Thursday, January 31, 2013

Bateman bleeds for his role in 'Identity Thief'

By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

As a showbiz veteran, Jason Bateman knows a person has to be willing to take his lumps to make it in Hollywood. "It's really hard to stay employed in this business," he told TODAY's Matt Lauer Thursday.

That hasn't been a problem for Bateman, who after all these years is still ready to bleed for his art. Take "Identity Thief," in which he spars with Melissa McCarthy, who plays the film's titular criminal. Earlier this week, McCarthy mentioned that she beat "the bejeepers out of" her co-star, and on Thursday Bateman confirmed it.

"The throat punch (she gave me) was a fake," he said. "The smacks to the beak were real. My nose bled twice during the filming!"

He added, tongue-in-cheek, "She has a lot of anger issues."

He should have been able to guess that McCarthy would be a no-holds-barred performer after watching her in "Bridesmaids"; that performance led him to decide to cast her in "Identity Thief," which he also produced.

"I, like everybody fell in love with her (in "Bridesmaids")," he explained. "I went to the premiere of that film and the next day called the studio and my producing partner ... said, 'Why don't we switch the thief from a man to a woman' so that I can work with this woman ... because she's going to be white-hot. And we were correct. She's way too expensive now.'"

And it all worked out beautifully. Lauer noted that McCarthy does make mincemeat of him in this film, and Bateman nodded and smiled. "I let her have me," he said. "I like to be submissive to women."

"Identity Thief" opens in theaters on Feb. 8.

Related content:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/01/31/16790045-jason-bateman-identity-thief-melissa-mccarthy-has-a-lot-of-anger-issues?lite

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Police: Brazil nightclub fire kills more than 200

SAO PAULO (Reuters) - At least 200 people were killed in a nightclub fire in southern Brazil on Sunday after a band's pyrotechnics show set the establishment ablaze, local officials said.

Bodies were still being removed from the Kiss nightclub in the southern city of Santa Maria, Major Gerson da Rosa Ferreira, who was leading rescue efforts at the scene for the military police, told Reuters.

Ferreira said 159 bodies had been removed from the club, and the death toll was likely to rise above 200. He said the victims died of asphyxiation or from being trampled, and there were as many as 500 people inside the club when the fire broke out.

Luiza Sousa, a civil police official in Santa Maria, told Reuters the blaze started when a member of the band or its production team ignited a flare, which then set fire to the ceiling. The fire spread "in seconds", Sousa said.

Rio Grande do Sul state Health Secretary Ciro Simoni said respirators from all over the state were being sent to the scene.

Santa Maria is some 187 miles west of the state capital of Porto Alegre. "A sad Sunday!" tweeted Rio Grande do Sul Governor Tarso Genro. He said "all possible measures" were being taken in response and that he was on his way to the scene.

(Reporting by Ana Flor, Guillermo Parra-Bernal and Brian Winter; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/brazil-nightclub-fire-kills-least-90-local-media-104354656.html

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Screeners of unusual size? I don?t think they exist. (Unqualified Offerings)

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Fed up! School junks federal lunch aid after students give new grub terrible reviews

Michelle Obama?s signature 2010 child nutrition legislation is running into a stumbling block in a school district in upstate New York: reality.

Niskayuna Central School District in the Schenectady area has decided unanimously to withdraw from the program as of April, reports WNYT, Albany?s CBS affiliate.

Under the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act, participating schools must provide lunches ? including free or reduced price lunches ? with minimum amounts of fresh fruits, fresh vegetables and whole grains. Also, in what presumably falls outside the hunger-free aspect of the act, there?s a calorie cap: 850 for high school lunches, 700 for middle schools and a mere 650 calories for kids in elementary school.

In order to meet the requirements, schools must cut the sizes of main dishes.

In the Niskayuna cafeterias, the program isn?t working out. In short, kids aren?t eating the grub. At elementary schools, for example, students are buying lunch about half as often as they did last year.

?The kids just don?t like what?s being served this year,? Suzanne Wixom, director of the school district?s food services, told WNYT.

?We have kids who are hungry and that?s what we?re here for,? she added. ?They can?t learn if they?re hungry.?

Wixom added that students have frequently just tossed food they don?t want to eat into the garbage.

?You are going to be heroes among a lot of kids,? said school board member John Buhrmaster after the decision, according to Spotlightnews.com. ?The program you had before was better than the one dictated by the federal government and the kids understood that, and they will be very appreciative.?

In exchange for meeting the federal requirements, participating school districts receive substantial funding from the United States Department of Agriculture.

For the Niskayuna Board of Education, the decision to opt out of the program will mean forgoing roughly $150,000 in federal funding.

However, according to Spotlightnews.com, participation in the federal program has pinched the school district?s bottom line. Since the start of this school year (through December), the lunch program has operated at a net loss of over $70,000.

School officials say they hope to make up for the loss in federal lucre by offering more appetizing ? but still nutritious ? lunches.

?We hope to see increased participation in the school lunch program,? Superintendent kay Salvaggio wrote in a letter to parents, according to the Albany Times Union. ?Despite the loss of federal meal reimbursements, we have calculated that the surest way to ensure a cost-effective program is to have sufficient numbers of students buying lunch.?

As the Times Union notes, only about eight percent of the students in Niskayuna qualify for free or reduced lunch, which suggests that the school district will be able to absorb the loss of federal reimbursement better than a school district such as the nearby Schenectady City School District. In Schenectady, where almost two thirds of all students qualify for free and reduced lunches, the school district is more likely to take the federal aid and the strings that come with it.

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Fed up! School junks federal lunch aid after students give new grub terrible reviews

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fed-school-junks-federal-lunch-aid-students-grub-193242934.html

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Staging Without Spending ? One Key to Home Selling Success ...

Real Estate Advice, Sellers

Staging Without Spending ? One Key to Home Selling Success!

Rearranged furniture for impactEffective staging is a tremendous benefit when needing or wanting to sell a home. But professional staging can be expensive. Don?t get me wrong ? professional stagers do absolutely amazing jobs! But sometimes the money?s just not there to hire a stager, buy a bunch of staging materials or rent snazzy furniture.

Although the real estate market seems to be recovering slightly, most sellers still need to capture every penny possible from the sale of their existing home ? perhaps to gain maximum sufficient funds to purchase a new place or perhaps to attract a sufficient price will keep their sale from falling into the short sale category.

Simple clean-up and rearranging of furniture can do wonders without spending much more than the cost of soap and water, a few boxes to store extra clutter and possessions, and maybe the short-term rental of a storage unit.?

Removing worn throw rugs, dingy pillows and bedspreads is a tremendously effective tool.?Sometimes merely washing and ironing (yes ? that word) is sufficient.?A bottle of bleach and a can of my favorite ?Barkeepers Friend? can make kitchens and bathrooms really shine.?Remove all of those refrigerator magnets, canisters, coffee pots, grinders, toasters, etc. as they just look like clutter when photographed. (And a good listing agent should take lots of photos of your house to show off its best features.)

A seller and I often spend?less than $250 when preparing a home for sale. For less than about $50, I always buy a few brand new thick fluffy towels, color-appropriate shower curtains, and candles to work wonders in bathrooms. Add a couple of ribbons around the towels for a model-home look.

A visit to the local thrift store can provide a couple of big?toys (scrubbed sparkling clean, of course) to add personality to an empty bedroom. A gallon or two of mis-mixed neutral-toned?paint and a couple of hours can freshen up a stale entry. Don?t forget the?discount stores such as Big Lots!, TJ Maxx, Marshalls, HomeGoods when shopping for linens and impact art pieces. Check out the clearance aisles at Home Depot or Lowe?s if you need to replace or update light fixtures or cabinet pulls. I?ve picked up small tables and then spray painted them for entry accents.

And don?t forget the front door. My favorite is to paint the door a deep charcoal or black. Then put a couple of pots of live flowers near the front door. Not just greenery (of course it depends on the time of year), but some nice yellows, reds, or purples sitting on the clean front porch near that freshly painted front door ? just does wonders.

I wish I?d have taken more ?before? pictures from some of the homes I?ve sold, but did scrounge up a few before and after photos. Maybe these few photos will give you a few ideas.

Staging Without SpendingBefore (nice kitchen & well kept, but?look at the clutter?y fridge and the stuff above the cupboards.)

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Staging Without Spending -- AfterHere?s the same kitchen after decluttering. Still a few necessary things on the counter ? but look at the difference! Could we have removed the wallpaper border? Yes ? but the owner really pushed back and I wanted to pick my battles.

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Staging Without Spending - BeforeAnother before and after kitchen. Of course it helped tremendously to remove the spent roses from the room ?but even removing the extra microwave cart and adding a little breakfast table to the end made a huge difference!? Staging with Addition of Table -- $100

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Here?s another before and after. One of those difficult young teen?s?rooms where stuff gets thrown everywhere. Tied up the curtains, removed the extra dresser and held the threat of extra chores and homework?over the young owner?s head should the place get cluttered again during the selling process. You can?t see the posters on that were on the wall beside the bed and taped to the closet doors. Those were taken down, with the tape residue also scrubbed off.

Preparing for Sale - Teen Bedroom - BeforePreparing for Sale -Teen Bedroom - After?

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Staging Without Spending -- Deck beforeEven outside small Staging Without Spending -- One Key to Successorganizational efforts can be amazing. Check out these before and after deck photos.

It was raining during the ?before? photo and sunny during the ?after? photo. We trimmed up the overgrown bush in the corner, rearranged the BBQ area,? swept the roof overhang and rearranged the deck furniture?so it looked tidy.?

?

Total cost for new bedspread & pictures? -- $75I wish I had a couple of the ?before? photos of this bedroom and bathroom. Owned by a single guy (what fun it was to work with him, actually! He was SO appreciative of everything I did to help him get his little condo?ready for sale!)

Take it on good faith ? with all of the sports posters and ?stuff? that he?d carefully collected over the years, the place needed a bit of effort to get it market ready. This ?blue? bedroom was a bit of a challenge, but adding a new bedspread and pictures cooled it down?a bit without repainting. (By the way ? we also removed the artsy ?nudes? in the bathrooms. I could just envision a youngster?s pointed questions!)

The place?sold for list price .. and very quickly once it was ready and during a time in the down market when it was VERY difficult to sell a condo!

?

Bath -- bought a $9.95 shower curtain & $10's in towels. Homeowner had everything elseIn almost every house, rearranging furniture and gathering all of the collectibles into a single ?themed? room also goes a long ways. Prior to listing, walk through the house and notice how many things you?ve gathered that are similar ? little ceramic boats, boat pictures, metal sailboats. We all tend to have things we love, but then we spread them out all over. Gather them together into a boat-themed bathroom or bedroom.

Sometimes you can Stage Without Spending ? One Key to Home Selling Success!

Source: http://www.gabriellenemes.com/2013/01/staging-without-spending-one-key-to-home-selling-success/

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Survival Odds Grim for Native Plants Fighting Invaders

Invasive species are winning in the battle for survival against some native plants in a California reserve, according to a new study.

The research has troubling implications for plant hardiness, the scientists studying the plants said. While some researchers have believed the invaders merely supplement the native ecosystem, the new findings, published online earlier this month in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, show that a few of the original plants could die out in a few hundred years.

"What we see is a serious invasion, meaning that as one or more invasive species start to become abundant, the native plants shrink down in their habitat," said ecologist Benjamin Gilbert, who did field research during a temporary appointment at the University of California. He is currently with the University of Toronto.

Among other experiments, Gilbert and co-author Jonathan Levine planted plots of several native species, including the native flower Lasthenia californica, at the Sedgwick Reserve in the Santa Ynez Valley near Santa Barbara. Researchers then observed the plants' growth and modelled the long-term trend for the plants' survival based on the experimental results.

In general, Levine and Gilbert noted that the seedlings did not do very well in areas dominated by "exotic" grasses, such as Avena fatua, and that the population sizes of the native species are shrinking to critical levels.

Researchers have found that the number of total species in an area increases as exotics take hold and natives cling on to life. However, the native species are restricted to small "refugia," or isolated populations, located far apart from each other, which could hurt their long-term survival, Gilbert said.

Such isolated patches make the plants are more susceptible to damage frombeing hurt by disease or fire; plus, it's harder for them to disperse seeds.

"The native species are pushed out of the best habitat," Gilbert told OurAmazingPlanet. "The analogy for people is being taken off a really good diet ? it's getting them by, [but] it's not optimal."

Native species that have adapted to more challenging environments, such as rocky conditions, tend to fare better. "In this case, the only reason the natives seem to do well in these patches is it is so crappy for the invasives," Gilbert said.

As for protecting the native species, pesticides sometimes do more harm than good. It might be more effective, Gilbert suggested, to create a "corridor" of suitable habitat between patches of native species, which would help them again colonize larger areas.

One challenge, though, is that most of the native species develop naturally in small areas, although the invasives push them to sites that are much smaller than usual. This makes it difficult to study the impact of invasive species or to encourage the natural grasses and flowers to expand their habitats.

Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace or on Twitter?@OAPlanet. We're also on?Facebook?and Google+.

Copyright 2013 OurAmazingPlanet, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/survival-odds-grim-native-plants-fighting-invaders-213930736.html

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Microsoft earnings narrowly beat forecast

Published: Thursday, 24 Jan 2013 | 4:27 PM ET

By: CNBC.com With AP

Microsoft Q2 Earnings Out

Microsoft is reporting a Q2 EPS of $0.76 versus an estimate of $0.75, with Ben Pace, Deutsche Bank Private Wealth Management and CNBC Contributor Josh Brown.

Software giant Microsoft reported quarterly earnings that were a penny higher than Wall Street's forecasts and revenue that was just shy of what analysts had expected on Thursday despite a lift from its latest version of Windows.

After the earnings announcement, the company's shares slipped in after-hours trading. (Click here to get the latest quotes for Microsoft.)

Microsoft earned $6.4 billion, or 76 cents per share, during its fiscal second quarter. That was down from $6.6 billion, or 78 cents per share, a year earlier.

Revenue increased 3 percent to $21.46 billion from $20.89 billion a year ago.

In the report, Microsoft said its server and tools business revenue grew 9 percent while its business division revenue fell 10 percent from the prior-year period.

Analysts had expected the company to report earnings excluding items of 75 cents a share on $21.53 billion in revenue, according to a consensus estimate from Thomson Reuters.

Amid an increasingly competitive landscape, Microsoft has pinned its hopes for personal computer sales on the launch of its new Windows 8 system.

The results announced Thursday are the first to include Windows 8. The program is a dramatic overhaul of the Microsoft operating system that powers most PCs. Windows 8 came out Oct. 26 with slightly more than two months left in Microsoft's fiscal second quarter.

Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Steve Ballmer, chief executive officer of Microsoft Corp.

Although the Windows 8 sales haven't been as impressive as investors hoped, revenue in Microsoft's Windows division climbed 24 percent from the previous year.

Microsoft said it had licensed more than 60 million copies of Windows 8. That puts the redesigned system on the same early sales trajectory as its predecessor, Windows 7, after it came out in 2009.

Investors have already signaled their disappointment with Windows 8 and Surface. The Redmond, Wash., company's stock is hovering around the same price as when those products were released three months ago, while the overall market has climbed higher.

So far, tech earnings results have been mixed. On Tuesday, IBM earnings and revenue exceeded Wall Street's expectations while Apple fell short of revenue forecasts on Wednesday, sending the already bruised stock even lower in trading on Thursday.

The software giant reported quarterly earnings that were a penny higher than Wall Street's forecasts but revenue fell short despite a lift from its latest version of Windows.

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/100404984

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AT

Shortly after giving up on the T-Mobile USA merger, AT&T announces it will acquire Alltel Corp for $780 million.

By Steph Solis / January 22, 2013

The AT&T logo is seen at their store in Times Square in New York in this 2010 file photo. AT&T announced today that it will acquire Alltel for $780 million, pending FCC and DOJ review.

Shannon Stapleton/Reuters/File

Enlarge

AT&T says it will acquire Alltel Corp's?spectrum?for $780 million in cash, Business Wire?reports.

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The wireless carrier signed an agreement with Atlantic Tele-Network Inc, which operates under the Alltel name in the United States, to gain Alltel's licenses, networking hardware, retail stores, and about 585,000 of its 4.6 million subscribers.

"We are pleased that AT&T recognizes the value of our U.S. wireless retail operations and is acquiring these assets," Alltel CEO Michael T. Prior says in a statement. "Alltel's customers will benefit from access to a nationwide 4G network, a larger device selection, additional retail locations and a broader range of product offerings.?

The acquisition is being reviewed by the Federal Communications Commission and the Department of Justice with an answer expected halfway into the 2013.

Alltel has subscribers in rural areas of six states: Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, North Carolina, Ohio, and South Carolina. Alltel uses cellular technology called CDMA, that same technology used by?Verizon Wireless and Sprint. The company?s customers would need to convert to AT&T?s preferred service, GSM, once the merger is through. Initial reports suggest that the switching over will not affect AT&T cash flow.

The acquisition may confuse people who remember the Verizon merger from four years ago. Verizon acquired most of Alltel's properties for about $22 billion, becoming the largest wireless carrier in the country. This included the bulk of Alltel's 13 million customers in 34 states.

However, Verizon later had to divest?105 of Alltel's operating markets in 24 states?as a condition set by the DOJ and the FCC to complete the Alltel acquisition -- 79 of which were picked up by AT&T shortly after the Verizon deal.

In the latest acquisition, AT&T will be acquiring Alltel?s remaining operating markets.

Chris Morran of The Consumerist describes the buzz as a "shell game," where consumers have to try to keep track of the mergers and divestitures in the ever-changing wireless market.

The announcement comes weeks after AT&T terminating its?bid for T-Mobile USA, ending a nine-month-long controversy over the merger's monopolistic implications.?AT&T announced in March that it planned to acquire T-Mobile USA for $39 billion, which would have made it the largest wireless provider in the country. The company is currently the second-largest wireless provider, behind Verizon.

The deal came under fire from competitors and regulators. Sprint Nextel said the prospective merger would lead to a duopoly between AT&T and Verizon, who together would have controlled 80 percent of the market. The DOJ sued AT&T in August over concern about higher consumer prices and reduced competition and choice.

The Alltel acquisition, however, is not expected to cause as much controversy as the deal is much smaller than AT&T's last attempt.

AT&T will likely have less trouble seeking FCC approval than it will converting Alltel?s markets from CDMA to GSM, Engaget projects: "Besides regulatory approval, which shouldn't prove to be a major obstacle, the company also faces challenges integrating Alltel's existing infrastructure with its own," Terrence O'Brien writes.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/LiF8UCfBGS0/AT-T-to-acquire-Alltel-for-78-million

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

In a Bad Mood? New Expereal App Can Tell You Why - Shape

How was your day yesterday? It?s not a hard question, but chances are you?re going to give the wrong answer.
That?s the thinking behind a new app, Expereal, which aims to measure and track our daily emotions. The app, available on iOS, was released November 2012.

What?s the Deal?
Expereal?s creator Jonathan Cohen was inspired by the work of economist Daniel Kahneman, who argues for the difference between a ?remembering? and an ?experiencing? self. Basically the idea is that the way we feel in the moment?say, while eating lunch or while taking a difficult test?can be a lot different from the way we remember feeling afterward.

For a program that could change our understanding of the human brain, the app is ridiculously simple. Users sign up through Facebook (you can?t sign up without a Facebook account) and are immediately presented with a colorful wheel and the numbers one through 10 (the numbers indicate how they?re feeling). It?s also possible for users to include little notes about where they are, what they?re doing, and who is with them. Throughout the day, the app sends (optional) push notifications asking ?How are you feeling?? which prompts users to repeat the whole process.

The coolest part about the app is the way it collects information. Hit the ?visualize? button and up pops a graph showing three sets of data. The blue line shows how the individual user?s mood has fluctuated over the past week. (There?s also an option to see how your mood has changed over the past month.) The gray line shows the average emotions of all Expereal users. Another line shows the average emotions of all the user?s Facebook friends who use Expereal. (Note: Data are anonymous, so you won?t know which of your Facebook friends uses Expereal or how they?re feeling unless they choose to make their information public.)

RELATED: Lose weight fast and get in amazing shape with these free mobile apps!

Is It Legit?
Hard to say. Cohen?s definitely onto something, but his ideas about what the app should accomplish are still pretty vague. ?Ultimately we want it to be about self-knowledge, self-understanding, leading to self-improvement,? he says in a video message to potential users.

Still, this app is a handy way to test out Kahneman?s and other expert ideas about human memory. Kahneman?s work suggests there are a number of cognitive biases that skew our memories of different experiences. For one thing, we tend to hang onto negative experiences, meaning if the whole day goes according to plan except for the moment when we spill soda on the boss?s lap, we?ll probably remember the day as pretty bad.?The end of an experience is also important: Studies have shown that if a painful medical examination is followed by a few minutes of less pain, we?ll remember the whole experience as less aversive than if the exam just ended after the painful part.?Another, controversial, idea is the ?peak-end? phenomenon, which happens when we remember our feelings during the entire event as the average of the emotional peak and the end of the experience.

RELATED: Frustrated to see the scale creep back up after losing weight? Here's how to take the pounds off?for good.

Cohen?s app is also one of the first self-quantifiers to measure anything psychology-related. With the abundance of apps on the market that measure how much fuel we burn, how many calories we consume, and how many times we pee, it?s nice to see that someone thinks our thoughts and feelings are just as important.

Would you use an app that tracks your emotions throughout the day? Let us know in the comments below or tweet the author at @ShanaDLebowitz.

More from Greatist.com:
6 Ways to Fight Seasonal Affective Disorder
77 Healthy Crockpot Recipes
21 Inspiring Health and Fitness Mantras

Source: http://www.shape.com/blogs/shape-your-life/bad-mood-new-expereal-app-can-tell-you-why

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Realtors - Are huge investment companies buying properties ... - Zillow

In Virginia we are seeing large groups as well as "deep pocket" individuals who have the right connections that are purchasing these homes. It's very hard for a first time buyer or even certain cash buyers to get the homes before someone else gets them. I think it's the case of not what you know but who you know here. They are selling and it's making a difference on values by the work being done to these detressed homes. It's helping the resale market in the values. Buyers do see the value in a home that's been totally redone and they will pay more for it than another where the condition is not there.

Source: http://www.zillow.com/advice-thread/Realtors-Are-huge-investment-companies-buying-properties-in-your-area/475313/

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Big crowd, high spirits for 2nd Obama swearing-in

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Declaring "our work begins today", President Barack Obama vowed to "finish what we started" four years ago as hundreds of thousands of inauguration-goers gathered on the historic National Mall in anticipation of his oath-taking for a second term.

"Let's go," Obama tweeted Monday morning as he began the day of inaugural celebrations.

The president was cheered in the streets as his motorcade slowly made its way down Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House and arrived at the Capitol. At midday, he was to speak to a huge crowd on the Mall and millions more watching on television, hoping to set an optimistic tone for a divided nation seeking solutions to economic woes at home and conflict overseas.

The fanfare is extending across the nation's capital, including the traditional inaugural parade and a pair of glitzy formal balls.

Obama, along with his family and Vice President Joe Biden, began his day with a church service at St. John's Episcopal Church. Known as "The Church of the Presidents", St. John's is located just across from the White House on the other side of Lafayette Park. Pew 54 is known as "the president's pew" and is reserved for the commander in chief whenever he attends.

The centerpiece of Monday's festivities is Obama's inaugural address. The president will be urging lawmakers to find common ground and will preview his second-term goals, including immigration reform, stricter gun-control laws and an end to the war in Afghanistan.

Obama is also facing fresh concerns about terrorism in North Africa. In the midst of the inaugural celebrations, a U.S. official said two more Americans died in Algeria, bringing the U.S. death toll from a four-day siege at a natural gas plant to three. Seven Americans survived, the official said.

Washington largely shelved its partisan fighting for the three days of inaugural celebrations. Obama, perhaps seeking to start fresh with lawmakers in his second term, invited several members of Congress to the White House before his swearing-in, including the Republican leaders he has been at odds with for the past four years: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Speaker John Boehner and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor.

Pressing matters await the president and Congress once the celebrations subside, including three looming fiscal deadlines. Obama will also need help from a reluctant Congress if he hopes to fulfill his promise to sign comprehensive immigration reform and tighten gun laws in the wake of last month's school shooting in Newtown, Conn.

The mood surrounding Obama's second inaugural is more subdued than it was four years ago, when the swearing in of the nation's first black president drew 1.8 million people to the Mall. Still, organizers were expecting up to 700,000 to attend Monday's events, which would make it the largest second-term inaugural in history.

At least one public viewing area on the National Mall was full two hours before the president's swearing-in, and the crowd spread from the Capitol to the Washington Monument.

The weather forecast was encouraging, to a point. High temperatures were predicted for the lower 40s during the day, with a slight chance of rain and snow showers in the afternoon and flurries later.

Security was tight across Washington, with several streets near the White House and Capitol Hill closed off. Humvees and city buses were being used to block intersections. Volunteers fanned out near the Mall to help direct the crowds.

Lawmakers and other officials slowly trickled onto the platform on the West Front of the Capitol where Obama was to be sworn in. Former Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle and former GOP House Speaker Newt Gingrich sat next to each other on the folding chairs as they awaited the festivities.

David Richardson of Atlanta and his two young children were among the early crowds heading to the National Mall Monday even before sunrise.

"We wanted to see history, I think, and also for the children to witness that anything is possible through hard work," Richardson said.

Wendy Davis of Rome, Ga., was one of thousands of inaugural attendees who packed Metro trains before sunrise headed for the Capitol and parade route. Davis came four years ago as well but was among the many ticketholders who couldn't get in because of the massive crowds. She was determined to get in this time.

"I thought I was early last time but I obviously wasn't early enough," she said.

By 8 a.m. thousands of people were also waiting in security lines that stretched a block to gain access to the spots along the parade route that were accessible to the general public without a special ticket.

The cold weather was easily tolerated by Marie-France Lemaine of Montreal, who received the trip to the inaugural as a birthday present from her husband. She headed up an Obama advocacy group in Quebec that cheered on the president from north of the border.

"The American president affects the rest of the world," she said.

The president was officially sworn-in shortly before noon on Sunday, in keeping with the Constitution's mandate that presidents begin their new term on Jan. 20. But because inaugural ceremonies are historically not held on Sundays, the public celebration was pushed to Monday, coinciding with the birthday of late civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.

Condoleezza Rice, who served as secretary of state under former President George W. Bush, called on Obama to put electoral politics aside in his second term if he hopes to accomplish those objectives.

"It requires now a kind of humility and a reaching across the aisle," Rice said on CBS "This Morning. "And reaching across the aisle, by the way, means reaching out to Americans who may not have voted for him."

Following his swearing-in, Obama will attend the traditional luncheon with lawmakers before joining marching bands and floats in the inaugural parade, which winds its way from Capitol Hill to the White House.

The president and first lady will then slip into formalwear for two swanky inaugural balls. That's far fewer than the 10 they attended after the 2009 inauguration, though this year's events are still expected to draw up to about 40,000 people.

The centerpiece of Monday's activities was Obama's inaugural address. Aides said he would make the case that the nation's founding values can still guide the country through changing times. He is not expected to outline specifically policy proposals, saving them instead for his Feb. 12 State of the Union address.

Some Americans, weary after four years of shaky economic news, implored Obama to focus on patriotism, not politics, in his remarks.

"I'm just hoping for a nice eloquent speech that makes people feel good about being an American," said Sean Payton, a 32-year-old Democrat from Highland Ranch, Colo.

Monday's celebrations bring to a close three days of inaugural fanfare across Washington, including a day of service, a wreath-laying at Arlington National Cemetery, and a concert honoring military families.

The quirk in the calendar meant Obama would end up being sworn in for his second term twice. Sunday's ceremony was an intimate gathering at the White House, with only a dozen family members on hand to witness Chief Justice John Roberts administer the oath of office.

Obama placed his hand on a Bible used for years by Michelle Obama's family. On Monday, he'll take the oath using two ? one owned by King and one by Abraham Lincoln.

Vice President Joe Biden was also to be sworn in for the second term a second time Monday. Biden took the oath of office Sunday at the Naval Observatory in northwest Washington. Justice Sonia Sotomayor, appointed by Obama as the first Hispanic to serve on the Supreme Court, administered the oath to Biden, who placed his hand on a Bible his family has used since 1893.

Ahead of his swearing-in Sunday, Obama, along with Vice President Joe Biden, solemnly honored the nation's fallen soldiers during a wreath-laying ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery. On a crisp, sun-splashed morning, Obama and Biden placed a large wreath adorned with red, white and blue ribbon, in front of Arlington's Tomb of the Unknowns. Holding their hands over their hearts, the two leaders stood motionless as a bugler played taps.

___

Associated Press writers Darlene Superville, Matt Barakat, Alan Fram, Donna Cassata, Jim Kuhnhenn and Mary Clare Jalonick contributed to this report.

___

Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/big-crowd-high-spirits-2nd-obama-swearing-153950715--politics.html

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Al-Qaida flourishes in Sahara, emerges stronger

In this undated photo, men look at the wreckage of a vehicle near Ain Amenas, Algeria. Algerian bomb squads scouring a gas plant where Islamist militants took dozens of foreign workers hostage found "numerous" new bodies on Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013 as they searched for explosive traps left behind by the attackers, a security official said, a day after a bloody raid ended the four-day siege of the remote desert refinery. (AP Photo/Echorouk Elyaoumi)

In this undated photo, men look at the wreckage of a vehicle near Ain Amenas, Algeria. Algerian bomb squads scouring a gas plant where Islamist militants took dozens of foreign workers hostage found "numerous" new bodies on Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013 as they searched for explosive traps left behind by the attackers, a security official said, a day after a bloody raid ended the four-day siege of the remote desert refinery. (AP Photo/Echorouk Elyaoumi)

(AP) ? The Islamists are back as a force in Algeria.

The terrorist attack on an Algerian natural gas plant that left dozens of hostages and militants dead has demonstrated how a failing Algerian insurgency transformed itself into a regional threat, partly by exploiting the turmoil unleashed by the Arab Spring revolts.

Al-Qaida's branch in Algeria retreated into a Sahara no man's land between Mali, Algeria and Mauritania after it was largely defeated by the Algerian army in a 10-year war in the 1990s that claimed 200,000 lives. There it grew rich on smuggling and hostage-taking, gained new recruits and re-emerged stronger than ever, armed with looted high-tech weapons from Libya's 2011 civil war.

The audacious assault last Wednesday on Algeria's Ain Amenas gas complex by a multinational band of Islamists shows how long-simmering ethnic tensions in Mali, a civil war in Algeria and a revolution in Libya have combined to create a conflict spanning the deserts and savannahs of both North Africa and West Africa.

Algeria's Islamists were driven south into the desert by the military's brutal counterinsurgency tactics ? a take-no-prisoners approach vividly on display in the resolution of the latest hostage crisis.

Factions of Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb became rich in the lawless desert by smuggling guns, drugs and cigarettes and by kidnapping foreigners for ransom. Soon they became involved in the longstanding disputes of the desert Tuareg against the government in Mali, whom the tribesmen felt ignored or abused them.

One of their prominent leaders was Moktar Belmoktar, who made millions smuggling and kidnapping and went on to mastermind the attack on the Ain Amenas plant.

While taking up the Tuareg cause in northern Mali, these al-Qaida-allied groups decided to use their new-found strength to settle scores against old opponents like Algeria and the West.

"It seems that Moktar has tasked himself with the internationalization of the Mali conflict," said William Lawrence, the North African analyst for the International Crisis Group. "There's no question there is struggle between different groups in the Sahel and Sahara to have the upper hand in claiming the jihad mantle in the region."

Belmoktar fell out with the local al-Qaida franchise, the Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), and formed his own northern Mali-based group in December called the Masked Brigade. He promised to attack those threatening the radical Islamist mini-state that was emerging in northern Mali.

"We threaten everyone who participated in and planned for the aggression against our Muslim people due to their implementation of Islamic Shariah law on our land," he announced in December on jihadi websites. "You will taste the heat of war in your countries and we will attack your interests."

With the money to be made in smuggling and kidnapping, all that was missing was easy access to heavy weaponry. That changed in 2011, and weapons came cascading across the borders when Libya fell apart and dictator Moammar Gadhafi's vast arsenals of oil-bought weapons were looted.

What began in January 2012 as a secular revolt of disaffected Tuaregs hoping to carve out a homeland in northern Mali was soon hijacked by al-Qaida and allied extremist groups.

With their new weapons, money and men, Algerian militants like Belmoktar could now do what had never been possible before ? hit oil-rich Algeria's strategic energy infrastructure in the remote desert.

National borders were no impediment to these heavily armed fighters in four-wheel drive vehicles.

"AQIM and other militant Islamist groups' control over northern Mali and weak security along Libya's borders has provided the organization with greater operational freedom," noted Arun Pillai-Essex, an analyst with Maplecroft, a risk analysis group, who said AQIM has also been able to capture weapons from the Libyan and Malian armies.

The question now is where the Islamists will strike next.

Another attack on an Algerian energy installation is doubtful, analysts say. Already heavily guarded, security will no doubt be vastly increased and there are suggestions that the Ain Amenas attack only succeeded by having some type of inside help.

France and its Western allies fear AQIM could metastasize its terrorism into Europe if left unchecked.

In the last two weeks, France has been taking the fight to AQIM with punishing air strikes against the vast territory the group controls in northern Mali ? raising questions about whether the group's fighters will have much time to think about new terror attacks.

"It is one-off episode, they got lucky," said Riccardo Fabiani, North Africa analyst of the Eurasia group. "I would think that the next attacks are going to target other countries. Mauritania could be an easy target, Morocco or any ECOWAS country or possibly in Libya."

The attack has also pushed France and Algeria ? two nations with fraught relations due to bloody colonial ties ? closer together over the need to combat these groups.

Prior to the attack, Algeria had long publicly opposed France's call for armed intervention to deal with the rise of extremist groups in northern Mali, citing the threat to regional stability and the chances of the crisis spilling over into its own desert regions.

Now, with the fight brought to Algeria's doorstep, al-Qaida-linked groups will be facing their old implacable enemy once more.

Unlike other Western nations, French officials refused to criticize Algeria for its strong-fisted handling of the Ain Amenas hostage ordeal.

"When a country is attacked in this way, and its own sovereignty is jeopardized, it decides on how to respond with its own army," French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said Sunday on France-5 TV.

Throwing more military operations at al-Qaida, however, is not going to solve the underlying problem, warned Lawrence, the North Africa analyst.

"This is linked to the Libyan conflict, it's linked to the Mali conflict, it's linked to 50 years of struggle by the Tuareg, it's linked to 20 years of struggle in Algeria," he said.

Ultimately, he says, the countries of North and West Africa, not to mention Europe, will have to address the conditions that allowed al-Qaida to flourish in this impoverished region.

"A security response is at best a partial response. Until a robust political, humanitarian and economic effort is implemented, the security effort won't solve these problems," Lawrence said.

_____

Schemm reported from Rabat, Morocco.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-01-20-Algeria-Kidnapping-Analysis/id-9ba0ca05c4bc4842a09a6890f89ce6f3

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Many Kids Vaccinated Late or Not at All

About half of infants and young children in the United States receive vaccinations late or not at all, a new study suggests.

Between 2004 and 2008, about 49 percent of children ages 2 months to 2 years were "undervaccinated," meaning they received at least one vaccine or more a month later than is recommended by the current vaccine schedule. The percentage of undervaccinated children increased during the study period.

In about 13 percent of cases analyzed, parents intentionally delayed their child's vaccination, the researchers said.

Some parents say they intentionally delay vaccinations, because they are afraid their child is getting too many vaccines in too short a period, said study researcher Jason Glanz, a senior scientist at Kaiser Permanente's Institute for Health Research. However, research does not support such concerns ? an Institute of Medicine report released last week found children who receive their vaccines on time are not at increased risk for medical conditions, such as developmental disorders.

Because of the many different ways a child could be considered undervaccinated, the exact effect of undervaccination on a child's health is not known. But experts say when parents deviate from the recommended vaccination schedule for their kids, they are taking unnecessary risks.

"When you make up a schedule, it is by definition an untested schedule, both in safety and effectiveness," said Dr. Paul Offit, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, who was not involved in the study. Moreover, a delay in vaccination would prolong the period of time a child would be susceptible to a vaccine-preventable disease, Offit said. [See 5 Dangerous Vaccine Myths.]

A higher number of unvaccinated children also decreases so-called herd immunity ? disease protection that occurs because a certain portion of people are vaccinated ? and increases the risk of outbreaks of infectious disease, such as measles and whooping cough, Offit said.

Glanz and colleagues analyzed records from more than 323,200 U.S. children born between 2004 and 2008, and determined whether they received vaccinations on time, or 30 or more days late. Eight vaccines given over the first two years of life were included in the study.

During the study period, the percentage of undervaccinated children increased from 41.8 percent in 2004 to 54.4 percent in 2008, and was 49 percent for the period overall.

Besides parental choice, other reasons for undervaccination include missing doctors' visits, losing health-care coverage, or waiting to give a shot because a child is ill at the time he or she should receive it, Glanz said.

Considering whether each vaccine was received, delayed or never given, there were about 1,400 distinct ways in which children were undervacciated. The researchers hope the findings will be a first step in studying the safety of alternative vaccination schedules, Glanz said.

Previous studies have found children of parents who refuse vaccines are nine times more likely to get chickenpox, and 23 times more likely to get whooping cough than children who receive vaccines on time, the researchers said.

The new study is published online today (Jan. 21) in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.

Pass it on: Many young children don't receive recommended vaccines on time.

Follow Rachael Rettner on Twitter @RachaelRettner, or MyHealthNewsDaily @MyHealth_MHND. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

Copyright 2013 MyHealthNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/many-kids-vaccinated-not-211826634.html

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Car Insurance Brokers ? Bnr.Co

Vehicle insurance coverage brokers play a very crucial role in creating up a link among the consumers and the underwriting insurers. In performing this function, they have to in addition attend other areas skillfully, like, interacting with the consumers and the insurance coverage organizations. However, while placing the motor insurance coverage danger and property below coverage, they should treat it different from other kinds of insurances, in which the danger element is lower.

Automobile insurance coverage brokers must have full knowledge about the various types of coverage, in relation to the standard vehicle and industrial auto insurance coverage policies that are obtainable in the industry. He should be adept and effectively-versed with numerous policies and the prices provided by both well-identified insurance businesses as nicely as underwriters. These brokers often volunteer to partake as third parties for the clientele, than to restrict themselves by merely acquiring and supplying insurance policies. A very good instance of the element of car insurance policies that are handled by the brokers are commercial fleet auto policies grouped with personal ones.

Numerous acclaimed car insurance brokers, on an international level, are of the opinion that personal auto insurance coverage policies are simply devoid of any profit returns for prolonged and ongoing enterprise. This is mostly why the local and provincial brokers, in association with specialist sub brokers have become engaged with these sort of policies. This form of service is not at all empty of profit, as most individuals may well believe. The brokers get amply rewarded by the involved insurance organizations, with extravagant amounts.

Nonetheless, the insurance market has noticed a big section of vehicle insurance coverage brokers obtaining engaged in direct dealing account. This is a various type of dealing, in which the brokers act as a bridge among the sub brokers and underwriters, influencing the former to sign a mutual agreement, quite spiritedly, with the underwriters. Whatsoever, the primary broker in no way gets ripped off his complete liberty to get hold of the accounts. The commission earned gets successfully distributed between the two parties.

With the surfacing of the Net, the functions of car insurance coverage brokers have undergone a radical modify. Based on quotation methodology, the positions of agents have been largely superseded by the totally free web sites providing services of insurance quotes comparison. Nonetheless, in spite of the technological progression, some brokers have, till date, effectively managed a robust hold on their position by effectively adapting to the new facet of engineering.

Source: http://www.bnr.co/autos/auto-insurance/car-insurance-brokers/

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Monday, January 21, 2013

Flu season fuels debate over paid sick time laws

In this Friday, Jan. 18 2013 photo, activists hold signs during a rally at New York's City Hall to call for immediate action on paid sick days legislation in light of the continued spread of the flu. An unusually early and vigorous flu season is drawing attention to the cause that has both scored victories and hit roadblocks in recent years: mandatory paid sick leave. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

In this Friday, Jan. 18 2013 photo, activists hold signs during a rally at New York's City Hall to call for immediate action on paid sick days legislation in light of the continued spread of the flu. An unusually early and vigorous flu season is drawing attention to the cause that has both scored victories and hit roadblocks in recent years: mandatory paid sick leave. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

In this Friday, Jan. 18 2013 photo, Emilio Palaguachi, center, speaks during a rally at New York's City Hall to call for immediate action on paid sick days legislation in light of the continued spread of the flu. An unusually early and vigorous flu season is drawing attention to the cause that has both scored victories and hit roadblocks in recent years: mandatory paid sick leave. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

In this Friday, Jan. 18 2013 photo, Emilio Palaguachi, right, speaks during a rally in New York's City Hall to call for immediate action on paid sick days legislation in light of the continued spread of the flu. An unusually early and vigorous flu season is drawing attention to the cause that has both scored victories and hit roadblocks in recent years: mandatory paid sick leave. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

(AP) ? Sniffling, groggy and afraid she had caught the flu, Diana Zavala dragged herself in to work anyway for a day she felt she couldn't afford to miss.

A school speech therapist who works as an independent contractor, she doesn't have paid sick days. So the mother of two reported to work and hoped for the best ? and was aching, shivering and coughing by the end of the day. She stayed home the next day, then loaded up on medicine and returned to work.

"It's a balancing act" between physical health and financial well-being, she said.

An unusually early and vigorous flu season is drawing attention to a cause that has scored victories but also hit roadblocks in recent years: mandatory paid sick leave for the 40 percent of American private-sector workers ? more than 40 million people ? who don't have it.

Supporters and opponents are particularly watching New York City, where lawmakers are weighing a sick leave proposal amid a competitive mayoral race.

Pointing to a flu outbreak that the governor has called a public health emergency, dozens of doctors, nurses, lawmakers and activists ? some in surgical masks ? rallied Friday on the City Hall steps to call for passage of the measure, which has awaited a City Council vote for nearly three years. Two likely mayoral contenders have also pressed the point.

The flu spike is making people more aware of the argument for sick pay, said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values at Work, which promotes paid sick time initiatives around the country. "There's people who say, 'OK, I get it ? you don't want your server coughing on your food,'" she said.

Advocates have cast paid sick time as both a workforce issue akin to parental leave and "living wage" laws, and a public health priority.

But to some business owners, paid sick leave is an impractical and unfair burden for small operations. Critics also say the timing is bad, given the choppy economy and the hardships inflicted by Superstorm Sandy.

Michael Sinesky, an owner of seven bars and restaurants around the city, was against the sick time proposal before Sandy. And after the storm shut down four of his restaurants for days or weeks, costing hundreds of thousands of dollars that his insurers have yet to pay, "we're in survival mode."

"We're at the point, right now, where we cannot afford additional social initiatives," said Sinesky, whose roughly 500 employees switch shifts if they can't work, an arrangement that some restaurateurs say benefits workers because paid sick time wouldn't include tips.

Employees without sick days are more likely to go to work with a contagious illness, send an ill child to school or day care and use hospital emergency rooms for care, according to a 2010 survey by the University of Chicago's National Opinion Research Center. A 2011 study in the American Journal of Public Health estimated that a lack of sick time helped spread 5 million cases of flu-like illness during the 2009 swine flu outbreak.

To be sure, many employees entitled to sick time go to work ill anyway, out of dedication or at least a desire to project it. But the work-through-it ethic is shifting somewhat amid growing awareness about spreading sickness.

"Right now, where companies' incentives lie is butting right up against this concern over people coming into the workplace, infecting others and bringing productivity of a whole company down," said John A. Challenger, CEO of employer consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

Paid sick day requirements are often popular in polls, but only four places have them: San Francisco, Seattle, Washington, D.C., and the state of Connecticut. The specific provisions vary.

Milwaukee voters approved a sick time requirement in 2008, but the state Legislature passed a law blocking it. Philadelphia's mayor vetoed a sick leave measure in 2011; lawmakers have since instituted a sick time requirement for businesses with city contracts. Voters rejected a paid sick day measure in Denver in 2011.

In New York, City Councilwoman Gale Brewer's proposal would require up to five paid sick days a year at businesses with at least five employees. It wouldn't include independent contractors, such as Zavala, who supports the idea nonetheless.

The idea boasts such supporters as feminist Gloria Steinem and "Sex and the City" actress Cynthia Nixon, as well as a majority of City Council members and a coalition of unions, women's groups and public health advocates. But it also faces influential opponents, including business groups, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, who has virtually complete control over what matters come to a vote.

Quinn, who is expected to run for mayor, said she considers paid sick leave a worthy goal but doesn't think it would be wise to implement it in a sluggish economy. Two of her likely opponents, Public Advocate Bill de Blasio and Comptroller John Liu, have reiterated calls for paid sick leave in light of the flu season.

While the debate plays out, Emilio Palaguachi is recovering from the flu and looking for a job. The father of four was abruptly fired without explanation earlier this month from his job at a deli after taking a day off to go to a doctor, he said. His former employer couldn't be reached by telephone.

"I needed work," Palaguachi said after Friday's City Hall rally, but "I needed to see the doctor because I'm sick."

___

Associated Press writer Susan Haigh in Hartford, Conn., contributed to this report.

___

Follow Jennifer Peltz at http://twitter.com/jennpeltz

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-20-Flu%20Season-Sick%20Leave/id-0595712b51714cb59a874269227d50c7

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Real estate notes | TribLIVE


By Sam Spatter

Published: Saturday, January 19, 2013, 9:00?p.m.
Updated 10 hours ago

? The Brix at 26, an 87-unit apartment complex on the site of the former Goodwill Building on S. Carson Street in the South Side, will open for occupancy on Feb. 1 with more than 20 percent of its apartments pre-leased. ?We are very pleased with the interest the building is receiving, and the only problem is we only have a total of 87 units to lease,? said Jim Scalo, a partner of Burns & Scalo Real Estate Co., owner/developer. The building has environmentally friendly construction and is pet and smoke free, which has been popular, he said. One bedrooms are renting for $1,450 to $2,100, and two-bedrooms for $1,736 to $2,200.

? Duquesne University and Carnegie Mellon University will seek approval Tuesday from the Allegheny County Higher Education Building Authority to seek tax-exempt revenue bonds. Duquesne seeks $17 million to finance all or part of renovations to Duquesne Towers, St. Ann?s Hall, Libermann Hall and for other capital expendures. Carnegie Mellon seeks up to $60 million for construction, furnishing and equipping the 105,000-square-foot Nano/Bio/Energy Technologies Building. The funds would also cover improvements to clean rooms, wet and dry labs and energy research space. A hearing is set for 10:30 a.m., 425 Sixth Ave., Suite 800, Downtown.

? EQT Corp. is adding 23,494 square feet to its space on the 12th floor of its headquarters, EQT Plaza, 625 Liberty Ave., Downtown. That will give it 235,994 square feet in the building. David Massaro of Massaro Properties LLC is representing EQT in the expansion. Pat Greene of CBRE Inc. represents the landlord, Liberty Avenue Holdings, affiliated with Highwood Properties of Raleigh, N.C.

? Heather Nally has opened the Micro Diner at 221 Shiloh St., Mt. Washington, thanks to a $29,060 loan from the Pittsburgh Business Growth Fund from the Urban Redevelopment Authority toward the total investment of $72,651. Six jobs were created. Micro serves breakfast all day.

? A request to demolish a building at 202 Rodi Road will be heard by the Penn Hills Planning Commission Thursday. Morris Knowles & Associates would then build a 1,600-square-foot addition to an adjacent building for a kidney dialysis center, DaVita Dialysis. A hearing is at 7 p.m., municipal building, 12245 Frankstown Road.

? A rebuilt Goodwill store at 89 Jefferson Ave., Washington, will hold a grand opening at 9 a.m. on Wednesday with prizes, refreshments and gift cards. The store is the fifth of Goodwill?s new prototype stores, said David Tobiczyk, vice president of marketing for Goodwill of Southwestern Pennsylvania. It will have 9,300 square feet of sales space within the 15,000-square-foot structure and include a collection center with 20 employees. Burns & Scalo Real Estate Advisory Services Inc. was developer and general contractor. A temporary Goodwill store at 853 Jefferson will close at 5 p.m. Tuesday.

Sam Spatter is a staff writer for Trib Total Media. He can be reached at 412-320-7843 or sspatter@tribweb.com.

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Source: http://triblive.com/business/realestate/3293850-74/building-square-goodwill

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

Fact or Fiction: Can Stress Really Cause Hair Loss? | Get Holistic ...

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Fact or Fiction: Can Stress Really Cause Hair Loss?It?s been a topic of debate for a few decades now, and one which we all have encountered, either through personal experience or through a relatable television program. The question is, ?Can stress cause hair loss?, and the answer is, most definitely. The science behind hair loss from stress is a little common sense and a little biology.

Seasoned dermatologists who see patients for possible skin conditions also see them for scalp conditions. While some hair loss is natural, more than one hundred hairs lost in a day is reason for concern. Since people aren?t going to stop and count every hair they lose in a day or notice when they have lost another hair or two, this isn?t a practical means of measuring problematic hair loss. Dermatologists recommend looking for clumps off hair on the pillow, in your comb or brush or in the shower drain. Clumps are more noticeable because they have at least two dozen hairs in a ball together, and this is the point when people turn to a dermatologist to see if the problem is their scalp.

Several scalp conditions can be to blame; anything from excessive oiliness and the presence of wens, small acne like boils on the scalp, to psoriasis, which can prevent new hair from growing in. When all of the scalp disorders are ruled out and the patient isn?t suffering from a thyroid, parathyroid or pituitary glandular problem (all three effect hair growth), then the dermatologist will ask about a person?s lifestyle and employment.

High stress jobs, relationships and responsibilities elevate the level of cortisol in the body. Cortisol is a biological ?fight or flight? chemical that prepares the body to run or defend, and it also causes hair loss. Cortisol in produced in the adrenal glands, which also produce adrenaline, something everyone should be familiar with. Just as some lizards and rodents lose their tails and fur when their adrenal glands are engage and they are energized to run from a predator, making a slick get away, so too are humans programmed to respond. The only problem is, we aren?t fleeing from something that will eat us anymore, we are just trying to keep up with all the daily demands and responsibilities. Still, that doesn?t stop our scalps from shaking hair loose, and because it?s more noticeable from our heads we become concerned. If we noticed any excessive hair loss from our bodies we probably wouldn?t react as strongly. The truth is, our bodies lose just as much hair from stress as our heads do!

To calm down and stop the hair loss from stress, ten minutes a day sitting someplace quiet without any distractions and just a focused breathing for those ten minutes is all that is needed to take the body out of the ?flight? mode. If more than one thing stresses you out, take more than one ten minute break to relax, just not successively.

Author: Adam Kutner

Adam is a writer and blogger who enjoys writing about medical health and fitness, both mental and physical.

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Source: http://www.getholistichealth.com/17695/fact-or-fiction-can-stress-really-cause-hair-loss/

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