Sunday, September 25, 2011

Yao Ming, Richard Branson team up to stop shark fin trade

Yao Ming and Richard Branson are teaming up to help put an end to the cruel trade of shark fins for use primarily in shark fin soups in China.

Recently retired Chinese NBA star Yao Ming is taking the fight against eating shark fins back to his homeland, where demand for the traditional delicacy is soaring despite efforts to ban their use and trade.

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Yao and British tycoon Richard Branson made an appeal Thursday in Shanghai against eating shark fins, which are a staple of high-class Chinese banquets, to a group of 30 of China's richest and most influential businesspeople.

"When demand happens, the buying happens and the killing happens," said Yao, a 7-foot-6 (2.29-meter) former center who retired in July after eight seasons with the Houston Rockets due to injuries.

Shanghai-born Yao is using his post-retirement free time to help campaign against the slaughter of 1.5 million sharks a week that is taking some of the species close to extinction.

The event, sponsored by the conservation group WildAid, is aimed at starting a conservation movement in China "not just to protect the sharks but to protect tigers, and to protect other species that are in peril of extinction," Branson said.

Critics say fishermen kill more than 70 million sharks each year for their fins, which can sell for $700 a pound (450 grams), while the soup can cost $80 a bowl. Usually, the fins are cut from the sharks and their bodies discarded, leaving them to die.

Although there have been moves to ban the trade and consumption of shark fins in California and elsewhere, 95 percent are consumed in China.

"There's been a massive increase in shark fin soup and the killing of sharks," said Branson, whose Virgin Airlines bans transport of shark fins. "The world is getting wealthier, particularly in China people are getting wealthier, and they can now afford to buy shark fin soup."

"We're trying to get other businesses to ban the transportation of shark fins," he said.

While shark fins have been used to make soup for hundreds of years, until recently consumption was limited to a small elite, said Yao, who gave up eating shark fin in 2006 and says he avoids events where it is served.

About 20 countries and regions have imposed regulations on finning or commercial shark fishing. Earlier this month, California imposed a ban on the trade. China regulates dealings in and harvesting of sharks but has not banned it.

"As far as shark finning is concerned the best way is to ... ban altogether shark fin soup from states and then countries. That's perhaps the only way to save the shark in the long term," Branson said.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/dL9OgUAFF6o/Yao-Ming-Richard-Branson-team-up-to-stop-shark-fin-trade

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Saturday, September 24, 2011

The American 'allergy' to global warming: Why? (AP)

NEW YORK ? Tucked between treatises on algae and prehistoric turquoise beads, the study on page 460 of a long-ago issue of the U.S. journal Science drew little attention.

"I don't think there were any newspaper articles about it or anything like that," the author recalls.

But the headline on the 1975 report was bold: "Are We on the Brink of a Pronounced Global Warming?" And this article that coined the term may have marked the last time a mention of "global warming" didn't set off an instant outcry of angry denial.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE: Climate change has already provoked debate in a U.S. presidential campaign barely begun. An Associated Press journalist draws on decades of climate reporting to offer a retrospective and analysis on global warming and the undying urge to deny.

___

In the paper, Columbia University geoscientist Wally Broecker calculated how much carbon dioxide would accumulate in the atmosphere in the coming 35 years, and how temperatures consequently would rise. His numbers have proven almost dead-on correct. Meanwhile, other powerful evidence poured in over those decades, showing the "greenhouse effect" is real and is happening. And yet resistance to the idea among many in the U.S. appears to have hardened.

What's going on?

"The desire to disbelieve deepens as the scale of the threat grows," concludes economist-ethicist Clive Hamilton.

He and others who track what they call "denialism" find that its nature is changing in America, last redoubt of climate naysayers. It has taken on a more partisan, ideological tone. Polls find a widening Republican-Democratic gap on climate. Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry even accuses climate scientists of lying for money. Global warming looms as a debatable question in yet another U.S. election campaign.

From his big-windowed office overlooking the wooded campus of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in Palisades, N.Y., Broecker has observed this deepening of the desire to disbelieve.

"The opposition by the Republicans has gotten stronger and stronger," the 79-year-old "grandfather of climate science" said in an interview. "But, of course, the push by the Democrats has become stronger and stronger, and as it has become a more important issue, it has become more polarized."

The solution: "Eventually it'll become damned clear that the Earth is warming and the warming is beyond anything we have experienced in millions of years, and people will have to admit..." He stopped and laughed.

"Well, I suppose they could say God is burning us up."

The basic physics of anthropogenic ? manmade ? global warming has been clear for more than a century, since researchers proved that carbon dioxide traps heat. Others later showed CO2 was building up in the atmosphere from the burning of coal, oil and other fossil fuels. Weather stations then filled in the rest: Temperatures were rising.

"As a physicist, putting CO2 into the air is good enough for me. It's the physics that convinces me," said veteran Cambridge University researcher Liz Morris. But she said work must go on to refine climate data and computer climate models, "to convince the deeply reluctant organizers of this world."

The reluctance to rein in carbon emissions revealed itself early on.

In the 1980s, as scientists studied Greenland's buried ice for clues to past climate, upgraded their computer models peering into the future, and improved global temperature analyses, the fossil-fuel industries were mobilizing for a campaign to question the science.

By 1988, NASA climatologist James Hansen could appear before a U.S. Senate committee and warn that global warming had begun, a dramatic announcement later confirmed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a new, U.N.-sponsored network of hundreds of international scientists.

But when Hansen was called back to testify in 1989, the White House of President George H.W. Bush edited this government scientist's remarks to water down his conclusions, and Hansen declined to appear.

That was the year U.S. oil and coal interests formed the Global Climate Coalition to combat efforts to shift economies away from their products. Britain's Royal Society and other researchers later determined that oil giant Exxon disbursed millions of dollars annually to think tanks and a handful of supposed experts to sow doubt about the facts.

In 1997, two years after the IPCC declared the "balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate," the world's nations gathered in Kyoto, Japan, to try to do something about it. The naysayers were there as well.

"The statement that we'll have continued warming with an increase in CO2 is opinion, not fact," oil executive William F. O'Keefe of the Global Climate Coalition insisted to reporters in Kyoto.

The late Bert Bolin, then IPCC chief, despaired.

"I'm not really surprised at the political reaction," the Swedish climatologist told The Associated Press. "I am surprised at the way some of the scientific findings have been rejected in an unscientific manner."

In fact, a document emerged years later showing that the industry coalition's own scientific team had quietly advised it that the basic science of global warming was indisputable.

Kyoto's final agreement called for limited rollbacks in greenhouse emissions. The United States didn't even join in that. And by 2000, the CO2 built up in the atmosphere to 369 parts per million ? just 4 ppm less than Broecker predicted ? compared with 280 ppm before the industrial revolution.

Global temperatures rose as well, by 0.6 degrees C (1.1 degrees F) in the 20th century. And the mercury just kept rising. The decade 2000-2009 was the warmest on record, and 2010 and 2005 were the warmest years on record.

Satellite and other monitoring, meanwhile, found nights were warming faster than days, and winters more than summers, and the upper atmosphere was cooling while the lower atmosphere warmed ? all clear signals greenhouse warming was at work, not some other factor.

The impact has been widespread.

An authoritative study this August reported that hundreds of species are retreating toward the poles, egrets showing up in southern England, American robins in Eskimo villages. Some, such as polar bears, have nowhere to go. Eventual large-scale extinctions are feared.

The heat is cutting into wheat yields, nurturing beetles that are destroying northern forests, attracting malarial mosquitoes to higher altitudes.

From the Rockies to the Himalayas, glaciers are shrinking, sending ever more water into the world's seas. Because of accelerated melt in Greenland and elsewhere, the eight-nation Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program projects ocean levels will rise 90 to 160 centimeters (35 to 63 inches) by 2100, threatening coastlines everywhere.

"We are scared, really and truly," diplomat Laurence Edwards, from the Pacific's Marshall Islands, told the AP before the 1997 Kyoto meeting.

Today in his low-lying home islands, rising seas have washed away shoreline graveyards, saltwater has invaded wells, and islanders desperately seek aid to build a seawall to shield their capital.

The oceans are turning more acidic, too, from absorbing excess carbon dioxide. Acidifying seas will harm plankton, shellfish and other marine life up the food chain. Biologists fear the world's coral reefs, home to much ocean life and already damaged from warmer waters, will largely disappear in this century.

The greatest fears may focus on "feedbacks" in the Arctic, warming twice as fast as the rest of the world.

The Arctic Ocean's summer ice cap has shrunk by half and is expected to essentially vanish by 2030 or 2040, the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center reported Sept. 15. Ashore, meanwhile, the Arctic tundra's permafrost is thawing and releasing methane, a powerful greenhouse gas.

These changes will feed on themselves: Released methane leads to warmer skies, which will release more methane. Ice-free Arctic waters absorb more of the sun's heat than do reflective ice and snow, and so melt will beget melt. The frozen Arctic is a controller of Northern Hemisphere climate; an unfrozen one could upend age-old weather patterns across continents.

In the face of years of scientific findings and growing impacts, the doubters persist. They ignore long-term trends and seize on insignificant year-to-year blips in data to claim all is well. They focus on minor mistakes in thousands of pages of peer-reviewed studies to claim all is wrong. And they carom from one explanation to another for today's warming Earth: jet contrails, sunspots, cosmic rays, natural cycles.

"Ninety-eight percent of the world's climate scientists say it's for real, and yet you still have deniers," observed former U.S. Rep. Sherwood Boehlert, a New York Republican who chaired the House's science committee.

Christiana Figueres, Costa Rican head of the U.N.'s post-Kyoto climate negotiations, finds it "very, very perplexing, this apparent allergy that there is in the United States. Why?"

The Australian scholar Hamilton sought to explain why in his 2010 book, "Requiem for a Species: Why We Resist the Truth About Climate Change."

In an interview, he said he found a "transformation" from the 1990s and its industry-financed campaign, to an America where climate denial "has now become a marker of cultural identity in the `angry' parts of the United States."

"Climate denial has been incorporated in the broader movement of right-wing populism," he said, a movement that has "a visceral loathing of environmentalism."

An in-depth study of a decade of Gallup polling finds statistical backing for that analysis.

On the question of whether they believed the effects of global warming were already happening, the percentage of self-identified Republicans or conservatives answering "yes" plummeted from almost 50 percent in 2007-2008 to 30 percent or less in 2010, while liberals and Democrats remained at 70 percent or more, according to the study in this spring's Sociological Quarterly.

A Pew Research Center poll last October found a similar left-right gap.

The drop-off coincided with the election of Democrat Barack Obama as president and the Democratic effort in Congress, ultimately futile, to impose government caps on industrial greenhouse emissions.

Boehlert, the veteran Republican congressman, noted that "high-profile people with an `R' after their name, like Sarah Palin and Michelle Bachmann, are saying it's all fiction. Pooh-poohing the science of climate change feeds into their basic narrative that all government is bad."

The quarterly study's authors, Aaron M. McCright of Michigan State University and Riley E. Dunlap of Oklahoma State, suggested climate had joined abortion and other explosive, intractable issues as a mainstay of America's hardening left-right gap.

"The culture wars have thus taken on a new dimension," they wrote.

Al Gore, for one, remains upbeat. The former vice president and Nobel Prize-winning climate campaigner says "ferocity" in defense of false beliefs often increases "as the evidence proving them false builds."

In an AP interview, he pointed to tipping points in recent history ? the collapse of the Berlin Wall, the dismantling of U.S. racial segregation ? when the potential for change built slowly in the background, until a critical mass was reached.

"This is building toward a point where the falsehoods of climate denial will be unacceptable as a basis for policy much longer," Gore said. "As Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said, `How long? Not long.'"

Even Wally Broecker's jest ? that deniers could blame God ? may not be an option for long.

Last May the Vatican's Pontifical Academy of Sciences, arm of an institution that once persecuted Galileo for his scientific findings, pronounced on manmade global warming: It's happening.

Said the pope's scientific advisers, "We must protect the habitat that sustains us."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110924/ap_on_sc/us_climate_the_disconnect

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In the US, two housing markets and two directions

In this Aug. 23, 2011 photo, real estate agent Ronni Keating waits for a client to view a home in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

In this Aug. 23, 2011 photo, real estate agent Ronni Keating waits for a client to view a home in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

In this Aug. 23, 2011 photo, real rstate agent Ronni Keating waits for a client to view a home in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

In this Aug. 23, 2011 photo, real estate agent Ronni Keating waits outside for a client to view a home in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

In America, it's starting to feel as if there are two housing markets. One for the rich and one for everyone else.

Consider foreclosure-ravaged Detroit. In the historic Green Acres district, a haven for hipsters, a pristine, three-bedroom brick Tudor recently sold for $6,000 ? about what a buyer would have paid during the Great Depression.

Yet just 15 miles away, in the posh suburban enclave of Birmingham, bidding wars are back. Multi-million-dollar mansions are selling quickly. Sales this August were up 21 percent from the previous year. The country club has ended its stealth discounts on new memberships. And Main Street's retail storefronts are full.

"We're getting more showings, more offers and more sales," says Ronnie Keating, a real estate agent with Sotheby's International.

Think of this housing market as bipolar. In the luxury sector, the recession is a memory and sales and prices are rising. But everywhere else, the market is moving sideways or getting worse.

In the housing market inhabited by most Americans, prices have fallen 30 percent or more since the peak in 2007. That's a steeper decline than during the Depression. Some people have had their homes on the market for a year without a single offer.

Almost a quarter of American homeowners owe more on their house than it's worth. Another quarter have less than 20 percent equity. About half of homeowners couldn't get a mortgage if they applied today, says Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist for Capital Economics.

But then there is the other housing market, occupied by 1.5 percent of the U.S. population, according to Zillow.com. The one with outdoor kitchens and in-home spas; with his-and-her boudoirs and closets the size of starter houses. The one that is not local but global, with international buyers bidding in all cash. And where the gyrations of the stock market are cause for conversation, not cutting expenses.

In this land of luxury properties, the Great Recession seems over. Prices of $1 million-plus properties have risen 0.7 percent since February, according to Zillow. Prices of houses under $1 million have fallen more than 1.5 percent.

Normally, these two segments of the housing market rise and fall together. But now, they're moving in opposite directions.

"Luxury is the best performing segment of the housing market right now," says Zillow.com chief economist Stan Humphries.

After every recession since World War II, housing has led the economic recovery. Not this time. The renewed vitality in the comparatively small market for luxury homes is not enough to power a full-blown recovery. This bifurcation in the market is yet another reason Michelle Meyer, the chief economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, says her housing outlook is "increasingly downbeat."

The phenomenon is not limited to real estate. You can see the same split in other gauges of the economy. Sales at Saks versus Walmart. Pay on Wall Street versus Main Street. Corporate profits versus family balance sheets.

The divide is also making credit a perk of the rich. Mortgage rates are the lowest in decades. But what good are absurdly cheap rates if you can't get a mortgage? The banks aren't granting credit to anyone "who even has a smudge on their application," says Jonathan Miller, founder of real estate consulting firm Miller Samuel. Applications for new mortgages languish at 10-year lows.

Across the country, prices on high-end homes fell after the subprime crash in the fall of 2008. The price on the $25 million mansion became $20 million, then $15 million. Such "bargains" are pushing more luxury buyers to commit to more deals.

There are other factors, too. In Detroit, a recovering auto industry is helping propel high-end sales. All those car executives who have helped turnaround the American auto industry used to rent. Now they are using their performance bonuses to buy homes.

Wall Street's recovery has brought back the market for mansions in the Hamptons, on Long Island, where the number of closings has returned to the 2007 level, and for luxury co-ops in New York City. And because of social-network riches in Silicon Valley, twice as many homes have sold for $5 million or more this year than last.

But in the other housing market, an apartment tower built in 2007 in San Jose, Calif., recently converted to all-rental. The building had not sold a single unit. In Miami, a city that exemplifies the foreclosure epidemic, idled cranes dot the skyline. Unemployment shot up again this summer from 12 percent to 14 percent, a level not seen since the energy crisis in 1973. There are so many two-bedroom condos in gated communities with golf courses, private pools and rustic jogging paths that you can pick one up for $25,000, 66 percent off the price five years ago. But luxury condos priced at $1 million or more are selling as rapidly as they did during the boom.

"In the 20 years that I have been in South Florida real estate, I have never seen a greater divide between those who have and those who have not," says Peter Zalewski, founder of the real estate firm Condo Vultures.

One big factor in the divide is foreign cash, at least in the world of property. For international buyers, U.S. real estate is the new undervalued asset, the new fire sale, and foreigners are big buyers of luxury properties. International clients bought $82 billion worth of U.S. residential real estate last year, up from $66 billion in 2009. In states like Florida, international buyers account for a third of purchases, up from 10 percent in 2007.

"Luxury properties are drawing buyers from all over the world," says CoreLogic's chief economist, Mark Fleming.

That's true even in such seemingly all-American enclaves as Detroit. Step off a plane at the city's futuristic new airport and the internationalization of the Motor City is obvious. All the signs ? as well as the announcements on the public address system ? are in both Chinese and English.

In the middle of the terminal sits a five-star Westin Hotel, the better to serve the global executive class that jets in and out as the U.S. auto industry regains its footing. Many of them are buying in Birmingham, where home values are up 3.1 percent this year, according to Zillow.com.

In Birmingham, local store owners say business is as good as it was during the boom years last decade. Chasta Fase, who owns Old World Olive Press, a boutique shop that sells $30 bottles of olive oil from all around the world says business "has been just awesome" since she opened her doors in November. And since April, she says, customers have been spending more than ever.

Real estate agent Keating says the same is happening to her sales. In June, she sold a lakefront mansion in Birmingham to a Russian entrepreneur. He had purchased a local steel company that he plans to turn around.

"They're coming from all over," says Keating, who for the past 30 years has sold most of the car barons their homes, from Roger Smith, the former CEO of General Motors, to former Chrysler CEO Bob Nardelli. "I don't know who any of them are anymore."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-09-21-US-Two-Housing-Markets/id-c67f20755cce4a4690df01ed5c335ccc

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Friday, September 23, 2011

Best Cable TV and Internet Package Deals in Alabama | Article Tavern

Today the world is more connected than ever before. The popularity of HDTV has pushed the demand for digital tv set services, while the interest in the internet and social networking have driven the need for broadband internet services . Collectively, both services possess introduced a new age of digital entertainment where high-speed data, music and video is shared more quickly, and with more people than in the past.

Today?s consumer does more than just surf the web. They are a part of social communities that share experiences and knowledge with each other in the form of pictures, videos, music and also text. This sharing requires high speed broadband sites capable of handling millions of parallel transmissions of sounds, data and graphics, all while maintaining the best and speeds obtainable. Network providers have answered with high speed internet services that can handle a number of users and all of their own multimedia demands. In add-on they are always providing great deals to new subscribers looking discover real value from their internet service providers.

Advances within digital HDTV technology have got virtually enabled us all to bring the movie theater experience into our own homes. High definition tv offers unprecedented picture clarity and remarkable sound quality. When coupled with a DVR from your cable supplier, you can enjoy all of your favorite movies, TV sequence and shows without missing a single episode, and all in the high quality of High Definition. Cable TV services now contain: news, college and professional sports, digital radio stations, and premium motion picture channels. Also available are on demand services like further premium movies, sporting events and games. Add optionally available DVR services and you will be able to pause and report live TV at will.

Cable Tv set providers can also offer telephone services to their high speed broadband customers. VOIP is a form of words communication that uses high speed data transmission within the internet instead of traditional phone lines. VOIP can result in substantial cost savings above land lines and offer digital voice top quality. Consumers can lower their telephone bills by eliminating land lines and adding Voice over internet protocol services to their cable bill.

More recent models of Lcd tvs and gaming consoles can now link your Television to the internet. Enter one more shift in age of on-demand entertainment, in which literally thousands associated with shows may be searched, downloaded and played instantly on your own television, PC, phone, pill, notebook or another internet connected device. Your internet as well as cable TV providers have acknowledged the future of residence and cellular entertainment and right now offer you included cable packages where you can combine your own voice, cable as well as internet under a single service. Each service provider understands value of new customers and offers a great deal on bundle cable TV packages.

This is good news for consumers as they can now enjoy all of the benefits of a high speed internet connection, plus all that their cable TV provider has to offer including high definition digital television, digital music stations, premium movie channels, sports and a DVR, all for one low price. Together, broadband internet service and cable TV give the consumer more choices than every before.

Are you interested in learning more about Affordable Charter Cable Offers in Alabama? The author?s website is an excellent resource on the subject.

Source: http://articletavern.com/communications/broadband-internet/best-cable-tv-and-internet-package-deals-in-alabama

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Surveys Online And Cash | Restraq

The single most searched topic on the internet is how to ?generate income?, this has become a popular subject for quite some time. In this particular brief article let me tell you about one of the most effective ways to make money on the internet: paid survey programs. There are plenty of businesses and corporations which are needing to know your thoughts and opinions and pay out for that, the obvious way to discover which companies are investing in this type of market research is joining paid survey programs web sites, however the easiest way is to purchase a complete list of companies that pay for your opinion. For additional information regarding paid surveys online please visit: Las Empresas te necesitan gana Dinero por Internet llenando Encuestas Remuneradas.

This entry was posted in Business. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://restraq.com/business/surveys-online-and-cash/

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Thursday, September 22, 2011

Green Valley Real Estate >> Touring a few garden spots in Green ...

Homes in Green Valley ? The charter night for the Men?s Garden Club, now known as Green Valley Gardeners, was Nov. 13, 1980. With 42 members, it began as an organization made up of gardeners resolved to provide service to the community. Since then, this not-for-profit group has continued their mission by providing several gardening projects to improve gardening education and beautification in the Santa Cruz Valley.

Included in the list of the group?s achievements is the sponsorship of about 26 weekly gardening seminars per year. These talks are free and open to the public, with refreshments and coffee provided. The first seminar was held last Thursday, Sept. 15, at East Social Center on North Abrego.

Green Valley Real Estate GardensTaking a photographic tour of some of the ?green? spots developed by volunteers from Green Valley Gardeners was Mary Kidnocker. She is a former president of the group, a Pima County Master Gardener, Coordinator of The Arid Garden, and a gardening columnist for the Green Valley News. Photographer and club member Linda Gregory provided the beautiful accompanying photos.

To see more of the beauty of the place, check out Dorn?s new homes for sale in Green Valley.

There was a walkthrough of the Allen J Ogden Community Garden, where everyone viewed the plots brimming with a variety of seasonal vegetables. There are two distinct vegetable gardening seasons. One starts around March through April and another begins in September to October. There were also veteran vegetable gardeners who answered specific questions after the seminar.

Then, everyone moved on to the Gardeners? beautification project at The Animal League of Green Valley. A dusty, open desert section was turned into a shady area for acquaintance sessions with prospective adoptees. A call for volunteers brought out over 20 folks who dug holes and planted 20 15-gallon trees in a little over two hours. Afterwards, 15 ash trees were planted to provide more shade for the large dogs. Paths were also constructed, and color was added.

Providing a little history as background, the attendees took a colorful and exciting stroll through The Arid Garden. Seasonal looks and some of the birds and wildlife were also seen. This garden is a valuable benefit for new and established residents, even non-gardeners.

Median Green has done a remarkable job in beautifying our community boulevards. The Green Valley Gardeners was also an early supporter, helping to select low-water, low-maintenance plants, and donating funds for the plants and their installation.

Green Thumb is provided by the Green Valley Gardeners and seminar speakers.

Living up to the name, Green Valley residents are embracing a green lifestyle. Dorn Homes, the most notable among home builders in Green Valley, offer green homes in Green Valley. A Dorn-built house for sale in Green Valley is energy efficient by 65% more than an average home. Our new homes in Green Valley are undoubtedly convenient, comfortable, and stylish, too!

Experience green living in our new homes in Green Valley!

Source: gvnews.com

Source: http://www.dornhomes.com/green-thumb-touring-a-few-garden-spots-in-green-valley/

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Profiling Temple club sports : The Temple News

Part two of a series focusing on club sports in preseason.

Men?s Volleyball:

The men?s volleyball club is in its preseason phase. The club wants to carry a squad of anywhere between 12 and 15 guys to compete in tournaments.

?Our club is highly competitive, as we compete in tournaments on the East Coast, and make a trip to nationals at the end of the spring semester,? men?s volleyball club President Louis Cannataro, said in a email.

The club?s schedule hasn?t been set in stone yet, but it will compete in its first tournament of the season at West Chester? on Oct. 9. The club finished its season last year at 7-3, but this year?s club will have a different look to it.

?[We?ve] had quite a few people graduate from the team this year,? Cannataro said. ?With the amount of members lost due to graduation, some fresh new faces would be a welcomed sight.?

Climbing Club:

Even though the club started climbing last Wednesday, the rock-climbing club climbs year round so that its members can experience the thrills of rock climbing all year long.

This particular club is one of the more rapidly growing clubs on campus.

?We actually had an overabundance of new members this semester,? rock climbing club President Molly Marshaleck, said in an email.

This is another club that functions for both recreation and competition.

?We occasionally compete throughout the semester,? Marshaleck said.

The club?s scheduled competitive climbs include: the Penn Pulldown on Sept. 22 at the University of Pennsylvania, the College Crank on Nov. 12 at Philadelphia Rock Gym, and the Crux Comp on April 3 at Drexel.

Ultimate Frisbee:

Temple?s ultimate frisbee club is? competitive and open to anyone. It does enter into competitions, but there is no set schedule.? Gameday rosters depend upon dedication to the club and attendance in practice.

?The club is a lot more competitive than most people think,? ultimate frisbee club President Steve Ng, said in an email. ?We try to start going to tournaments as early as possible, and our practices are meant to get everyone working at the same level fast.?

Anyone who decides to join this club has to be dedicated to the sport and enjoy a lot of strenuous physical activity.

?In any given tournament weekend, we could play up to nine games in two days, so our practices and drills involve a lot of running and conditioning while also strengthening fundamentals,? Ng said. ?It?s a lot to handle.?

Karate:

The karate club is a competitive martial arts club that gives its members an opportunity to not only practice martial arts skills on each other, but offers a competition setting as well.? It does, in fact, already have enough members to participate, but it is always looking to add new and enthusiastic members to its roster.

For students looking to channel their inner Daniel-son, this club competes in five tournaments each year.

This club has unlimited potential to grow, so even if you?re curious about the martial arts, contact club President Michael McKeon about how to join and when practices are.

Sean Purvis can be reached at sean.purvis@temple.edu.

Source: http://temple-news.com/2011/09/19/profiling-temple-club-sports/

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Gowalla 4.0, Their Bold Revamp Towards Travel And Stories Goes Live

Screen Shot 2011-09-22 at 12.46.04 AMA couple weeks ago during TechCrunch Disrupt, Gowalla co-founder and CEO Josh Williams took the stage to preview the latest version of his service. And while it is technically called Gowalla 4.0, as Williams showed, it's really a total revamp away from the check-in space and towards the travel and location-based story space. But as good as Williams and myself may have been at describing it, you should really try it out for yourself. And now you can. The Gowalla 4.0 apps for iOS and Android have just gone live in their respective stores. The website has also been completely revamped to focus on the new details of the service.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/-a0uOTd6t_k/

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Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Limousines Are Suitable For Any Occasion ? Sorprendeatushijos

[unable to retrieve full-text content]For a number of years, limos have been the preferred method of transport for leisure and business travellers alike. ... If you are a business traveler, limo hire Brisbane is able to meet all your travelling needs. If you're unsure as ...

Source: http://www.sorprendeatushijos.com/?p=496

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Child abuse climbed with recession: study (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? As the U.S. economy began to tank, the number of abused children landing in the hospital with severe brain injuries spiked, according to a study.

Anecdotes linking child abuse to the recession had surfaced before, but the current study -- based on hospital data from four U.S. states and published in Pediatrics -- is one of the first to provide hard data to back the connection.

Although there is no proof that financial hardship itself is causing the rise in abuse, earlier research has tied parental stress to child maltreatment.

"It's definitely disturbing," said Elizabeth Gershoff, a psychologist who studies parenting but was not involved in the study.

The study looked at children under five in Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Washington and showed that from 2004 to 2009, there were 422 children diagnosed with what doctors call "abusive head trauma." The majority ended up in intensive care units (ICUs), and 16 percent died of their injuries.

In the three years leading up to December 2007, just around the time of the market crash, the rate of abusive head injuries was 8.9 per year per 100,000 children. After that date, the number jumped to 14.7 per 100,000.

"If what we are seeing is even close to generalizable, that is a lot of excess children," said Rachel Berger, a child abuse expert at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, who co-authored the study.

Berger said she noticed a sharp uptick in the number of children who came to her hospital with head injuries in 2008. From 17 cases per year, it suddenly jumped to 37 in 2008.

"At any given time there was virtually always a baby in our ICU," she said.

The average age of the children in the study was nine months.

In the United States, some 1,800 toddlers come to the hospital with abusive head trauma every year, corresponding to about one in 3,300. But that statistic is certain to leave out many cases, Berger said.

Federal data show a decline in child abuse in 2008, but Berger said those numbers have many limitations, such as a very restrictive definition of abuse.

While it is unclear how to account for the findings, Berger added that fewer resources might have forced mothers to leave their babies with people who don't usually take care of them, such as fathers or male caretakers.

"The number one perpetrators are fathers and male caretakers, very few perpetrators are mothers. It's the people that mothers give their kids to that end up being the perpetrator."

Gershoff said the young age of the children suggests crying might have caused the abuse. If a caretaker shakes a baby violently to make them stop crying, that may lead to "shaken baby syndrome," in which the brain bumps up against the skull and bleeds or becomes damaged.

Gershoff said that babies only cry for five reasons -- because they are hungry, tired, bored, in pain or need a fresh diaper. If dealing with none of that helps, she said it was all right to leave the crib as long as the baby is safe.

"Just taking a break from that sound, walk out and then come back when you have calmed down," she said.

Berger said the government is not doing much to help disadvantaged parents cope with financial hardship.

"We have actually increased their stress by decreasing programs to help infants and young children," she said, noting that there have been cuts in daycare and child benefits.

"When people are stressed in this country, for instance during a hurricane, as a society we provide help to those people. Here we have an economic recession and what happens during that time is we actually pull back," she added.

"We need to really think about what the outcome is going to be when we cut programs that help infants and young children." SOURCE: http://bit.ly/cxXOG

(Writing by Frederik Joelving at Reuters Health; editing by Elaine Lies)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110920/us_nm/us_abuse_economy

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Business sales downtrend slowing | Free Business Checking Account

Business sales downtrend slowing

Posted by FBCA on Tuesday, September 20, 2011 ? Leave a Comment?

Updated: 10:25, Tuesday September 20, 2011

Business sales downtrend slowing

Good news! Sales by Australian businesses are not falling as rapidly as they were.

The latest Commonwealth Bank Business Sales Indicator (BSI) fell in trend terms in August, but only by 0.1 per cent, the smallest drop in four months.

It was a result Craig James, the report?s author and chief economist of the bank?s sharebroking arm, Commsec, described as ?encouraging?.

The seasonally adjusted data, on which the smoothed trend series is based, also provided some encouragement in the form of a rise of 0.6 per cent in August, the biggest rise in six months.

But it followed a fall of 0.7 per cent, which was the steepest drop for nine months.

So business sales are not out of the woods just yet, not by a long shot.

Mr James said businesses were unlikely to get too far ahead of themselves, despite the encouraging signs.

Seven of 20 monitored industry sectors posted trend falls in August, compared with eight in July and nine in June.

The weakest was contracted services, which includes building trades, which fell by 0.8 per cent in trend terms in August, the biggest drop for a year and a half.

The strongest was amusement and entertainment, which includes movie theatres and recorded a trend rise of 0.8 per cent in the month.

Three states posted trend falls in business sales in August ? South Australia, Queensland and, despite the mining boom, Western Australia, where sales are falling at a rate of 0.5 per cent for month, adding weight to recent data suggesting WA is a patchwork state within the patchwork economy.

The BSI is based on the value of credit and debit card transactions processed through Commonwealth Bank merchant facilities and provides a broader measure of business sales than the monthly retail trade survey by the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

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Article source: http://www.skynews.com.au/businessnews/article.aspx?id=663749&vId=2715603

Source: http://www.freebusinesscheckingaccount.info/business-sales-downtrend-slowing/

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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Video: Fall films the whole family can enjoy

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/44578207#44578207

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The Vison and Future of Fusion 40 Fitness

by fusion40fitness on September 19, 2011

As a business owner and trainer i have seen hopeless fitness trends come and go. Founding Fusion 40 Fitness has given me the opportunity and pleasure of enhancing the quality of my clients? lives in mind, body and spirit. Fusion 40 Fitness has been founded to reshape fitness by getting back to the basics. The principles of Fusion 40 Fitness exceed beyond training for the sake of training but to educate. My career as a trainer and business owner is different than other businesses in my community because Fusion 40 Fitness is a family oriented business that cares about individuals and the quality of their lives. As an educator, volunteer of many youth and family oriented programs over the years, it is Fusion 40 Fitness goal to give back to the community by drawing attention to the necessity and importance of family, fitness and health programs. Such programs will empower those who need it the most to be more active role models not only for their families but also their community. Fusion 40 Fitness takes pride in bridging the gaps between the sexes,ages, genders, orientations and religions. What better way than through fitness? It is the endeavor of Fusion 40 Fitness to give its? clients the information and encouragement needed to focus less on how they look and more on leading happier, healthier lives in mind, body and spirit. My reason for starting my own business in the fitness industry is simple, my clients deserve to have the highest quality of service to live happier and healthier lives.

-WiL T

Founder of Fusion 40 Fitness

Source: http://fusion40fitness.com/the-vison-and-future-of-fusion-40-fitness/

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[WATCH]: How to Handle Wrist Pain While Bench Press | Health ...

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Flood of Foreclosures Heading to ... - Denver Real Estate Blogger

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New foreclosure starts rose sharply in August, signaling a slew of foreclosed properties will be dumped on the already bloated housing market in early 2012.

?Notices of Default,? the first stage of the foreclosure process, rose 33 percent month-to-month, according to a new report from RealtyTrac.

Much of this was driven by a huge jump in the numbers from Bank of America
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, as reported here on the blog Tuesday.

?The big increase in new foreclosure actions may be a signal that lenders are starting to push through some of the foreclosures delayed by robo-signing and other documentation problems,? said James Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. ?It also foreshadows more bank repossessions in the coming months as these new foreclosures make their way through the process.?

As always, the numbers vary locally, with default notices up more than 40 percent month-over-month in New Jersey (42 percent), Indiana (46 percent) and California (55 percent). The numbers are still down from August of 2010, but that was a near-record high month before any of the ?robo-signing? documentation problems were uncovered.

While the jump is significant, it may just be the tip of the iceberg.

After posting my blog on Bank of America Tuesday, a spokesman there responded, ?We are on an ongoing path to return foreclosures to normal levels. Strong gains like that from July to August demonstrate our progress ? primarily in judicial states ? clearing more volume to advance to foreclosure once we pass the numerous quality controls we have in place and exhaust all options with homeowners. Our progress each month builds upon foreclosure levels lower than the market realities would dictate.?

The market realities are a far higher number of delinquent loans that have not yet even made it to foreclosure starts. There were 4.38 million delinquent loans recorded in July by Lender Processing Services, which does not include the 2.15 million in the foreclosure process. This latest jump, fed by Bank of America, may push other major loan servicers to do the same.

?I wonder if this will signal a move by the lenders and servicers to stop waiting for the final settlement with the government to take place and re-start foreclosure proceedings on all those seriously delinquent loans?,? asks RealtyTrac?s Rick Sharga.

While settlement talks, lawsuits and investigations slog on, the big bank servicers are working to get the troubled loans through the process and off their books, and frankly that is the best course of action. The mortgage and housing market crash was a man-made disaster, but just like any hurricane or tornado, you cannot rebuild until you?ve cleared away the mess.

Questions?? Comments?? And follow me on Twitter @Diana_Olick

 Flood of Foreclosures Heading to Housing Market

Article source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/44533588?__source=RSS*blog*&par=RSS

Loren is a long-time Denver real estate investor. He has bought, remodeled and sold homes throughout the Denver metro area. Loren has also invested in commercial real estate. He is an entreprenuer who has owned multiple businesses and is now a licensed real estate agent with Keller Williams Advantage Realty.

Source: http://denverrealestateblogger.com/599/flood-of-foreclosures-heading-to-housing-market/

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Monday, September 19, 2011

Toronto Real Estate: Buyers beware in real estate purchases, too ...

September 16, 2011 ? I recently read an article in the Toronto Star that got me thinking about the experiences of homebuyers purchasing newly built condominiums.

The article detailed buyers who had bought from floor plans, but, unfortunately, once the unit was built they were disappointed when they realized that one window looked at a brick wall, the floor was laminate and the balcony was ?more of a ledge.? This article is a good reminder that there is a lot to consider when deciding to buy a new home.

Condominiums are regulated by the Condominium Act. In recent months, there has been some talk about the need to reform this law, in part to provide better consumer protection. There is no doubt that the act does need reworking, but caveat emptor, or buyers beware, can go a long way to help buyers when purchasing any home.

When buying newly built housing there are many things to consider. Firstly, when you walk into a sales office, understand that often everyone there is working on behalf of the seller/builder. If that is the case, you may have discussions with them, but their fiduciary duty is to the builder, not you as the buyer. With this in mind, you do have the option of working with a realtor and entering into a Buyer Representation Agreement to authorize them to work on your behalf.

At any time that you work with a licensed realtor they must disclose, to all parties, on whose behalf they are working, in writing. For years I have been hoping that Ontario would make disclosure part of all sales that happen in the province. Currently only realtors who are licensed under the Real Estate and Business Brokers Act 2002 must do so. Consumers would be better protected if all parties involved in real estate transactions ? including lawyers, private sellers and new construction on-site salespeople ? were required to do so. It?s only fair; anyone acting on behalf of someone else should have to disclose their relationship.

Secondly, a very important thing to know is that all buyers of newly built condominiums are entitled by law to a 10 day cooling-off period, during which time they can cancel their agreement. This is a good time to peruse all documentation and take it to a lawyer for review. When dealing with condominiums, it could help to use a lawyer who specializes in condo law. The lawyer may have good advice on stipulations that you can add into the contract to better protect yourself.

Thirdly, understand what you are buying:

???Make sure that a condominium suits your lifestyle. Do you have a good sense of the reality of a 665-square-foot unit with two bedrooms and two bathrooms? If you have house-sized furniture, are you ready to sell it all to make this type of new space livable?

???Be diligent in getting the details. If the plans show nine-foot ceilings, is that in all of the rooms? Where will the heating, cooling, and water be located for the apartment below and above? Ask for the full building plans so you can see where the bulkheads are planned.

???Understand the status of the neighbourhood. Is it a stable neighbourhood with little redevelopment, or is their significant development going on ? or coming ? that could change the nature of the area and affect things like the view from your unit. The municipality?s Official Plan and Planning Department staff can help you look into the future.

???Be realistic in your expectations for the property?s value; use common sense. Getting caught up in hype and speculating that your unit will increase dramatically in value from the time you purchase until construction is complete could leave you disappointed.

???Finally, be sure to consider all of your options. For many homebuyers, newly built housing is the right choice. However, if you are the type of person who likes to ?kick the tires? before buying, purchasing a resale property might be a better option for you.

Newly constructed housing is an important part of the real estate market. It fills an important niche and is the right choice for many people. However, as with any major purchase, it is important that you take steps to look out for your best interests. Go the extra step to make sure that you understand what you are buying and consider working with a realtor who can provide assistance and advice during the purchase.

Richard Silver is president of the Toronto Real Estate Board. The views expressed here are those of the president. For more information, go to www.TorontoRealEstateBoard.com. Follow on Twitter @TREB_Official, on Facebook TorontoRealEstateBoard and www.youtube.com/TREBChannel.

Reposted from The Toronto Star

Source: http://torontoism.com/2011/09/16/toronto-real-estate-buyers-beware-in-real-estate-purchases-too/

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Guests coming? Need not worry about energy bills | My Content ...

Entertaining guests is always a fun thing to do in your home. Many people enjoy entertaining guests because they get to show off their home and have fun with their friends and family. Showing your friends a good time is also very satisfying as you know you are responsible for the fun that you and your friends are having while they are at your home.

If you are planning on entertaining a number of guests at your home, you will need to do a bit of planning before your friends come over. Some of the things that you will need to do include buying extra food to feed your guests as well as making sure that you have extra amenities such as clean towels, sheets and toiletries so that your guests are as comfortable as possible. One thing that you will not need to worry about is the extra electricity that you will use while entertaining guests at your home. Sure, your guests are likely to use some additional electricity at your home, but this will not cost you a lot of extra money with your electric bill.

One reason why having guests over at your home will not cost you extra money in electricity is that energy is cheaper these days than in the past. Because of these lower energy prices, you will not have to pay substantially more money when you have guests over at your home. This will allow you to enjoy your guests? company rather than worry about the additional money your guests are costing you when they use your electricity.

Another reason why you do not need to worry about energy bills when hosting friends and family at your home is that appliances are much more efficient these days and do not use as much electricity. These energy efficient appliances are a terrific way to save money when it comes to your electric bill because they do not use as much energy as older appliances. Owning these energy efficient appliances is critical if you plan on saving money while hosting guests in your home, especially if you know those guests are going to be using electronic products all over your house.

Entertaining guests is one of the best parts of being a homeowner. When you can have your loved ones over for an extended period of time, you have a much better chance of bonding and truly getting to know your friends and family. In order to have as enjoyable of a time as possible when entertaining guests, you will need to make a couple of arrangements such as ensuring there is enough food for you and your guests as well as additional amenities. However, one thing you no longer need to fret about is the cost of energy bills when hosting guests at your home. Since energy prices have fallen in recent years and appliances are much more efficient, you no longer need to worry about your energy bill skyrocketing when you have a few guests over to your home.

If you haven?t paid electricity bills and guests are coming at your home then it would be really embarrassing if there is no electricity in the house but now you can save electricity by using energy efficient appliances and can save your money, just click on the link and start saving electricity.

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Source: http://www.mycontentbuilder.com/guests-coming-need-not-worry-about-energy-bills/

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Send Your Child To One Of The Dyslexia Schools Florida | Article ...

The parent of a dyslexic child may not understand the disorder. It may be that there is a good program at the public school, but it may be disappointing to find it so crowded. Special education teachers now understand the methods that are effective to teach children who are dyslexic, but time may be limited. If a parent is interested in finding a private school that is geared towards children with disabilities, the private dyslexia schools Florida provide the teachers and the time to give an optimal learning experience.

This is more than a reading problem as was commonly thought. It involves listening, speaking, spelling and writing as well. Actually, it affects every subject that is taught because language comprehension is basic to the learning of any other topic. You may be interested in sending your child to a school tailored to meet his or her specific needs.

In addition to the regular school year, some summer camps are available to strengthen skills for the next year. The camp does put its main emphasis on academics. Also, fun activities and sports are offered to build the self-confidence of each child. Ages 8 to 16 can attend. This type of informal environment facilitates advancement in reading and all the other basics. It also strives to build strengths in getting along with peers in fun activities.

Learning to swim, playing soccer and other summertime activities are intermingled with academic classes and private tutoring sessions. Children do art projects to bring out their creativity, which is often negatively impacted by their academic challenges. Failure in school the next year can be fortified by what is accomplished in the summer camp.

There was a time when no one understood this disorder and it was viewed as a lack of intelligence instead of a learning disability. Actually dyslexics are brighter than average. Their ability to learn and perform academically is excellent when the teaching is cognizant of the disorder. Special tutoring and teaching methods will facilitate that.

The academics are as comprehensive as in the traditional school. The only difference is the individual attention that is tailored to facilitate learning in a way that accommodates each child with a different learning style. Reading, spelling, math and science are all included with supplemental materials added to match the variety of learning styles. Dyslexia schools Florida teach all the traditional subjects in an altered method of presentation.

Looking to find the single source of helpful information on dyslexia schools Florida?

Source: http://articletavern.com/recreation-sports/send-your-child-to-one-of-the-dyslexia-schools-florida

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Sunday, September 18, 2011

Sheriff: 2 shot, wounded by gunman at Fla. church (Providence Journal)

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

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Professional Sports Photography 101 Guide, Arts & Entertainment

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Pure Green | Weight Matters

Pure Green

With the increasing fast paced life, it has become difficult for many people to maintain good health. People are unable to find time to have a proper meal and are depending on fast foods which are completely unsafe for health. Junk food such as burgers, pizzas, rolls, cool drinks, tea and coffee are unsafe for health and increase the fat content in the body. Coming to tea, green tea, which has gained popularity slowly in recent years, is termed to be the best drink available which reduces the chances of increase in body weight. Green tea weight loss programs have also been launched which provided many people the opportunity to maintain good health.

Green tea is obtained from green plants, also called as Camellia Sinesis, which is the native plant in China. Green tea has been in existence for more than thousands of years and has slowly been bought into light after globalization. Due to its healing effect, it gained popularity in the west. Many tea manufacturing companies have added green leaves in their products to make their tea maker the healthier product in the market. But, are they providing completely healthier drink? This is the question that you must answer to yourself. Green tea creates an increase in body temperature which in turn burns down the calories present in the body. Due to its fast acting effect, green tea weight loss programs have been added to different diet charts.

Green tea weight loss program can be carried out by any person without much difficulty. But, before they start the process, they are required to obtain a pure green tea product. As there are many manufacturers present, it can be very difficult for any person to choose the best product in the market. Researching over the web may provide you with the required information that will help you look out for the best product in the market.

Irrespective of a person?s weight, green tea weight loss program can be carried out alongside the actual diet chart. It is known that about 50 ? 80 calories are burnt by green tea. This is due to the heat it generates in the body. When a person adds this particular weight loss program to their already present diet chart, they are sure to feel the change in their body within no time. As there are no side effects associated with green tea, 3 ? 4 cups per day is a good amount that one can opt for.

Now that you have understood the importance of green tea, it is time that you add green tea weight loss procedure to your diet chart. When followed perfectly without any pauses, a person can feel the change in less than 20 days. They are also required to carry out regular exercises and a proper food habits which will help them maintain good health and keep their weight under check. Removal of junk food from their food habits will help achieve the goal of reducing Weight Without any side effects.

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* Common Uses: Herbalist regards Lavender as the most useful and versatile essential oil for therapeutic purpos?


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Saturday, September 17, 2011

Eleanor Mondale, daughter of Walter Mondale, dies (AP)

MINNEAPOLIS ? Eleanor Mondale, the vivacious daughter of former Vice President Walter Mondale who carved out her own reputation as an entertainment reporter, radio show host and gossip magnet, has died at her home in Minnesota. She was 51.

Family spokeswoman Lynda Pedersen said Mondale died Saturday. She had been diagnosed with brain cancer years earlier.

"Joan and I must report that our wonderful daughter, Eleanor Mondale Poling, after her long and gutsy battle against cancer, went up to heaven last night to be with her angel," the former vice president said in a statement emailed to friends. "Thank you for all your friendship, you will hear more about plans to celebrate her life soon."

Mondale had been off the air at WCCO-AM in Minneapolis since March 19, 2009, when she announced that her brain cancer had returned a second time. She had surgery to remove the tumor Aug. 12, 2009, at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and a posting on her CaringBridge website declared the surgery a success.

Mondale, the middle of three children born to Walter and Joan Mondale, stumped for her father in his failed campaign to unseat President Ronald Reagan in 1984. She also made calls in 2002 in her father's last campaign, when the former vice president took the ballot slot of Sen. Paul Wellstone, who died in a plane crash just days before the election.

A striking blonde known on the party circuit when she was younger, Eleanor Mondale also attracted gossip. Her dalliance with the late rock musician Warren Zevon was detailed in "I'll Sleep When I'm Dead: The Dirty Life and Times of Warren Zevon," a posthumous biography published by Zevon's ex-wife in 2007.

In 1998, CBS News reported that Mondale was one of four women Monica Lewinsky expressed resentment toward in taped conversations because of attention President Bill Clinton paid to them. (Mondale issued a statement saying her relationship with the president and his wife, Hillary, was "purely a friendship.")

Mondale started as an aspiring actress, with bit parts in TV's "Three's Company" and "Dynasty." She got her start in broadcasting as an entertainment reporter at WCCO-TV in Minneapolis in 1989, but left after only eight months when a Twin Cities magazine was about to publish an article called, "Walter and Joan's Wild Child." The Star Tribune reported that Mondale denied she was forced out.

In the article in Mpls.St. Paul magazine, Mondale was quoted as saying "I like to get wild. But it's not murder, and I don't do drugs."

After stints at Minneapolis radio station WLOL-FM, on cable television at E! Entertainment and ESPN and network TV on CBS' "This Morning," she returned to Minnesota in 2006 to co-host a weekday morning show on WCCO-AM with Susie Jones.

"I was terrified of her at first, she was so big, but you talked to her for a minute and you realized she was just as regular as you could expect," Jones said. "She was uncanny, she was unpredictable. She sparkled. She was gorgeous inside and out. And I'm going to miss her; I'm going to miss her so much."

In 2005, Mondale was diagnosed with brain cancer after she suffered two seizures during a camping trip. The tumor nearly disappeared after Mondale had chemotherapy and radiation, but her cancer returned in 2008. She underwent surgery and was able to return to WCCO but eventually had to take disability leave to treat the recurrence.

"She would send me texts about how her (cancer) scan was. She had it every six weeks, and she would report how it was and how big it was. She hated that part," said Jones, who visited Mondale on Thursday to say goodbye. "She fought very hard. She did not want to die. She had a lot of dignity in the end, and died quietly and beautifully."

Mondale was married three times: to Chicago Bears offensive lineman Keith Van Horne, to fellow DJ Greg Thunder and to Twin Cities rock musician Chan Poling of The Suburbs. Mondale and Poling married in 2005, shortly after her cancer was diagnosed, and lived on a farm near Prior Lake in the southern Twin Cities.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obits/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110917/ap_on_re_us/us_obit_eleanor_mondale

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