^_^

About the author

Laura JonesBy Laura Jones: She blogs about and reviews video games to recapture her misspent youth, growing up gaming on hand-me-down consoles and cast-off computers with three siblings fighting over the controllers and helping each other beat Bosses. Read her posts and watch her video game reviews here and connect with her on Twitter and at Google+.


Source: http://www.videogamesblogger.com/2012/11/19/black-friday-gaming-deals-nerdy-news.htm

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Life Perspective for Business Preparation HR, Recruiting, Social ...

Prepared to Discuss Preparation

I have a few posts under my belt about being prepared. ?There was this one last week, Preparing for Now, and this past summer Were You Prepared? or this one, The Ultimate Preparation.?One might think being prepared is important to me. ?It it likely that I have spent most of my life trying to get out of a bad situation and thus value the importance of not getting into a bad sitch to begin with ? that is where preparedness comes in handy.

Having?the tools you need for success,knowing?how to use those tools, and then?using?them properly will lead to the success one expects.

Perhaps.
Maybe.
? ? ? ? ? ? If only it were that simple.

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Everyone?s vision of what is needed for preparedness and?success is different. Often, an outside, subjective perspective is needed.

Subjective Life Perspective for Business Preparation

One Camping Trip

I can remember packing for a camping trip during the summer before my freshman year of high school. My mom had taken me shopping for new school clothes prior to the trip and I loved the new things she had purchased. These clothes were different from any I had ever worn before. I felt they were more grown-up and bit more ?hip,? and very beach-y. Since we were going camping to the beach, I really wanted to bring a few of my new things. My mom, ever practical, would say, ?You need to pack for go, not show.? ?I knew exactly what she meant but convinced her to let me bring one or two of my new things. Now, what I brought was not practical for camping wear, but I was an impetuous?almost fourteen-year old?and really enjoyed having clothing that made me feel older and ready for high school.

Another Camping Trip

Fast forward twenty years to me taking my own young family camping. The preparation was excessive,?as is for most camping trips,?but this one also included two personal watercrafts ? a SeaDoo and a Yamaha (or Porsche and Cadillac, as I liked to call them). The summer had been hot and we were looking forward to a few days on the lake. I had a new baby to pack for and I had instructed my two other daughters to pack their own bags for the camping trip. ?I, wrongfully, assumed that the proper attire would be brought along. One of my daughters packed only sundresses and sandals. While this might have worked for the cheap resort we often went to on the Colorado River, these articles of clothing failed miserably at protecting against mountain bugs and cool night air.I had not prepared her for what we would encounter,?I hadn?t?followed through.?She survived that trip, yes, she was miserable and cold in the evening and was unable to enjoy running and jumping in the surrounding wooded area; we often laugh about it still. She is usually blamed for her lack of proper preparation and silly wardrobe choices but she was only seven! ?As her mother, I should have double-checked her work.

She was naive and silly. I was busy and expected too much of her and not enough of me. Our perspectives were just that, ours. And just too darn objective.

Life Lessons Applied at Work

It is an employee?s responsibility to prepare but it is also the manager?s responsibility to make sure the employee received the right message.?Stand and deliver.A former CEO of mine once told me that ?people do not fail, employees do not fail, the system fails them. There is a whole theory about systems thinking, and it makes a great deal of sense, common sense.

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You wouldn?t send a soldier into battle without the right gear and weaponry, and you would make damn sure he knew how to best use the gear and when to use what weapon. ?A master chef would not whisper a recipe quickly to an 11-year old child and expect them to know how to prepare the dish perfectly. ?A contractor would never begin construction without a design and plan. ?You would never give a 16-year old a license without driving lessons and insurance.Why on earth would you expect a new employee to jump into a new role and deliver success without proper training or information share about how things are done and what the expectations are? ? Failure by this employee falls squarely on the shoulders of the manager and the process. ?Sometimes makes you wonder how poor managers sleep at night, I suppose counting ex-employees instead of sheep?

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?I think of life as a good book. ?The further you get into it, the more is makes sense??
-Harold Kushner

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Article by Rayanne Thorn

Rayanne Thorn,?@ray_anne?is the VP of Communications and Branding for?Evenbase.? She is also a proud?mother of?four,?happily engaged to Tom, residing in Laguna Beach, California, and a daily contributor for Blogging4Jobs. ?Connect with her on?LinkedIn.??

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Source: http://www.blogging4jobs.com/business/subjective-life-perspective/

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Some N.J. beaches now 50 percent smaller

Rich Schultz / AP

Two women walk along the shore where new sand is in place at the beach in Seaside Heights, N.J., on Nov. 18.

By Wayne Parry

The average New Jersey beach is 30 to 40 feet narrower after Superstorm Sandy, according to a survey that is sure to intensify a long-running debate on whether federal dollars should be used to replenish stretches of sand that only a fraction of U.S. taxpayers use.

Some of New Jersey's famous beaches lost half their sand when Sandy slammed ashore in late October.

The shore town of Mantoloking, one of the hardest-hit communities, lost 150 feet of beach, said Stewart Farrell, director of Stockton College's Coastal Research Center and a leading expert on beach erosion.

Routine storms tear up beaches in any season, and one prescription for protecting communities from storm surge has been to replenish beaches with sand pumped from offshore. Places with recently beefed-up beaches saw comparatively little damage, said Farrell, whose study's findings were made available to The Associated Press.

"It really, really works," Farrell said. "Where there was a federal beach fill in place, there was no major damage ? no homes destroyed, no sand piles in the streets. Where there was no beach fill, water broke through the dunes."

The beach-replenishment projects have been controversial both for their expense and because waves continually wash away the new sand. The federal government picks up 65 percent of the cost, with the rest coming from state and local coffers.

How big the beaches are ? or whether there is a beach at all to go to ? is a crucial question that must be resolved before the summer tourism season. The Jersey shore powers the state's $35.5 billion tourism industry.

But the pending spending showdown between congressional Republicans and Democrats could make it even harder to secure hundreds of millions of additional dollars for beach replenishment.

From 1986 to 2011, nearly $700 million was spent placing 80 million cubic yards of sand on about 55 percent of the New Jersey coast. Over that time, the average beach gained 4 feet of width, according to the Coastal Research Center. And just before the storm hit, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers awarded nearly $28 million worth of contracts for new replenishment projects in southern New Jersey's Cape May County.

Wayne Parry / AP

A bulldozer pushes piles of sand around on the beach in Ocean Grove, N.J., beach in front of its storm-buckled boardwalk and damaged fishing pier on Nov. 15, 2012.


U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn, an Oklahoma Republican, used a photo of a pig on the cover of his 2009 report "Washed Out To Sea," in which he characterized beach replenishment as costly, wasteful pork that the nation could not afford.

"Taxpayers are not surprised when they learn how Congress wastes billions of dollars on questionable programs and projects each year, but it may still shock taxpayers to know that Congress has literally dumped nearly $3 billion into beach projects that have washed out to sea," he wrote.

A message seeking comment was left Monday with Coburn's office.

U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat, predicted lawmakers from New Jersey and New York would be able to get additional shore protection funds included in the next federal budget, despite partisan wars.

"I think we will be able to make the case," he said. "We can show that this provides long-term protection to property and lives. You can either pay up front to keep on top of projects like this, or you can pay on the back end" through disaster recovery funds.

Menendez this week noted that Congress has approved emergency recovery funds for victims of Hurricane Katrina and tornadoes in Missouri, among other natural disasters.

During a tour of storm-wrecked neighborhoods in Seaside Heights and Hoboken, Vice President Joe Biden also vowed the federal government would pay to rebuild New Jersey.

"This is a national responsibility; this is not a local responsibility," Biden said. "We're one national government, and we have an obligation."

Jogging in the street because Sandy had destroyed the Spring Lake boardwalk for the second time in little over a year, Michele Degnan-Spang said it was difficult to comprehend how things have changed in her community.

A few stray planks of the synthetic gray boardwalk that was just replaced last year after Tropical Storm Irene were strewn about the sand; concrete pilings that used to support the boardwalk now stretch for a mile off to the horizon like little Stonehenges.

"It's horrible," she said. "It's draining to see this. It's surreal. I'm walking through it and saying, 'This really is happening.'"

Degnan-Spang predicted she and her extended family would be back on the sand soon, though.

"The drive is going to be to get back on the beach next summer, no matter what it looks like," she said. "We don't go on vacation because we live in the most beautiful spot in the world. We all go to the beach; it's what summer is. It'll come back; it'll just be different."

The Associated Press.

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/20/15306096-new-jersey-beaches-30-40-feet-narrower-after-superstorm-sandy-study-shows?lite

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A.L. Brown Interact, local college students partner to help Habitat ...

Monday, November 19, 2012 12:34 AM | Printer friendly versionPrinter friendly version | E-mail to a friendE-mail to a friend | Comments

Adriana Jaimez. A.L. Brown High School junior and member of the Interact club, talks to Luis Perez in front of what will soon be the new Perez family home in Spencer. The Interact club volunteered with Habitat for Humanity on Saturday. Photo by Hugh Fisher.

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Catawba College student Nate Hill, right, helps measure siding with John Manik, a Catawba College employee, for Saturday's Habitat for Humanity work day. Local college students teamed with the Interact Club from A.L. Brown High in Kannapolis to assist. Photo by Hugh Fisher.

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By Hugh Fisher

hfisher@salisburypost.com

SPENCER - According to Jonathan Farmer, math teacher and Interact club adviser at A.L. Brown High School, the subdivision on Grants Crossing Lane in Spencer could have been another statistic of the bad economy.

Farmer, along with 14 students, three other teachers and wife Miranda, teamed with three Catawba College students and one from Rowan-Cabarrus Community College to help change that.

The new homes that now line the cul-de-sac will provide homes for local families, thanks to local volunteers and Habitat for Humanity.

Saturday, while the college student volunteers helped measure and hang vinyl siding on one house, Interact members from A.L. Brown painted walls and an outbuilding, and helped clean the yards around newly-built homes.

"We're all supposed to help each other," Farmer said. This is his first year as adviser of the Interact club, the high-school auxiliary of Rotary.

Farmer said the club is thriving thanks to community partnerships.

Kannapolis City Schools Superintendent Pam Cain is one of several school officials who are Rotarians.

And Kannapolis Rotary hosts a golf tournament annually to raise money for scholarships to help send A.L. Brown graduates to college.

Farmer said the students willingly stepped up to help out, despite a busy week of activities that just ended and a holiday week ahead.

"The kids have been awesome. They're not afraid to do anything," said Kelly Clark, a special education teacher who also teaches math classes for the school's Alternative Learning Center.

Jessica Rojas, an A.L. Brown senior who was just elected president of Interact, said she was glad to take part.

"It feels good to know that we're helping out, that even though we're students we can still help construct a house," Rojas said.

Rojas, a senior who plans to attend N.C. State University and pursue a degree in psychology, recently attended a month of meetings at the Kannapolis Rotary Club as a Junior Rotarian.

Jamie Beaver, junior class representative for Interact, said she feels being active in volunteer work will help her run her own business in the future.

"It's like a warm feeling inside, knowing that you're helping someone with their future house," Beaver said.

LaKeindra Snowden, who teaches business law and principles of business at A.L. Brown, said she was proud of the students who cheered at Friday's ball game, then turned out at 8 a.m. the next morning to volunteer.

"They're the future leaders," Snowden said. "They gave up whatever they do on Saturday mornings to give back."

Across one front yard, A.L. Brown junior Adriana Jaimez stood next to a future homeowner, Luis Perez.

Perez, originally from Puerto Rico, now works in Salisbury.

He is counting the days until December 17, when he, his wife, and their son and daughter will move into their new home.

Perez, Jaimez and some other bilingual students chatted in Spanish during their lunch break.

He spoke happily of how it would feel for his family to have a home of their own.

"I give thanks to God because He has blessed me so much," Perez said.

At the same time, he joked with the high school students who, while painting his new house, also managed to paint themselves pretty thoroughly.

"They gave three coats," Perez joked. "One to the wall, one to the clothes and one to the floor!"

On a serious note, Jaimez said the fact that people had helped her parents on their path to citizenship made her even more willing to give back.

Her parents immigrated to the U.S. from Michoac?n, Mexico. She was born here.

"I didn't get to help my parents, so I feel like I can help someone else at least," said Jaimez, who plans to pursue a career as a dental hygienist.

Two houses down, Nate Hill - a freshman at Catawba College and graduate of Carson High - helped measure and cut siding, which other volunteers and Habitat workers were hanging.

"As my work study (assignment), I am volunteer coordinator for this project," Hill said.

Working for Volunteer Catawba, he helps organize students who, in turn, are placed with Habitat for Humanity, Rowan Helping Ministries and other local organizations."The people who run Habitat out here ... are excellent teachers. They're literally teaching us how to build a house," Hill said.

Trey Ingram, a Catawba College junior and outside linebacker for the school's football team, said that it was good to be able to help give a family a new home.

"Especially when it's coming around to the time when families get together," Ingram said.

His teammate Dalton Pierce, also a junior at Catawba, said the hardest part wasn't the work, but learning the tricks of the trade and how to build a house right.

For RCCC student Miguel Hernandez, who is studying industrial engineering, past experience in the construction business made him eager to volunteer.

His hope for the family that will soon move into the house: "That this will be a good start for them, a brand new start, in case they've been in a bad situation."

And, for the students, Saturday's work with Habitat was an early start to the best kind of holiday giving there is.

Contact Hugh Fisher via the editor's desk at 704-797-4244.

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Source: http://www.salisburypost.com/News/111912-habitat-for-humanity

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Howdy - Family Woodworking

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Source: http://familywoodworking.org/forums/showthread.php?28924-Howdy

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Monday, November 19, 2012

TGI Friday's Malaysia / Italiannies Restaurant: All Food For 50% OFF ...

Monday, November 19, 2012 7:08 PM


TGI Friday's Malaysia / Italiannies Restaurant: 50% OFF ALL Food Items

Enjoy 50% OFF Discount for all Food Items across All Chaswood Group Brands on 21st November 2012 !!!

* After 9 years of serving you the best that the Culinary World has to offer, Chaswood is giving everyone a treat.

Date:

21st November 2012 (One Day Only)

Participating Restaurants:

-TGI Friday's Restaurant

-Italiannies Pasta Pizza & Vino

-Malones Irish Restaurant & Bar

-Laundry

-Republic Bar

-WATAMI Japanese Casual Restaurant

-Bedroom

-Baci Italian Cafe

-The Apartment

-Bulgogi Bothers Korea BBQ Restaurant.

Terms & Conditions:

-All Teh Tarik Place outlets in Malaysia WILL NOT be participating in the 50% Discount for the 50th Store Celebration on 21st November 2012.

About Chaswood Resources:

ChasWood Resources is the largest multi-concept and multi-format operator in the food and beverage industry in Malaysia, we have been consistently invigorating the industry and demonstrated its ability to expand its market share, received numerous accolades and realize investor value. In the last seven years, we have gone from strength to strength, diversified our portfolio and introduced new concepts and innovations. In addition to holding the franchise rights for T.G.I. Friday?s?, WATAMI Japanese Casual Restaurant and Bulgogi Brothers Korean BBQ Restaurant, we are also the operator for Italiannies, The Apartment, Malones Irish Restaurant & Bar, Teh Tarik Place, Baci Italian Caf?, Laundry Republic and Bedroom. Being in one of the most soul stirring business ? that of good food and entertaining people is what inspires us every day. We are fanatical about best tasting food and drink, bringing the most compelling dining and beverage trends to our guests and we have fun, friendly and engaging team members that ensure the best experience for our guests.

Don't forget to visit your favourite restaurants / Cafe to enjoy the promotion on 21st Nov 2012.
You Like This?

Source: http://www.hokangtao.com/2012/11/tgi-fridays-malaysia-italiannies-food-promotions.html

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Sunday, November 18, 2012

The New Bridge : Cascade creative writing students reap what they ...

Home > Cascade > Cascade creative writing students reap what they?ve sown

Erik Burlingame, Cascade Editor
November 18, 2012
Filed under Cascade, News

CASCADE ? Students of Cascade campus? creative writing program are to share their seasonal yield of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction at the 3rd-annual Harvest of the Word reading.

The reading is open to the public and will be held in the Cascade cafeteria on Friday, November 30th, from noon to 3p.m.

Refreshments will be provided.

Drop-ins are welcomed.

For further information, contact Gardner Mein at?gardner.mein15@pcc.edu

Source: http://www.pccnewbridge.com/news/2012/11/18/cascade-creative-writing-students-reap-what-theyve-sown/

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Republicans: GOP needs to get with the times (The Arizona Republic)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/263624781?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Mount Union rolls in playoff opener

Christopher Newport out of Virginia came to Mount Union Stadium hoping for a miracle.

What it got was an introduction to Division III playoff football, Purple Raiders? style.

No. 2-seeded Mount Union improved to 11-0 as quarterback Kevin Burke threw for 264 yards and three scores in just a half, and the defense did its job in a business-like 72-14 first-round thrashing of the Captains.

?What you see is what you get,? Christopher Newport head coach Matt Kelchner said after getting outgained 641-102. ?They are very efficient, well coached.?

The Purple Raiders? 72 points broke their postseason high of 70 set against Widener in 2000 and was their high-water mark this season.

?We played very well,? Mount Union head coach Larry Kehres said. ?We started fast, had some big plays in the first quarter, jumped out to the lead, and we continued on.?

Mount Union moves on to play Johns Hopkins, a 42-10 winner over Washington & Jefferson, in next week?s second-round game. A site will be named today, but it is expected to be at Mount Union Stadium.

The No. 1-ranked Purple Raiders wasted no time in letting Christopher Newport, a 12-year-old program in the making, know it was going home with a 6-5 record.

Burke connected on touchdown passes of 11 and 26 yards to Jasper Collins and a? 55-yard strike to Julius Moore. Mount Union wideout Chris Denton, made his presence felt five minutes into the game with an 80-yard punt return touchdown. Denton?s fifth punt return score tied the Division III record for a season.

?Coach tells me which way to run it, so as soon as I catch it I know which way I?m going,? said Denton, who fielded the ball on the left has and rolled all the way to the right sideline. ?I give it all to the unit. They?re blocking their butts off.?

?It was the second score,? Kehres said. ?When it comes that early, it?s hard to drive 80 yards. That was 80 yards and a score in a matter of seconds ... it makes it devastating (against you) and exhilarating to have your team score.?

Senior running back T.J. Lattimore ran for 94 yards and two touchdowns and had a big impact early. The 5-foot-9, 185-pounder scored on his second carry from 10 yards out and, two carries later, added a 16-yarder that shot the Purple Raiders ahead 28-7 with 45 seconds left in the first quarter.

By intermission it was 49-7. Burke?s top receivers, Collins and Moore, had 145 and 100 yards receiving, respectively, as they outran and side-stepped Captains defenders.

The Captains? highlight came on a nice eight-play, 76-yard drive in the first quarter when they trailed 21-0. Quarterback Marcus Morrast converted two third downs and completed four straight passes, capped by a bullet that running back Zack Stevens caught and fell into the end zone for a 17-yard score.

Christopher Newport then onside kicked and recovered, only to be offside.

?I said yeah, we?re going to do it,? Kelchner said of a comeback. ?But it went downhill from there.?

Source: http://www.cantonrep.com/sports/x1107412203/Mount-Union-rolls-in-playoff-opener

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Saturday, November 17, 2012

Lightbank-Backed Social Gifting Platform Boomerang Expands To 3 New Cities, Launches Mobile Apps

Boomerang logo - high resBoomerang, the Facebook-based gifting service that launched its beta test in Chicago earlier this year, just announced that it is now expanding beyond its initial market and making its first move toward launching its nationwide operations. Starting today, Boomerang users in three new cities, New York, Austin and Indianapolis, can now send each other real-world gifts like cupcakes, drinks, massages or kayaking adventures. Users receive these gifts through Facebook or email in the form of digital vouchers that they can then redeem at local businesses.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Ecqs9uBMgTM/

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Twinkie maker Hostess Brands crumbles into bankruptcy ...

Pdf Fri 11:13 am by Proactiveinvestors

Privately-held Hostess Brands, maker of iconic Twinkie snack cakes, filed for bankruptcy Friday, weighed down by $1 billion debt and $2 billion of unfunded pension liabilities.

The company's workers were recently involved in a dispute over pay and benefits. Hostess given a Thursday afternoon deadline for employees to return to work or face a shutdown of the company.

"We deeply regret the necessity of today's decision, but we do not have the financial resources to weather an extended nationwide strike," said Hostess Brands CEO Gregory F. Rayburn.?

"Hostess Brands will move promptly to lay off most of its 18,500-member workforce and focus on selling its assets to the highest bidders."

The company said it will seek bankruptcy court permission to close its business and sell its assets "including its iconic brands and facilities. Bakery operations have been suspended at all plants."

Based in Irving, Texas, the company has already reached a contract agreement with its largest union, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. Thousands of members of its second-biggest union went on strike late last week after rejecting a contract offer that cut wages and benefits in September.?

Production at about a dozen of Hostess' 33 plants has been seriously affected by the strike.

Competition is increasing in the snack space and North Americans are increasingly conscious about healthy eating. Hostess also makes Dolly Madison, Drake?s and Nature?s Pride snacks.

Source: http://www.proactiveinvestors.com/companies/news/37428/twinkie-maker-hostess-brands-crumbles-into-bankruptcy--37428.html

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Report: Apple interested in arbitration in Motorola Mobility case

Things could work out a bit more smoothly in Apple's legal battle with Motorola Mobility, based on some new court filings.

Apple filed a reply on Friday regarding the dismissal of its FRAND case against the mobile device manufacturer at the U.S. District Court in the Western District of Wisconsin.

The key point of Apple's latest filing is that the court should not dismiss Apple's claims (or the case in general) or else arbitration would be off the table completely.

To recall, Judge Barbara B. Crabb canceled the trial on November 5 -- the day it was supposed to start -- following disputes over how the case should move forward. Crabb also dismissed the case "with prejudice" -- something Apple is firmly against.

At that point, it seemed the iPhone maker's only shot at resuscitating this case now was to go for an appeal.

Yet the Cupertino, Calif.-based corporation now seems steadfast in its hopes of at least arbitrating this case -- a move in which, as Bloomberg reports, "could lead to a global settlement of all of their patent disputes."

Here's a snippet from Apple's argument for arbitration and preventing the case from being dismissed with prejudice:

Finally, the Court should dismiss Apple?s claims without prejudice because the parties are now actively engaged in negotiating the terms of a binding arbitration to resolve their disputes with respect to a license to each other?s standards-essential patents. After Motorola offered to enter into binding arbitration at the November 5 hearing in this matter, the parties exchanged correspondence expressing their desire to arbitrate these matters, and are now negotiating the parameters of such an arbitration. See Exs. 1 and 2. Because a dismissal with prejudice may interfere with Apple?s ability to adjudicate its claims in arbitration proceedings, Apple asks that the Court not dismiss the case with prejudice.

For reference, Apple sued Motorola Mobility in March 2011 after the now Google-owned subsidiary demanded 2.25 percent of all net sales on iOS products that incorporated select industry-standard patents. Apple thought Motorola's demands were excessive.

To read through Apple's entire filing, scroll through the document below:

Apple v. Motorola Mobility: Arbitration

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zdnetaustralia-news/~3/y7DVBObsVYc/

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Friday, November 16, 2012

Robotic explorers may usher in lunar 'water rush'

ScienceDaily (Nov. 15, 2012) ? The American space program stands at the cusp of a "water rush" to the moon by several companies developing robotic prospectors for launch in the near future, according to a NASA scientist considering how to acquire and use water ice believed to be at the poles of the moon.

"This is like the gold rush that led to the settlement of California," said Phil Metzger, a physicist who leads the Granular Mechanics and Regolith Operations Lab, part of Kennedy's Surface Systems Office. "This is the water rush."

Collecting the water, or at least showing it can be collected, is where the Pittsburgh-based Astrobotic Technology comes in. The small company signed on in April for the third phase of a Small Business Innovative Research deal that continues research work to develop technologies NASA may need to harvest space resources in the future.

The company already is far along in its development of a rover that will work on its own. There is a deal in place with SpaceX to launch a lander and rover on a Falcon 9 rocket in October 2015. Astrobotic is competing against several other companies for the Google Lunar X-Prize, an award worth up to $30 million funded by the Internet search engine company.

"Our intent is to land on the surface of the moon in October 2015 and find water," said John Thornton, president of Astrobotic.

Water already on asteroids, the moon or Martian moons represent a potential bonanza to NASA's exploration plans because the resource can be put to use in so many critical ways for astronauts venturing into deep space. Water, made of hydrogen and oxygen molecules, can be turned into everything from breathing air to rocket fuel, not to mention the chance to filter it clean and drink it.

"Using these resources is the key to making space travel and habitation affordable and sustainable -- we are starting to learn how to live on another planetary surface," said Rob Mueller, a senior technologist in Kennedy's Surface Systems Office.

"It's a really interesting resource when you start to think about how to explore beyond Earth and to use the resources that are already in our solar system," Thornton said. "This is the first step toward harnessing the resources in the solar system for exploration and sustained presence beyond Earth."

Not having to launch those resources from Earth would dramatically cut the price tag for exploration, plus lower the risks involved for the crews as they venture into deep space on missions to an asteroid or Mars.

"There have been studies that have shown you can reduce the mass of a mission to Mars by a factor of somewhere between three and five if you get propellants from the space environment rather than launching them all from Earth," Metzger said.

Thornton said the fact that a number of companies are developing plans and building machines to go to the moon shows that the potential is real.

"If we were doing something really big and no one else was trying to do it, then it might not be that big," Thornton said.

Apollo astronauts found no signs of water ice as they walked on the surface of the moon near the equator from 1969 to 1972, nor did the soil and rock samples they brought back to Earth. However, several probes within the last 15 years found one indication after another that frozen water not only exists on the moon, but is abundant.

"None of these have been ground-proofed yet," Metzger said. "We really need to get vehicles on the surface of the moon prospecting to characterize those deposits, like how do they vary spatially, how do they vary with depth?"

A big question now is whether water ice on the moon is a powder akin to what skiers experience on a mountainside or is it completely solid like an ice cube, or did water seep down between granules of soil and freeze to produce rocks as hard as granite. It wouldn't surprise lunar researchers to find cases of all three as robotic prospectors explore the surface.

"Our best guess is it's going to be the ice," Thornton said. "Probably small little pieces of ice mixed in with the regolith."

Of course, there's more to exploration than knowing what questions to ask. There's also the issue of inventing technology that allows a robotic landing cheaply enough that a private company can pay for it, developing a rover heavy enough to drill or dig into the moon's surface without lifting itself off the ground in the low gravity, not to mention the matter of keeping the rover warm and powered in areas of the moon that are shadowed and surviving the lunar night.

Metzger has been pleased with what he has seen from the company so far.

"They're doing excellent work, they're excavator is progressing well," Metzger said.

Thornton said exchanging a modular digging element on the rover for a drill and instruments was not particularly difficult, and is an option for prospecting on the moon.

"The excavation chassis is a perfect fit for a mission to the moon in terms of scale, mass and power. We took out the excavation part and dropped in a drill and instruments," Thornton said.

Astrobotic will test its rover and tools in the bin of simulated lunar soil that Kennedy uses for its annual Lunabotics Mining competition to prove the vehicle is up to the challenges of operating on the moon.

"You have to be able to go to the moon with some confidence that your vehicle's going to be able to get around and to dig in the soil," Thornton said.

While NASA is excited about the chances to use a new resource for deep space exploration, Astrobotic wants to use the robotic prospector to start mapping where the biggest water deposits are, along with other helpful chemicals, and then use the information to develop ways to extract the materials from the moon and put it to use. There are no plans to return water or other lunar samples to the Earth, Thornton said.

"The beauty of sending a robot is they don't demand a return ticket," Thornton said. "Once we know where the water is and what form it is in, we can develop systems to produce it in useable quantities. Water is a critical resource because you can drink it, breathe it and use it for rocket fuel."

There are a great many questions to answer before astronauts can count on the moon, an asteroid or Martian moons as fuel and air depots, but Metzger and Thornton said the answers are within reach.

"That's the reason to go, because we don't know the answer," Thornton said.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA.

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


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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/space_time/astronomy/~3/qROlccGBTXI/121115165048.htm

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Asia Briefing Releases New Guide: Human Resources and Payroll ...

Labor contracts, social insurance contributions, salary packages, visas for foreigners, and more!

Nov. 16 ? Asia Briefing, in cooperation with its parent company Dezan Shira & Associates, has just released a new 102-page guide introducing everything that foreign investors in China should be familiar with from the human resources and payroll management perspective. This guide, titled ?Human Resources and Payroll in China (Third Edition),? is immediately available as a PDF download on the Asia Briefing Bookstore.

A firm understanding of China?s laws and regulations related to human resources and payroll management is essential for foreign investors who want to establish or are already running foreign-invested entities in China. This guide aims to satisfy that information demand, while also serving as a valuable tool for local managers and HR professionals who may need to explain complex points of China?s labor policies in English.

The first chapter of this guide focuses on the recruitment process in China. While the overall process for hiring people in China does not differ much from elsewhere in the world, there are a number of points that require special attention. The rest of the guide has been designed to cover the most important issues relating to managing a Chinese workforce in enough detail to satisfy the requirements and curiosity of most managers either working in China or involved in HR from the headquarters abroad.

Chinese law places significant obligations on employers to remain legally compliant in labor matters. In this guide, we also address the major issues in managing employment relationships in China.

Included in this guide:

  • Recruiting Professionals
  • Hiring Staff
  • Handling Payroll
  • Managing the Employment Relationship
  • Terminating the Employment Relationship
  • Arranging for Visas

Within these topics, we address labor contracts, company rulebooks, salary packages, social insurance contributions, special circumstances for employees (extended sickness or pregnancy), termination and severance pay, and visas for foreign staff and Chinese staff being sent to work abroad.

?Human Resources and Payroll in China (Third Edition)? is out now and immediately available as a PDF download on the Asia Briefing Bookstore.

This publication is based on the knowledge of Dezan Shira & Associates, a specialist foreign direct investment practice providing corporate establishment, business advisory, tax advisory and compliance, accounting, payroll, due diligence and financial review services to multinationals investing in emerging Asia.

Since its establishment in 1992, the firm has grown into one of Asia?s most versatile full-service consultancies with operational offices across China, Hong Kong, India, Singapore and Vietnam as well as liaison offices in Italy and the United States. Dezan Shira & Associates? experienced business professionals are committed to improving the understanding and transparency of investing in emerging Asia.

For further details or to contact the firm, please email china@dezshira.com, visit www.dezshira.com, or download the company brochure.

You can stay up to date with the latest business and investment trends across China by subscribing to The China Advantage, our complimentary update service featuring news, commentary, guides, and multimedia resources.

Related Reading

Social Insurance and Payroll
In this issue, we take a ?back to basics? approach to China?s mandatory benefits. Where, exactly, is that extra 35-40 percent on top of an employee?s salary going? What are social insurance contribution rates, base amounts, and tax exemptions? How does all of this figure into the payroll process? We next look at mandatory benefits as a piece of the larger payroll puzzle, with highlights on two very China-specific pieces: FESCOs and hukou, China?s ?domestic passport.?

An Introduction to Doing Business in China
Asia Briefing, in cooperation with its parent firm Dezan Shira & Associates, has just released this 40-page report introducing everything that a foreign investor should be familiar with when establishing and operating a business in China.

Update: Foreigner Participation in China?s Social Insurance Scheme

A FESCO as a Tool for Labor Dispatch in China

Limiting Tax Exposure for American Expatriates in China

Highly-Qualified Foreigners to Face Easier Visa Formalities in China

China Releases 2011 Statistics for HR and Social Security Development

Mandatory Social Welfare Benefits for Chinese Staff

Source: http://www.china-briefing.com/news/2012/11/16/asia-briefing-releases-new-guide-human-resources-and-payroll-in-china.html

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Lewis University and Philip Lynch Theatre presented 44 Plays for 44 Presidents o...

44 Plays for 44 Presidents | Facebook
Sign Up Facebook ? 2012 ? English (US)Mobile ? Find Friends ? Badges ? People ? Pages ? Apps ? Games ? Music ? About ? Create an Ad ? Create a Page ? Developers ? Careers ? Privacy ? Cookies ? Terms ? Help

Source: http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10151325305447803.525924.91748742802&type=1

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