Monday, July 30, 2012

Treatments For High Blood Pressure | Health Articles Directory ...

High blood pressure, also referred to as the ?silent killer? is usually the symptom of some other malfunction within your body. Though there are actual organic options and/or home remedies to reduce blood pressure, physicians use medications to fight the ?silent killer.?

The issue with this is always that you become a victim of the annoying blood pressure medicine side effects. Medical professionals are usually satisfied with recommending medications because it is effective short- term in that it may actually lower the blood pressure.

It is very important to know that drugs don?t cure hypertension. They?re more of a short-term fix. Sometimes the drugs make a patient experience more serious pain in other areas. The doctors generally prescribe four main forms of medications to lower blood pressure level. The medications are diuretics, beta- blockers, ACE inhibitors and also calcium channel blockers. Hypertension certainly is the result of irresponsible lifestyle choices; the medicines are masks, not really a cure.

Virtually any drug with the least amount of toxic can cause terrible side effects. Listed here are the medications as well as their individual side effects. Even as the blood pressure might decrease you might undoubtedly feel worse on the drugs.

Blood Pressure Medicine Negative Effects:

1. Diurectics

The very least toxic of all of the anti- hypertension drug treatment-diuretics are just dehydrators, meaning they are used to eliminate fluid out of your body through the kidneys. The problem with this way of lowering blood pressure is you are also eliminating vital minerals like potassium, sodium, magnesium and also calcium.

Draining these minerals out of your body will cause electrolyte imbalances within your body. Diuretics also lead to irregular heartbeat, gout, kidney damage or perhaps failure, abnormal cholesterol, uremia, hyperglycemia, erectile dysfunction, heartburn, visual disruptions, headaches and anemia.

2. Beta- Blockers

Beta- Blockers slow up the force of your heart contractions. While the heartbeat decreases, the blood pressure lowers. This can be a dangerous cardiac drug; hence there?ll be apparent indications of severe heart problems. You may experience congestive heart failure (basically a heart attack) or perhaps arrhythmias.

3. ACE Inhibitors

ACE Inhibitors is generally a ?chemical attack.? The drug blocks the discharge of the molecule, Angiotensin which truly lifts the blood pressure. In addition, this agent is a protective mechanism that is made to keep your ?homostasis.? This eventually causes a chemical turbulence mainly because it tosses off your biological balance.

To get additional details on high blood pressure remedies, please check out: inderal.

Source: http://www.health-articlesdirectory.uni.me/health/vitamins-supplements/treatments-for-high-blood-pressure

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Thursday, July 26, 2012

Edgar Wright And J.J. Abrams Teaming Up For Sci-Fi Film 'Collider'

What do you get when you combine J.J. Abrams, Edgar Wright and "I Am Legend" screenwriter Mark Protosevich? A movie we can't wait to see, that?s what. Deadline is reporting that the trio has teamed up on an ultra-secretive sci-fi project called "Collider." Apparently Wright will direct the film and co-write it with Protosevich, with [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2012/07/24/edgar-wright-jj-abrams-collider/

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Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Dow Jones to sell newswires through WSJ.com - CEO

(Reuters) - When Lex Fenwick started his job as CEO of Dow Jones & Co more than five months ago, he found it strange that one of Wall Street's most historic and well-known brands did not have a direct pipeline into Wall Street itself.

The 130-year-old publisher of Dow Jones Newswires relies on third parties, including rivals Bloomberg LP and Thomson Reuters Corp , to deliver its content to banks, brokers and funds; it does not have its own distribution channel.

Fenwick intends to address that with a plan to make the Wall Street Journal's website a single portal for financial institutions to access all content from Dow Jones, including Newswires and risk and compliance tools.

"Even bloggers have their own distribution platform," Fenwick, 53, told Reuters in his first interview since Dow Jones' owner, News Corp , hired the British executive from Bloomberg in February. "For a rich content company to not have a distribution channel directly to an institutional customer seems to be shortsighted," he said.

Fenwick's ambitions to sell directly to financial institutions is a change in strategy for Dow Jones. It comes at a critical juncture for Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, which is preparing to spin off its slower-growing publishing assets from the more lucrative film studio, cable and broadcast TV networks.

As newspapers around the world suffer sharp drop-offs in advertising sales, the standalone publishing company will need to bolster its business with financial institutions and other companies to drive growth.

Fenwick said he intends to raise prices for the newswires, whether customers get them through WSJ.com or through market data platforms sold by Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters, FactSet Research Systems Inc and Interactive Data Corp.

That could be a tough sell given that many Wall Street banks, whose profitability has been sagging, are currently cutting staff and seeking to save costs.

DISRUPTIVE

When News Corp bought Dow Jones in 2007 for $5.6 billion, Murdoch mainly wanted to get his hands on the Journal. He invested in the paper and its website and cut costs, whittling down 17 printing facilities to nine and outsourcing print to metro newspapers.

Analysts estimate News Corp's publishing assets to be worth $7 billion, dwarfed by the entertainment unit's $52 billion. Newswires and the Factiva news database generated about $500 million in revenue last year, a quarter of overall Dow Jones revenue.

Last year, Dow Jones had the opportunity to bring in an executive with experience selling to business clients when Les Hinton stepped down as CEO in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal at a Murdoch paper in Britain.

Enter Fenwick, a 25-year veteran at Bloomberg, credited with building its European business, implementing a laser-like focus on customer service, and doubling revenue to $6 billion when he was CEO from 2001 to 2008.

Since joining Dow Jones, Fenwick has created a stir by voicing to sales staff and customers his dislike of the company's reliance on distributing through rivals, the so-called feed business. Some of these sales staff and customers said Fenwick's attitude has sparked speculation that his ultimate goal in creating a new platform is to cut out third-party distributors.

"The idea of reselling or delivering through Thomson Reuters, Bloomberg or others ... it is very much a question mark if that is going to continue," said one such source, speaking on condition of anonymity. "There was a very clear sense communicated by Lex to the sales organisation that he did not like the feed business."

But Fenwick rejects that description of his strategy, saying there were no plans for Dow Jones to acquire the market data it would need to compete with its larger rivals, which can package news with real-time price quotes, charts and analytics.

He said he sees little near-term opportunity to loosen the stranglehold of the big data distributors.

"We have plans to build and evolve our product. Absolutely," he said. "But Reuters and Bloomberg have been doing this for 30 years. Do you really believe that anybody could go out and do something that is comparable in three years? In six years? It would have to be so disruptive and so extraordinary."

Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters, FactSet and IDC all declined to comment.

"GRAND CENTRAL"

The WSJ.com is now mainly a consumer website that carries a selection of stories from Newswires but far from the entire feed. The goal of the project, dubbed "Grand Central," is to crack open new markets using the brand cachet of the Journal, Fenwick said.

He sees hedge funds, independent retail brokerages, and corporate executive suites as areas where the company could pick up additional clients through direct sales - but the site won't be targeting the big banks.

"The likelihood of a high-end institutional guy at Goldman Sachs saying, 'I am going to get the new DJ Grand Central product' - we don't sit here and honestly think that is going to happen," Fenwick said.

Pricing is a key issue for Fenwick.

Currently, Dow Jones prices vary and it offers big discounts for large orders.

For example, Dow Jones news service - historically known as the broad tape - can cost as little as about $20 a user for big brokerages with tens of thousands of users, to as much as $900 for a firm with just one user, according to Douglas B. Taylor, managing partner at Burton-Taylor International Consulting LLC. The size of the difference is partly related to the costs of installation, which drop per user if there are more.

Fenwick said the bulk deals are likely to continue but at higher prices. "We would like to put the prices up, as against down," he said.

On the website, Fenwick is seeking to create more standard, transparent pricing, which would mean a customer would pay the same per log-on whether ordering for one user or for many. He declined to be specific about the prices.

In some ways, Fenwick's strategy takes a page from the playbook of his former employer: Bloomberg sells one product for one price - about $20,000 a year -- to all customers.

But given the problems on Wall Street, some analysts say the banks are likely to push for discounts.

"Bloomberg is the only one that has been able to stick to this very firm fixed-price model because they are most unique in terms of content," said Piper Jaffray analyst Peter Appert. "Given the financial pressure the customers are under, it would be fairly challenging" for Dow Jones.

Dow Jones, whose clients range from big banks like Bank of America Merrill Lynch to brokerages like Raymond James Financial Inc , has tried a proprietary platform before.

In 1990, it bought out the rest of electronic financial information company Telerate that it did not own for about $1.6 billion. But the acquisition was a disaster due to cultural clashes and weak product development. In 1998, Dow Jones dumped the remains of the business for little more than $500 million.

(Additional reporting by Jennifer Merritt; Editing by Tiffany Wu, Martin Howell and M.D. Golan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dow-jones-sell-newswires-wsj-com-ceo-233629316--sector.html

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Charities help pets when foreclosure victims can't | Sandusky Register

Carla Waller believes in promises. She was married for 37 years, held one job for 35 and never adopted a pet she didn't keep for life. Until now.

Waller and her husband Dennis moved to Las Vegas in 2006 and put $100,000 down on a $330,000 home. They adopted Jake, a 3-year-old, lean, shy Cocker spaniel. They both sold furniture on commission and thought they were set for retirement and beyond.

Dennis was diagnosed with terminal cancer in 2008 and died in 2009. Carla stayed home to care for him, but returned to work to make ends meet. She adopted Marilyn Monroe, a schnauzer-collie, to keep Jake company. A friend added Jewels the cat to the mix.

The recession stripped her home of a third of its value. Then health problems left her unable to work.

Foreclosure is just around the corner, said Waller, 67. "I know I'm a couple of months out. I can't do it anymore. I don't have the income," she said. "I'm done. There is nothing I can do now."

The hardest call she had to make was to Foreclosed Upon Pets, Inc., to arrange for homes for Jake, Marilyn and Jewels so she can move in with relatives.

"I am very depressed about it and very concerned about where they go because I took them for life and life is not what it should be," she said.

Waller's story is all too familiar to Everett Croxson, who founded Las Vegas-based FUPI (rhymes with puppy) in 2008.

Croxson, 59, a retired business consultant, was guided by hometown headlines.

? Nevada had the worst foreclosure rate nationally for 62 months until March.

? Nevada has the highest unemployment rate in the nation at 11.6 percent.

? The Animal Foundation in Las Vegas runs the highest volume single-facility shelter in the country. It takes in close to 50,000 animals a year. Nearly two-thirds have to be euthanized.

In 2009, Croxson bought a five-bedroom home to use as a transition house for the pets. FUPI placed 348 pets that year.

In 2010, it was nearly 500; in 2011, 570; and this year it will be more than 600, Croxson said.

FUPI also works with the unemployed and those too ill or old to handle their pets, but about 30 percent of their pets are foreclosures, Croxson said.

"Real estate agents or cleaning crews call all the time. Maybe they have found a couple of cats in a closet of a foreclosed home," he said.

In Arizona, which bumped Nevada from the top of the foreclosure rankings in March, the Lost Our Home Pet Foundation in Phoenix does similar work. Founded in 2008, it also relies primarily on fosters although it did open a small shelter in April.

There are about 40 animals in the shelter and 220 in foster care. More than 2,000 have been placed in four years, said founder-executive director Jodi Polanski.

As a mortgage loan officer, Polanski heard story after story, so she started the rescue in her spare time. There was too much work, so she became full-time director and now she and two employees work with 120 volunteers and fosters.

Lost Our Home runs a food bank and a temporary care program for dogs belonging to homeless entering shelters. The dogs are kept for 90 days so owners can get back on their feet.

In Arizona's Maricopa County, foreclosed homeowners have turned into renters. "Landlords can be pickier and not allow pets or they can require large pet deposits," Polanski said, forcing people to give up some or all of their animals. The problem will exist until people can qualify for home loans again, she said.

"The economy is looking better in a lot of places, but it's not better for the animals right now," Polanski added.

There is no charge to a person relinquishing an animal, but adopters pay $150 per animal at FUPI, $75 for cats and $195 for dogs at Lost Our Home. A vet's exam, sterilization, shots and a microchip are included.

Polanski said the worst part of her job is turning pets away. "We do have limitations. We have a waiting list. It breaks our hearts every day when there are pets we can't help," she said.

A few weeks ago, FUPI rescued two Shih Tzus from an elderly woman who was being transferred to a home for dementia patients. Their fur was so matted with feces, dirt and food, they had to be shaved.

"She loved her dogs, she just didn't know the state they were in," Croxson said.

In addition to its own placements, FUPI sends between eight and 14 Animal Foundation dogs to Canada each week, where a pet store chain houses and places them.

"It's absolutely helpful to our organization to have rescues like FUPI," said Carly Scholten, Animal Foundation's director of operations.

In addition to a website and weekly adoption events, Croxson is taking part in county meetings designed to find ways to place more animals, and he does a weekly radio show to recruit volunteers and talk about pets.

For Croxson, the worst part of helping is the loss, guilt and remorse he sees when owners say goodbye to their pets.

He works hard to find homes he believes would please them.

Waller told him Jake needs someone by his side, day and night. "He's an old person's dog, though he's great with kids. His favorite thing to do is lie at your side."

No matter what, she said, "I hope my puppies are loved as much as I love them."

Source: http://www.sanduskyregister.com/los-angeles/news/charities-help-pets-when-foreclosure-victims-cant

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Monday, July 23, 2012

Joe Paterno statue: Penn State brings down 'obstacle to healing'

In the wake of the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal, Penn State officials removed the statue of head football coach Joe Paterno. He had been implicated in covering up the abuse.

By Brad Knickerbocker,?Staff writer / July 22, 2012

Penn State workers cover the statue of former football coach Joe Paterno on Sunday. The university announced that it was taking down the monument in the wake of an investigative report that found the late coach and three other top Penn State administrators concealed sex abuse claims against assistant coach Jerry Sandusky.

Christopher Weddle/Centre Daily Times/AP

Enlarge

Penn State head football coach Joe Paterno was always larger than life, racking up more bowl games than any coach in college football history, the man revered as ?JoePa? by generations of students over his 46 years coaching there, whose first name seemed to become ?Legendary.?

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His statue outside Beaver Stadium literally was larger than life ? 900 pounds of bronze and seven feet tall.

Now it?s been removed, lifted ignominiously by crane early Sunday morning to be stored ?in a secure location,? according to university officials. This inanimate object, it seems, had become another victim of a shocking child sex abuse scandal?that went on for years, apparently with at least some knowledge by Mr. Paterno.

IN PICTURES:?Fallout from the Penn State scandal

?Contrary to its original intention, Coach Paterno's statue has become a source of division and an obstacle to healing in our University and beyond,? Penn State President Rodney Erickson said in a statement Sunday.

?For that reason, I have decided that it is in the best interest of our university and public safety to remove the statue and store it in a secure location,? he said. ?I believe that, were it to remain, the statue will be a recurring wound to the multitude of individuals across the nation and beyond who have been the victims of child abuse.?

In a way, it was a Solomonic decision. Remaining in place ? and without any name change, at least for now ? will be the campus library that bears Paterno?s name.

?The Paterno Library symbolizes the substantial and lasting contributions to the academic life and educational excellence that the Paterno family has made to Penn State University,? Mr. Erickson said. ?The library remains a tribute to Joe and Sue Paterno's commitment to Penn State's student body and academic success, and it highlights the positive impacts Coach Paterno had on the University. Thus I feel strongly that the library's name should remain unchanged.?

Over the years, the Paterno family had made large financial contributions to the university.

Coach Paterno?s fall from Penn State football grace came with the horrific reports of child sexual abuse committed over years by Paterno?s chief assistant and friend Jerry Sandusky.

Mr. Sandusky now awaits sentencing for his conviction last month on 45 charges of child sex abuse involving 10 boys over 15 years.

All along Paterno (who was in his 80s and died in January of problems related to an illness that his family had announced some time earlier) maintained that he had no idea that Sandusky was a pedophile whose abuse of many boys stretched over years.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/e0rUeI6fBh8/Joe-Paterno-statue-Penn-State-brings-down-obstacle-to-healing

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Credit Card Debt Negotiations - How to Gain the Upper Hand and ...

9:01 PM By Article Directory

'; div.innerHTML = summary; } //]]> Credit Card Debt Negotiations - How to Gain the Upper Hand and Eliminate Credit Card Debt Credit Card Debt Negotiations - How to Gain the Upper Hand and Eliminate Credit Card Debt

What do you know about credit card debt negotiation? Do you know the fact that the credit card debt negotiation is helpful for you to remove your liabilities?

If you have huge liabilities against you, you should hire a company and get the liabilities settled as soon as possible. The financial relief firm will handle the credit card debt negotiation process while settling the liabilities on your behalf. In the past, the liability settlement companies never existed and it was very difficult for the people to clear off the old dues and unpaid balances. When the recession hit the global economy, there was a complete blockage of capital everywhere around the world. The recession has affected the lives of millions of people and business or organisations.

At that time, even the banks and the privatised financial institutions faced monetary problems. The creditors also wanted their money back at this time and it was quite impossible for the people to pay back the amount to the creditors. Now, it was the time to approach the financial firms and settle the liabilities. There are lots of firms that operate through the internet and help the people to settle their liabilities legally. When your liability reduction case is handed over to the financial relief firm, they will process the credit card debt negotiation on you r behalf.

Before moving forward with credit card debt negotiation, the financial firm will ask for few genuine details. The details should contain a report of your financial status so as to prove that you are not in a situation to clear off the liabilities. When the documents are verified, the firm will firstly consolidate all your liabilities and arrears. When all the dues are added up, the firm can actually estimate how much has to be reduced. According to the value of the accumulated liabilities, a certain percentage which is to be reduced is decided by the firm.

Finally, the firm will approach the creditor and will bargain the liabilities on your behalf. This is a great advantage for you because you can get your liabilities reduced which you may have never thought about in your life. If you approach a good financial firm for the settlement, then your case will be advantageous as more than half of the total amount will be exempted.

If you have over k in unsecured debt it would be wise to consider debt settlement. Creditors of unsecured debt are very concerned about collecting on their delinquent accounts and you can take advantage of this. Consumers and small business have never had a better opportunity to eliminate debt through a settlement process. To locate legitimate debt settlement companies in your state check out the following link:

Free Debt Help [http://www.freedebtreductionhelp.com]

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Salma_Owais

Source: http://business-negotiation.blogspot.com/2012/07/credit-card-debt-negotiations-how-to.html

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Saturday, July 14, 2012

Summer pet safety and energy conservation tips http://bit.ly/Ok5FHG

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Friday, July 13, 2012

Crowd-sourcing and other tools to finance clean energy future ...

By Ron Pernick on 13 July 2012

By Ron Pernick, via Clean Edge

At Clean Edge, we spend a great deal of time looking at innovative policy, business, and financing models that can support the broad and steady growth of solar, wind, energy efficiency, green buildings, and other clean-tech sectors. And in many ways, we believe it?s no longer really an issue of technology development. Costs continue to come down across the clean-tech value chain while the industry, along with the products it offers, expands and matures.

?The technologies are here,? explains Aaron Berg of Portland-based Blue Tree Strategies and one of the key architects behind Clean Energy Works Oregon, an on-bill energy efficiency financing vehicle for homeowners. ?It?s no longer a technology problem but more about creating and enabling breakthrough business and finance models.?

In the past few months two financing options, one which we?ve been tracking closely and the other which came as a surprise, have been gaining traction and support. And in many ways they couldn?t be more different. One relies on tried and true capital models historically deployed around the exploitation of traditional fossil fuels, in particular natural gas. The other plans to use the power of 21st century, web-based crowdsourcing to democratize the financing process of solar installations. While attacking the clean-energy finance conundrum from very different angles, each approach has the power to tap the value of efficiency and renewables in potentially remarkable ways.

Let?s look at master limited partnership (MLPs) first. Used successfully for traditional oil and gas investments for decades, these vehicles, which trade like corporate stock, allow investors to earn dividends that usually fall in the six percent range. However, current MLP rules are structured to cover only oil and gas, and exclude clean-energy investments. Simple tax code changes could enable these investment structures to leverage the built-in annuity streams of clean energy, and could expand decent-yielding investment opportunities to a broader retail market. Some members of Congress seem to think so, and the idea is rapidly catching on with support from corporate and industry stakeholders. Senator Chris Coons (D-Delaware) has introduced the Master Limited Partnerships Parity Act, which at approximately 200 words, is both simple and powerful.

As Senator Coons? web site states: ?By statute, MLPs have only been available to investors in energy portfolios for oil, natural gas, coal extraction, and pipeline projects. These projects get access to capital at a lower cost and are more liquid than traditional financing approaches to energy projects, making them highly effective at attracting private investment. Investors in renewable energy projects, however, have been explicitly prevented from forming MLPs, starving a growing portion of America?s domestic energy sector of the capital it needs to build and grow.? We fully agree.

In the not-yet-tried-and-true department, others are looking at how to take a very 21st century tool ? crowdsourcing/crowdfunding ? and apply it to clean-tech deployment opportunities. The most notable of these is startup firm Solar Mosaic, which recently raised venture capital to the tune of $2.5 million (Series A round lead by Spring Ventures) and received a $2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy?s SunShot Initiative, to build an online platform that supports funding of solar projects.

If the firm can become the Kickstarter of solar financing, it could help raise millions of dollars from thousands of investors, while also potentially offering decent returns. Solar Mosaic is currently in a quiet period after filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission and several states in April to offer Solar Power Notes to the public, with proceeds going to fund solar power projects.

In our forthcoming book Clean Tech Nation, coauthored with Clint Wilder, we ask a simple but important question about investing in proven clean-energy projects such as energy efficiency, solar PV, and wind deployment. ?How can such relatively low-risk, high-yield investment opportunities become more widely available not only to large corporate and institutional investors like Google, but to the average retail investor?? we write. ?And how can renewables and efficiency projects begin to tap the proven investment vehicles and business structures historically used in the fossil-fuel and real estate industries to gain access to an expanded pool of much-needed capital??

Admittedly, we live in hyper-partisan times, but the effort to open up the clean-energy investment marketplace to more retail investors is well underway and gaining support across party lines. When even top GOP strategist Karl Rove supports extension of the production tax credit for wind power, you know there?s a glimmer of hope that clean energy can once again be about American jobs and competitiveness, and not a divisive post-Solyndra issue that separates Republicans and Democrats. MLPs, crowdfunding, clean energy-focused real estate investment trusts (REITS) and other emerging tools all offer the promise to bring much-needed capital to the clean-tech marketplace.

Investors will rightfully demand that those overseeing technology selection and project deployment, and those managing their funds, have the necessary experience and utmost integrity. And certainly, technology-based gains and improvements will continue to be important. But make no mistake ? the greatest breakthroughs in the near to mid-term are likely to be those in the financing realm that unleash the inherent power and value of clean energy. Whoever can package a well-structured financial vehicle that returns at least five to six percent annually from trusted market players, we believe, has much to gain in the months and years ahead.

?Ron Pernick is co-founder and managing director of clean-tech research and advisory firm Clean Edge. This piece was originally published at Clean Edge and is reprinted with permission.

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Source: http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/crowd-sourcing-and-other-tools-to-finance-clean-energy-future-26124?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=crowd-sourcing-and-other-tools-to-finance-clean-energy-future-26124

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Tim Pawlenty Stock Rises In Mitt Romney Vice Presidential Search

ST. PAUL, Minn. -- As a presidential hopeful, Tim Pawlenty won respect among GOP insiders, social conservatives and the tea party movement. Far from the first love of any faction, he quickly washed out as a candidate.

Almost a year after he abandoned his White House bid, Pawlenty's reputation as being suitable but not a standout is actually fueling the speculation that the former Minnesota governor is a serious contender in Republican Mitt Romney's search for a running mate.

Romney is keeping the process tightly under wraps. An announcement could come at any point between now and the Republican convention in late August. It's unclear who the Romney campaign is vetting, though Pawlenty's name comes up frequently in political circles as a prospect. Pawlenty himself isn't giving any clues even as Republicans debate the pros and cons of a Romney-Pawlenty ticket.

To hear these insiders tell it, the earnest Pawlenty might end up satisfying many Republicans without risking the unwelcome distractions that could result from a running mate who is flashier than the nominee, who has close ties to an unpopular past administration or whose background has largely avoided scrutiny.

"He's not a Sarah Palin. He's a Joe Biden type of pick," said Gary Marx, executive director of the conservative Faith and Freedom Coalition, describing Pawlenty as "appealing and acceptable to all branches of the conservative base and the Republican Party as a whole."

Pawlenty, an evangelical, also could help quell any lingering unease about Romney's Mormonism among some conservatives. As the self-made son of a truck driver, his life story could relate more to middle-class voters than that of Romney, the wealthy businessman and son of a former governor.

Campaigning last week for Romney in blue-collar Pittsburgh, Pawlenty weaved a mention of his 1970s boyhood in a struggling meatpacking town to convey his grasp of economic woes on a more personal level.

"I saw the face of unemployment and dislocation from the economy and the effects that has on moms and dads and people and families, neighborhood and community," Pawlenty said in a hushed tone. "I saw it at a real young age, up close and real personal."

During his eight years leading Minnesota, Pawlenty restricted abortions and expanded gun rights. He also stocked his state's judiciary with conservative judges and made frequent use of vetoes and executive budget-cutting powers to curb spending.

His biggest blemish was rather tame ? a tobacco surcharge that he insisted be labeled a fee, not a tax. The decision triggered a semantic dispute mirroring the fight over whether President Barack Obama's health insurance mandate is a penalty or a tax.

What Pawlenty lacks is the star power to give Romney's ticket a boost among any key constituency or critical voting bloc. He would also be hard-pressed to swing Minnesota to Republicans for the first time since 1972 ? before Pawlenty, 51, was even old enough to vote. His two statewide victories came in races in which he benefited from multiple candidates dividing the vote on the left.

With the presidential race so tight, some GOP leaders want Romney to opt for solid over spectacular, someone who is tested rather than intriguingly new to the national scene.

"He's better prepared than any of these other folks being talked about a lot, in terms of the intellectual and physical rigor of a campaign and the kind of grilling you're going to face," said Bill Lacy, who advised Republican Bob Dole during his presidential campaigns.

When Republicans began lining up last year to challenge Obama, Pawlenty was regarded as a threat to Romney, the presumed front-runner. Pawlenty landed top campaign talent and boasted of his achievements as a Republican who was twice elected to lead a Democratic-leaning state. But he struggled to excite voters and finished a disappointing third in a summer 2011 test vote in Iowa, leading him to quit the race.

Pawlenty soon embraced an industrious role as a go-anywhere, get-tough surrogate for Romney ? precisely the tasks often assigned to running mates. Last week he was on a bus in Ohio and Pennsylvania, attacking Obama's record before the president's own bus pulled in for campaign rallies. Before that, he was Romney's emissary to out-of-the-way Republican conventions in California, Michigan, Oklahoma and other spots. And he's scooped ice cream by Ann Romney's side after serving warm-up duties for her husband in New Hampshire.

Campaigning for someone else, Pawlenty has been far more relaxed than when he was on his own. Back then, he tended to come off as bland and rehearsed ? especially when stacked against candidates with more flair, such as fellow Minnesota Republican Michele Bachmann.

Like other vice presidential contenders, Pawlenty sidesteps questions about his interest in the No. 2 post. He initially asked to be removed from parlor-game shortlists. Now he says it's an honor to be mentioned, while insisting he's content to help Romney in other ways.

"I am enjoying my time in the private sector and view my role in this presidential campaign as being a key volunteer," Pawlenty told The Associated Press on Wednesday. "So, anything beyond that would be an unexpected development."

Part of the hesitancy stems from 2008, when Pawlenty was a runner-up to Palin as John McCain's vice presidential choice. In his memoir last year, Pawlenty recalled marveling about the fact that he was even being vetted. He said it proved that life was "unpredictable" and "filled with possibilities," and he comically described scurrying to pull together the paper trail covering intimate financial and personal details.

As time wore on, Pawlenty concluded he wouldn't be chosen. He suspected McCain would go with Romney, whose own presidential campaign came up short that year. "I actually talked to Mitt about that at some point later on, and he said he thought it was going to be me," Pawlenty wrote.

This time, friends say, Pawlenty seems content to let the process play out around him rather than sweat over it. Meanwhile, he's charted a lucrative course by joining half a dozen corporate boards. As a director at a software company, for instance, he'll pull down $200,000 in salary and restricted stock shares this year. The other companies include medical technology and natural gas exploration firms; they are privately held and don't report their compensation packages.

Investor Ron Eibensteiner, a former Minnesota Republican Party chairman who serves alongside Pawlenty on a startup company board, said that while Pawlenty is acclimating well to corporate culture, the tug of politics remains naturally strong.

"I would imagine that he is very focused on making a little bit of money because he really doesn't have a lot," Eibensteiner said. "But if a good (political) opportunity arose, would he consider it? Absolutely. He'd be a fool not to."

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/12/tim-pawlenty-vp-mitt-romney_n_1668068.html

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Thursday, July 12, 2012

RDCK Area E - Columbia Basin Rural Economic Development Institute

The RDI is a regional centre of excellence in applied research and information provision focused on strengthening rural communities in the Columbia Basin Boundary region.

About Us
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Issue 1 July 2012

Wiki Images, NASA Shuttle Radar Topography Mission

RDI Launches Website

The Columbia Basin Boundary region will soon have better access to data on their area as a result of the launch of the Columbia Basin Rural Development Institute?s website.

Employment Lands Project Launched

Decision-making around economic growth in the Columbia Basin Boundary region will soon be easier, thanks to a new project now underway.

Business Retention & Expansion Project

Spearheaded by the Columbia Basin Rural Development Institute (RDI),the Business Retention and Expansion (BR+E) pilot project aims to help Columbia Basin communities better understand the needs of local business and the challenges they face.

EVENTS

May 16 ? September 12

BC Ideas: Solutions for Stronger Communities. BC Ideas is an online competition that is seeking innovative solutions to strengthen BC communities. Have an idea, program or partnership that addresses the health, social or environmental issues affecting BC communities? Enter your idea.

SUBSCRIBE TO

RDI CONNECT

FORWARD?TO A FRIEND

STATE OF THE BASIN?-?A tool to identify, monitor?and report on information?relating to well-beingwithin the region.

TRENDS

Growth Corridors Fuel Population Rebound

Strong population growth in Nelson, Castlegar, Cranbrook, Creston, Kimberley, Trail, Rossland and the Elk Valley helped the Columbia Basin Boundary region to rebound from population decline experienced between 2001-2006.

Regional Population Returns to 2001 Levels

Data from Census 2011 reveals the population of the Columbia Basin Boundary region has returned to 2001 levels, rebounding from a decline in population of 3,704 as reported in the 2006 census.

Second Home Ownership Over the Last 5 Years

The average increase of 4% in second home ownership over the past 5 years in the Columbia Basin Boundary region is substantially higher than the provincial average of 1%.

STATE OF THE BASIN POLL

How would you rate your sense of well-being today in comparison to 5 years ago?

better same worse

(Click vote to access the poll.)

Source: http://rdckareae.inthekoots.com/2012/07/12/columbia-basin-rural-economic-development-institute/

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Judge: Miss. anti-abortion law stays blocked

Reuters

Diane Derzis, owner of Mississippi's lone abortion clinic, sits in the reception area. She has challenged a law that could shut down her facility.

By msnbc.com and news services

Updated at 6:36 p.m. ET: A federal judge on Wednesday said he would continue to block a state law that threatens to shut down Mississippi?s only abortion clinic.

U.S. District Judge Daniel P. Jordan III, who was appointed to the bench by former President George W. Bush, had delayed the law?s implementation on July 1 with a temporary restraining order. After his decision on Wednesday not to lift the order, it is unclear how long the law will now be delayed.

At issue is a law that abortion rights advocates say is a thinly veiled attempt to ban the procedure in Mississippi. Supporters of the measure argue it is necessary to ensure women's safety.


The law, signed by Republican Governor Phil Bryant in April, requires physicians who perform abortions to be board-certified in obstetrics and gynecology, and to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital.

The clinic, Jackson Women's Health Organization, says it has been unable to obtain admitting privileges for its two out-of-state OB-GYNs because local hospitals have not responded to their requests.

In his July 1 ruling to temporarily block the law, Judge Jordan wrote that the plaintiffs, the state?s sole abortion clinic, ?have offered evidence ? including quotes from significant legislative and executive officers ? that the Act?s purpose is to eliminate abortions in Mississippi. They likewise submitted evidence that no safety or health concerns motivated its passage. This evidence has not yet been rebutted.?

In his opening arguments on Wednesday, Jordan said, according to WAPT.com, ?This is a court of law, not a political debate.?

Later, the jude said, according to The Jackson Free Press, that the case is unique because it is unclear whether doctors for the clinic will be able to get admitting privileges.

Mississippi, which had as many as 14 abortion providers in the early 1980s, would be the only state without an abortion clinic should the clinic, based in Jackson, Miss., close. The clinic opened in 1996; in the last 18 months, the clinic has performed about 3,000 abortions, according to court papers.??

Mississippi already has some of the country's strictest abortion laws and one of the lowest abortion rates. It also has the highest teen pregnancy rate in the United States - more than 60 percent above the national average in 2010.

Supporters of the law say it's designed to protect patients. But Republican Gov. Phil Bryant has said openly that he hopes it will make Mississippi "abortion-free."

Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

?Usually elected officials at least pretend that the law is about health and safety,? Attorney Michelle Movahed told msnbc.com. ?But the elected officials have openly said they would like this law to close down the state?s only abortion clinic.?

Although officials changed their tune somewhat when litigation started, no one has renounced their earlier hopes that the law could shutter the clinic, Movahed said.

?No one said, ?Oh crap, we didn?t realize the effect this would have on the clinic,? she said.

Clinic owner Diane Derzis said that since she acquired Jackson Women's Health Organization in 2010, no woman has had to be taken from the clinic by ambulance. Additionally, if the clinic closed, the closest clinics to Jackson are about 200 miles away, in Louisiana, Tennessee and Alabama.

Mississippi physicians who perform fewer than 10 abortions a month can avoid having their offices regulated as an abortion clinic, and thus avoid restrictions in the new law. The clinic's owner has said the clinic is unlikely to stay open and perform that few abortions per month. The Health Department said it doesn't have a record of how many physicians perform fewer than 10 abortions a month.

Clinic operators say almost all the abortions in the state are done in their building. They say in court papers that the clinic did about 3,000 abortions in 18 months.

Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

The U.S. Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade decision in 1973 established a nationwide right to abortion. In 1992, the court's decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey upheld the Roe decision and allowed states to regulate abortions before fetuses are viable.

But, as supporters of Mississippi clinic point out, the 1992 decision also said states may not place undue burdens or substantial obstacles to women seeking abortion.

The Associated Press, Reuters and msnbc.com's Isolde Raftery contributed to this report.

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

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Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/07/11/12687295-judge-mississippis-anti-abortion-law-should-remain-blocked?lite

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The Main Vital Pieces Of Article Marketing ? Writing and Speaking

One clever tactic that businesses use to attract new customers is called article marketing. Article marketing essentially involves businesses writing articles that are relevant to products or services that they sell. These articles are helpful to readers and may persuade them to buy products or services made by the business that will meet their needs. Below is an article that contains tips related to article marketing.

Providing links to other websites in your articles is a great way to market your own. How? By showing readers all the other resources they can use to learn more on a topic, you?re providing a central directory that they will return to check out time and time again. You may not have all the content on your site, but you definitely provide all the answers.

One way to build an email list through your article marketing efforts is to encourage your readers to write you to ask questions or get more information. Be careful to make this process sincere; do not rely on canned replies. If readers like your article enough to contact you directly they will probably consider giving up their address a fair trade for your attention.

Check out your competition. To ensure that you will be gaining readers, research those blogs and websites that offer similar articles to your own. Find out what they are doing, and figure out a way to do it better. Giving a reader something that they cannot anywhere else is a sure way to keep them coming back to you.

When you are writing for article marketing, information is key. You should not forget that the main reason anyone wants to read your article is to gain information. Your article should have information, and it should be relevant. The information you include should also be as timely as possible.

Double check your links. As soon as your article gets published, visit it. Click every link inside to make sure they are all accurate and working correctly. You do not want to send your readers to a 404 screen, or some random website that has nothing to do with you or your article.

Make sure that every article you provide is full of useful, interesting information. Remember that search engine bots may read for keywords, but people read for interest and entertainment or because they are trying to find something out! Your articles should have fresh, timely information about subjects people are interested in.

In article marketing, freshness is everything. The more often you write unique content, the more often people and search spiders will index your website. As you create new articles, you also have more original content to spin and post elsewhere. Try to write something new every single day, and then take some time to submit it to as many websites as possible.

If you sell your articles to EzineArticles.com you?ll find that after the first you will have an RSS feed. Take this link and submit it to all of the RSS directories available, and then ping each when a new article is published. This will further increase your exposure and traffic will grow in turn.

Use your old material to create new articles. If you need more content but aren?t sure where you are going to get it, simply take your old articles and rewrite them. You can use blog entries, things you?ve written on Facebook and much more. If you have created any videos or podcasts, use them for inspiration as well.

Odds suggest that prior to reading this article, you didn?t know half of the information. That?s because finding accurate and current information on article marketing is actually a tough thing to do. This article laid out some very easy, yet very insightful tips, that you can use to build your marketing campaign. Make sure you use them wisely.

Beside creating articles about Article Marketing, Bettyann Raisin also gives advice about Keyword Canine Bonus? on her sites. To find out about Cbengine Bonus, visit www.warriorforum.com


Related:

Article Marketing Game 2009 & BeyondArticle Marketing Game 2009 & BeyondThe Secret to High Profit Websites - The Unknown Realms Revealed!

Article Marketing Strategies That You Can Include Right Now To Explode Your Article Equation!

Tags: article marketing article, article marketing idea, article marketing info, article marketing tips

Source: http://writingandspeaking.how-to-make-cheese.com/uncategorized/the-main-vital-pieces-of-article-marketing-2/

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Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Adam Lambert Calls 'American Idol' Judge News A 'Beautiful Rumor'

Former 'Idol' runner-up tells British reporter he would 'jump at the chance' to join 'Idol.'
By Gil Kaufman


Adam Lambert
Photo: Frazer Harrison/ Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1689286/adam-lambert-american-idol-judge-rumors.jhtml

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More at Work on Those Tax Cuts (talking-points-memo)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/237483216?client_source=feed&format=rss

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'The Closer' Premiere: Brenda Is A Hostile Witness On The Stand And Makes A Shocking Allegation (VIDEO)

  • Mon., July 9: "Bunheads"

    (9 p.m. ET on ABC Family) Michelle tries out a new living arrangement that gives her some distance from her new mother-in-law. And Fanny is beside herself when the Joffrey Ballet threatens to move Summer Program auditions to another city because the dance floor studio is not up to par.

  • Mon., July 9: "The Closer"

    (9 p.m. ET on TNT) <em>summer premiere</em> The long-running drama returns for its final batch of episodes. Kyra Sedgwick stars as Los Angeles Deputy Police Chief Brenda Leigh Johnson, whose investigative and interrogation skills have resulted in countless confessions and convictions. Mary McDonnell, who will continue her role as Captain Sharon Raydor in TNT's upcoming spin-off "Major Crimes," also stars. Followed by the series premiere of Eric McCormack's "Perception." (Read an <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/09/perception-eric-mccormack_n_1654869.html?utm_hp_ref=tv" target="_hplink">interview with Eric McCormack</a> and <a href="www.huffingtonpost.com/maureen-ryan/perception-review-eric-mccormack_b_1654962.html?utm_hp_ref=tv" target="_hplink">a review of "Perception."</a>)

  • Mon, July 9: "The Bad Girls Club"

    (10 p.m. ET on Oxygen) <em>season premiere</em> The show moves to sunny Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, marking the first time this series is set in an international location. This season will bring new alliances, new enemies and new attitudes as a fresh group of girls takes on a different city.

  • Tues., July 10: "Destination Truth"

    (9 p.m. ET on Syfy) <em>season premiere</em> Season 5 opens with two special back-to-back episodes, as Josh Gates and his team lead viewers on a chase into one of the world's biggest caves in the jungles of Vietnam to search for Bigfoot. Then, at the overwhelming request of fans, they'll travel to Romania for a return visit to the haunted Hoia Bachu Forest, the site of their most terrifying investigation to date, and then explore the reportedly haunted Mayan ruins of Tikal in pursuit of a monster known as the Belize Goblin.

  • Tues., July 10: "White Collar"

    (9 p.m. ET on USA) <em>season premiere</em> The unique partnership between con man Neal Caffrey and FBI agent Peter Burke was upended in the Season 3 finale when Neal fled the country with Mozzie. The series returns for a dramatic fourth season exploring Burke's fate with the FBI, the whereabouts of Caffrey and whether or not their relationship will ever be the same again. Followed by the season premiere of "Covert Affairs."

  • Tues., July 10: "NY Med"

    (10 p.m. ET on ABC) <em>series premiere</em> For a full year, ABC News cameras had unprecedented access to document the mayhem and the miracles that occur daily inside the walls of Columbia and Weill Cornell Medical Centers -- the crown jewels of the prestigious New York-Presbyterian Hospital in New York City -- for an eight-part series, "NY Med." Lutheran Medical Center also participated, adding a Brooklyn dimension to the series. In the premiere, cameras follow a mother of two as she undergoes brain surgery -- while awake.

  • Wed., July 11: "Dogs in the City"

    (8 p.m. ET on CBS) <em>season finale</em> Dog guru Justin Silver partners with Edie Falco ("Nurse Jackie") to help renovate a shelter that is close to her heart and, while there, works with a dog who has been scaring off potential adopters.

  • Wed., July 11: "Beverly Hills Nannies"

    (9 p.m. ET on ABC Family) <em>series premiere</em> Play dates on Rodeo Drive, ironing the baby's Burberry, personal chefs and over-the-top parental demands are only just the tip of the iceberg for a group of nannies that work for high powered families living in the most exclusive zip code in the country.

  • Wed., July 11: "Damages"

    (9 p.m. ET on DirecTV) <em>season premiere</em> The fifth and final season centers on the timely and controversial subject of government and corporate transparency, focusing on how the ever-changing digital landscape shapes the way in which information is obtained and shared. Ryan Phillippe joins the cast as a series regular. Followed by the series premiere of "Hit and Miss."

  • Thurs., July 12: "Big Brother"

    (9 p.m. ET on CBS) <em>season premiere</em> 12 new houseguests compete to be the last contestant standing. In a series first, four of the most successful players to ever enter the "Big Brother" house, will return to play their own game and for their own separate prize. The identities of the four returning players and details surrounding their mission inside the house will be revealed during the season premiere.

  • Thurs., July 12: "The Choice"

    (9 p.m. ET on Fox) <em>season finale</em> Actor Dean Cain, American fashion model and actor Tyson Beckford, NFL defense tackle Ndamukong Suh and Beverly Hills plastic surgeon to the stars Dr. Robert Nettles vie for love on the season finale of the dating show.

  • Thurs., July 12: "The Real L Word."

    (10 p.m. ET on Showtime) <em>season premiere</em> New cast-members from the New York lesbian scene join the show for its third season, as well as returning LA fan favorites. Although the series straddles both coasts, it will continue to depict these ladies in their passionate (mis-)adventures, both at work and play. Fans can also expect some big surprises and special guest star appearances throughout the season.

  • Fri., July 13: "Can You Survive A Horror Movie?"

    (9 p.m. ET on Chiller) <em>special presentation</em> Have you ever watched a horror film, reveling in the gruesome deaths of twenty-something teenagers, and thought that you could do better? This special will put those thoughts to the test as it explores the best tips and tricks for conquering the classic death-dealing scenarios. Combining cinematic reenactments with expert strategy, the show will also highlight the three unsuspecting hosts, putting them through a blood-soaked series of challenges deviously designed to test the likelihood of their continued living.

  • Sat., July 14: "The Firm"

    (10 p.m. ET on NBC) <em>series finale</em> Chances are you'd forgotten this low-rated legal drama was still on the air, but on the off chance you kept up with the series while NBC burned it off on Saturdays, it comes to a close tonight. On the day of Ray and Tammy's wedding, a new enemy threatens to destroy the joyous family occasion. As Patrick Walker's trial begins, Mitch makes a startling discovery that the conspiracy surrounding the case goes deeper than just the mob.

  • Sun., July 15: "Leverage"

    (8 p.m. ET on TNT) <em>season premiere</em> Television's coolest gang of thieves, grifters and con artists are back in the fifth season of this fast-paced, light-hearted caper series.

  • Sun., July 15: "Breaking Bad"

    (10 p.m. ET on AMC) <em>season premiere</em> The fifth and final season begins. As Walt deals with the aftermath of the Casa Tranquila explosion, Hank works to wrap up his investigation of Gus' empire.

  • Sun., July 15: "Political Animals"

    (10 p.m. ET on USA) <em>series premiere</em> Adrian Pasdar stars as President Paul Garcetti, who defeated Elaine (Sigourney Weaver) in the presidential primary and then appointed her as his Secretary of State. A smart man who uses every resource at his disposal to his advantage, he deftly employs Elaine's popularity to deflect unwanted attention. Elaine tries to keep her family together while simultaneously dealing with crises of the State Department and a hungry DC journalist (Carla Gugino) who is bent on destroying her.

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/10/the-closer-premiere-brenda-hostile-witness-video_n_1661233.html

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    Romney, echoing Rubio, sees Venezuelan threat to U.S. security (Los Angeles Times)

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

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/237586946?client_source=feed&format=rss

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    Japan farm paid $10 million for I?ll Have Another


    NEW YORK (AP) ? The owner of I?ll Have Another says he sold his Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner to a farm in Japan for $10 million, a price that far exceeded any amount he was offered in the United States.

    J. Paul Reddam made his comments in a blog appearing on the bloodhorse.com website. He writes there were two offers from U.S. breeding operations, one valued at just under $5 million, the other at $3 million.

    ?Certainly greed has something to do with it,? he wrote, adding that the ?one offer was four times higher in cash than the best offer here,? and ?I couldn?t rationalize not selling him overseas.?

    Reddam also notes that the rights of Derby, Preakness and Belmont runner-up Bodemeister ?recently purportedly sold for about 13 million in America.?

    I?ll Have Another was retired with a tendon injury the day before he was to run in the Belmont Stakes and attempt to become the first Triple Crown champion in 34 years.

    The colt made a farewell appearance at Betfair Hollywood Park on Saturday before heading to a career at stud at Shigeyuki Okada?s Big Red Farm on the island of Hokkaido.

    ? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

    More articles filed under Sports

    Source: http://www.longislandpress.com/2012/07/09/japan-farm-paid-10-million-for-ill-have-another/

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    Senate Democrats pushing tax cuts for business

    FILE - In this May 17, 2012 file photo, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democrats want to push tax cuts through the Senate for companies that hire new workers, give raises or buy major new equipment this year. With neither party eager to let the other claim campaign-season victories, the ultimate fate of the roughly $29 billion legislation seems dubious. Debate was to begin Tuesday, though it was possible Republicans would use procedural blockades to quickly derail the measure. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

    FILE - In this May 17, 2012 file photo, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democrats want to push tax cuts through the Senate for companies that hire new workers, give raises or buy major new equipment this year. With neither party eager to let the other claim campaign-season victories, the ultimate fate of the roughly $29 billion legislation seems dubious. Debate was to begin Tuesday, though it was possible Republicans would use procedural blockades to quickly derail the measure. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

    FILE - In this Sept. 7, 2011 file photo, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democrats want to push tax cuts through the Senate for companies that hire new workers, give raises or buy major new equipment this year. With neither party eager to let the other claim campaign-season victories, the ultimate fate of the roughly $29 billion legislation seems dubious. Debate was to begin Tuesday, though it was possible Republicans would use procedural blockades to quickly derail the measure. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

    (AP) ? Democrats want to push tax cuts through the Senate for companies that hire new workers, give raises or buy major new equipment this year.

    With neither party eager to let the other claim campaign-season victories, the ultimate fate of the roughly $29 billion legislation seems dubious. Debate was to begin Tuesday, though it was possible that Republicans, who prefer other tax changes, would use procedural blockades to quickly derail the measure.

    The legislation would grant tax credits ? which are subtracted from a company's tax bill ? equal to 10 percent of the amount its 2012 payroll exceeds the salaries it paid in 2011. The maximum credit would be $500,000, a figure that would disproportionately help smaller businesses.

    It would also let companies that buy major new property in 2012, such as machinery, deduct the entire cost of the purchase this year. Currently they can only deduct half the amount.

    In an election year in which the slumping economy gives President Barack Obama and the Senate's majority Democrats little to boast about, the proposal lets Democrats take the offensive on the tax issue while asserting they are trying to encourage job creation. It was reaching the floor days after the latest gloomy Labor Department report that a scant 80,000 jobs were created last month, leaving the unemployment rate at a rugged 8.2 percent.

    "This tax cut is by no means a cure-all, but it could be a difference-maker for small firms on the fence about adding payroll," said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. "After last month's sluggish jobs numbers, we may be on the verge of a rare moment of agreement on how to help the economy."

    On Monday, Obama proposed continuing wide-ranging tax cuts ? which will otherwise lapse in January ? for most taxpayers, while letting them expire for households making more than $250,000 annually. He argued that the rich should contribute to deficit reduction efforts.

    Republicans want all the tax cuts to be renewed and have opposed Democratic efforts to omit the highest earners, saying that would hurt businesses.

    "If my friends on the other side of the aisle truly care about small businesses, as I know they do, then they should join us in stopping these tax hikes that will hit those very same people if the president has his way," Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, said of Obama's proposal and the Senate Democratic bill. "If small businesses need help then the best thing we can do is stop all the tax increases."

    House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, plans for a House vote on renewing all those tax cuts later this month. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., is likely to hold a Senate vote in July on Obama's proposal to renew the expiring tax reductions for all but those earning more than $250,000.

    It was unclear whether Republicans would demand opportunities to reshape the business tax cuts or to force votes on other topics as the price for letting debate begin on the Democratic bill.

    The legislation contrasts with a $46 billion measure Republicans pushed through the GOP-run House in April granting 20 percent tax deductions to all businesses with fewer than 500 employees ? more than 99 percent of the nation's companies. It drew a veto threat from Obama and has gone nowhere in the Senate.

    Both measures were unpaid for, meaning that if enacted, their price tags would make federal deficits bigger.

    Both parties support the tax breaks for equipment purchase, though critics have questioned their job-creation potential because they say they would cut taxes for companies that would have bought items anyway.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-07-10-Congress-Taxes/id-bde9d3fb449a4420bdae681e700d8a08

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