Sunday, September 30, 2012

Analysis: China slides faster into pensions black hole

QINGHAI, LEDU COUNTY, China (Reuters) - Eighty-year-old Chinese farmer Guo Shuhe receives a state pension equivalent to just $9 a month, not enough to buy a month worth of groceries, but enough it seems, to risk punching a gaping hole in government finances.

Guo, whose palms are thick and rough from a life spent hoeing fields in southwest China, is one of over 150 million people covered by a rapidly expanding rural retirement scheme which is accelerating the nation's slide into a pension crisis.

"Fifty-five yuan a month is little, but it's better than nothing," said Guo, rubbing his head with his hands at his home in Ledu County, a village 3,000 meters above sea level in China's mountainous Qinghai province, bordering Tibet.

Guo, though, is fortunate because he also has the financial support of six children. But for younger and future generations of retirees, China's traditional family safety net is disappearing, replaced by state-backed pension schemes tailored for a graying society.

Policy makers and economists have long been worried about the financial burden of China's expanding patchwork of pension schemes, but those concerns have recently escalated as its rural pension scheme took off in the past three years.

The funding shortage is daunting: economists say it could blow out to a whopping $10.8 trillion in the next 20 years from $2.6 trillion in 2010, towering over China's $3 trillion onshore savings, the biggest hoard of domestic savings in the world.

Time is not on China's side. Its fast-maturing society and economy -- thanks to a one-child policy and a rapid rise in living standards -- demand better pension coverage in future.

Yet China is already straining to hold things up.

Funding capacity is not keeping pace with swift growth in pension coverage as China sticks to safe but low-yielding investments for its pension funds.

To make bad matters worse, retirements are getting pricier on an ageing population, a shrinking work force, longer life expectancies, early retirements and generous pension payouts.

So pressing are China's pension problems that analysts say they can no longer be ignored. Xi Jinping, China's president-in-waiting, must raise retirement ages and supply pension funds with state assets for financing after he takes power next year.

"This is a very important issue for the next leadership, which does not have a lot of time to get to it," said Zhao Xijun, an economics professor at Renmin University in Beijing.

To give or not to give, China's pension dilemma is not a sideshow. Good pension coverage will help Beijing remake the world's No. 2 economy to boost domestic consumption, cut export reliance, and dodge a middle-income trap that could ensnare the country anytime in the next two decades.

Giving millions of Chinese workers peace of mind about their retirement will encourage thrifty wage-earners to spend more in coming years, standing in for American and European shoppers tightening their belts, economists say.

Crucially, a working pension system will comfort stability-obsessed Beijing, painfully aware that the fruits of China's stellar economic growth must be more evenly shared to head off social discontent.

"Of course it is not enough to live on the current pension. We want the government to raise our pension in future," said Guo.

GREYING FAST

The number of Chinese over 65 years of age, at 123 million, virtually matches Japan's total population, and is rising fast due to the one-child policy Beijing adopted in the 1970s.

According to the World Bank, China is ageing so rapidly it grayed in the last 40 years, whereas ageing societies in the United States and the United Kingdom took a century to form.

The problem of growing old, fast, is most acute in the countryside, where thousands of villages are "hollowed out" as working adults abandon farms to migrate to cities in search of better lives, leaving the young and old behind.

The old-age dependency ratio, or the number of elderly people as a share of those of working age, will hit 34.4 percent in rural China by 2030, compared to 21.1 percent in urban areas, and up from 13.5 percent in 2008, the World Bank said.

The cost of an expanding elderly class is hefty.

Many analysts believe China's labor force will shrink from 2015, hurt by stubbornly low birth rates and an ageing populace, a trend expected to drive up wages in the world's factory floor in years ahead, and henceforth global inflation.

To beat the demographic challenge, Beijing hastened the roll-out in 2009 of a voluntary pension scheme for 657 million rural residents, the equivalent of two United States.

To get a minimum 55 yuan a month in retirement, or a tenth of last year's average monthly wage in the countryside, rural workers must pay at least 100 yuan a year for 15 years.

In China's richer eastern provinces, payouts are much higher because workers pay more, and local governments and private firms have the means to match payments. In cities, for example, the monthly pension is 28 times higher at an average 1,531 yuan.

But whatever the payout, most of the financial burden falls squarely on the government. State subsidies accounted for 61 percent of total rural pension revenues in 2011, with personal contributions making up the rest.

"The ageing population in the countryside is rising faster than urban areas, which could pressure the premature rural pension system," said Cai Fang, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a respected government think-tank.

EMPTIED ACCOUNTS

At face value, China's pension system should not drain state coffers since payouts start low. Yet, an OECD study of global pension systems ranked China's as among the most generous and least sustainable, after the Philippines.

China's pension benefit as a share of retirees' average lifetime wages, also known as replacement rate, stands at 78 percent for male workers, above an OECD average of 57 percent, France's 49 percent, and the United States' 39 percent.

The replacement rate climbs to 98 percent for low-income earners, much higher than the United States' 52 percent in that category.

Early retirement, especially for women, further bulks up the pension bill at a time when people are also living longer. Blue-collared female workers retire from 50 years old in China, a decade earlier than a minimum 60 in the west.

And there is the problem of finding the cash to pay for retirees. Beijing only allows rural pension funds to invest in one-year deposits, whose paltry returns lag wage growth.

In China's fragmented urban pension funds that manage over 1.1 trillion yuan in 2010, real returns were as dismal as under 1 percent for some.

Trapped by rising costs and deficient funding, China spends about 40 percent of state earnings on pension, compared to under 15 percent in Japan and the United States, the OECD said.

Stretched, China's local governments are widely believed to be emptying 2.2 trillion yuan worth of pension accounts of young working adults today to pay for current retirees, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said.

But such financial wizardry does not get rid of the crater in China's pension budget, said economists Ma Jun and Cao Yuanzheng from Deustche Bank and Bank of China respectively.

Funding shortfalls hit 16.5 trillion yuan in 2010, the two economists said, and will quadruple to a stunning 68.2 trillion yuan by 2033. That is about 40 percent of China's gross domestic product, assuming its economy grows 6 percent a year.

Unless China diverts 80 percent of dividends from listed state firms to pension funds to balance the pension account by 2050, they said, the nation may suffer "enormous fiscal stress".

For migrant worker Li Mei, however, the problem is less abstract. Corruption that has pilfered the nest egg of some retirees is her biggest worry.

"I didn't join the rural pension system and will not in future. It's safest to put my money in my own pocket," 40-year-old Li said. "I prefer to trust myself over others." ($1 = 6.3376 Chinese yuan)

(Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-china-slides-faster-pensions-black-hole-210717135--sector.html

alec baldwin kicked off plane mumia mumia uss arizona memorial uss arizona memorial d day red solo cup

Support for LGBT Military Families

gaymilitarypartners.jpgThe American Military Partner Association (www.MilitaryPartners.org) is the nation's premier support and resource network for the partners/spouses of LGBT servicemembers and veterans. Launched originally in 2009 as the "Campaign for Military Partners" by Servicemembers United, America's gay military organization, this first-of-its-kind initiative grew substantially over the course of the ensuing two years and graduated to become the American Military Partner Association on September 20, 2011 - the day that the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" law was officially repealed.

Throughout the years of the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy, gay and lesbian servicemembers were forced to either forego a relationship and a family or go to great lengths to hide their relationships in order to continue to serve in the armed forces. This situation rendered the committed civilian partners of gay and lesbian servicemembers virtually invisible. They could not be acknowledged, they could not be brought to unit or military functions, they could not access spouse and family support networks, and they were denied the family readiness services made available to the spouses and partners of heterosexual troops. This isolation was always particularly devastating when same-sex couples had to move together to rural posts and bases and especially when the active duty servicemember was deployed overseas.

It is this disadvantaged plight that motivated Servicemembers United and the American Military Partner Association to step up back in 2009 and begin to serve this underserved - and often ignored - part of our American military family. In the true historic tradition of military spouses pulling together and figuring out how to support one another on their own during World War II and the Vietnam era, the American Military Partner Association began as an effort to identify, connect, support, and recognize the often ignored and frequently isolated civilian partners of gay and lesbian military personnel. Founded by Servicemembers United in 2009 as a project called the Campaign for Military Partners, the initiative grew to include hundreds and hundreds of military partners across the country and even across the world.

The American Military Partner Association has also worked tirelessly to spread the word about the existence and unique needs of the partners of gay and lesbian servicemembers. Dozens of stories were successfully pitched to major national media outlets, resulting in a national spotlight being continuously shown on these silent heroes for the first time in American history. But simply drawing the public's attention to the plight of isolated and under-supported military partners was only the start of how we have been helping military partners for more than two years.

The American Military Partner Association launched and maintains the website MilitaryPartners.org as the internet's premier information resource for the partners of gay and lesbian servicemembers. We have engaged in a systematic outreach campaign to military partners in order to let them know about our organization and the resources and network now available to them and to make them start to finally feel like a welcomed part of the wider gay and lesbian military community. After proactively building up a membership, we conducted a first-ever survey of military partners in order to identify and explore the unique needs, challenges, and issues they face on a regular basis. This information was aggregated and analyzed, and it formed the basis of an informative, one-of-a-kind report on gay and lesbian military partner and couple issues submitted by Servicemembers United to the Comprehensive Review Working Group on "Don't Ask, Don't Tell."

Find out more at www.militarypartners.org

Source: http://www.thedccenter.org/blog/2012/09/support-for-lgbt-military-families.html

ohare airport etta james songs east west shrine game haywire underworld awakening dog the bounty hunter tacoma narrows bridge

Sony Xperia Go and U get ICS update, Solas includes Glove Mode

GS writes An Ice cream sandwich update has been launched for Xperia Sola, Xperia U and Xperia Go. For Xperia Sola users, they will get a new feature known as Glove mode. The Glove mode is best for those, living in the sub zero temperatures and now, they don?t have to remove the gloves in order interact with the phone. (Gadgets, Sony Xperia go, Sony Xperia Sola, Sony Xperia U)

Source: http://techspy.com/news/1091585/sony-xperia-go-and-u-get-ics-update-solas-includes-glove-mode

mario manningham williams syndrome hoya casa de mi padre corned beef and cabbage diners drive ins and dives jeff who lives at home

Choosing A Sink Vanity Cabinet | Home improvement knowledge

Are you fixing your house? Fixing your bathroom perhaps? Are you thinking about those little things to make the space more of a home than a house, showcasing your personal taste? Bathrooms are one of those overlooked rooms that we sometimes look at as merely practical, but it is actually one of those areas that we spend a significant amount of our time in. It?s the first place we go to when we wake up and the last place we visit before going to bed, it is as much a personal space where we seek a few moments of solitude and respite. Therefore we must also take a care in fixing or designing one of the smallest rooms in a house or apartment that we call home.

What do we want inside our bathrooms? Aside from the usual bath or shower, toilet and mirror, sinks and cabinets, what else could we possibly add? Bathrooms can look more elegant when a sink vanity cabinet is present. There are many different types of sink corner cabinets. So you have to consider for example the type of wood you?d like. Do you like dark cherry wood, or do you go for the lighter pine wood or maybe you would like to settle for something in between? After deciding what type of wood you like, now you decide how big it would be. This basically depends on the space of your bathroom: too big a vanity cabinet would cramp the space and eliminate even the need for the sink vanity cabinet to begin with. Having a small sink vanity cabinet would severely limit the things you could put in your cabinet, and it would be merely an accessory rather than something useful.

There are many choices of sink vanity cabinets and sink corner cabinets as well, from the traditional single sink vanity cabinet, the double sink vanity cabinet, to the modern sink vanity cabinet. The traditional sink vanity cabinet, as the name suggests, has a single sink with a cabinet underneath. If one is looking for elegance and old world touch then you could go for this kind of vanity.

The double sink vanity has two sinks and is for those who have the floor space to accommodate this kind of sink. This type is actually the best possible choice. Imagine having two sinks and being able to simultaneously use them with your family or partner. For those who would prefer a more current look, then they should go for the modern vanity sink cabinets. You will also need to decide what type of sink you?d like, a glass one perhaps, the marble kind or the aluminum one.

Sink vanity cabinets are accessories in more ways than being simply a piece of furniture that looks good. They can also make the drains or pipes connecting to the sink hidden from view. The sink vanity cabinet has the amenities of a sink but the convenience of a cabinet. The use of space is not only aesthetic but practical as well.

?

Source: http://www.gradcmu.net/choosing-a-sink-vanity-cabinet

puerto rico prometheus grand canyon skywalk tonga pid corned beef hash the walking dead season 2 finale

The Best Two Things: Video Games & Neil deGrasse Tyson | OGR

Well, I?m positively late on this one. One of my favorite men that has ever existed,?astrophysicist?Neil deGrasse Tyson, has officially spoken about video games into a microphone, and?somehow?the world didn?t implode with the weight of pure unbelievable?serendipity.

Dr. Tyson runs a science-based podcast called?StarTalk Radio. It wasn?t until recently that I investigated why my RSS feed hadn?t yielded me any new podcasts since June. Luckily, my fear that the podcast had been canned was unfounded. The feed changed! Now I have a healthy bit of podcast catch-up to do. When first browsing the selection, I immediately noticed a pair of episodes that required my?immediate?consumption. They were about video games.

Advancing to the Next Level: The Science of Video Games (Part 1)?and?(Part 2)?are absolutely brilliant. Dr. Tyson interviews Jeff Ryan, author of?Super Mario: How Nintendo Conquered America?and famous game designer?Will Wright?with co-host Eugene Mirman. This makes for some fascinating conversation as Ryan and Wright both provide intriguing facts, ideas and tidbits about the history of video games, artificial intelligence, ludology, design theory and the future of gaming hardware. Eugene Mirman offers up consistently hilarious quips and comments about these topics and even knows what a?Vectrex?is/was.

If you like hearing intelligent people talk about video games, these two podcasts simply cannot be missed. Clear up an hour and a half and put these sciencey soundwaves in your ears. For games. For science!

This entry was posted in Gaming Thoughts, PODCASTS, Technology and tagged neil degrasse tyson, podcast, starTalk radio, video games. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://oldgamereviewer.com/2012/09/28/the-best-two-things-video-games-neil-degrasse-tyson/

brandon phillips summerfest summerfest fidel castro rick santorum ozzie guillen castro comments phish

The Shady Ethics of 'The Obama Phone'

By now, most of my readers will have seen the infamous YouTube video of an Obama supporter explaining that all minorities should vote for President Obama because he gives out free phones:

YouTube Preview Image

The story has taken several turns.

Surely this woman is deceived, right? ?Surely ??surely?? Barack Obama is not in the business of giving out cell phones in exchange for a vote. ?Right?

As it turns out, there is a government assistance program to provide low-income individuals with landlines or with cell phones.

So, surely this is another example of Barack Obama purchasing the favor of special interest groups with government largesse, right? ?Barack?s big-government, redistributionist policies run amok?

That?s not quite right either. ?It was?long felt?that universal access should be the goal of telecommunications, so that all people would have access to phones in case of emergency and so that existing customers could reach all people. ?Liberal website ThinkProgress says, ?The idea of providing low-income individuals with subsidized phone service was?originated in the Reagan administration?following the break-up of AT&T in 1984. (It was expanded and formalized by the Telecommunications Act of 1996.) The program is paid for by telecommunications companies through?an independent non-profit, not through tax revenue.?

So, the conservative response to the ?Obama phone? is just example of conservative stupidity, right? ?Obama has nothing to do with the program, and it?s not supported by taxpayers, right?

Well, no, again it?s not that simple. ?For one thing, ThinkProgress supports its reference to Reagan with a link to FactCheck.org, which does not reference Reagan at all. ?ThinkProgress seems to be reaching hard to associate the Lifeline phone service program with Reagan, when it actually began in 1996 under a law signed by Clinton (isn?t it interesting how ThinkProgress leaves out his name?). ?For another thing, the government forces phone providers to pay a fee in support of the Lifeline program, and phone service providers in turn force their American customers ? taxpayers ? to pay a fee. ?It?s not unreasonable to call this a tax, even if it?s a tax that?s trying to avoid being called a tax.

But the really interesting question is: Who has been marketing this as the ?Obama Phone??

First, let?s step back. ?Having a program to ensure that welfare recipients have at least minimal phone service is not necessarily a bad idea. ?We can all imagine emergency situations where phone access would be critical, whether it?s because the individual needs to reach emergency services or because a local government or law enforcement needs to reach the individual. ?And expanding the program to cell phones is, likewise, not necessarily a bad idea. ?It?s arguably cheaper, since there is no installation charge.

Where I have questions is with the?marketing?of the free cell phones as ?Obama phones.? ?Imagine, for instance, that it were the government itself that advertised the phones as Obama phones, starting in 2009. ?This would be, at the very least, deeply misleading. ?It would be taking credit for a program begun under predecessors. ?It would be similar to President Bush in his first term, if he had come to office after Clinton initiated a program that gave free cars to welfare recipients, seeking electoral advantage by advertising them as ?Bush cars.?

But clearly (?) that?s not the case here, right? ?A visit to FreeGovernmentCellPhones.net ? which calls itself ?a small publishing company and the authority on the U.S. government?s Lifeline Assistance program as it applies to mobile phones? ? decries the ?false rumor? of Obama Phones, which it calls an ?incorrect term? because the cell phone program began several months before Obama?s election. ?Case closed.

Or maybe not. ?Visit ObamaPhone.net and here?s what you see (I suspect they?ll make changes soon, if they haven?t already, so I wanted to take a screenshot):

It begins: ?What exactly is the free Obama phone? The free OBama phone is a program that is meant to help the financially unstable who cannot afford access to a cell phone??

When you click the link at ObamaPhone.net to apply for a free cell phone, you?re redirected to?wait for it?FreeGovernmentCellPhones.net. ?That?s right. ?The same website that decried the ?false rumor? and ?incorrect term? of The Obama Phone Program has another website, surely desired to attract search engine traffic, that advertises The Obama Phone Program. ?Nice.

So then we reach the question: Who funds the companies like FreeGovernmentCellPhones.net and ObamaPhone.net? ?Did they begin calling it ?the Obama Phone? before or after the rumors of Obama phones began to spread through email? ?Do they have a profit-share arrangement with the wireless telecoms that receive money (albeit indirectly) from the government to distribute free cell phones? ?Are they paid by the federal government to help spread the word about the free cell phone service program?

These websites are hard to penetrate, so I don?t know the answer, but it?s a juicy question: Is the Obama administration effectively paying a company to advertise the free cell phones as Obama Phones? ?Or was the administration aware of the practice, and have they done anything to stop it? ?I?m sure the mainstream media are hard on the case, investigating the Obama administration in that relentless way they do.

You can learn more about the program ? which, if not begun by President Obama, seems to have grown bloated in his term ? from Rep Tim Griffin?s video:

YouTube Preview Image

Source: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/philosophicalfragments/2012/09/28/the-shady-ethics-of-the-obama-phon/

heart attack grill las vegas the heart attack grill joe kennedy iii joseph kennedy iii ghost hunters lightsquared david lee

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Goal Setting in Estate Planning for Farmers and Ranchers | NBI CLE ...

This is the first introductory glimpse at the materials for our upcoming ?Estate Planning for Farmers and Ranchers? CLE webcast to be held next week (October 3rd).

Attorney Jessica BourkeWritten by Attorney Jessica A. Bourke

Providing a good plan to clients requires the correct balance of listening to what they are saying, hearing what they are not saying, and understanding what they should be talking about.? That is to say, counseling a client who owns a farm or ranch means respecting each client as a unique planning opportunity while keeping in mind the planning concerns that are generally applicable to farmers and ranchers.

Counseling the Client

Goal setting can be the most complicated part of the planning process, and if this step is not completed comprehensively, then all the legal techniques in the world are not going to allow the plan to execute properly because the plan is not oing to fit the client.? You need to know what it is that you as the attorney are being asked to ?solve.?

On the most basic level, the counselor role is defined by the professional rules of conduct that apply to attorneys.? These may differ in minor ways from state to state, but the general premises are universally applicable. (In Wisconsin, these rules are found in Wisconsin Supreme Court Rules Chapter 20: Rules of Professional Conduct for Attorneys.)? The first question is, who is your client?? The ansewr to this question is essential to practicing within the applicable ethical requirements.? ?The client? is whose interests you are representing, and the person whose voice should be carrying the most weight throughout the planning process.? the client is to whom you owe the duties of confidentiality and due diligence.? (WIS. SUP. CT R. 20:1.3-1.4)? This is the person with whom you should be entering into the representation agreement/engagement agreement/fee agreement. (WIS. SUP. CT R. 20:1.5)

Determining the identity of your client is relatively straightforward when handling a criminal matter, or a personal injury lawsuit, or even a single person estate plan.? However, this can be substantially more complicated when working with owners of farms and ranches.? these are often family businesses with a lot of people who have a lot of interests.? The person whose interests you are representing may not be the same person who has expressed a willingness to pay for your services or the same person who has offered to be a key contact person for phone calls and emails.? Failing to recognize that the decisions of one family member cannot be taken for granted as the decisions of the client could mean violating rules that pertain to conflicts of interes. (WIS. SUP. CT R. 20:1.7-1.8? Violating conflict of interest urles can then lead to formal reprimands, the forfeiture of fees, and/or removal from the representation of either or both clients. For a recent example of this in Wisconsin, see In re the estate of Rebecca Derzon v. Johnson. 2011AP377)

It is beneficial to include other family members in the planning process in addition to the client.? Succession planning requires key individuals who are part of that plan understand the plan, and also requires an attorney understanding of how much heirs are capable and willing to contribute in terms of financial contributions and effort.? heirs may be able to identify the gradual decline of mom and/or dad?s physical and mental capabilities.? On the other hand, mom and day may know best which children are the most financially competent.? Furthermore, other individuals who are not directly part of the plan but have valuable information to contribute, such as accountants and financial planners, are alsouseful people to have at the table.? Inclduing everyone in the conversation may save a substantial amount of time in terms of making sure information is adequately disseminated to all key players in an accurate manner.? This may include keeping that initial referral source in discussions if he or she was the initial troubleshooter.

To make sure the interests of the client are kept at the forefront throughout the planning process, conflict waivers should be utilized and explained to make sure everyone knows who the clients are and what that means for everyone else before any planning takes place (see WIS. SUP. CT R. 20:1.7). If the client grants someone else permission to communicate or receive information on their behalf, channels of communication directly with the clients should still be maintained to ensure that the clients? interests are not lost when others are included in the process (see WIS. SUP. CT R. 20:1.4).? This may mean one meeting with everyone and another meeting just with the clients.? This means figuring out a way to separate a dominant client from a more passive client to make sure both of them are represented fully.? Different attorneys will have different strategies for addressing this issue, but no matter the method, the objective should be the same.

The goal setting part of the estate planning process requires attorneys to utilize the ?counselor? part of the profession.? Farmers and ranchers are generally emotionally invested in the business, rather than looking at their businesses from a detached investment perspective.? An attorney must be able to listen to clients and others and pick up subtle cues regarding family dynamics, as well as the willingness and ability to proceed with a particular course of action.? This means knowing when to ask the hard follow-up questions, or knowing when to question an unenthusiastic response.

Substantive Considerations

Attorneys provide value in terms of understanding the variety of legal techniques and the considerations that are required before proceeding with those techniques.? Clients have often fixated on one or two key concerns that have brought them to your office.? the legal techniques of which they have knowledge depends o n their sophistication with legal matters, but often is based on what their relatives/friends/neighbors have experienced.? Aside from identifying the client and opening those channels of communication with the client, goal setting requires making sure that you have touched ont he possible areas of concern before suggesting a particular course of action with the client.

The following are possible concerns that should be considered regardless of whether the client articulates them as goals:

  1. Providing for owners during their lifetimes.? Consider retirement plans, the cost of long-term care, planning for a surviving spouse, and maintaining a particular standard of living.
  2. Providing for heirs.? Is the point simply to make sure that all the heirs ?get something,? or is there a particular plan of distribution that would make the most sense?? Should all the heirs be included in this process?
  3. Keeping the business in the family.? If the farm/ranch should continue to be run by family members, which family members, and how are they going to make that work financially and interpersonally?
  4. Minimizing financial costs. Minimize taxes on income, gifts and the estate; measure attorney fees versus probate administration fees, protect against creditors.
  5. Ease of administration.? Can key players properly administer a corporate entity and execute installment sales, or will a more straightforward (if slightly less optimal) plan be more likely to be administered effectively?

Some preparation can be done ahead of this meeting through making sure the initial contact with the client is productive.? Providing the client with introductory materials to better understand what planning invovles amay help them be better prepared and have less apprehension going into the initial meeting.? Likewise, asking for information from potential clients ahead of time, such as information on their family, their business and their finances can help you know in general what items will likely need to be discussed at that meeting.? Asking for them to spell out their specific concerns can provide an understanding of what they are expecting out of the initial meeting and the planning proess as a whole.

About the Author:

JESSICA A. BOURKE is an Associate Attorney for Willms, S.C. who focuses her practice primarily in the areas of estate planning, elder law and disability law, and business planning.? She focuses on long-term care planning, which includes estate planning, special needs trusts, long-term care financing through insurance as well as public benefits, and planning for incapacity through advanced directives and guardianships.? Much of her practice involves working with small business owners, particularly farmers, to assist in transferring their businesses intact to the next generation.

?Jessica graduated summa cum laude from St. Norbert College in De Pere, Wisconsin, and cum laude from Marquette University Law School.? Prior to joining Willm, S.C., Jessica worked with the Milwaukee Legal Aid Society, focusing on disability-related public benefits, and with the Milwaukee County Corporation Counsel, focusing on guardianship proceedings and mental health matters.

?Jessica is a member of the State Bar of Wisconsin, the Milwaukee Bar Association, and the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys.? Currently Jessica is serving as the Chair of the Friends of Life Navigators (formerly ARC of Greater Milwaukee).

Related posts:

  1. 5 Things Estate Planners Need to Know About Elder Law

Source: http://cleblog.nbi-sems.com/2012/09/goal-setting-in-estate-planning-for-farmers-and-ranchers/

London 2012 Table Tennis badminton Dominique Dawes Gabby Olympic Gymnast Robyn Lawley Gore Vidal mlb trade rumors

Friday, September 28, 2012

YOUTH DANCE Grades 6-7-8 | Basking Ridge Sports & Recreation ...

264 S Warren Ave, Stirling, NJ | Get?Directions??
$10.00

Youth Dance for Grades 6-7-8 to be held Fri. Sept. 28th from 7-10pm. ?$10 per person. lite refreshments sold at event. DJ Dancing. Sponsored by the Millington & Stirling Fire Company and the Columbus Club of Bernardsville and Basking Ridge.

A safe place for the youth of the greater area to come and enjoy a great time together. Drop off starts at 6:45pm and pick up is 10pm sharp.

Proceeds benefit the Millington & Stirling Fire Company in preparation of their 100th Anniversary.

40.667477

-74.490523

primary

YOUTH DANCE Grades 6-7-8

September 28, 2012, 7:00 pm?10:00 pm

264 S Warren Ave, Stirling, NJ

Long Hill Twp. Community Center

/events/youth-dance-grades-6-7-8

/locations/7921406

Source: http://baskingridge.patch.com/events/youth-dance-grades-6-7-8

roy oswalt kevin martin 2012 senior bowl chuck series finale welcome back kotter 2001 a space odyssey barefoot bandit

Sharp says it's making enough iPhone 5 displays

2 hrs.

Sharp is making "adequate volumes" of displays it is known to supply for Apple's new iPhone5, a company executive said, indicating that a possible bottleneck in supplies of screens may have eased.

Analysts had blamed a shortfall in supplies of display for leaving Apple with too few iPhones to meet burgeoning demand at its launch this month.

At the end of Aug., three weeks before the new iPhone went on sale, Sharp, which was supposed to be mass producing at its Kameyama plant in central Japan, had fallen behind schedule, a source earlier told Reuters.

Sharp, the source said, was struggling to improve low production yields, raising the question of whether Apple would be prepared to sweeten financial incentives to secure an acceleration of production.

Apple also buys screens from Japan Display and Korea's LG Display.

Apple began offering the iPhone?5 on Sept. 21, selling over 5 million in the first three days, topping the iPhone 4S, which sold more than 4 million units in its first weekend. On the fourth day, Apple said it had run out of its initial supply and many pre-orders were scheduled to go out in Oct.

"The iPhone 5's 4-inch low-temperature polysilicon (LTPS) touch-panel display with in-panel switching (IPS) is exceptionally difficult to produce at high yields," Deutsche Securities analyst Yasuo Nakane said in a report on Sept. 14.

Nakane estimates iPhone screen capacity at Japan Display and LG Display at eight million a month each, and at six million at Sharp. Displays for Apple's first lot of new iPhones likely came from only LG and Japan Display, Nakane added.

Sharp and Japan Display do not publicly admit to the relationship even though Apple, in a list of component makers published last year, identified both Japanese companies as suppliers.

The Sharp executive made the comment at a press briefing in Osaka, western Japan, speaking on condition he wasn't identified.?

(Reporting by Tim Kelly and Yoshiyuki Osada; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

(c) CopyrightThomson Reuters 2012. Check for restrictions at:?http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp?

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/sharp-says-its-making-enough-displays-iphone-5-6150502

sacha baron cohen best picture nominees 2012 academy awards 2012 albert nobbs a star is born oscar nominees oscar nominations 2012

TSA pays mom $3.99 for seized peanut butter

By Bob Sullivan

When Stephanie Lambert packed peanut butter and jelly to keep her two small children happy on a cross-country flight in June, she didn't mean to pick a fight with the Transportation Security Administration. But after a long security line argument, and the confiscation of the peanut butter (but not the jelly), she felt she had no choice.??

Courtesy Stephanie Lambert

Stephanie Lambert got $3.99 from the U.S. Treasury after TSA agents seized her child's peanut butter at an airport checkpoint.

Then, after churning through the four-page ?SF-95 Tort Claim Package forms,? she got something else she never expected: a $3.99 refund from the U.S. Treasury Department.

Lambert was traveling with her husband, a 6-month-old and a 2-year-old on an ungodly early flight in June, and arrived at the airport about 5 a.m. She was flying from Los Angeles to Pittsburgh, and she needed the usual bag of distractions and food to keep her kids -- and other passengers -- sane during the trip. But, she says, her efforts to ensure a smooth flight were foiled when a TSA agent with a bad attitude singled out her family for additional screening. After the usual pat-downs and questions, discussion centered on the jar of peanut butter.?

"He just really fixated on the peanut butter and a jar of apple sauce I had," she said.? "I keep saying, 'It's not a liquid; it's pureed apples,' but we go went around and around.? He also screened my husband multiple times. I asked to speak to the terminal manager, but he never arrived. ... We were there 30 minutes."


Eventually, the screener let the apple sauce (and the jelly) go, but he drew the line on the peanut butter.

"I said, ?Fine.? I left the peanut butter, but I took down names," she said. "The screener was asking for my all my details, so I figured I'd ask for his."

When the family arrived in Pittsburgh, Lambert asked a TSA screener on her way out about peanut butter -- Was it considered a liquid or not? -- and got a vague answer. So when she got home, she turned to the Internet and the found the SF-95 Tort Claim Package forms. Generally, they're filled out by fliers who think the TSA lost something valuable while screening bags, such as laptop computers. But Lambert was after satisfaction, and she didn't see why she couldn't make a claim for the cost of her seized peanut butter.

"At the airport, my husband kept saying, 'Would you just let go of the peanut butter? We're going to miss the plane.' But these things really fire me up," Lambert said. "So when I said, 'Honey, I'm going to file a claim,' he wasn't surprised."

Lambert is a rare consumer who was in a perfect position to file such a claim. For starters, she had the original receipt from Whole Foods showing the price she paid for the spread.?

Who keeps receipts for peanut butter?? Lambert explained that she started her family during the recession, and from the start has carefully watched her money. She saves receipts from every purchase, enters everything into a spreadsheet and tracks every expense. She also has a binder, where she records refunds, returns, rebates and any other correspondence that involves money.

"I fill out forms and keep track of them all the time, so this was easy for me," she said. "I'm responsible for the family finances. If it takes me months, it takes me months. I'm very firm when companies owe me money."

She had another motivation behind her ferocity regarding the confiscated peanut butter, however.

"When they first put in the liquid (security) rules on flights, a screening agent took a $7 lip gloss I had just purchased. Then, the very next day, they changed the rules and lip gloss was allowed. I was furious," she said. "I remember the TSA agent actually took a basketball shot with my lip gloss into the trash bins as I went through security. I'm still mad about that, and I was thinking, 'This is not happening again.'"

On her complaint form, Lambert said TSA agents unnecessarily screened her husband twice, and removed everything from her carry-on bags during the 30-minute ordeal.

"At the time I was carrying my 6-month-old and trying to keep my 2-year-old calm," she wrote. "(The agent's) behavior was completely unwarranted."

She submitted the claim on June 19.? To her surprise, she received a letter dated Aug. 24 from TSA that read: "Your claim against the United States in the amount of $3.99 has been granted in full." On Sept. 14, the "refund" was electronically deposited into her bank account.

Naturally, Lambert wasn't really after the money. She says she was trying to make a point.

"I think people really do need to fight for themselves," she said. "In this case, the peanut butter was important to me. I was thinking, 'Hey, I need that. If I have a crisis with a child on a five-hour flight this peanut butter may help me.? I wasn?t hopping to Phoenix, I was flying across country and there?s no food on the flight for children."

As it turns out, the TSA website does list peanut butter as a banned liquid/gel, if carried onto a plane in containers exceeding 3.4 ounces. Jellies, jams and "creamy dips and spreads" are also banned in bigger portions. There are some exceptions for mothers traveling with infants, however, involving breast milk, juice, baby food and other liquids and gels, which muddies the discussion considerably.

Part of the problem, Lambert says, is that the rules seem to vary from airport to airport, and even from agent to agent.

"I think it depends on how well the information goes down the chain," she said.?

Lambert said she spoke via telephone with a TSA representative as she was filling out her tort claim and thought the agent was very pleasant and competent. The agent even promised to review security tape to see if the incident required follow up. That conversation, and her refund, actually leaves her with more good than bad feelings about the TSA. The problem, she said, is that most of the trouble for passengers occurs on the front lines, in the chaos of someone rushing to make a flight with agents who sometimes are too eager to exert their power.

TSA spokesman David A. Castelveter told NBC News that peanut butter jars in excess of 3.4 ounces are generally not permissable as carry-on items, but that screeners can exercise "common-sense discretion." Exceptions generally involve medical needs, he said.?

He also pointed to a press release about TSA agents in Los Angeles who stopped suspects allegedly trying to sneak marijuana onto an airplane?in a modified jar of peanut butter last year.

The agency has no readily available statistics on tort claims, Castelveter said, but added that Lambert's peanut butter refund claim was "the first time I'd ever heard of something like that."

The Los Angeles Times investigated tort claims against TSA last year, and found that 1,702 claims were made against the agency by passengers traveling through Los Angeles International Airport from 2007 through 2010.? Most claims involved items that were damaged or disappeared from checked baggage. The average damage claim was $1,437, but most were denied.? Roughly 13 percent of those who claimed the loss of a laptop computer were granted relief, but less than 1 percent of those saying they lost or damaged digital camera were reimbursed.

RED TAPE WRESTLING TIPS

One key to having successful dialogs with TSA agents at checkpoints is time; passengers rushing to make a flight have no time to make their case. In Lambert's situation, she had time to put up a fight because, ironically, her husband is a frequent traveler and the family qualified for express screening.??

If you feel like the TSA has wrongly confiscated an item from you at a checkpoint, you can obtain the necessary forms at this page.

Note that if the TSA denies a claim, it can only be appealed by filing a lawsuit in federal court. By law, small claims courts have no jurisdiction over TSA cases.

?* Follow Bob Sullivan on Facebook.
* Follow Bob Sullivan on Twitter.

More from Red Tape Chronicles:

?

?

?

Source: http://redtape.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/28/14127532-recovering-the-spread-mom-forces-tsa-to-shell-out-399-for-seized-peanut-butter?lite

jeff garcia jeff garcia big east jesse james pearl harbor day discovery channel lea michele

Italy rocked by corruption, drug scandals

By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

ROME ? Franco Fiorito, a member of the regional council of Lazio, the Italian region that includes Rome, was known ironically among his friends as Batman. It was a nickname he earned when he managed to fall off a Harley Davidson still on a kickstand.

But rather than a superhero, he looks like an actor out of ?The Sopranos? with his slicked-back hairstyle, striped double-breasted suit, bulky figure and bigger than life personality. ??

Fiorito, a member of Silvio Berlusconi?s People of Freedom party (PDL), was accused earlier this month of embezzling at least $1.5 million of public funds to pay for everything from oyster dinners, to hotels, aides and apartments.

Fiorito, who has since resigned, fought the allegations by telling investigators that fellow party members behaved worse than he did ? putting the spotlight on regional president Renata Polverini.

The scandal proved too much for Polverini, who resigned on Monday, and damaged the reputation of Berlusconi?s already weakened party.

She denied allegations of any wrong-doing on her part, but admitted that the scandal had exposed infighting within the PDL party and had stripped the regional council of some legitimacy. ??

But most importantly, it stands as a symbol of a political class that has lost touch with the electorate, and carries on living a lavish lifestyle financed with public funds at a time when most Italians struggle to get by.

?Why did they call him Batman? He sounds more like the joker to me,? said Carla Cecchini, a receptionist from Rome who was waiting at a bus stop in Rome on Wednesday morning. ?He is not even that smart. We know they are all thieves, but this guy didn?t even try to hide it. He is shameless.?


Toga party photos
Apparently Fiorito is not as brazen as another member of the regional council.

Only days ago, pictures emerged of a lavish toga party organized in 2010 by Carlo de Romanis, a 32-year- old member of Berlusconi?s party. ?

Romanis organized the party to celebrate his election to the regional council and his return to Rome after eight years working at the European Parliament in Brussels.

The theme of the party, ?Ulysses returns home and fights his enemies,? was taken seriously by his 2,000 guests. They showed up dressed up as ancient Roman maidservants, gladiators, patricians in laurel wreaths and minotaurs, drinking from ancient-looking jars. Pictures emerged of guests feeding each other grapes, as well as men wearing pig masks fondling female guests.

?A party worthy of the last days of ancient Rome, when the narcissistic and decadent elite kept enjoying a lavish lifestyle while the empire was falling apart all around them.

The similarities might not be so far-fetched. Even though Carlo ?Ulysses De Romanis? insists the $30,000 he paid for the party came from his own pocket, it still upset many Italians who are tired of seeing the political elite enjoying the lifestyle of emperors while they feel the strain of the recent austerity measures and the economic crisis.

Alex Biasco, a DJ in Milan, told NBC News that the Italian public is partly to blame as well. He said they like to complain about the widespread abuse of office, without acting to bring about any changes.

?Look at the Spanish: they fill the squares in Madrid to demand the resignation of unfit politicians,? said Biasco.? ?While in Italy we have had politicians who stole for decades, who are corrupt to the core?and yet, Italians only fill their squares when their soccer teams win.?

Luca Orsenigo, a 38-year-old telecom manager from Milan, had a similar complaint.?

?We got to this point because we deserve it. Instead of going to prison, these people are invited to defend themselves on talk-shows," said Orsenigo, referring to the many TV appearances Fiorito enjoyed after the scandal broke. "As long as these people go unpunished, nothing will change?

Cocaine bust
More proof of widespread corruption among Italian governmental institutions came on Tuesday, when the head of the postal service in the Italian Senate was arrested for cocaine trafficking, police said.

Orlando Ranaldi, 53, is accused of being part of a criminal gang 10 Italians and Albanians who ran a cocaine ring in southern Rome. While not a politician, Orlando held a managerial position in Italy?s upper house of parliament. ?

?"I only hope that he didn't push inside the Senate," Senator Felice Belisario of the Italy of Values party told Reuters.

Roberta, a housewife from Rome who gave only her first name, jumped to her own conclusions. ??

?They are all living the high life, and I can?t believe the guy wasn?t doing ?favors? to the political elite,? she said. ?

The recent revelations of Champagne-filled toga parties, embezzlement of public funds and cocaine heists have only contributed to widening the gap between the political elite and the electorate.?

?Once again we are showing the world how corrupt we are.? But Italians, thank God, are not all like Batman and Ulysses,? Alessandra Scolaro, a website designer and member of the People of Freedom party from the Veneto region, told NBC News. ?The best Italians are those who wake up every morning and go to work. And those who make us proud by raising the bar of Italian creativity in the arts and fashion industries. This is the real Italy.?

While Italians aren?t likely to descend to the squares to protest and try to get rid of the political class the hard way, they will have the opportunity to bring change in the general elections next spring.?

?

More world stories from NBC News:

Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

?

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/26/14113589-italy-rocked-by-corruption-drug-scandals?lite

cheney tori spelling marion barber marion barber syracuse ohio state girl with the dragon tattoo

Home and Family Articles ? Blog Archive ? Pregnancy: Should You ...

Have you lately learned that you will be a new ma? If that39;s the case congratulations! Parenthood is something that most girls live their lives for. As lovely as pregnancy is, many issues arise that many first-time parents don39;t know much about. Due to this, many first time mothers make the choice to take parenting classes, but the issue is should you?

When referring to deciding if you need to take parenting classes, to get ready for the raising of your new baby, many mothers and fathers are dubious. If you39;re one of those soon-to-be elders, you may need to inspect the advantages and drawbacks of parenting classes. These benefits and drawbacks, two which are revealed below, may help in making arriving at a call a little bit easier for you.

As for the advantages of taking a parenting class, you39;ll find that there are an unlimited number of them. Although you might have babysat children during the past, parenting is dissimilar. When you are a parent, you are responsible the safety and the contentment of your youngster. While this task could look like an overwhelming one, you don't have the choice of backing out on this one. For that reason, you should take any steps obligatory, including parenting classes, to make arrangements for this venture.

Another one of the many benefits to taking a parenting class, before the arrival of your first child, is the data that you39;ll end up with. Many parenting classes target a big spread of issues. In a parenting class, you39;ll learn how to correctly change a nappy, lay your baby down for a sleep, as well as feed them in a healthy way. As well as educating you in a study room setting, you will also find that many parenting classes give you hands on learning. This is sometimes done with the employment of baby dolls.

Networking is another one of many advantages to taking parenting classes before the birth of your kid. You39;ll basically be stunned just how preferred parenting classes are. Whether you live in a massive city or a tiny city, there's a good probability that your parenting classes will be filled to capacity with first time mummies. While you may not always think about this at the time, this is a glorious opportunity to meet new friends and develop new friendships. If you don't have any mates or family who are parents, this could be a concern of yours.

The price of parenting classes is another one of many advantages of or advantages to taking a parenting class. As previously mentioned parenting classes come in a number of formats, as well as costs. It's simple to find parenting classes where you've got to pay a tiny charge, regularly less than one hundred bucks. With that in mind, it's also possible to find parenting classes that are free. These free parenting classes are infrequently supplied through non-profit organizations.

While there are a substantial number of advantages to taking a parenting class, to stand by for the birth and upbringing of your first kid, there are 1 or 2 flaws or disadvantages to doing so too. One of those drawbacks is the conferences. Parenting classes change, but many have multiple classes in a short period of time, like 1 or 2 months. You39;ll be wanting to attend each and every one of those classes to absorb as much information as practical. Preparing for the arriving of a new kid, especially your first child, could be a busy and busy time in your life. Because of that, you may not necessarily have the time to give to parenting classes.

The previously mentioned benefits and flaws are merely a few of many which exist, concerning parenting classes. The upbringing of a young child is a difficulty that you, as a soon-to-be mum need to address. For help, you may want to turn to a regionally offered parenting class.

Lyman Broy does a lot of research on many subjects and writes about these subjects while not hiking on the weekends with family, or selling goods like landau which is of a very top quality. Additionally, the writer sells dickies scrubs which is also an exceedingly top spec product. Playing various instruments with a band during the week is yet another past-time that keeps time moving for this busy writer.

Tags: health, healthcare, Parenting, Pregnancy

Source: http://www.homeandfamilyarticlesblog.com/pregnancy-should-you-actually-consider-parenting-classes/

alfa romeo giulietta xbox update xbox update nba schedule nhl realignment nhl realignment new earth

Source: http://nguyen30.typepad.com/blog/2012/09/home-and-family-articles-blog-archive-pregnancy-should-you.html

nfc championship game martin luther king jr quotes martin luther king jr i have a dream speech packers score ricky gervais napoleon dynamite michelle williams

Source: http://josiahmitchell.typepad.com/blog/2012/09/home-and-family-articles-blog-archive-pregnancy-should-you.html

Ed Hochuli Opie avengers soa andy williams andy williams how i met your mother

WNBA MVP Tamika Catchings: Advocating for Health, Fitness and ...

Laura KolodjeskiLaura Kolodjeski

It?s safe to say there?s no shortage of inspirational women in the Women?s National Basketball Association (WNBA)! Earlier this year I featured WNBA President, Laurel J. Richie and Chicago Sky Head Coach, Pokey Chatman. Today, I?m excited to introduce you to the WNBA?s 2011 Most Valuable Player, Tamika Catchings, who plays for the Indiana Fever. Additionally, she?s a Dribble to Stop Diabetes Campaign Ambassador and co-founder of the Catch the Stars Foundation.

Q: How did you get started playing basketball?

A: My father was an NBA player for eleven years, playing for various teams including the Milwaukee Bucks, New Jersey Nets, Philadelphia 76ers and the Los Angeles Clippers. I really got started playing by watching my dad. I have an older brother and an older sister, so between the three of us we were very active and always playing sports.

Another reason I got involved in sports was because I was born with hearing problems, so I had to wear hearing aids and had a speech problem. Back then, I didn?t have the little hearing aids, I had the big ones and as a young girl that?s really not the thing that makes you popular. I remember just wanting to fit in and be normal and be like everybody else. I always got made fun of because of the way that I talked.

Sports really became an avenue for me just to be able to fit in and to be like everybody else. I knew that if I got made fun of off the court I could say, ?Hey, let?s go play basketball? or ?Let?s go play soccer.? I knew that some things in life I wouldn?t be able to change, but with sports I could always work harder and get better.

In seventh grade, I found my passion for basketball. I would go outside and play and play and play and it was just something that I loved. I enjoyed volleyball and still played until I went to college. I ran track and field into my junior year but during seventh grade, I decided that I was going to follow in my dad?s footsteps and play in the NBA. That was my dream.
2011 WNBA MVP Tamika Catchings

Q: You?ve carried that dream through to playing in the WNBA. What are some of the lessons you have learned playing at that level?

A: The WNBA is very professional and, as a professional athlete, it?s your responsibility to take care of yourself and your body. In college you really don?t have a choice because the team does everything together, including eating. In the WNBA, you have a schedule of practice times and games. In between practices and games, it?s up to you to make sure you?re getting in the weight room. You need to make sure that if you need to get extra cardio, that you?re doing it. And you have to make sure you?re eating right. Unlike college, there aren?t people watching you and making sure you?re getting everything done.

Q: Can you tell us a little about your Catch the Stars Foundation?

A: We work with boys and girls ages 7 to 15 and we offer sports-related and education-related programs. In the beginning, my sister and I started by offering basketball camps. Eventually, we were hosting so many different types of programs, we decided to start the Catch the Stars Foundation and put all of our different programs under that organization. Since then, we have added mentoring programs and we?re continuing to grow.

I love being able to impact the kids, especially early on, when you can involve them and guide them and lead them, you can tell that it makes a difference in their future.

Q: You?re now a spokesperson for Dribble to Stop Diabetes. Why did you decide to become so involved in the program?

A: Diabetes runs in my family. My nephew has type 2 diabetes and one of my aunts has type 1 diabetes. I realize that diabetes affects all of us. For me it?s really important to know what?s in my family, to make sure that I stay active and eat as healthy as I can.

Plus, Dribble to Stop Diabetes correlates directly with what I?m already doing with my job so it is a perfect fit. This is about setting an example. Any time you have kids looking up to you, it?s important to share the right message. When parents ask questions about diabetes and I can encourage them to look at the website, take a risk assessment, and talk to a doctor, then I think we?re promoting the right behavior.

Q: You mentioned how important kids are to you, any words of wisdom that you share with kids you meet?

A: It?s all about dreams and setting goals. In all of the programs that I?m involved in, we have them sit down and write goals. We talk about short-term goals and long-term goals.

A lot of people think that setting goals has to be a big thing. It can be, or it can be a simple daily task. It can be as big or little as you want. I was in seventh grade when I made my goal. The WNBA wasn?t even here and I knew what I wanted. I had a dream of what I wanted to do. To think about what I wanted to do in?seventh grade and to actually be doing it, it?s amazing.

It really is amazing! Tamika is such an inspiration and I think we can all take note from her experience and strive to accomplish our goals. All it takes is a dream and hard work. Thanks Tamika!

All the best,

Laura K.


Disclosures: Tamika Catchings is a paid Campaign Ambassador for Dribble to Stop Diabetes. All opinions contained in this post reflect those of the interviewee, and not of Sanofi US, its employees, agencies or affiliates.

The Dribble to Stop Diabetes campaign is a Sanofi US Diabetes partnership with the NBA, NBA D-League, WNBA and the American Diabetes Association.

?



Other Posts You Might Enjoy:

  1. Diabetes Awareness Scores Points with WNBA President Laurel J. Richie
  2. Chicago Sky Cares Foundation Annual Fitness Festival
  3. Pokey Chatman: WNBA Coach and Diabetes Advocate
  4. Dribbling, Biking and Running Across the Country, Raising Awareness of Diabetes
  5. Partnering with the NBA and the American Diabetes Association to Raise Awareness about Diabetes: 4 Questions with Gipper Monson

Source: http://www.discussdiabetes.com/2012/09/wnba-mvp-tamika-catchings-diabetes-awareness/

timothy leary jonathan frid pujols watchmen hitch justin beiber lamar odom

One Direction Shatters Justin Bieber VEVO Record

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/09/one-direction-shatters-justin-bieber-vevo-record/

mike wallace chicago cubs split pea soup recipe the client list yahoo.com/mail baylor april 9

Thursday, September 27, 2012

United Airlines gets 1st 787

In this undated photo provided by Boeing Commercial Airplanes, the first Boeing 787 that will be used by United Airlines, is shown taking off. U.S. travelers are going to be seeing a lot more of the 787, the ultra-lightweight jet that aims to reduce flier fatigue and airline fuel bills. United announced the week ofThursday, Sept. 27, 2012, that it has become the first U.S. airline to get the newest Boeing plane, and flights from Houston to Chicago will begin November 4. The carrier joins All Nippon Airlines and Japan Airlines, who have started 787 service from U.S. cities, or will soon. (AP Photo/Boeing, Matthew Thompson)

In this undated photo provided by Boeing Commercial Airplanes, the first Boeing 787 that will be used by United Airlines, is shown taking off. U.S. travelers are going to be seeing a lot more of the 787, the ultra-lightweight jet that aims to reduce flier fatigue and airline fuel bills. United announced the week ofThursday, Sept. 27, 2012, that it has become the first U.S. airline to get the newest Boeing plane, and flights from Houston to Chicago will begin November 4. The carrier joins All Nippon Airlines and Japan Airlines, who have started 787 service from U.S. cities, or will soon. (AP Photo/Boeing, Matthew Thompson)

U.S. travelers are going to be seeing a lot more of the 787, the lightweight jet built to reduce flier fatigue and airline fuel bills.

United this week became the first U.S. airline to get the newest Boeing plane. Flights between United hubs, including Houston and Chicago, begin Nov. 4. United joins All Nippon Airways, which starts U.S. flights on Monday, and Japan Airlines, which already flies the 787 from Boston to Tokyo.

After years of delays, Boeing Co. has begun delivering a handful of 787s every month. With more than 800 sold to airlines around the world, it will eventually be a plane that travelers encounter regularly. The 787 seats 219 passengers ? making it relatively small for a long-range plane but ideal on routes where it's tough to fill a larger 777.

Boeing claims the Dreamliner will be 20 percent more fuel efficient than comparable jets. And it promises a better travel experience, with more space, better lighting and carefully calibrated air pressure that should lead to fewer flier headaches.

United will fly its new plane from Seattle to Houston on Friday to begin getting it ready for passenger flights.

Here's what U.S. travelers should know about the 787:

WHO FLIES IT IN THE U.S.:

A small but growing number of airlines.

Japan Airlines currently flies 787s from Boston to Tokyo, and plans to add San Diego-Tokyo on December 2.

Japan's All Nippon Airways was the first airline to get a 787 a year ago, and starts flights Monday between Seattle and Tokyo's Narita airport. Flights between Narita and San Jose, Calif. begin in January.

United Airlines expects to get five 787s this year. Passengers will first see the 787 on flights between United's U.S. hubs. Then, on Jan. 3, United begins flights from Los Angeles to Tokyo. On March 31, it starts new flights from Denver to Tokyo Narita.

Among U.S. airlines, United Continental Holdings Inc. is going to have the 787 to itself for several years. Delta Air Lines Inc. has pushed its deliveries back to 2020, spokesman Anthony Black said. Around the industry, there's widespread skepticism about whether it will ever take the planes at all.

American Airlines has a commitment ? but not a signed, firm order ? for 42 of the planes, slated to begin arriving in the second half of 2014.

Chilean airline LAN plans to fly 787s from Los Angeles to Lima, Peru, but doesn't have a firm date yet.

WHAT YOU'LL NOTICE INSIDE:

Bigger windows and better air.

The 787's bigger windows let in more light, and its ceiling is 15 inches higher than in United's 767s. The air is less dry than on other planes, and the cabin is pressurized to a lower altitude. That will make the air inside feel closer to the air on the ground.

Ray Neidl, an airline analyst for Maxim Group, said he thinks this will be the first plane since the 40-year-old 747 that passengers will go out of their way to fly on.

"People are going to feel a lot more comfortable at the end of a long trip than they would feel on a normal airplane," giving them a reason to seek it out, he said.

United's 787 seats 219 passengers, including 70 in what it calls "Economy Plus." That's a sort of high-end coach seat that has three more inches of legroom, and other perks.

That's a significant number of Economy Plus seats, said Tim Winship who runs frequentflier.com. But considering the long flights the 787 will be making, United appears to be betting that passengers will pay up (or use frequent flier miles) to get those seats.

For most passengers, 787 or 777 are just numbers. All that really matters is their personal space on board. And the best measure of that space is the seat pitch, or the distance between seats.

By the standard, United's 787 lands in the middle of the pack. United's pitch will be 32 inches in coach, which is roughly comparable to planes that travelers might encounter on other airlines. United and American's 777s have 31 inches of pitch, according to seatguru.com, although American's 767s have 33 to 34 inches. Delta's 767s have 31 to 32 inches, according to the website.

The 32 inches on United's 787 is "pretty much the standard for entry-level coach seating," Winship said. "It's certainly not enough to surprise or delight long-haul flyers."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-09-27-United%20Airlines-787/id-a25e3685b9244914b7a4feb7df0843e0

mike wallace mike wallace chicago cubs split pea soup recipe the client list yahoo.com/mail baylor

Simple.TV clarifies shipping dates, tells backers units will start arriving October 10th

SimpleTV clarifies shipping dates, tells backers units will start arriving October 10th

According to Simple.TV, there have been articles circulating around the interwebs that may have caused confusion amongst parties interested about the shipping dates of its facile white puck. So, in order to induce some clarity, the folks behind the project have posted a Kickstarter update to let its backers know their Simple.TVs will be arriving soon -- somewhere between October 10th and 15th, to be precise. On the other hand, Simple.TV is also set to start taking pre-orders on its website tomorrow from folks who missed out on the crowd-funded party, with these particular units estimated to ship "within 20 days" after the order has been placed. The good news is we're only a couple of weeks away from its long-overdue arrival; in the meantime, however, don't forget we have our own hands-on for you to graciously pore over.

Filed under: , ,

Simple.TV clarifies shipping dates, tells backers units will start arriving October 10th originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Sep 2012 19:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink CNET  |  sourceKickstarter (Simple.tv)  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/pj7i4fp-puY/

lindzi cox bachelor finale courtney robertson ben flajnik randy moss randy moss hunger games premiere

A third of public fears police use of drones

WASHINGTON (AP) ? More than a third of Americans worry their privacy will suffer if drones like those used to spy on U.S. enemies overseas become the latest police tool for tracking suspected criminals at home, according to an Associated Press-National Constitution Center poll.

Congress has directed the Federal Aviation Administration to come up with safety regulations that will clear the way for routine domestic use of unmanned aircraft within the next three years. The government is under pressure from a wide range of interests to open U.S. skies to drones. Oil companies want them to monitor pipelines. Environmentalists want them to count sea lions on remote islands. Farmers want them to fly over crops with sensors that can detect which fields are wet and which need watering. They're already being used to help fight forest fires. And the list goes on.

Manufacturers are also keen to cash in on what they expect to be a burgeoning new drone market. Government and commercial drone-related expenditures are forecast to total $89 billion worldwide over the next decade. On the leading edge of that new market are state and local police departments, who say that in many cases drones are cheaper, more practical and more effective than manned aircraft. Most of them would be small drones, generally weighing less than 55 pounds. They could be used, for example, to search for missing children or to scout a location ahead of a SWAT team.

But privacy advocates caution that drones equipped with powerful cameras, including the latest infrared cameras that can "see" through walls, listening devices and other information-gathering technology raise the specter of a surveillance society in which the activities of ordinary citizens are monitored and recorded by the authorities.

Nearly half the public, 44 percent, supports allowing police forces inside the U.S. to use drones to assist police work, but a significant minority ? 36 percent ? say they "strongly oppose" or "somewhat oppose" police use of drones, according to a survey last month.

When asked if they were concerned that police departments' use of drones for surveillance might cause them to lose privacy, 35 percent of respondents said they were "extremely concerned" or "very concerned." An almost identical share, 36 percent, said they were "not too concerned" or "not concerned at all."

Twenty-four percent fell in the middle, saying they were "somewhat concerned" about a potential loss of personal privacy.

David Eisner, president and CEO of the constitution center in Philadelphia, said he was surprised by the level of support for police use of drones.

"I had assumed that the idea that American police would be using the same technology that our military is using in Afghanistan would garner an almost hysterical response," Eisner said. Support for drone use "shows that people are feeling less physically secure than they'd like to because they are willing to accept fairly extreme police action to improve that security."

One poll respondent who said he has deep reservations about police use of drones was Tim Johnson, 55, a Houston real estate agent. He said he fears the data they gather will be misused, especially by other government agencies. It is possible government officials might use the information to create profiles of political enemies, he said.

Pointing to the growing use of traffic cameras and the Google's mapping programs, Johnson said he sees police use of drones as an extension of technology trends that are already eroding privacy.

"I Googled my house," Johnson said. "There's my car sitting in the driveway ?you can see the license plate number. And my living room picture window, you can see right into my living room. You can see my pictures on the wall. If I had been standing there in my underwear you could see me in my underwear." Google says it tries to ensure privacy by blurring parts of images in its Street View feature.

"This information ? there is just too much of it," Johnson said. "I don't support any of it."

But Sheana Buchanan, 49, of Apple Valley, Calif., said she had no qualms about police using drones.

"I figure if you're doing something wrong, then you should be concerned about it," Buchanan said. "But if you're a law-abiding citizen, if you're concerned about safety ... and it's going to help catch the bad guys, have at it."

There was a gender gap in the poll, with men were more concerned about a loss of privacy if police start using drones than women ? 40 percent to 30 percent. There was an even wider gap between white and black respondents, with 48 percent of blacks strongly concerned about a loss of privacy compared to 32 percent of whites.

But the poll found no significant difference between Democrats and Republicans on the issue.

Protecting privacy has long been an issue that resonates on both the political left and the right, said Jay Stanley, an American Civil Liberties Union senior policy analyst. He pointed to several bills that were introduced this year in Congress by Democratic and Republican lawmakers to prevent drones from being used in a manner that jeopardizes privacy.

"The awareness of drones and their privacy implications has really reached the American public," Stanley said. "This is a technology that people weren't thinking about at all or hadn't heard much about at all just a couple of years ago."

Responding to public concern, a drone industry trade group and the International Association of Police Chiefs have separately released voluntary guidelines for drone use in recent months.

"A lot of the public doesn't understand how the technology is being used," said Gretchen West, vice president of the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International. "Law enforcement use (drones) to do the same thing they've used manned aircraft for years, it's just that (drones) are more affordable and usually a more efficient option."

The National Constitution Center is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that operates a Philadelphia museum and other educational programs about the Constitution.

The AP-NCC Poll was conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Corporate Communications from Aug. 16-20, using landline and cellphone interviews with 1,006 randomly chosen adults. The margin of sampling error was plus or minus 3.9 percentage points.

___

Associated Press Deputy Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta and AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

___

Follow Joan Lowy at http://www.twitter.com/AP_Joan_Lowy

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/third-public-fears-police-drones-184211444.html

michelin tires michelin tires rett syndrome where the wild things are josh smith birdsong teresa giudice