Sunday, August 26, 2012

Obama-Romney race is focused on 7 states

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) ? On the eve of their national party conventions, the race between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney to amass the requisite 270 Electoral College votes needed for victory is exactly where it was at the start of the long, volatile summer: focused on seven states that are up for grabs.

Neither candidate has a significant advantage in Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Ohio, Nevada, New Hampshire and Virginia, which offer a combined 85 electoral votes, according to an Associated Press analysis of public and private polls, spending on television advertising and numerous interviews with Republican and Democratic strategists in battleground states.

The analysis, which also took into account the strength of a candidate's on-the-ground organization and travel schedules, found that if the election were held today, Obama would have 19 states and the District of Columbia, offering 247 votes, solidly in his column or leaning his way, while Republican Romney would have 24 states with 206 votes.

Obama won all seven of the too-close-to-call states in 2008, and they are where the race will primarily be contested in the homestretch to the Nov. 6 election.

Ten weeks before Election Day, the AP analysis isn't meant to be predictive but rather is intended to provide a snapshot of a race that's been stubbornly close all year.

Among the unknowns that could shake up the electoral landscape before November: the latest unemployment figures that come out early next month, an unexpected foreign policy crisis in Syria or Iran and the outcome of the candidates' October debates.

Both sides are working to persuade the 23 percent of registered voters who said in an Associated Press-GfK poll that they are either undecided about the presidential race or iffy in their support for a candidate.

Too woo them, the campaigns and political parties, along with allied groups with access to unlimited financial contributions, have already spent an astounding $540 million on television advertising, according to ad spending reports provided to the AP. And there's more to come.

Over the past three months, the campaign took a sharply negative turn, at times becoming nasty and personal.

Obama sought to define Romney early as a ruthless corporate raider for his time at the head of a private equity firm in Boston, and as an out-of-touch rich man keeping secrets about his wealth. Romney, in turn, worked to cast Obama as a failed president on a host of fronts, primarily the economy.

Both candidates have hit road bumps: Obama saw the unemployment rate rise to 8.3 percent and gave Republicans an opening to argue that he was unfriendly to small business. Romney had a widely panned foreign trip and made a series of potentially problematic comments, most recently joking about the debunked conspiracy theory regarding Obama's citizenship.

The national party conventions, starting with Republicans here on Monday and ending with Democrats the following week in Charlotte, N.C., will set the parameters of the fall campaign, and could provide each side with at least a temporary surge of support in national, if not battleground state, polls.

While Obama has a clear advantage given his incumbency, Romney does have a path to victory ? though it's a steep climb.

He must win most of the seven most competitive states ? Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Ohio, Nevada, New Hampshire and Virginia ? in order to reach the magic number. For instance, he can lose Ohio's 18 electoral votes and still become president if he wins the other six and hangs onto those already in his grasp. It's difficult to see a scenario where Romney wins without a victory in Florida, which offers 29 electoral votes.

Neither side expects a dramatically different playing field this fall.

"You know the states that are in play," said Obama's campaign manager Jim Messina. "I don't think there's going to be a surprise."

Romney's political director Rich Beeson makes the same point: "I don't think you're going to see the map go crazy."

Still, once their conventions are over, both campaigns will commission polls in the hardest-fought states to determine whether to shift their strategies. The candidates and their allied outside groups will pull money and manpower from states that are moving out of reach while relocating it to others they may now think they have a shot at winning.

"We're in a holding pattern," said Charlie Black, a veteran Republican campaign strategist and informal adviser to Romney.

Perhaps not for long.

With a huge cash advantage, Romney is considering trying to put more states in play ? and creating more state-by-state paths to reach 270. He's closely watching to see whether it's worth it to compete aggressively in Wisconsin, now that native son Rep. Paul Ryan is on the ticket.

The Republican National Committee and GOP allies have been advertising in the state in hopes of making it competitive; at least one poll shows they've had some success and the race appears close. Obama, who has a formidable campaign on the ground that includes the state's active labor and minority blocs, hasn't advertised there but might be forced to do so.

Romney also is eyeing a deeper investment in Michigan, where he campaigned Friday, and Pennsylvania, where Ryan was last week. Obama carried both states in 2008, but the GOP sees promise in the economically struggling northern industrial states, especially among working-class, white voters.

The Republican may have the money to expand the map.

August financial reports show that Romney's overall fundraising apparatus ? his campaign, the RNC and a separate joint-fundraising committee ? has roughly $177 million in the bank. And to a greater degree than Obama, Romney also has amassed an untapped stockpile of general election money that he plans to use this fall. He can begin spending it immediately upon accepting the nomination for president at the convention's close Thursday night.

Obama and his comparable committees, in turn, have only about $126 million on hand, and he must wait a week ? after he accepts his party's nomination on Sept. 6 at the close of his convention ? to start spending it.

Unlike Romney, Obama isn't focused on expanding the map in earnest.

He's mostly looking to hang onto as many of the states he won four years ago, with Ohio being of particular focus. In recent months, Obama's standing there has strengthened, the unemployment rate has dropped and last week General Motors announced a $200 million expansion of a northeast Ohio plant to continue building the Chevrolet Cruze there.

Beyond playing defense, Obama's team is watching to see whether the political terrain becomes more favorable to him in Missouri in the aftermath of controversial abortion and rape comments by Rep. Todd Akin, a GOP Senate candidate.

The backlash has been fierce, and polls show Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill ? arguably the most vulnerable Senate Democrat ? having gained ground. Obama competed for Missouri four years ago but lost and hasn't run ads there this year. Romney has had a comfortable advantage there.

If they have the money to do it, both sides will engage in head-faking: spending money in places simply to force the other side to defend their home turf. For example, if Romney goes after Pennsylvania, which has voted Democratic in all recent presidential elections, Obama would likely have to spend money to defend it, limiting the amount of cash he'll have available to spend in more competitive states, like Florida or Virginia.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-romney-race-focused-7-states-190717717.html

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Hitler and the false lure of more is better

Nazi Germany's economy was not a central planning success, it was a disaster. Is there a lesson for today?

By Bill Bonner,?Guest blogger / August 25, 2012

A representation of Adolf Hitler lies in a box after police searched the house of an alleged neo-Nazi in Juelich, western Germany, on Thursday. Germany's Nazi economy holds some lessons for today.

Michael Klarmann/dapd/AP

Enlarge

Economists cannot know what is ?better.? They can only know what is ?more.? They have numbers. They can count. They can add up ?more?. As for ?better,? they have no idea. So, in their little minds, more is better.

Skip to next paragraph Bill Bonner

Bill has written two New York Times best-selling books, Financial Reckoning Day and Empire of Debt. With political journalist Lila Rajiva, he wrote his third New York Times best-selling book, Mobs, Messiahs and Markets, which offers concrete advice on how to avoid the public spectacle of modern finance. Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force behind The Daily Reckoning (dailyreckoning.com).

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That is the thinking that has driven the profession?and much of the world economy?to absurdity. Throughout the last 50 years, more looked so much like better, no one worried too much about the difference. More cars. More houses. More food. More gadgets. What was not to like?

But the cost was more debt. And by the 21st century the burden of debt had become so great that the system could no longer move forward. Here is how it worked, up until the early spring of 2007:

The Chinese, and others, made more stuff. The Arabs, and others, pumped more oil.

Americans, and others, created more credit and used the money to buy more stuff.

Rather than demand payment ? in gold ? for their excess dollars, as they would have before 1971, the exporters took the money and lent it back to the Americans. In this way, the US never really had to settle up. Approximately $8 trillion of purchasing power ? the accumulated trade deficits between 1970 and 2007 ? was created in this way. There is supposed to be ?no such thing as a free lunch? in economics. But for years Americans ate breakfast, lunch, and many of their dinners too at foreigners? expense.

Not needing to redeem the old credits, new ones were made available to Americans. Cheap credit drove up housing prices?and gave them the collateral to borrow more money and buy more stuff.

But when subprime mortgage market collapsed in ?07-?08, suddenly, US real estate prices stopped rising. This left millions of households in a bind. They could no longer borrow against rising house prices because housing was going down. They had to cut back on spending?which meant less stuff could be sold to them?and it left producers with bulging warehouses with unsold goods.

Economists looked at this situation, after the crash of subprime mortgages in ?07 and ?08, and came to the same conclusion they had on the occasion of every other slowdown over the previous 60 years. The economy needed more ?stimulus? to encourage consumers to buy more stuff. They did not notice that consumers already had too much stuff?and that they were now paying the price for buying more stuff than they could afford. Nor did they wonder whether consumers? lives might be better if they focused more on quality and less on quantity. ?More? is all they know; it is all they can do. So they called for ?more stimulus,? more debt, more credit, more spending, and more stuff.

But more is not always the right answer. There are times when less is better.

One of those times was in the mid-1930s?when Germany faced a critical decision. More? Or less?

Adam Tooze, a British historian, has written a marvelous book on the Nazi economy,?The Wages of Destruction. He shows that, far from illustrating the success of intelligent central planning, the German economy of the Third Reich was a disaster. The National Socialists ? or ?Nazis? ? had their plans for Germany. They were determined to put them into practice, regardless of what the Germans may have wanted for themselves. They fiddled with one sector after another. When one fix failed to produce the desired results, actually bringing unintended and undesired consequences, they tried to fix the fix with a new fix. Most of these fixes involved spending money ? if not on actual output, then on bureaucracies that regulated output. And most of them were directed towards a goal that only a demagogue politician or a lame economist would find attractive ? making Germany self-sufficient. Imports cost money, they reasoned. Besides, trade forced a nation to behave. Neither was attractive to the Nazis.

Like America in the 2000s, by the mid-1930s Germany had already spent too much money ? with the military as its biggest single expense. It faced enemies much more real and dangerous than America?s ?terrorist? adversaries. And under Adolph Hitler?s leadership it had decided to invest heavily in armaments. This created a sense of purpose for many people and a source of ?demand? that got people working again. Germany was still a relatively poor country, with a standard of living only about half the US equivalent. An autoworker in Munich, for example, could not expect anywhere near the same lifestyle as one in Detroit. Henry Ford paid his workers so well they were able to afford large houses with hot and cold running water and electricity. They could buy automobiles too?which gave a huge boost to America?s heavy industry. When war began, the US could fairly quickly convert its auto factories to production of jeeps, tanks and trucks. Germany could not.

In Germany, automobiles were still a luxury item. Few people owned them; certainly not the people who made them. Military orders made up for the lack of demand from the civilian population.

In this regard, many economists looked at Germany and labeled the rearmament program ? from an economic standpoint ? as a central planning success story. It ?put people back to work.? It ?got the economy moving again.? More stuff was being produced. ?More? worked! From all over Europe, people came to admire the revival in Germany. American Congressmen praised Hitler. So did many magazine editors and other leaders in France and Britain too.

Besides, compared to what was going on in Russia, Japan and Italy? Germany looked positively benign, if not a perfect role model. Stalin was purging or starving his enemies ? millions of them. Benito Mussolini had invaded Abyssinia and was busily massacring the locals. The Japanese were beginning their bloody war against the Chinese. Hitler may have sounded mad from time to time, and he may have murdered many of his rivals on the ?night of the long knives,? but now ? by 1935 ? he was beginning to sound reasonable, at least in comparison.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/nvmf645LIZU/Hitler-and-the-false-lure-of-more-is-better

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Saturday, August 25, 2012

Real estate agent wants review of signatures in mayoral bid - WTVR 6

Posted on: 6:22 pm, August 24, 2012, by Nick Dutton, updated on: 06:55pm, August 24, 2012

RICHMOND, Va. (WTVR) ? A real estate agent who failed to get enough verified registered voters to sign his petition for Richmond mayor is mounting a legal challenge to get his name on the November ballot.

?For me, it?s been kind of hurry up and wait,? said?Michael ?Ryan Jr.??It?s only fair that if you?re disqualified that we sit down and look at why you?re disqualified, because people do make mistakes,? said Ryan.

According the City Registrar, the 46-year-old did not turn in enough verified registered voters on his petition in several districts. And since there is no appeals process, he and his attorney?s filed suit last month.

Kirk Showalter, an attorney for the city registrar, denied that Ryan was wrongfully kicked off the ballot. In a response to the candidate Friday, Showalter?said the lawsuit be thrown out.

?It?s unfortunate because it?s a waste of people?s time, energy, and taxpayer?s money,? said Ryan.

Goldman believes they can reach an agreement with the city registrar?s attorney to review Ryan?s signatures. After all, that?s what officials did with?Tichi Pinkney-Eppes, a Richmond?school board candidate who was told her signatures weren?t valid.

?They did the same thing in the previous case with Ms. Eppes that we won,? said Paul Goldman, Michael Ryan?s attorney. ?They made the same denials and then they were forced to change their mind. I think the same thing is going to happen here.?

However, a judge could decide?in Ryan?s case if the attorneys for the city registrar and Michael Ryan Jr. fail to reach an agreement.

?It?s unfortunate that when you?re trying to enforce you basic rights that all citizens should have [and] there doesn?t seem to be any real interest among the leadership in the city of Richmond to make this happen,? said Goldman.

Goldman said he is confident Michael Ryan will get the review that he is believes the candidate is entitled to.

CBS 6 News? Sandra Jones tried to reach William Turner, an attorney for the city registrar, but he had not yet returned her phone calls.

Stay with CBS 6 News and WTVR.com for the latest updates on this story.

Source: http://wtvr.com/2012/08/24/will-mayor-dwight-jones-run-unopposed/

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Video: ?Say yes to the Dress? heads to Atlanta

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/48788407#48788407

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HBT: Lannan leading candidate to replace Strasburg

Whenever the Nationals shut down Stephen Strasburg the ?leading candidate? to replace him in the rotation is John Lannan, according to James Wagner of the Washington Post.

Lannan has spent nearly all of this season at Triple-A despite throwing 185 innings with a 3.70 ERA for the Nationals last season and being paid $5 million this year. And he hasn?t even been much good in the minors, starting 22 games with a 4.89 ERA and 74/49 K/BB ratio in 131 innings.

He has, however, pitched reasonably well in a pair of spot starts for the Nationals and is already on the 40-man roster, making Lannan a guaranteed September call-up.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/08/24/john-lannan-is-the-leading-candidate-to-replace-stephen-strasburg-in-nationals-rotation/related/

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Sending the message regarding the Fight against Obesity by means ...




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Source: http://www.kiefit.com/FitnessVideos/what-exactly-is-the-visalus-challenge-party-buzz-all-about-/

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Friday, August 24, 2012

Correa could deny Belarus blogger's extradition

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa said he could have the last word on the extradition of a dissident blogger and former soldier from Belarus now before the country's high court.

Alexander Barankov, a former army captain, fled to Ecuador in 2009 after being charged with fraud, allegations he says were trumped up after he blogged about widespread corruption linked to people close to Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, often referred to as "Europe's last dictator."

Ecuador granted him asylum in 2010 after he argued that he faced the death penalty for treason in Belarus, but imprisoned him for 52 days later that year after an extradition request from Minsk that was eventually rejected.

"Ecuador will put the emphasis on not extraditing a citizen whose life is at risk, from facing the death penalty or life in prison," Deputy Foreign Minister Marco Albuja said.

Correa said that if the high court, which is due to issue a ruling in the coming days, decides to grant the extradition request from Belarus, he could overrule that decision "as a last resort."

"We reject any attack on human rights (or) political persecution," Correa told foreign reporters.

Ecuador's much-criticized record on press freedom has come under renewed scrutiny following its decision to grant asylum to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, holed up at its London embassy to avoid extradition to Sweden.

Barankov, 30, is wanted by Interpol for fraud. He has been detained for 70 days pending the court decision.

His lawyer Fernando Lara told AFP that the Lukashenko regime is out to silence Barankov -- a former member of a military anti-corruption investigation team -- after he uncovered illicit activities embarrassing top officials.

The European Union and the United States have accused Belarus of detaining dissidents and committing other human rights abuses, and tightened sanctions in the wake of a disputed election in December 2010 that handed another term to Lukashenko, in power since 1994.

The Barankov case re-emerged following a visit by Lukashenko to Ecuador in June, when he signed several military and other accords with Correa, a leftist leader who has moved to strengthen ties with US foes.

The reopening of the Barankov case comes at a time of tensions with Britain over Assange, who is wanted for questioning in Sweden over sexual assault allegations but fears being sent on to the United States for prosecution.

Correa insisted that Ecuador was "open to dialogue" with Britain and Sweden over Assange, expressing hope for renewed contacts between senior officials.

Washington has viewed WikiLeaks as a threat to its national security following the release of a trove of leaked diplomatic cables and military logs from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Ecuador's support for Assange -- who presents himself as a whistleblower and the victim of a US "witch hunt" -- has drawn attention to Correa's long-running feud with the country's own private media.

Rights groups and press freedom organizations have roundly criticized Correa for targeting opposition media with libel suits, accusing Ecuador of having one of the worst records on press freedom in Latin America.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/correa-could-deny-belarus-bloggers-extradition-051626335.html

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A Gel That Extends The Shelf Life of Bananas

60-Second Science

Chemists have created a spray-on gel that can slow the ripening of bananas. Christie Nicholson reports

More 60-Second Science

One day the banana is perfect. Bright yellow, firm, flavorful. But even within the same day brown spots appear on your perfectly ripe banana, its flesh turns mushy, and it?s destined for the compost or at best, banana bread.

?

But scientists are developing a way to extend the life of bananas. It?s a spray-on coating made from chitosan?a substance found in crab and shrimp shells. The new gel can be sprayed on bananas to slow the ripening process by up to 12 days.

?

Like other fruit bananas remain alive after being picked and they actually continue to respire. This means they take in oxygen and release carbon dioxide. The more the banana breathes the faster it ripens and then rots. Bananas ripen more quickly than most fruit because they don?t naturally slow the respiration after being picked, in fact it speeds up, giving bananas their notoriously short shelf life.

?

Chitosan not only kills the bacteria on banana?s skin that then leads to rot, it also significantly slows down the respiration in the first place. So bananas won?t drive you bananas.

?

?Christie Nicholson


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=2850ba7ba6913442823f7f8593287fee

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Thursday, August 23, 2012

THURSDAY, Aug. 23 (HealthDay News) -- A new study that helps ...




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Mom's emotional health during child's early years linked to teen's oral health

ScienceDaily (Aug. 22, 2012) ? A mother's emotional health and education level during her child's earliest years influence oral health at age 14, according to a new study from Case Western Reserve University's School of Dental Medicine.

Researchers started with the oral health of the teens and worked backwards to age 3 to find out what factors in their past influenced their oral health outcomes. While mothers were interviewed, lead investigator Suchitra Nelson, professor in the dental school, believes it can apply to whoever is the child's primary caregiver.

Nelson's team examined the teeth of 224 adolescent participants in a longitudinal study that followed very low birth weight and normal birth weight children. Over the years, researchers gathered health and medical information from the children and their mothers to assess the child's wellbeing at age 3, 8 and now 14. The researchers analyzed the teen's oral health by counting the number of decayed, filled or missing permanent teeth and assessed the level of dental plaque, a symptom for poor oral hygiene.

Mothers completed a questionnaire about preventative treatments from sealants to mouthwashes, sugary juice or soft drink consumption and access to dental care and frequency of dental visits.

The data revealed that even with access to dental insurance, fluoride treatments and sealants as young children, it did not always prevent cavities by the age of 14, said Nelson, professor of community dentistry at Case Western Reserve dental school.

She is lead investigator on the Journal of Dental Research article, "Early Maternal Psychosocial Factors are Predictors for Adolescent Caries."

What did prevent cavities in teens?

Using a statistical modeling program that tracked pathways from the teen's dental assessments back to the source of where the oral health originated led researchers right to mothers and their overall emotional health, education level and knowledge when children were at ages 3 and 8.

The researchers found if mothers struggled in any of the three areas, the oral health of the teens at age 14 resulted in higher numbers of oral health problems.

"We can't ignore the environments of these children," Nelson said. "It isn't enough to tell children to brush and floss, they need more -- and particularly from their caregivers."

The oral health boost comes from mothers, who muster coping skills to handle everyday stresses and develop social networks to provide for their children's needs.

It was found that mothers with more education beyond high school, with healthy emotional states and knowledge about eating right had children with healthier teeth.

"We cannot ignore these environmental influences and need interventions to help some moms get on track early in their children's lives," Nelson concludes.

Nelson says moms need to care for themselves to help their children. She likens it to the emergency instructions on an airplane that mothers put on the mask first and then their children. "How can a mother help her child if she passes out," asks Nelson. "It's all common sense, but some mothers may need help."

Contributing to this study were Wonik Lee, research associate, and Jeffrey. M. Albert, associate professor from the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics and Lynn Singer, Deputy Provost and Vice President of Academic Affairs and professor in the Department of General Medicine and Pediatrics at the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine.

Support for the study came from National Institute of Health's Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research and the Health Resources and Services Administration's Maternal and Child Health Program.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Case Western Reserve University.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. S. Nelson, W. Lee, J. M. Albert, L. T. Singer. Early Maternal Psychosocial Factors Are Predictors for Adolescent Caries. Journal of Dental Research, 2012; 91 (9): 859 DOI: 10.1177/0022034512454434

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/-YfAbyemhqs/120822131218.htm

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Lifelike, cost-effective robotic hand can disable IEDs

ScienceDaily (Aug. 21, 2012) ? Sandia National Laboratories has developed a cost-effective robotic hand that can be used in disarming improvised explosive devices, or IEDs.

The Sandia Hand addresses challenges that have prevented widespread adoption of other robotic hands, such as cost, durability, dexterity and modularity.

"Current iterations of robotic hands can cost more than $250,000. We need the flexibility and capability of a robotic hand to save human lives, and it needs to be priced for wide distribution to troops," said Sandia senior manager Philip Heermann.

The Sandia Hand project is funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

Principal investigator Curt Salisbury said the goal was to build a capable but affordable robotic system.

"Hands are considered the most difficult part of the robotic system, and are also the least available due to the need for high dexterity at a low cost," Salisbury said.

The Sandia Hand is modular, so different types of fingers can be attached with magnets and quickly plugged into the hand frame. The operator has the flexibility to quickly and easily attach additional fingers or other tools, such as flashlights, screwdrivers or cameras. Modularity also gives the Sandia Hand a unique durability. The fingers are designed to fall off should the operator accidentally run the hand into a wall or another object.

"Rather than breaking the hand, this configuration allows the user to recover very quickly, and fingers can easily be put back in their sockets," Salisbury said. "In addition, if a finger pops off, the robot can actually pick it up with the remaining fingers, move into position and resocket the finger by itself."

The operator controls the robot with a glove, and the lifelike design allows even first-time users to manipulate the robot easily. The robot's tough outer skin covers a gel-like layer to mimic human tissue, giving the Sandia Hand the additional advantage of securely grabbing and manipulating objects, like a human hand.

Using Sandia's robotic hand to disable IEDs also might lead investigators to the bomb makers themselves. Often, bombs are disarmed simply by blowing them up. While effective, that destroys evidence and presents a challenge to investigators trying to catch the bomb maker. A robotic hand that can handle the delicate disarming operation while preserving the evidence could lead to more arrests, and fewer bombs.

Sandia partnered with researchers at Stanford University to develop the hardware and worked with consulting firm LUNAR to drive costs down drastically. In current commercially available robotic hands, each independently actuated degree of freedom costs roughly $10,000.

"The Sandia Hand has 12 degrees of freedom, and is estimated to retail for about $800 per degree of freedom -- $10,000 total -- in low-volume production. This 90 percent cost reduction is really a breakthrough," said Salisbury. Additionally, because much of the technology resides in the individual finger modules, hands with custom numbers and arrangements of fingers will be quite affordable.

"At this price point, the Sandia Hand has the potential to be a disruptive technology," added Heermann. "Computers, calculators and cell phones became part of daily life and drastically changed how we do things when the price became affordable. This hand has the same potential, especially given that high-volume production can further reduce the cost."

DARPA is funding a separate software effort in a parallel track to the hardware work.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Sandia National Laboratories.

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/top_news/~3/0JsvLr8JhDQ/120821222007.htm

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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Social Media Intelligence Brief, Aug. 21, 2012 | Social Media Today

About Steve Momorella:

Owner/Founder

TEKGROUP

Steve Momorella, owner and founder, TEKGROUP International, has more than 17 years of direct Internet experience ranging from programming to high-level design and consulting for numerous large corporations including IBM, AOL and Ford Motor Company. Currently, Steve is responsible for the sales and marketing of TEKGROUP?s Online Newsroom Solution, used by well-known brands including Toyota, Starbucks, Prudential, Walgreens, Lowes, Dunkin' Donuts, Ford, Sprint, and many of the Fortune 500 companies. As the head of sales and marketing for TEKGROUP, Steve stays on top of the latest news and events by working with industry experts to conduct research surveys, producing reports on topics such as online newsrooms, social media news, and digital communications. His recent research reports include The Online Newsroom Survey and The Social Media News Survey. He manages all sales and marketing efforts for TEKGROUP by combining his unique background of technology, communications, project management, and years of executive sales experience. Steve is also a frequent speaker for national conference organizations and association meetings, and he is workshop instructor at colleges and universities across the country. Steve has presented at the Public Relations Society of America, Bulldog Reporter Media Relations Summit, Major League Baseball winter meetings, and at the University of Virginia and Western Kentucky University.

See entire profile ?

Source: http://socialmediatoday.com/steve-momorella/732746/social-media-intelligence-brief-aug-21-2012

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Biden: Wall St. reform critics 'squealing pigs'

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ? Vice President Joe Biden is defending the Obama administration's efforts to reform Wall Street ? and comparing Republican critics of the law to "squealing pigs."

Biden told a raucous crowd in downtown Minneapolis on Tuesday that Congress had passed a law reining in Wall Street despite objections from presidential candidate Mitt Romney and other Republicans.

Biden described the objections of Republicans as sounding like "squealing pigs" and called the changes "some of the toughest Wall Street regulations in history."

Biden caused a stir last week when he said Romney and other Republicans would put Americans "back in chains" in order to unshackle Wall Street.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/biden-wall-st-reform-critics-squealing-pigs-201600355.html

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Growth in Interims Managers hired to deliver change and business ...

By On-Rec at 22 August, 2012, 9:17 am

Change Management is becoming the new place to be for Interim Managers. A growing number of interim managers specialising in change management are emerging in the UK according to the latest snap shot market research from Russam GMS, the award-winning interim management provider. ?

The company?s latest report of 12,000 interims highlighted that the majority of interim assignments are now for specialist projects or change management programmes ? rather than more traditional ?gap-filling? assignments, which make up just 13% of total projects.? 17% of interims say they are involved in change management work and change and business transformation work now accounts for 19% of all assignments.

Charles Russam, Chairman of Russam GMS comments, ?Change management has emerged as a new job discipline in interim management. Increasingly, CEOs are hiring interim change management experts to help them handle their toughest business challenges and to move their business to the next level. Interims are proving popular because they bring specialist expertise that tends not to exist within a company. They are adept at quickly identifying and sorting out problems and can brought in on a short-term basis so they are an affordable option for many businesses.?

Russam adds that there seems to be an increase in the number of businesses bored with a no-growth economy, keen to move ahead and with funds on hand who are now hiring Interims to help identify changes and to manage their implementation.? It?s a quick, low cost, low risk approach.? And it can be seriously effective.

Leon Labovitch has specialised in interim change management for the past eight years working in manufacturing, banking and the retail sectors. He says the skills of a change manager are very specific and rare ? a hybrid of business strategy mixed with programme and project management skills. He says the strengths of a change manager are strategic insight, the ability to quickly identify and communicate problems within a business, devise a strategy for change and importantly, deliver that change.

Jacqui Dunning is a former consultant at PA Consultancy who set up her own change management business in 2009.? She was attracted to change management as a result of her fascination with solving business problems and because she had seen ?too many? good projects and policies ruined by poor implementation.

Jacqui Dunning says, ?Too many businesses have great strategies and plans that aren?t implemented properly which is why I moved from consultancy into project delivery. But there are skills needed as a change manager. Firstly, you need to be resilient and recognise that no one likes change so people within a business will be naturally suspicious of you.?

?You also need a diverse range of skills to succeed including great analytic ability to quickly assess problems, excellent communication skills and boundless energy and passion to get people to buy into your vision of change. You need determination to see the plans through to the end. You must be a good listener and strong leadership skills are essential as they contribute to at least 70% of project success.?

Categories :News | News archive Full Article :view now

Source: http://www.recruiterfocus.co.uk/2012/08/22/growth-in-interims-managers-hired-to-deliver-change-and-business-transformation/

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Tuesday, August 21, 2012

South African Ministry of Finance Alerts about Fake E-mails ...

The Finance Ministry of South Africa along with the country's FIC has alerted citizens of fake e-mails/letters which are presently circulating online masquerading as FIC, published allafrica.com dated August 12, 2012.

FIC, which works for making sure the system of finance in SA is credible and stable, is reportedly among the total of 7 institutions which are accountable to the finance ministry.

Apparently according to the ongoing online fraud, the fake electronic mail claims that its writer has the authority to dispatch an enormous sum-of-money that the reader is entitled to get and those who authorized him are Pravin Gordhan, Finance Minister and the IMF's (International Monetary Fund) Secretary General.

Moreover, for making the scam e-mail appear authentic, it provides the reader one reference number for the payment, a release-code of an ATM Visa Card, a confidential telex-code and PIN number.

However, for all that, the recipient must give his cell-phone number and address amongst other personal information, the e-mail states. There's also an admonition that the reply must be immediate so the payment doesn't go to someone who isn't the right beneficiary.

The Ministry disclosed that the scam e-mails had been utilizing various state agencies' as well as the FIC's logos.

It also said that these, which were a form of the 419 scam, were known to FIC that had been warning people through its www.fic.gov.za government site about fake campaigns, which posed as having the FIC's permission along with that of the Finance Ministry and additional public officials.

But according to FIC, it not only doesn't need anybody to pay for anything it does for them; it doesn't even disburse funds to any member of the same.

Jabulani Sikhakhane, Spokesperson for the Ministry-of-Finance reported the condemnation Pravin Gordhan made for his and the FIC's names getting used for defrauding South Africans into giving away their hard-earned cash. Mr. Gordhan had thus urged netizens for informing their local police about all alleged frauds, Sikhakhane added. Fin24.com published this dated August 12, 2012.

According to the Spokesperson, the fake electronic mails are recognizable by their incorrect logos, spelling mistakes and the exaggerated reimbursement stated.

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Watch How Quickly Climate Change Melts Ice Over the Arctic Sea

The ice over the Arctic Ocean is?shrinking at record rates?this year, a stark signal of global warming, scientists say. How bad is it? Watch this striking animated GIF of the past few decades' of ice shrinkage from climate change?blog Open Mind.

RELATED: Planet Earth Had a Great Fall

Using data from the University of Illinois' Cryosphere Today, blogger Tamino animated the changes in area of the Arctic Sea ice from 1980 to 2012. In the summer, the ice melts more before refreezing in the winter, which explains the dip and rise.?

RELATED: America's Gardens Are Warmer in 2012

As you can see, the line gets steeper and steeper as time passes, and the area gets lower and lower, showing how the ice is diminishing due to rising temperatures.?Whether or not you think global warming is caused by humans, the evidence is clear that ice is no longer refreezing to its previous levels.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/watch-quickly-climate-change-melts-ice-over-arctic-182102345.html

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Plants vs. Zombies 2 teased... for spring 2013!

Plants vs. Zombies 2 teased... for spring 2013!

Plants vs. Zombies, the wildly popular undead-themed tower defense-style game for iPhone and iPad will finally -- finally -- be getting a sequel... in late spring 2013! Yep, it's walking this way at full, lurching, zombie speed, it seems. Developers PopCap, a division of EA, have still seen fit to send out a tease, and that's about all it is -- the promise that it's coming and hoards of new zombies, plants, and features are coming with it.

Still, PopCap isn't totally without heart, or a sense of human, and so they've provided pull quotes from some of the characters to tide us over.

?Spring is crullest curlie ungood time, and plantz grow dull roots,? noted an unidentified spokesperson. ?So, we are meating you for brainz at yore house. No worry to skedule schedlue plan? we're freee anytime. We'll find you.?

?There was a time we relished a bracing, hearty blend of zombies, in the morning,? said Sonny F. Lower, a representative of the Flora Forever Foundation. ?But first, a brisk shower and some strategic pruning are required. Tomorrow is near!?

I don't even want to begin to count the hours I've lost to Plants vs. Zombies over the years, so at least we'll have the winter to get some work done before late springs come and the zombies EAT OUR BRAINS!

In the meantime, what new features would you love to see in Plants vs. Zombies 2? Zombie giants vs Ents?!



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/1eleBpebNCM/story01.htm

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Monday, August 20, 2012

Why Women Choose Abortion

Understanding why a woman gets an abortion may help to prevent unintended pregnancies in the first place, say scientists who have dug into this complex, and often controversial, matter.

Their new research suggests a not-insignificant percentage of abortion-seeking women are in the midst of a disruptive life event, such as job loss, relationship breakdown or lack of funds for rent/mortgage payments around the time they made their abortion decision.

The study results, detailed in the Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care, cannot suggest a cause-effect link between life stressors and abortion. However, the researchers say the results have practical implications regarding access to birth control.

Abortion decision

The study, by researchers from the Guttmacher Institute in New York, relied on data from nearly 9,500 American women who had an abortion in 2008; the women indicated whether they had experienced any of 11 disruptive life events at the time, as well as socioeconomic factors and contraceptive use. The researchers also conducted in-depth interviews with 49 women, ages 18 and older, from June to October 2008.

Of the women who reported having an abortion, more than 57 percent noted they'd faced at least one major life stressor in the preceding year. For instance, nearly 20 percent had lost their job; 16 percent had separated from a partner; 14 percent had fallen behind on rent or mortgage; and nearly 12 percent had moved several times.

In addition, 10 percent had experienced the death of a close friend; 10 percent had had a baby; and 7 percent had experienced domestic violence. [10 Most Destructive Human Behaviors]

Poor women were more likely than affluent women to have experienced multiple life stressors, "perhaps because a lack of financial resources prevents them from dealing with the fallout from one disruption and, in turn, a 'chain effect' is initiated," the researchers write.

(The researchers noted that in 2008 in the United States, women in poverty made up 42 percent of the 1.2 million abortions that year.)

Multiple life stressors

Regardless of poverty, the researchers found the fallout from one disruptive event could set a woman up for other life stressors, some of which led to an unintended pregnancy.

For instance, during the in-depth interviews, a married woman considered poor described the difficulty she had leaving an abusive partner after her mother died: "I mean, I was actually seeing a counselor for depression. I was put on antidepressants and anxiety medications, and it just ? I should have left before, and I just didn't. I mean, through therapy, through everything, I know I should have left sooner and, you know, my mom got sick all of a sudden [and subsequently died], and all this happened, so I just didn't get out when I should have."

Another married, poor woman noted: "I have two babies, so I have an 18-month and a 6-month old ... so I can't have another one right now. ... I just know I am not strong enough for it; some women are stronger than others. I am just not strong enough to take care of three kids. ... they both cry at the same time, and I am sick [from this pregnancy]. Oh no; I can't do it, I am sorry."

Though not too common in the survey, the researchers found contraceptive sabotage explained some unintended pregnancies. Six of those interviewed said their partner had tried to get them pregnant against their will, usually by refusing to withdraw during intercourse.

The researchers say the study results have political implications, for instance, suggesting easier access to birth control could help to prevent some unintended pregnancies. They point to free birth control, the availability of getting multiple refills at once and over-the-counter availability as potential solutions.

"Increased access to long-acting contraceptive methods such as the intrauterine device could also reduce the ability of disruptive events to interfere with contraceptive use as these methods do not require refills or maintenance costs," they write.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook?& Google+.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-women-choose-abortion-225111071.html

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Luck solid, Colts fall to Steelers 26-24

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck (12) looks to pass in the first quarter of an NFL football preseason game against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday, Aug. 19, 2012 in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Don Wright)

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck (12) looks to pass in the first quarter of an NFL football preseason game against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday, Aug. 19, 2012 in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Don Wright)

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown (84), left, flips into the end zone over Indianapolis Colts defensive back Antoine Bethea (41) for a touchdown in the first quarter of an NFL football preseason game on Sunday, Aug. 19, 2012 in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Don Wright)

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown (84), left, flips into the end zone over Indianapolis Colts defensive back Antoine Bethea (41) for a touchdown in the first quarter of an NFL football preseason game on Sunday, Aug. 19, 2012 in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Don Wright)

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, right, throws under pressure by Indianapolis Colts defensive end Robert Mathis (98) in the first quarter NFL preseason football game in Pittsburgh, Sunday, Aug. 19, 2012. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

Former Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Hines Ward, left, talks with new offensive coordinator Todd Haley before an NFL football preseason game against the Indianapolis Colts on Sunday, Aug. 19, 2012 in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)

(AP) ? Unlike his electric preseason debut, Andrew Luck's first pass against the Pittsburgh Steelers didn't result in a touchdown.

His eighth one did. Just not for the Indianapolis Colts.

Standing on the sideline moments after Pittsburgh's Ike Taylor cut in front of an underthrown pass and raced 50 yards for a score, Luck fumed. But only for a second.

Showing the mental toughness the Colts wanted when they tasked him with helping rebuild a franchise on the fly, the rookie rebounded to help Indianapolis take the halftime lead before falling 26-24 on Sunday night. Pittsburgh rookie kicker Danny Hrapmann kicked four second-half field goals, including the 22-yard winner with 23 seconds remaining.

By then the top overall pick was in a baseball cap after completing 16 of 25 passes for 175 yards. He added a 1-yard touchdown run and the Colts (1-1) held their own against a perennial Super Bowl contender.

"You never want to throw any interceptions, even if they are tipped, bobbled, whatever," Luck said. "I've got to cut down on those, but I think showing we can bounce back from those mistakes and kind of climb out of that hole was a good sign."

Luck certainly won over the Steelers (1-1), who let Luck lead the Colts on three second-quarter scoring drives to turn a 14-0 deficit into a 17-14 lead.

"He's a tough kid," Pittsburgh defensive end Brett Keisel said. "He's a good quarterback. I think he's going to play a long time. (Colts offensive coordinator) Bruce (Arians) is, I'm sure, a happy man."

Even if Luck wasn't particularly thrilled after Taylor sprinted into the end zone to put the Steelers up two touchdowns. Luck didn't expect things to go as easily against the Steelers (No. 7 in the AP Pro32) as they did in a romp over St. Louis last week.

He didn't expect to throw a pair of interceptions either.

"I knew after last week everything wasn't going to be smooth-sailing, you know?" Luck said. "But I think you can learn a lot from mistakes and hopefully not repeating mistakes."

He didn't during a sublime quarter in which he refused to get rattled against the defense that finished No. 1 in the league last fall. Using his mobility to step away from pressure and his vision to find open receivers, Luck didn't look like a guy who won't start his first NFL regular- season game for another three weeks.

"(Luck) was able to come back and put it behind him just like he always has," Indianapolis coach Chuck Pagano said. "We saw the same thing in college. He's able to bring his team back from behind so it was nothing surprising to us to see him come back and put those kind of drives together."

The Steelers aren't undergoing the kind of drastic makeover the Colts (No. 32) are enduring. Still, they have issues of their own, namely getting used to new offensive coordinator Todd Haley's complex scheme.

The results so far are mixed.

Ben Roethlisberger completed 7 of 8 passes during his one drive of work in the opener against Philadelphia last week, all of them quick hitters. His first pass Sunday night ended up in the hands of Indianapolis' Antoine Bethea.

Antonio Brown and Roethlisberger atoned the next time the Steelers had the ball, with Brown doing most of the work. He hauled in an 18-yard pass from Roethlisberger on third-and-11 to extend the drive then put together a highlight-reel 57 yard catch-and-run for a touchdown.

The play was all Brown. He took a screen pass from Roethlisberger, cut to the middle and used some great downfield blocking by running back Baron Batch to get to the end zone. Brown ? who has become Roethlisberger's favorite target with Mike Wallace in the midst of a holdout ? added some style points by doing a flip as he crossed the goal line.

"It'd give it an 8.5," Brown said about the somersault. "I didn't stick the landing."

And the Steelers didn't stick with it. The play accounted for more than half of the 112 yards of offense Pittsburgh generated when Roethlisberger was in the huddle. Roethlisberger completed 5 of 9 passes for 81 yards and the touchdown to Brown.

"We're making a little bit of progress," Roethlisberger said. "I still think we're leaving a lot out there. We're not playing as good as we could or should, but we're making progress."

So are the Colts.

On the verge of getting blown out, the Colts responded behind their new leader. Luck led a 10-play, 80-yard drive after Taylor's pick and Donald Brown got Indianapolis on the board with a 1-yard plunge.

Luck had it going on Indianapolis' next possession before being undone by a little bad, well, luck. He found rookie wide receiver T.Y. Hilton in stride down the middle only to have the wide-open Hilton throw the ball up in the air. Pittsburgh's Cortez Allen ran underneath it to thwart the drive, but it hardly slowed the Colts.

Indianapolis tied it at 14 when Luck deftly slid into the end zone on fourth-and-goal from the 1, ending a drive in which Luck completed all five of his passes.

Luck got one more chance just before the half, and he made it count. Working exclusively out of the shotgun, Luck led the Colts 31 yards in five plays, giving Adam Vinatieri just enough time ? and room ? to sneak a kick between the uprights at the halftime gun.

NOTES: Colts DE Robert Mathis left the game in the first quarter with a shoulder strain and did not return. Indianapolis WR Austin Collie underwent a concussion test after taking a blow to the head from Pittsburgh linebacker Larry Foote. ... The Steelers travel to Buffalo on Saturday night while the Colts visit Washington. ... Harrison, Hampton, running backs Isaac Redman and Rashard Mendenhall and linebacker Jason Worilds did not dress for the Steelers. ... Indianapolis backup QB Drew Stanton completed 4 of 13 passes for 69 yards and a touchdown.

___

Online: http://bigstory.ap.org/NFL-Pro32 and http://twitter.com/AP_NFL

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-08-20-FBN-Colts-Steelers/id-0d32e78f70a5435fb688b298dbfbb145

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Sirius XM Radio And Facebook Among Most Active Stocks In ...

MINYANVILLE ORIGINAL The three most active funds and stocks in pre-market trading on the Nasdaq (^IXIC) were Sirius XM Radio
(SIRI), Facebook (FB), and PowerShares QQQ Trust (QQQ) as of 9:00 a.m. Investors traded 3,922,186 shares of Sirius XM Radio, which was up $0.06, or 2.34%. Investors also traded 384,587 shares of Facebook, which was up $0.03, or 0.16%, and 176,297 shares of PowerShares QQQ, which was down $0.03, or 0.04%.

Twitter: @ChrisWitrak

No positions in stocks mentioned.

Source: http://www.minyanville.com/trading-and-investing/stocks/articles/tocks-trading-equities-investing-investments-investors/8/20/2012/id/43328

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Medicare barbs dominate White House race

President Barack Obama gives a 'thumbs-up' as he carries bags of apples during his arrival on the South Lawn of the White House on Marine One helicopter, Saturday, Aug. 18, 2012 in Washington. Obama purchased the apples and other items in a campaign stop at Mack's Apples in Londonderry, N.H. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama gives a 'thumbs-up' as he carries bags of apples during his arrival on the South Lawn of the White House on Marine One helicopter, Saturday, Aug. 18, 2012 in Washington. Obama purchased the apples and other items in a campaign stop at Mack's Apples in Londonderry, N.H. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney gets into his car to attend a fundraising event on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2012 in Nantucket, Mass. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Republican vice-presidential candidate Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., center right, and his mother, Betty Ryan Douglas, wave to supporters at a campaign rally in The Villages, Fla., Saturday, Aug. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)

(AP) ? Showing no signs of letting up, Mitt Romney and Barack Obama are doubling down on claims the other would threaten seniors' golden years.

Both campaigns sharpened their critique of the other's Medicare policies in recent days and planned to intensify them yet again on Sunday, as the already acrimonious race for the White House reached a new level. Romney's running mate, Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, on Saturday told seniors here on Florida's western coast that he sees parallels with Europe's debt crisis that cut seniors' benefits. He warned the same could happen right here at home.

Campaigning in New Hampshire, Obama said it is a sure thing that Romney would tear apart Medicare.

Medicare, the popular ? though costly ? health program for seniors, has become a flashpoint in the presidential race in the frenzied week since Romney picked Ryan as his vice presidential pick. Ryan, a deficit hawk and the House Republicans' chief budget writer, brought buzz to the ticket but also left Romney trying to explain to seniors that he would not take a wrecking ball to the program seniors see as a right.

Ryan has stood out in Washington for laying out tough spending choices that many lawmakers in both parties avoid. So it was almost inevitable that his selection as running mate would vault Medicare to the top of the campaign debate. But it isn't clear it will remain the top priority in an election that, to this point, has been a contest between Romney and Obama over who would be best for jobs and the economy.

Obama wasted no time reaching for the upper-hand on Medicare and his spokespeople were ready to take to the Sunday talk shows to plant doubts about what Ryan would do to seniors' programs in the name of balancing budgets. Romney's and Ryan's were at the ready, too, to point out Obama had shifted billions from the program to pay for Democrats' health care law.

It's a familiar charge already. On Saturday, Ryan accused Obama of raiding the Medicare "piggybank" to pay for his health care overhaul.

Obama countered that seniors shouldn't trust their golden years to Romney.

"They've been trying to sell this trickle-down snake oil before," Obama told his audience in Windham, N.H. "It did not work then. It will not work now. It will not reduce the deficit, it will not create jobs. It's the wrong direction for America."

Ryan's proposal in Congress would encourage future retirees to consider private coverage that the government would help pay for through a voucher-like system, while keeping the traditional program as an option.

According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, Medicare over time would spend thousands less per senior under the Ryan plan than under current policy. Critics say that would shift heavy costs to individual retirees. The government could always spend more than anticipated to meet changing realities, but at the cost of deeper deficits.

Speaking to donors who paid as much as $50,000 to have dinner with him, Ryan compared the United States with Europe, where a financial crisis has led to cuts in benefits for retirees. He said European lawmakers delayed action even though they saw impending problems and seniors paid the price.

"They ran out of road to kick the can down, and now they have a debt crisis," Ryan said here near Tampa. "Now, a debt crisis hit and those empty promises have become broken promises."

Ryan warned the same could happen here if the country doesn't get its hands around its own affairs.

"It doesn't have to be that way. We can turn this around," Ryan said.

Earlier in the day, Ryan introduced his 78-year-old mother to an audience of seniors at the world's largest retirement community and passionately defended a program that has provided old-age security for two generations of his own family.

"She planned her retirement around this promise," Ryan said as Betty Ryan Douglas looked on. "That's a promise we have to keep."

___

Kuhnhenn reported from Rochester, N.H. Associated Press writer Charles Babington in West Tisbury, Mass., and Calvin Woodward in Washington contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-08-19-Presidential%20Campaign/id-dd3619f6e35f46efb2e4be996dc81573

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TNA Impact Wrestling BaseBrawl | Annapolis Sports & Recreation ...

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Monday, August 13, 2012

Jersey Shore: One Family's Boardwalk Empire

Morey's Piers, located at the very southern tip of New Jersey on an unusually wide stretch of beach called Wildwood, has been ranked one of the best seaside amusement parks in the world.

It's a distinction few might have expected considering the amusement park's inauspicious start. It all began with a 12-lane slide built on the Wildwood boardwalk in the summer of 1969.

"My dad broke his leg the first year because someone slid into him," Will Morey, president of Morey's Piers, said of his father, who started the company along with their uncle. "There were probably about 12 to 15 people involved in running the slide and there weren't a lot of rules. They tried everything to make the thing work with the humidity. Our cousin even went down on a plate and ended up in the middle of the boardwalk. I still always remember dad standing there, pushing people down and being right in the action." ?

Today, the slide is gone. In its place, visitors find three colorful, blinking, pulsating piers extending out over the sand toward the ocean that were visited by an estimated 1.5 million people last year. They are filled with roller coasters that hurl riders out toward the sea and back, a 156-foot Ferris Wheel, two water parks and more than 100 other rides, games, restaurants and concession stands. ?

Not too bad for a company that actually has its roots in real estate and the development of many of the doo-wop style hotels that still define Wildwood's 1950s aesthetic.? The Morey empire has not lost sight of those roots and also includes Morey's Resorts, comprised of four hotels and the luxury condominium community of Seapointe Village, ?all located in the town.?

That decision to jump into the boardwalk came without the backing of a great deal of experience in the workings of the amusement industry. Against the odds, the company was able to succeed because they followed a clear and strong guiding vision.

"We really researched everything about Wildwood and we learned that the boardwalk was a really authentic, zany and little bit of a tacky kind of place," Will Morey said. "We learned we should be number one at that and not try to be anything else."

"We are tacky and proud of it," was the way Jack Morey, executive vice president of Morey's Piers described it.

[Coney Island's Renovation Draws on History for Inspiration]

The ability to readily embrace their identity has helped the company to build their brand on a rock-solid foundation that has supported them even during tough times.? The brothers, however, know that there is something much more important driving interest in their company.?

"If you are not compelling, the clock is ticking," Will Morey said. "You have to have a compelling reason to visit. We spend a fair amount of time figuring out how to be compelling, but there is not one thing that does it."

Staying compelling may be important to all businesses, but it is even more important in a seasonal business?like Morey's Piers.? The short season creates a number of challenges for the company, including finding enough seasonal employees to help ensure the park is run smoothly and safely during the peak season. ? ?

In response, the company recruits workers from around the world throughout most of the year. In total, international workers represent around 600 of the nearly 1,500 to 1,700 workers the company employs during the peak season. Morey's also employs 125 full-time employees throughout the year.

"You need to have a balance of people to be successful," Will Morey said. "You can put a bunch of really creative people together you can have a short journey or you can put a bunch of uncreative people together and have no journey. It may not always peaceful, serene and soothing to find that balance, and sometimes there is some conflict, not the bad kind, but it occurs to move the ball forward." ?

Morey's Piers works hard to find that mix of people but the leadership of Will and Jack helps to keep the company in line with their vision.? The brothers are able to do this by playing off each other's distinct strengths, but that does not come without some brotherly teasing.?

"People say I am creative but I'm not," Jack Morey said.?"Everyone, with the possible exception of my brother, is creative. It is all about solving a problem. Will, however, really does have a nice steady hand on the tiller running this company." ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

"Just be sure to refer to me as Jack's boss in the article," was Will's response.

Through all the fun and games, the brothers know that a vision can carry a business only so far. The most crucial building block of any successful business remains one that cannot be bought or taught. ?

"I personally think that all successful businesses are not started by people who are trying to make a buck," Jack Morey said. "They are started by people trying to execute a passion. I think you are doomed if you start the other way."

This story was provided by BusinessNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow David Mielach?on Twitter @D_M89?or BusinessNewsDaily @bndarticles. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jersey-shore-one-familys-boardwalk-empire-090028168.html

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