Thursday, January 31, 2013

The Ambitious Sower - Steve Gordon Marketing Systems

In the Bible there?s a story of an ambitious sower. I first heard it spoken by the late great Jim Rohn and it goes like this?

?A farmer went out to sow his seed. As he was scattering the seed, some fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up.

Some fell on rocky places, where it did not have much soil. It sprang up quickly, because the soil was shallow. But when the sun came up, the plants were scorched, and they withered because they had no root.

Other seed fell among thorns, which grew up and choked the plants. Still other seed fell on good soil, where it produced a crop?a hundred, sixty or thirty times what was sown.?
?Matthew 13:3-8

The point of the story is this:

To be successful you?ve got to plant lots of seeds with potential clients.

Some will be snapped up by competitors.

Some will lack the commitment or capacity to buy from you.

Still others will be overrun by information, drown in confusion and never buy.

But, if you are an ambitious sower. If you consistently plant new seeds, some will fall on good soil?some will be your IDEAL clients and will produce 30, 60 or 100 times what was sown.

The key to marketing and business success is consistently planting new seeds. Then nurturing those that fall on fertile ground until they are ready for harvest.

This week I was interviewed by Scott Stroud of Builder Radio on lead generation?planting seeds. I shared lots of good stuff and you can listen to the interview here.

Enjoy!

marketing consultant steve gordon

P.S. For help implementing the ideas I shared in the interview click here.

Your Business Could Double This Year, IF You Fix These 7 Marketing Mistakes

Enter your name and email to get a free copy of my E-Book 7 Deadly Marketing Sins That Will Kill Your Business?

Source: http://stevegordonmarketing.com/the-ambitious-sower/

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Physical Therapy Approach to Alleviating Bone Pain Due To Cancer

physical-therapy-bone-cancer

According to the American Cancer Society, approximately 1,638,910 new cancer cases were expected to be diagnosed in the United States last year. Of these cases, about 100,000 Americans will later find out that the cancer has spread to their bones. This is what is referred to as bone metastases, or ?bone mets?.

Once the bones have been invaded by cancer, they become at a high risk of sustaining fractures, as the cancerous cells have weakened their structure. Individuals with bone mets often complain of bone pain, a type of pain that varies in feeling from person to person. Depending on the bones affected, some may describe it as being dull or aching, and others as sharp and shooting pain; some may be more affected by it when at rest, while others have more pain with movement. Regardless of its presentation, the goal of physical therapy intervention, in conjunction with medical treatments, is to improve quality of life, alleviate the pain, decrease the risk of fractures and optimize mobility.

When specifically targeting pain, therapies such as cold or hot packs, massage and pulsed electrical current, namely the transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) can be very helpful to minimize symptoms for short periods of time.

Physical Therapists will often give their patients core stability exercises and postural training. Core stability is essential as it plays an important role in the support of the spine and pelvis during movement, thus reducing pain and the risk of injury to these areas. In conjunction to proper core stability, achieving correct posture may assist in alleviating bone pain in the spine by reducing the amount of pressure exerted on the vertebrae by poorly maintained posture. Gentle stretching may also be included in the exercise program.

On the other hand, there are exercises that should be avoided by people with bone mets, these being resistance exercises, but why? Shouldn?t we want these individuals to get stronger?? Absolutely, but since the structure of bones affected by cancerous metastases is weaker, these types of exercises, such as the use of free weights, can increase the risk of fracture. Therefore, strengthening is done through functional activities, such as walking and climbing stairs.

Before beginning any type of exercise, it is important that individuals with bone metastases consult a Medical Doctor and Physical Therapist in order to determine what the safest type of therapy will be, given their condition.

Source: http://pain.com/library/2013/01/29-physical-therapy-approach-alleviating-bone-pain-due-cancer/

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Long-delayed school snack rules to come soon: Vilsack

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - After more than a year's delay, American schools will soon see new U.S. government rules targeting the kinds of snacks sold to students, a move nutritionists say could play an important role in fighting childhood obesity.

Anxious schools have waited more than a year to find out how sales of potato chips, candy bars, sodas and similar treats to students will be restricted. These rules on food sold outside traditional cafeteria meals are a key part of the first major overhaul on school food in more than three decades.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack recently told Reuters that the rules on what snacks may be offered in vending machines, school stores and the like, originally due in late 2011, are expected to be finished in the early part of this year. (http://reut.rs/URlL5N)

Officially, USDA said it expects the proposal by April, at which point a 60-day public comment period would kick in before final rules are issued - potentially for the next school year.

Vilsack said the delay was in part to give food and drink manufacturers, as well as schools, time to adjust to a revamp of cafeteria breakfasts and lunches in early 2012.

Those earlier sweeping changes, dictating more whole grains, fruits and vegetables on school menus, led to a few complaints and some hungry children. USDA later gave schools more flexibility on the new menus.

"The whole idea is that they eat more fruits and vegetables ... that's not going to happen overnight," said Gail Koutroubas, who oversees food services for the public school district in Andover, Massachusetts, near Boston.

The school nutrition overhaul seeks to make a dent in the nation's obesity epidemic at a time when government statistics show more than one-third of those younger than 18 are too heavy.

Health advocates want the snack changes to include smaller portions, reduced fat and less sugar. Acceptable drinks for most students would include low- or no-fat milks, 100 percent juices and water.

"We're not saying get rid of the vending machines. Just change what's in them," said Margo Wootan, head of nutrition policy at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, an advocacy group. "We, as parents, don't want our kids eating candy bars and Gatorade for lunch."

Recent USDA data shows most U.S. public schools sell snacks in some way, but access to vending machines varies.

Machines are in just 13 percent of elementary schools for young children, but are in 67 percent of middle schools, where students are around 11 to 14 years old, and 85 percent of high schools, USDA said in December.

USDA also found more than 80 percent of school districts have either restricted or banned sugary drinks. More than 75 percent also have some kind of limit or ban on snack foods.

DRINKMAKERS 'COOPERATIVE'

Tops on the list of concerns are drinks, particularly high-calorie, sugar-sweetened beverages such as sodas and sports drinks that are popular among youth but cited by public health experts as empty calories with no nutritional benefit.

"The beverage industry from our perspective has been very cooperative. They understand and appreciate there has to be a different approach in terms of what's available in vending machines," Vilsack said.

Representatives from Coke and other drink makers met with White House and USDA staff last June to present industry-funded data on their voluntary effort in schools, according to one representative at the meeting.

The American Beverage Association said it wants USDA's snack rules to match the industry lobbying group's 2005 pledge to limit certain lower calorie sodas and sports drinks to mostly older students.

Cranberry growers also are pushing to allow sugar-sweetened cranberry juices, saying their fruits are too tart otherwise. Pizza companies are also seeking some exemptions.

Some health experts worry that the food and beverage industries' lobbying power will dilute the new nutrition law. They are also concerned that the delay signals a more cautious approach from the Obama administration.

Overall, food and beverage companies and groups spent more than $26 million in lobbying on a variety of issues over the last year, led by Coke and Pepsi, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

"We're very concerned," said Maya Rockeymoore, head of a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation program targeting childhood obesity. "Certainly sugar-sweetened beverages ... need to be completely eliminated from the equation."

Many states and schools have plowed ahead with their own standards rather than wait for USDA. About half of all U.S. states have already passed laws addressing snack items, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Money can also be an issue, since snack foods sales are often profit centers for schools, sports teams and other groups, especially given the current tight school budgets.

Advocates say the changes are necessary to help stave off a health crisis that impacts students' academic performance and even national security.

Vilsack says he has a personal stake in the issue, recalling how he was taunted as a "fatso" growing up on Pennsylvania.

"I've struggled with my weight all my life, and it's not an easy thing to deal with," Vilsack told Reuters. "And if you're dealing with it, you're dealing with a lot of consequences of feeling badly about yourself."

(Editing by Ros Krasny and Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/long-delayed-school-snack-rules-come-soon-vilsack-202744217--sector.html

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Study sees prostate cancer treatment side effects

A new study shows how important it is for men to carefully consider treatments for early-stage prostate cancer. Fifteen years after surgery or radiation treatment, nearly all of the older men in the study had some problems having sex.

About one-fifth had bladder or bowel trouble, researchers found.

The study doesn't compare these men ? who were 70 to 89 at the end of the study ? to others who did not treat their cancers or to older men without the disease. At least one study suggests that half that age group has sexual problems even when healthy.

The study isn't a rigorous test of surgery and radiation, but it is the longest follow-up of some men who chose those treatments.

Since early prostate cancers usually don't prove fatal but there are no good ways to tell which ones really need treatment, men must be realistic about side effects they might suffer, said one study leader, Dr. David Penson of Vanderbilt University.

"They need to look at these findings and say, 'Oh my gosh, no matter what I choose, I'm going to have some quality-of-life effect and it's probably greater than my doctor is telling me,'" he said.

The study appears in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in American men. In the United States alone, there were about 240,000 new cases and 28,000 deaths from the disease last year. Radiation or surgery to remove the prostate are common treatments when the disease is confined to the gland.

Men usually live a long time after treatment ? 14 years on average ? so it's important to see how they fare, said another study leader, Vanderbilt's Dr. Matthew Resnick.

The study involved 1,655 men diagnosed in 1994 or 1995, when they were ages 55 to 74. About two-thirds of them had surgery and the rest, radiation. They were surveyed two, five and 15 years later. By that time, 569 had died.

Men who had surgery had more problems in the first few years after their treatments than those given radiation, but by the end of the study, there was no big difference.

After 15 years, 18 percent of the surgery group and 9 percent of the radiation group reported urinary incontinence, and 5 percent of the surgery group and 16 percent of the radiation group said they were bothered by bowel problems. But the differences between the two groups could have occurred by chance alone once researchers took other factors such as age and the size of the men's tumors into account.

Impotence was "near universal" at 15 years, the authors write ? 94 percent of the radiation group and 87 percent of the surgery group. But the difference between the groups also was considered possibly due to chance. Also, less than half of men said they were bothered by their sexual problems.

"These men do get some help from pills like Viagra, Cialis, Levitra," but it may not be as much as they would like and most men would rather not need those pills, Penson said.

The National Cancer Institute paid for the study. Two authors have consulted for several makers of prostate cancer treatment drugs.

No study is perfect and this one has many limitations, said Dr. Timothy Wilson, urology chief at City of Hope, a cancer center in Duarte, Calif. Men who are having problems are more likely to complete follow-up surveys because they're angry, so that could skew results, he noted.

Still, "it's a high percentage" with side effects, said Wilson, who has been a paid speaker for two makers of surgery equipment.

"There's no question we overtreat" many cases of early prostate cancer, yet the disease is still the second-leading cause of cancer deaths in men. "We need to better sort out who really needs treatment," he said.

___

Online:

New England Journal: http://www.nejm.org

___

Marilynn Marchione can be followed at http://twitter.com/MMarchioneAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/study-sees-prostate-cancer-treatment-side-effects-222544696.html

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will.i.am Hopes To Beat The Bunny With #willpower

The Black Eyed Peas mastermind says his long-delayed solo album 'will be out before the Easter Bunny comes hoppin.' "
By James Montgomery


will.i.am
Photo: MTV News

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1701000/will-i-am-willpower-album.jhtml

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

SciTimes Update: Recent Developments in Health and Science News

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Science headlines from around the Web.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/29/science/developments-in-health-and-science-news.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Is flag football ahead for NFL?

Baltimore Ravens safety Bernard Pollard speaks during media day for the NFL Super Bowl XLVII football game Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

Baltimore Ravens safety Bernard Pollard speaks during media day for the NFL Super Bowl XLVII football game Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

San Francisco 49ers tight end Vernon Davis answers reporters questions during media day for the NFL Super Bowl XLVII football game Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

San Francisco 49ers safety Dashon Goldson (38) smiles during media day for the NFL Super Bowl XLVII football game Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

(AP) ? Players on both Super Bowl teams say they are confused about when a hit is legal by NFL standards.

Rules designed to make the game safer are also making players uncertain about which hits are considered clean and which ones could lead to a fine.

San Francisco tight end Vernon Davis wondered if two-hand touch is in the future for the NFL.

"I think the rules will change a lot," he said Tuesday. "There's already no helmet to helmet. Might be flag football, maybe."

Baltimore Ravens safety Bernard Pollard, one of the league's hardest hitters, warned against trying to take collisions out of the game, as long as they are clean.

His 49ers counterpart, All-Pro Dashon Goldson, says defenders keep this in mind when they take the field:

"Do your best and then hope you don't get a letter (with a fine) in your locker on Wednesday," he said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-01-29-Super%20Bowl-Legal%20Hits/id-5ec7449617d743d0a71dcb5da7a56cba

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Euro Accelerators: UK?s Dotforge And Lithuania?s StartupHighway Open Applications

logo-3I've said it before and I'll say it again, Europe has gone accelerator crazy. If putting burgeoning startups through a 13 week mentor-led boot camp and throwing a few euros their way is the key to economic growth, then the Euro crisis is all but solved. I jest, of course, and you arguably can't have too much idea-stage money and support. But, seriously, I can barely keep up with these things. To that end, two European accelerators opened to applications this month: Dotforge, a brand new accelerator based in Sheffield, UK, and Lithuania's StartupHighway, which runs for its second year.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Cb4KEPy0ObY/

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Gauge of business spending plans edges higher

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A gauge of business investment plans improved in December, a sign companies were betting the economy will pick up despite fears over tighter fiscal policy.

The Commerce Department said on Monday that non-defense capital goods orders excluding aircraft, a closely watched proxy for investment plans, edged up 0.2 percent last month.

Many economists expected businesses to invest more timidly late last year because of uncertainty over government spending cuts and tax increases, which had been scheduled to kick in this month. Congress ultimately struck a last-minute deal to avoid or postpone most of the austerity measures.

Despite the uncertainty, Monday's data pointed to growing economic momentum as companies sensed improved consumer demand.

"It certainly seems to us that companies are slowly but surely expanding," said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer at Solaris Group in Bedford Hills, New York.

In a further sign of business confidence, the November reading on capital spending plans was revised higher to show a 3 percent gain, up from the 2.6 percent rise reported a month ago.

A second report showed a measure of upcoming home resales took a breather in December, declining 4.3 percent. Still, the housing sector posted a rebound last year and economists expect it will add to growth again in 2013.

The business spending data pushed down prices for U.S. government debt, while giving the dollar a lift against the yen. But stock prices opened lower.

New orders for overall durable goods - long lasting factory goods from toasters to automobiles - jumped 4.6 percent in December, beating economists expectations of a 1.8 percent gain.

The gains were broad based, with orders for machinery, cars and primary metals all increasing.

"There's a lot more confidence," said Wayne Kaufman, an analyst at John Thomas Financial in New York.

Orders surged for civilian aircraft and military goods, although those two categories tend to be quite volatile.

Despite the stronger-than-expected demand at the nation's factories, economists think economic growth cooled in the fourth quarter as companies slowed the pace at which they re-stocked their shelves.

Analysts polled by Reuters expect a report on gross domestic product due on Wednesday will show the economy expanded at a mere 1.1 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, down from a 3.1 percent rate in the previous three months.

However, Monday's report on new orders for long-lasting factory goods suggested businesses are feeling stronger demand from consumers, and are responding by buying more machines to meet that demand. TD Securities economist Millan Mulraine said capital investment likely added to economic growth in the fourth quarter.

(Additional reporting by Lucia Mutikani in Washington, and by Leah Schnurr and Ryan Vlastelica in New York; Editing by Neil Stempleman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gauge-business-spending-plans-edges-higher-133926858--business.html

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'Smart Guns,' Designed To Be Fired Only By Owner, Have Battled History

NEW YORK (AP) ? It sounds, at first, like a bold, next-generation solution: personalizing guns with technology that keeps them from firing if they ever get into the wrong hands.

But when the White House called for pushing ahead with such new technology as part of President Obama's plan to cut gun violence, the administration did not mention the concept's embattled past. As with so much else in the nation's long-running divisions over gun rights and regulation, what sounds like a futuristic vision is, in fact, an idea that has been kicked around for years, sidelined by intense suspicion, doubts about feasibility and pressure tactics.

Now proponents of so-called personalized or smart guns are hoping the nation's renewed attention on firearms following the Newtown school massacre will kick start research and sale of safer weapons. But despite the Obama administration's promise to "encourage the development of innovative gun safety technology," advocates have good reason to be wary.

In the fiery debate over guns, personalized weapons have long occupied particularly shaky ground ? an idea criticized both by gun-rights groups and some gun control advocates.

To the gun groups, the idea of using technology to control who can fire a gun smacks of a limitation on personal rights, particularly if it might be mandated by government. At the same time, some gun control advocates worry that such technology, by making guns appear falsely safe, would encourage Americans to stock up on even more weapons then they already have in their homes.

Without the politics, the notion of using radio frequency technology, biometric sensors or other gadgetry in a gun capable of recognizing its owner sounds like something straight out of James Bond. In fact, it is. In the latest Bond flick, "Skyfall," Agent 007's quartermaster passes him a 9 mm pistol coded to his palm print.

"Only you can fire it," the contact tells the agent. "Less of a random killing machine. More of a personal statement."

In real life, though, there's no getting around the politics, and the debate over personalized guns long ago strayed well beyond questions of whether the technology will work.

Those were the first questions asked in 1994 when the research arm of the Justice Department began studying prospects of making a police gun that a criminal would not be able to fire if he wrestled it away during a struggle. Scientists at Sandia National Laboratories examined available technology in 1996 and found it promising, but wanting.

By then the notion of a safe gun had long captivated Stephen Teret, a former attorney and public health expert at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore who had gone after automakers for not including air bags in their cars. In 1983, he got a call that the 22-month-old son of a couple he knew had been killed by a 4-year-old who found a loaded gun in a nightstand drawer.

"Very definitely, that was the genesis," said Teret, who went on to found Hopkins' Center for Gun Policy and Research. "Because when one thinks of something as a public health person the first thing is you're sick with grief and the second thing that comes to mind is why in the world would there be a handgun operable by a 4-year-old?"

Teret began trying to get lawmakers and gun makers interested in the concept of personalized weapons. He convinced U.S. Rep. Pat Schroeder, D-Colorado, to earmark funding for the Justice study. And in the mid-1990s he voiced support for a project at Colt's Manufacturing Co., the legendary but beleaguered gun maker that saw an opportunity to sell safe guns to police officers and parents of young children.

Colt's developed a gun equipped with a microchip that would prevent it from firing unless the user was wearing an enabling device located in a special wristband. But gun rights activists were skeptical, partly because the government was funding research of the concept and because gun control advocates like Teret embraced it. At about the same time, New Jersey lawmakers began discussing a measure requiring all new handguns sold in the state to be personalized, three years after the technology came to market. The measure passed in 2002.

Owners' skepticism was heightened in 1997 when Colt's CEO Ronald Stewart wrote an editorial in American Firearms Industry magazine calling on fellow manufacturers to parry gun control efforts by backing a federal gun registry and developing personalized weapons.

"While technology such as this should not be mandated it should be an option for the consumer," Stewart wrote. "If we can send a motorized computer to Mars, then certain we can advance our technology to be more childproof."

Stewart did not respond to a message seeking comment left at a Connecticut company where he now serves on the board of directors.

Soon after, the Coalition of New Jersey Sportsmen ? a state affiliate of the National Rifle Association ? began calling for a boycott of Colt's. It warned that personalized technology might make it difficult for gun owners to defend themselves and called the company's conduct "detrimental to American-style freedoms and liberties."

Stewart was replaced as CEO of Colt's in 1998 and the company eventually abandoned development of a personalized gun.

In 1999, New Jersey's lawmakers approved a grant to researchers at New Jersey Institute of Technology to study personalized gun technology. Those efforts focused on adding transducers to a gun's handle to detect the grasp of an authorized user. Meanwhile, the Justice Department offered a challenge grant to gun makers and although two responded, they made limited headway by the time $7 million in funding ran out.

Work on personalized weapons suffered another setback after gun rights' groups boycotted Smith & Wesson over a 2000 agreement it signed with the Clinton administration in which the manufacturer made numerous promises, including one to develop smart guns.

Meanwhile, the New Jersey school, funded by Congressional earmarks, tried repeatedly to find a commercial partner for its work. But even as NJIT bolstered the reliability of its prototype, which now has a recognition rate of about 97 percent, it found it a hard sell. Talks with a Florida gun maker at first seemed productive until industry activists pressured the company to back away, said Donald Sebastian, NJIT's senior vice president for research and development .

"Their claim that these are just blue state liberals looking to take your guns away, it just inflames people to not think a little more rationally," Sebastian said.

"Yes it's a frustrating experience, but we have to be adults," he said. "I think it's been a long lesson to learn that this intermingling of the concepts of gun safety and gun control are ultimately poison."

Mike Bazinet, a spokesman for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, which represents gun manufacturers, said questions remain about whether the technology has been improved enough to assure police officers and civilians a personalized weapon would fire when they need protection. But there are also concerns "about individual consumers' ability to choose the firearm that they think is best for them," Bazinet said.

But gun makers and owners have not been the only critics. Activists from the Violence Policy Center, an outspoken gun control group, also spoke against personalized weapons.

"If a smart gun did exist what would its effect be, taking into consideration the nature of gun violence in this country?" said Josh Sugarmann, the group's executive director. "Would you place families at risk or people at risk by giving this impression that this is a safe gun? You know, people who wouldn't normally buy a gun, would they buy one now?"

NJIT's Sebastian, who joined a group of personalized gun advocates who met recently with Attorney General Eric Holder to push for their development, said his school has seen some renewed interest and is talking with officials at Picatinny Arsenal, which develops weapons for the U.S. military.

Meanwhile, two European companies working on personalized gun technology have their eyes on the U.S. market. One of those firms, TriggerSmart Ltd. of Limerick, Ireland, has developed a system using Radio Frequency Identification that would be built into the handle of a gun and triggered by a device the size of a grain of rice inside a user's ring or bracelet. Co-founder Robert McNamara said he is seeking to license the technology to a U.S. manufacturer, but is looking at the possibility of producing kits for retrofitting existing guns.

Another venture, Armatix GmbH of Unterfoehring, Germany, says it has developed a personalized gun, with settings based on radio frequency technology and biometrics, that was approved by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms in late 2011. Armatix said it hopes to begin selling the gun as well as accompanying safety and locking systems in the U.S. this year, but would not provide details.

Teret, who long ago launched the campaign for personalized guns, acknowledged much has to happen before they become a reality. But the White House has promised to issue a report on the technology and award prizes to companies that come up with innovative and cost-effective personalized guns, and its interest has rejuvenated hopes that the gun of the future may actually have one.

"For 30 years, at best we've been inching forward at a glacial pace," he said. "And now this puts it up to warp speed."

___

Associated Press writer David Rising in Berlin contributed to this report. Adam Geller, a New York-based national writer, can be reached at features(at)ap.org. Follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AdGeller .

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/27/smart-guns_n_2562091.html

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Jason Fladlien - Product Creation Eclass 2.0

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This is a 6-week live interactive group training that has produced more 6 figure earners than any other training Jason Fladlien has done. That doesn?t guarantee you?ll make 6 figures, of course, but I promise you will learn a lot?and if you follow what you learn, you will be well on your way!

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For an internet marketer, six weeks can be a long time- especially if you have tons of websites to handle of lots of campaigns to monitor. So will Product eClass 2.0 be well worth your time? Well, heres a preview of what you will do for six weeks with Jason Fladlien:

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Discover what Made In China means for Jason Fladlien
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Learn how to make more passive income from your online products
This technique has made Jason about $2000 in profit in one hour
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Learn the different ways to get more money from your products (or somebody elses products)
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My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Season 3 Episode 10


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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Moviehole.Net :: Movie, TV & Entertainment News | Film, DVD & Blu ...

Disney has confirmed last week?s leaked monster news that J.J Arbams will direct ?Star Wars Episode VII?.

Here?s the press release :

J.J. Abrams will direct Star Wars: Episode VII, the first of a new series of Star Wars films to come from Lucasfilm under the leadership of Kathleen Kennedy. Abrams will be directing and Academy Award-winning writer Michael Arndt will write the screenplay.

?It?s very exciting to have J.J. aboard leading the charge as we set off to make a new Star Wars movie,? said Kennedy. ?J.J. is the perfect director to helm this. Beyond having such great instincts as a filmmaker, he has an intuitive understanding of this franchise. He understands the essence of the Star Wars experience, and will bring that talent to create an unforgettable motion picture.?

George Lucas went on to say ?I?ve consistently been impressed with J.J. as a filmmaker and storyteller. He?s an ideal choice to direct the new Star Wars film and the legacy couldn?t be in better hands.?

?To be a part of the next chapter of the Star Wars saga, to collaborate with Kathy Kennedy and this remarkable group of people, is an absolute honor,? J.J. Abrams said. ?I may be even more grateful to George Lucas now than I was as a kid.?

J.J., his longtime producing partner Bryan Burk, and Bad Robot are on board to produce along with Kathleen Kennedy under the Disney | Lucasfilm banner.

Also consulting on the project are Lawrence Kasdan and Simon Kinberg. Kasdan has a long history with Lucasfilm, as screenwriter on The Empire Strikes Back, Raiders of the Lost Ark and Return of the Jedi. Kinberg was writer on Sherlock Holmes and Mr. and Mrs. Smith.

Abrams and his production company Bad Robot have a proven track record of blockbuster movies that feature complex action, heartfelt drama, iconic heroes and fantastic production values with such credits as Star Trek, Super 8, Mission: Impossible Ghost Protocol, and this year?s Star Trek Into Darkness. Abrams has worked with Lucasfilm?s preeminent postproduction facilities, Industrial Light & Magic and Skywalker Sound, on all of the feature films he has directed, beginning with Mission: Impossible III. He also created or co-created such acclaimed television series as Felicity, Alias, Lost and Fringe.

Meantime, Paramount?s been quick to confirm they?re still in the ?JJ? business.

?J.J. will continue to develop projects for us including a new ?Mission: Impossible,? and he is committed to produce another ?Star Trek,?? Paramount Vice Chairman Rob Moore told Hero Complex Friday afternoon.

While it?s only stated that J.J Abrams will produce ?Trek 3?, that doesn?t necessarily mean he won?t end up directing the film too.

Source: http://moviehole.net/201361462disney-officially-announces-jar-jar-abrams-as-episode-vii-director-paramount-confirms-his-commitment-to-trek-3

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Flood Insurance Delay Paints Bleak Picture for NJ Hurricane Sandy ...

His wife leaves the room to tend to their youngest. Jim Racanelli talks about being a man, about the responsibility of providing emotional and financial stability for his family. His icy-blue eyes are stern and unblinking, but when he talks his voice wobbles a bit, like the legs of a man shouldering a burden that?s suddenly grown too large to carry.

Driven from his home by Hurricane Sandy, Racanelli stands among the ruin. The walls of his Toms River home are stripped up to his waist, electrical lines like exposed nerves. The foundation is cracked, the house and its upside down mortgage shifted. You want to be strong, he says standing in the middle of a warped and rotting floor, but there?s always a limit.

If he hasn?t reached it yet he?s certainly knocking on the door.

In New Jersey, thousands of families are still displaced with little indication of when and if they?ll be able to return to their pre-Sandy lives. They are hoping their insurance can make them whole again by providing the funding necessary to make repairs and raise their homes, but the process is proving to be a slow one. As the winter creeps on, the future of many of those who?ve lost their homes to Sandy remains uncertain.?

?I?m trying to keep my head my head up. I?ve always said things will be OK; everything will be all right. This time I?m not so sure,??Racanelli?said.??I feel hopeless and helpless at the same time. To feel like that when you?re usually in control, it?s just people are looking to me ... my family is looking to me.?

Displaced and Homeless

The Racanelli?s have spent the last three months as nomads. The five of them, Racanelli, his wife Bel, and their three children ages 9, 7, and the youngest 3, have moved from place to place after being displaced from their home.

They had relatively comfortable accommodations in a hotel for a time but were tossed out, victims of overbooking and a reservation made with a credit card.

It hasn?t been easy for the kids, he says. The oldest has withdrawn. He?s sick of talking about the hurricane. Their middle son is acting out in school. He?s on edge. Administrators think it might be the result of the accumulated stress of seeing the only home he?s ever known destroyed. Racanelli said he knows it is.

On a trip to the mall during the holiday shopping season ? a short-lived diversion for the children, a stark reminder to the parents of the loss of all their accumulated possessions ? Racenelli said his daughter sat on Santa Claus?s lap. When he asked her what she wanted for Christmas, she told him she wanted her house back.

In their odyssey they spent a week in a neighbor?s camper, parked in their driveway and emerging only at night, after their hosts had gone to bed, to use the bathroom and take hot showers.

Looking for a house to rent for a longer, but still temporary solution, they found few available options for their family, despite assurances from the state and the Federal Emergency Management Agency that New Jersey has more than enough rental properties available for Sandy victims.

Eventually, after initially being denied rental assistance by FEMA without explanation and reapplying and being told that, yes, they did qualify for assistance, the Racenelli?s found a suitable home, agreeing to terms with a landlord. After several unanswered phone calls from Racanelli, he found out the property was leased to another family, he believes, with better connections or maybe a bit more cash.

A bright spot emerged recently in the form of an online connection via social media. A long ago high school friend, maybe better stated, an acquaintance, caught wind of Racanelli?s plight on Facebook. She offered him the name and number of a couple who spend their summers in Point Pleasant. This time the promise of an available rental home came through.

It?s home, for now.

Everything is temporary, of course, until their house is rebuilt, torn down, built over, raised up or swallowed by surging tidal waters during the next once a century storm. Racanelli said he isn?t sure what to do or how long the process will take. He hasn?t gotten his insurance check yet. The work that?s been done in the house so far ? the stripping of the floor and walls and the debris removal ? was done by a contractor who expects to be paid, eventually. Their life in disarray, the Racanellis, beaten down and frustrated, can only wait.

Unprecedented Storm, Unprecedented Delays ?

On a tour of the barrier island at the end of November, a month after the storm decimated much of the Jersey Shore and the first time the state Assembly at large was given the opportunity to see the devastation, Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver walked along a road where houses once stood and stated, confidently, that the state would be there to aid in recovery.

Insurance companies should take notice, too, she promised. The state would not look kindly on insurance companies that delayed writing checks to displaced homeowners. Never mentioned, however, as she continued along, stopping for a moment to survey an Ortley Beach home crumbled on top of a pile of sand that didn?t belong there, was FEMA?s role in the payback. ?

The federal agency operates the National Flood Insurance Program, which is in the process of making good on the policies Sandy?s victims have been paying into for years. But in many instances, the payouts have not come quickly enough. Even now, nearly three months since the storm passed, some residents, like the Racanellis, are still waiting for their checks. Homeowners are eager to get back to work, to begin rebuilding their lives, but without money there?s little they can do.

FEMA has asserted its position as the helping hand during Sandy recovery, offering displaced families assistance in finding rental properties, providing funding to pay for rent, and even supplying temporary housing at previously unused facilities at Fort Monmouth and in the form of mobile homes driven into New Jersey on 18-wheelers and dropped on concrete slabs in trailer parks throughout the area. Help is here, but it might not be in the form residents are looking for. The shear total of claims, the lengthy process through which FEMA assesses damage, has meant a delay in insurance payouts, officials said.

?It?s taking a little bit of time because of the inordinate amount of claims,? FEMA Spokesman Christopher Mckniff said recently, noting that hundreds of thousands of claims have been submitted in New York and New Jersey. ?It?s taken its toll on the system because it was such a catastrophic event.

?If you?re having an issue, if you?re waiting a long time on insurance, there are things we can do to assist you.?

"This is your job. Let's go here."?

Typically, insurance companies have 30 days to respond to claims. When it comes to unprecedented storms, like Sandy, that deadline is suspended. How long the suspension lasts depends on a number of factors, including the number of claims submitted, the personnel needed to assess damage, and having funding available in your coffers.

Earlier this month and prior to the passing of a complete Sandy relief package, the U.S. House of Representatives approved a measure to allow the National Flood Insurance Program to borrow $9.7 billion to pay insurance claims made by Sandy victims. In all, Sandy damaged or destroyed nearly 350,000 homes throughout the state. According to statistics released by Gov. Chris Christie?s office, 72,000 of them were covered by the NFIP.

Among them is the Racanelli home.

?The insurance companies are crying, asking people to be patient, but we?re 10 weeks out here,? Bel Racanelli said. ?I understand you?re overwhelmed, but you?re paid to do this. This is your job, let?s go here. Let?s hire people, let?s get off our butts and get this done.?

Racanelli?s words are earnest and delivered so. In the past few years, the 31-year-old has raised her children while having to deal with multiple surgeries, a home fire that destroyed many of her family?s personal belongings, and the strain of a cancer scare that caused her son to be admitted to the hospital. But the weary look that weighs on her still youthful face has everything to do with Sandy.

Information on what to expect has been limited. Jim Racanelli said two different adjusters came to take a look at his property on two different days. They each had significantly different opinions and perspectives on the situation. As to the official word, Racanelli doesn?t know. The adjusters have taken a look at the property, filled out paperwork, and submitted it up the line. In the mean time all there is to do is wait.

The Department of Banking and Insurance has taken on the task of assisting the state?s residents when it comes to filing complaints, answering questions, or, as it?s been recently, serving as the vent for so many Sandy-related concerns. Despite delays, DOBI Spokesman Marshall McKnight said claims are being paid off and that legitimate complaints, those that include proof that insurance companies violated department regulations, have been few.

In all, approximately 488,000 Sandy-related claims have been submitted by residents since the October storm. Of that total, 300,000, or roughly 60 percent of all claims, have been closed, paid out, resolved. When it comes to homeowners insurance, DOBI has methods of applying pressure to help urge things along. Dealing with the National Flood Insurance Program is a bit different. It?s a federal issue and not part of the department?s jurisdiction. Helpful advice is available, but getting your claim answered is out of the state?s hands.

Unsurprisingly, perhaps, the majority of complains DOBI has received following Hurricane Sandy are specifically related to flood insurance and delays in insurance payouts, McKnight said.

An Uncertain Future?

The Racanelli?s home on Elizabeth Avenue is a 1920?s bungalow with a view of a lagoon that?s never even once risen to reach their property line. In the distance, past the reeds and marsh are a few scattered mansions ? new construction taking advantage of a natural vista ? in a crowded part of a crowded state that?s likely unattainable for blue-collar families.?

They haven?t built homes like these for years and they may never again. They?re small, built below grade, and now, thanks to Sandy and FEMA?s new flood elevation maps, are located in flood prone areas. Even if the Racanelli?s are able to rebuild their existing home, new flood insurance rates expected to come online next year will make it too expensive to live there. Raising it is an option, one Racanelli said he?ll pursue, but Increased Cost of Compliance, or ICC, coverage only provides a maximum of $30,000 to raise a structure. Racanelli said he?s gotten estimates, the lowest of them coming in at $40,000.

In the end, the point may be moot. The ICC funding requires a number of steps before it?s made available, including compliance from towns to follow FEMA?s new flood maps. Even then the money doesn?t come quickly. At a recent information session with Sea Bright residents, FEMA officials acknowledged that some property owners in the Gulf Coast still haven?t received ICC funding to elevate their homes after Hurricane Katrina, a storm that hit in 2005.

?A lot of the builders are saying ?Jim, by the time we repair this all it?s going to cost too much?,? Racanelli said. ?I don?t know what to do.?

Editor's note: This article, part of a column about the effects of Hurricane Sandy, was previously published by Toms River Patch in New Jersey.

Source: http://darien.patch.com/articles/flood-insurance-delay-paints-bleak-picture-for-nj-hurricane-sandy-victims

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Timeshare Executive Headhunter Keith Trowbridge, Executive ...

Executive Quest logoFort Myers, FL (January 25, 2013) ? Keith W. Trowbridge, Ph.D., President and CEO of Executive Quest, Inc., executive headhunters in the timeshare, vacation ownership, and fractional industry, http://www.execq.com/keith.htm, reports the company has been busy even with the pressures of today?s economy. ?Executive Quest?s international presence has been a strong contributor to its success this past year,? said Trowbridge. He has a team with in depth knowledge of and optimistic expectations concerning the timeshare industry?s executive employee needs. This, and Executive Quest?s business practices and standards of conduct continue to strengthen the company?s position worldwide.

Much of Executive Quest?s headhunting strength now lies in its international presence with timeshare executive employee searches last year in such places as Australia, New Zealand, Dubai, Russia, the Caribbean, Dominican Republic, Mexico, the US, and Canada. Executive positions in these searches included directors, vice presidents, senior vice presidents in finance, HR, sales/marketing, property management, as well as project directors and call center managers, executive housekeepers, and national account executives.

Executive Quest soon will be starting its annual executive timeshare/vacation ownership/fractional salary study for 2012, http://www.execq.com/salarystudy.htm, which is free to all salary study participants as well as to members of Executive Quest?s resume management services program http://www.execq.com/store.htm.

Trowbridge writes a free monthly on-line newsletter with a subscription of better than 22,000 timeshare industry professionals that includes a calendar of upcoming industry conferences and events along with other timely industry articles. To subscribe, go to http://www.execq.com and click on the green ?Subscribe? button.

About Executive Quest, Inc.

Keith Trowbridge, Ph.D., who spent 35 years in the vacation ownership business as a developer, has spent the last 18 years in the head hunting business with his company, Executive Quest, Inc., a timeshare/fractional/ vacation ownership/ hospitality industry executive search firm with clients worldwide.

Inquiries can be made to http://www.execq.com, to Keith Trowbridge by phone at 239-454-1100 or keith@execq.com, or to Jim Perkins at 936-856-3983 or? jim@execq.com

Contact
Keith Trowbridge

Executive Quest, Inc.
239-454-1100

Source: http://www.insidethegate.com/2013/01/timeshare-executive-headhunter-keith-trowbridge-executive-quest-inc-had-a-strong-year/

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The Nutrition Facts of Food in Video Games

We totally think that bringing video game food into real life would be an awesome idea. But what are the nutrition facts of those mushrooms that Mario eats or those glowing dots that feed Pacman? We need to know these things! More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/JiLkOrJuzRU/the-nutrition-facts-of-food-in-video-games

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Mind Body Spirit Odyssey: Terrain - Garden Paradise on a Winter Day


For people who love to garden, the process doesn't stop just because it is cold outside.? It just shifts - inside.? Outside the soil freezes, the bare bones of our trees and shrubs are exposed.? We survey and contemplate what is underneath, taking stock of what we need to change and improve upon to make the garden function better in the Spring.


People also undergo an internal process during the winter months.? According to the Tao, we turn inward along with the season.? Contemplating...connecting with the energy of the North, with our inner thoughts and process.? We find ourselves evaluating, re-evaluating, throwing out what doesn't work or what we don't need any more...making quiet plans.? Winter has a way of doing that naturally to people.? Especially when the weather limits your activity.? It's your resting time, courtesy of natural law.? How you choose to handle it of course, is up to you.? Many people throw themselves into a regime of strenuous fitness and exercise.? That's not what it's suppose to be about.? But neither is three months vegging away on the couch in front of the TV either.

Anyway...I digress.

In winter I usually find myself in quiet mode.? Not terribly creative, but contemplative...definitely on the introspective side of the creative wheel.? I write more, I re-organize and re-think what I have done over the last year, eventually pulling together a (usually pretty vague) vision of what direction my path should take during the new calender year.

During this process I'm usually not only thinking about my artwork and jewelry designs, but also thinking about my garden.? The garden may be cold and bare boned outside, but inside I still crave nurturing the green and enjoying the beautiful colors displayed by the plants when they are in boom.

On a recent trip to Philadelphia, my son suggested we visit a garden shop/restaurant that he discovered not too long ago.? He told me that it was a amazingly beautiful place that I just had to see...and boy he certainly did not exaggerate!? Terrain is probably one of the most unique, gorgeous indoor retail spaces that I have ever been in - period.? It's a close second to ABC Carpet, and that's saying a lot!

Terrain is owned by Urban Outfitters, so right away you know it's going to have an edge and aesthetic appeal that you are not going to find every day.? The indoor garden shop is truly a glowing visual and sensory experience.? The space also extends into a wonderful little restaurant, specializing in locally sourced and prepared artisan food.? It was such an incredible environment.? I honestly could have moved in and stayed forever.

Philadelphia is Terrain's flagship store, and it only has one other location in Westport, Connecticut.? I've read articles where the store may be an attempt to target gardening and outdoor living to more of a Gen Xer audience, probably given the parent company, but I find that generalization to be pretty short sighted.? What is does offer is a wonderful opportunity to introduce the people of all ages to the visual aesthetic and artistic beauty of horticulture and garden design - an experience much different then just shopping for plants in the garden section of the Home Depot.

In addition to gardening supplies, I should also mention that the store beautifully integrates a whole range of books on food and gardening, artisan bath and body products, a sprinkling of furniture, lighting, curios and other carefully placed interior odds and ends into their space.? There is also an entire outdoor section of the shop which was closed for the winter.

So, if your thoughts are turning to the garden - even though it may be snowing - maybe you will get some ideas from some of these photos for some things you can be doing in your own home to pass the winter months.
?
If you do not live near Philadelphia or Westport, you can also visit Terrain's online store, where you will find a nice selection of some of the items available in their shop.

I'll close by saying, I really do hope that this is one retail store that will have greater availability to more people in the future.? It was definitely an uplifting experience for the Mind, Body and Spirit.

?

?

~ diane fergurson

? Follow the daily updates of the Mind Body Spirit Marketplace on Facebook

Source: http://www.mindbodyspiritodyssey.com/2013/01/terrain-garden-paradise-on-winter-day.html

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Online Dating Has Changed Everything - Online Personals Watch ...

Love in the time of algorithms 3dUSA TODAY - Jan 23 -?In his new book, Love in the Time of Algorithms: What Technology Does to Meeting and Mating, writer Dan Slater argues that online dating has changed society profoundly.

Q: What is it about online dating today that you believe has made such a big difference?
A: It's the vast expansion of the dating pool. People tended to be moving from one relationship to the next a lot faster than they seemed to before online dating existed.

Q: You suggest that online dating has made relationships more disposable. Why?
A: It made a lot more people feel they are part of a larger mating pool than they were used to.

Q: How much science is really involved in matching people the way online dating does?
A: Online dating does seem to be improving at is the likelihood of two strangers getting along well on a first date. ?The psychological science has not provided the ability to predict long-term compatibility between a couple who have never met.

Q: How did you meet your wife, Sophie?
A: I used a total of two sites through which I dated on and off about 12 months.Sophie and I actually met in a yoga class in January 2009. I asked her out, but she had a boyfriend. We went our separate ways for 2? years. Then we reconnected on Facebook.

by Sharon Jayson
See full article at USA Today

Source: http://www.onlinepersonalswatch.com/news/2013/01/online-dating-has-changed-everything.html

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Google reportedly ?actively exploring? the smartwatch market

Google SmartwatchGoogle Smartwatch Patent

In October, Google (GOOG) was granted a patent for a smartwatch with a flip-up display, however it was assumed that the concept, like most patents, would never move beyond the drawing board. A new report from Business Insider claims that the company is now ?actively exploring? the idea of producing its own smartwatch and is even looking into ways it could market such a device. Information is slim and it is unclear what size the device would be or if it would even run the company?s Android operating system. Business Insider cautioned that the project is still in a ?very early stage? and ?it remains to be seen if Google will actually end up bringing a smart watch to market.? As the Pebble has shown, however, there is clearly a market for smartwatches.

[More from BGR: Unlocking your smartphone will be illegal starting next week]

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/google-reportedly-actively-exploring-smartwatch-market-230945331.html

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Scientists encode Shakespeare sonnets, MP3 and more into glitch-free DNA

Scientists encode Shakespeare sonnets, MP3 into errorfree DNA memory

We've seen scientists experiment with DNA as a storage medium -- most recently with a Harvard team fitting 704TB of data onto a single gram of the genetic material -- and it looks like that research trend is only picking up. Scientists at the European Bioinformatics Institute in the UK have encoded an MP3 file -- along with a digital photo and all 154 of Shakespeare's sonnets -- into DNA, with a hulking storage density of 2.2 petabytes per gram. The information was written using the language of DNA's four bases (A, T, C and G, if you remember high-school bio), and to provide error correction the scientists reserved one of the letters to break up long runs of any of the other three bases. In practice, this system allowed for 100-percent accuracy in sequencing and retrieving the encoded files. Though DNA storage is still quite expensive, the researchers say this method could eventually provide a viable option for archiving information, especially considering DNA's high capacity and long life span. Still, you won't be ditching that hard drive just yet.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Via: Ars Technica, New Scientist

Source: Nature

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/HJr-Edhl3o4/

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Adopt a Cat is the Message in 'Catalogue' | Steve Dale's Pet World

By Steve Dale, Wednesday at 6:47 pm

I believe most people who don't want a cat, who don't like cats or say they don't like cats have simply never opened their homes to a cat....and ultimately their hearts. But generally, when people do open their minds to the idea, they?generally?do?ultimately?open their hearts.

The short movie won an award, called?"Catalogue." It was inspired by Rocky the cat,. who has s chameleon-like ability to blend into the sheets coupled with his love for napping made the?filmmakers?wonder what would happen if he'd been delivered with someone's new bed. Rocky's a screen veteran and has appeared in several other short films in his thirteen-year career, but has never matched the sheets better than he does in "Catalogue."

And a lesson from this movie: Two cats (or three maybe?) are better than one. And an adopted cat can become a movie star!

Feel free to vote HERE.

Filed under: animal shelters, cats, pets, Tree House Humane Society

Tags: adopt-a-cat, animal shelter, cat, cat adoption, cat shelter, Fresh Step cat litter, giving cats a chance, Rocky, Steve Dale archives, Tree House Humane Society

Source: http://www.chicagonow.com/steve-dales-pet-world/2013/01/adopt-a-cat-is-the-message-in-catalogue/

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Mali's top Muslim blasts 'wayward' rebels for imposing alien version of Islam

The head of the Islamic Council in Bamako says rebels have 'no right' to take up arms and impose sharia law, supports French troops and good Christian-Muslim relations. Meanwhile, Egyptian President Morsi opposes the French incursion into west Africa.

By Reuters / January 24, 2013

French soldiers look with binoculars in the outskirts of Sevare, Mali, some 385 miles north of Bamako, this week.

Thibault Camus/AP

Enlarge

Mail's top Muslim leader rejected the actions of Islamist foreigners in the north of his country and expressed outrage that they were trying to impose an alien version of Islam on a country that had been Muslim for a millennium.

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In an interview published on Thursday, Imam Mahmoud Dicko, head of the High Islamic Council in Bamako, also defended France's military intervention.

"What right do they have to impose the sharia here?" Mr. Dicko asked in the interview in the Catholic daily La Croix.

"What right do they have to take up arms to tell us how to practice Islam in our country?

"Thank God (France) has intervened to protect us from those who wanted to conquer us and impose their way of living Islam."

Islamists in northern Mali have destroyed historic Muslim shrines, which they considered heretical, and imposed harsh punishments that they say sharia Islamic law demands such as stoning adulterers to death and chopping off thieves' hands.

The imam disagreed with Muslim leaders who have criticized France's support for the government in Bamako.

"They talk about a war against Islam and a new crusade by France," he said. "I'm against this talk from Egypt or Qatar. They are completely mistaken."

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi criticized the French offensive on Monday and a Muslim group led by the influential Qatar-based preacher Youssef al-Qaradawi has warned of "dangerous consequences" from the intervention.

Dicko, described by La Croix as a follower of the puritanical Wahhabi version of Islam, said Bamako should try to negotiate with Malian Islamists but "chase out ... foreigners who came to impose sharia on us."

Some strict Wahhabis such as the Saudis also apply harsh punishments based on sharia Islamic law.

Dicko blamed attacks on a church in northern Mali on "wayward Muslims who came from abroad" and said relations between Mali's Islamic majority and its small Christian minority had always been harmonious.

Sheikh Sidi Konake, head of the Tijani Sufi brotherhood in Mali, also told La Croix he supported France's intervention.

"It's not fighting against Islam but against foreigners who want to impose their way of practicing Islam on us," he said.

"Luckily, France has come to save us from those people," he said. "Let me tell you -- there will be lots of little Malians named Hollande, you'll see."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/_oHMuUHUA0Y/Mali-s-top-Muslim-blasts-wayward-rebels-for-imposing-alien-version-of-Islam

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