শনিবার, ৩০ জুন, ২০১২

MADELGAIRE Goes to the Coll?giale music review by psarros

3 stars Formed in 2000 in the small city of Belgium Soignies and named after a local medieval hero, Madelgaire started as a four-piece band with singer/drummer Pascal Rocteur, keyboardist Patrice Chalon, bassist Christian Vanderwhale and guitarist Stephane Letertre.A few month later they were joined by a second guitarist, Dominique Lossignol, and this line-up led the band to the production of a demo entitled ''...Goes to the Collegiale'' in 2002.

Madelgaire's proposal is nothing less than rich and well-crafted Neo/Symphonic Progressive Rock in the vein of AMANDA, SEVEN REIZH or ARENA and the opening ''Vae Victis'' contains some good quality music.Bombastic atmospheres led by grandiose keyboards and dramatic guitar work and solos along with some softer Neo-Proggish grooves but always adventurous and intricate in a nice instrumental introduction.''Mad-el-Gher'', actually this is the band's name, could not have contained anything other than keyboard-based medieval tunes next to some prog good breaks and the overall sound is like listening to MINIMUM VITAL.''Gimme a Light'' is the epic of this demo, clocking at 11 minutes and opening with a light piano-driven jazzy section, before turning into a Neo-Prog manner with good keyboard/organ and guitar work along with the vocal lines of Pascal Rocteur, the result is close to the style of DEYSS.The short closer ''Rackham-das-R?te'' is another instrumental piece of dramatic slightly-symphonic Progressive Rock with great guitar work and some orchestral keyboards, quite nice.

This demo seems like a good sample of what Madelgaire were capable of.Slightly theatrical and always passionate, the performance is satisfying and if a copy ever come before your eyes, just grab it.Warmly recommended.

psarros | 3/5 |

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Source: http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=779956

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President Obama visits Colorado as fires rage on

Marc Piscotty/Getty Images

Onlookers watch as the High Park Fire in Larimer County has burns on

President Obama visits Colorado today, after declaring the state a federal disaster area with multiple wildfires raging.

In Colorado Springs, the Waldo Canyon fire has turned deadly, killing one person and burning over three hundred homes. Local authorities say they?re hopeful that weather conditions today allow them to advance on that fire, which is 15% contained. The cost of fighting these fires has topped $5 million.

How much federal funding will be required to get the wildfires under control? And how will residents ? and the tourism industry ? recover?

Megan Verlee, reporter for Colorado Public Radio. (She?s in a small partly evacuated town on the Western Side of the Rockies)


Source: http://feeds.scpr.org/~r/kpccAirTalk/~3/dL4EEFHLRTY/president-obama-visits-colorado-as-fires-rage-on

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শুক্রবার, ২৯ জুন, ২০১২

Activists: Dozens killed in Syria shelling

BEIRUT (AP) ? Government troops rained tank and artillery shells down on a rebellious suburb of the Syrian capital of Damascus Friday, killing at least 43 people over two days, opposition groups and activists said.

The barrage is part of a fierce government offensive aimed at regaining control of parts of Damascus suburbs where rebels operate, particularly Douma, a sprawling suburb that has been a hotbed of dissent against President Bashar Assad's regime.

A local activist who spoke on condition of anonymity for security reasons said the shelling was "relentless" throughout Thursday, and exploding shells killed people in their homes.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 41 people died in all-day shelling of Douma Thursday, including three children and five members of a single family. At least two more were killed Friday morning.

"They (government troops) are trying to bring Douma under control, but they are being met by fierce resistance," said Rami Abdul-Rahman, the group's director. He said most of the dead were civilians.

The Local Coordination Committees network said 59 people were killed in Thursday's shelling of Damascus suburbs, most of them in Douma. The difference in tolls illustrated the difficulty of verifying information coming out of tightly controlled Syria, where journalists and human rights groups are either banned or severely restricted.

Amateur videos posted by activists online showed bloodied bodies lying on blankets in a room and others shrouded in white sheets and placed on stretchers. "A new massacre by Bashar Assad," cried a man holding a dead girl in a pink blouse, a large gash on her face.

The violence around the capital's suburbs mirrored fighting across many parts of Syria that killed dozens of other people Thursday, according to the groups.

Activists say more than 14,000 people have been killed since the uprising began in March 2011.

Much of the violence that has gripped Syria has been sanctioned by the government to crush dissent. But rebel fighters are launching increasingly deadly attacks on regime targets, and several huge suicide bombings this year suggest al-Qaida or other extremists are joining the battle. A bomb blast rocked central Damascus on Thursday near a busy market and the country's main justice complex, wounding at least three people and sending a cloud of black smoke into the air.

The latest carnage came as world powers show new urgency to resolve the crisis, which so far has resisted international efforts.

World powers will meet Saturday in Geneva for talks on Syria, but few observers expect a breakthrough. Syria has the protection of Russia, a veto-wielding member of the U.N. Security Council, and has so far been impervious to international pressure.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Moscow will not endorse a call on Assad to give up power.

"We are not supporting and will not support any external meddling," he said. "External players must not dictate ... to Syrians, but, first of all, must commit to influencing all the sides in Syria to stop the violence."

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Thursday it was "very clear" that all the participants at the Geneva meeting ? including Russia ? are on board with a transition plan created by international envoy Kofi Annan. His plan calls for the formation of a national unity government that would oversee the drafting of a new constitution and elections.

Clinton told reporters that the invitations to Saturday's meeting in Geneva made clear that representatives "were coming on the basis of (Annan's) transition plan."

Lavrov said it was "obvious that a transitional period is needed to overcome the Syrian crisis," but insisted the major powers in Geneva must focus on convincing the opposition groups to soften their demands.

Diplomatic hopes have rested on Russia to agree to a plan that would end the Assad family dynasty, which has ruled Syria for more than four decades. Russia is Syria's most important ally, protector and supplier of arms.

There are few options besides keeping up diplomatic pressure, as an international military intervention is all but ruled out in the near future. Few countries are willing to get deeply involved in such an explosive conflict, and Russia and China have pledged to veto any international attempt to intervene militarily.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/activists-dozens-killed-syria-shelling-090308809.html

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Energy Take Classic 5.1


With so much of the focus these days on iPod speakers and wireless Bluetooth streaming, it's easy to forget there's a sizeable market for dedicated home theater systems. The Energy Take Classic 5.1 ($399.99 list) is a diminutive surround sound speaker set with a large sound. It's an excellent choice if you need a do-it-all speaker system for both home theater and music playback in this price range.

Design, Features, and Concept
For this review, I tested the Energy Take Classic 5.1 system with two home theater component receivers: a Denon AVR-1613 ($399.99, 3 stars) and a Yamaha RX-V473 ($449.99, 3.5 stars). Note that unlike most of the speakers we test, the Energy Take Classic 5.1 is unpowered. It's meant to be paired with a receiver, integrated amplifier, or separate pre-amp and amplifier components in a full-sized living room or den system. This is the more traditional way of putting together an audio system, which dates back decades, but I just wanted to point that out up front.

With that out of the way, let's get to the system itself. The black gloss vinyl finish looks clean, minimalistic, and sharp. Each satellite measures 6.9 by 4.1 by 4.1 inches (HWD) and weighs 2.9 pounds. The center channel measures 4.1 by 10.3 by 4.1 inches (HWD) and weighs 3.2 pounds. The powered subwoofer looks compact in photos, but it's surprisingly large in person, particularly when paired with the satellites; it measures 12.6 inches on all sides and weighs 19.7 pounds. All five satellites could sit on top of the subwoofer without hanging over the edges, just to give you an idea of the difference.

Each satellite contains a 3-inch poly-titanium woofer and a 0.75-inch hyperbolic aluminum dome tweeter. Energy rates the satellites' frequency response at 115 Hz to 20 KHz (+/- 3 dB). With a class-average efficiency rating of 89 dB, you wouldn't want to power them with a 10 watt tube amp, but that's not the crowd Energy is shooting for with this system. Just about any home theater receiver of recent vintage should have no problem powering the Take Classic 5.1. Meanwhile, the 200-watt bass reflex subwoofer features a 8-inch downward-firing, injection molded cone and a front-firing port. Energy rates the subwoofer's frequency response at 33 to 150 Hz (+/- 3 dB). There's a variable low pass filter you can set anywhere from 40 to 150 Hz, with an 18dB per octave roll-off.

Combination subwoofer and satellite systems (or "sub/sat systems," as they're commonly known) blend in with decor much better than full tower systems. They also tend to offer deeper, more powerful bass, and are natural choices for home theater systems where you may want a little more boost with the subwoofer's volume dial. Tiny satellite speakers also tend to do a better job of projecting a three-dimensional soundstage, assuming high-enough-quality drivers.Energy Take Classic 5.1

At the same time, sub/sat systems sometimes don't sound quite as natural or balanced as a properly voiced bookshelf or tower speaker; it's tricky to get the subwoofer's placement, crossover point, and volume level correct, as it changes from room to room and also varies on the listening position. And if the satellites are too small?the Energy system is pushing it here, at least on paper?you'll hear a hole in the upper bass and lower midrange region no matter what, simply because the satellite's woofer is too small to deliver enough full bodied response, and because at high crossover points, you'll be able to hear where the subwoofer is placed.

Performance and Conclusions
Fortunately, the Energy Take Classic 5.1 system avoids the above pitfalls. It delivers stellar performance, especially considering its reduced $400 price. In my tests, the satellites sounded clear and transparent, with a surprisingly natural-sounding midrange, and a reasonable level of detail for such a small speaker. The highs were airy and free of noticeable coloration, if a bit forward. I preferred the sound with the cloth grilles off, but that's a personal decision; I never find them 100 percent acoustically neutral, but I could be in the minority there. Down low, the subwoofer delivered serious extension and punch considering its size. With The Knife's "Silent Shout," our standard test music track for bass response, the system had no problem rendering the punchy 808-style kick drum and low-end synthesizer bass separately and distinctly.

To test the Energy Take Classic 5.1's home theater prowess, I used scenes from the the 2010 DTS Demonstration Blu-Ray Disc, and ran them through a Samsung BD-D5500 ($159.99, 3.5 stars) Blu-ray player and a Sony Bravia KDL-46EX620 ($809.99, 3.5 stars) LED-backlit HDTV. Arrow shots, voices, and horse gallops had sufficient clarity and distinction in Robin Hood (the 2010 film with Russell Crowe), and the Take Classic 5.1 had no problem rendering almost a dozen sound sources simultaneously throughout the sound field. In the DTS-encoded Despicable Me, the Take Classic 5.1 rendered the boom of the rocket ships and the low rumble while in flight, all while maintaining clear dialog and detailed sound effects throughout.

I initially ran into some trouble getting the right amount of kick out of the subwoofer, though that's typical of this type of system. Depending on the positioning, the subwoofer tended to sound a little soft and boomy, but only in terms of pure kick drum punch. The key in those situations is to turn the volume dial down, perhaps a little more than you'd expect, in order to get a balanced sound where the subwoofer doesn't call undue attention to itself. Ideally, though, spend the time to place it properly, as it pays off in dividends.

Overall, the Energy Take Classic 5.1 speaker system is an excellent buy, and could easily keep you happy for years. I'd be content just listening to music on it, which is not what I would say about many home theater-focused 5.1 subwoofer and satellite systems in the Take Classic 5.1's price range. A proper full-range tower or even bookshelf speaker will still deliver the ultimate in natural, balanced response, and don't need the serious kick and low-end extension of a powered subwoofer?NHT, Paradigm, and PSB are great places to start, although there are countless others. But for an ideal combination of home theater performance and music playback in this price range, the Take Classic 5.1 delivers.

More Speaker Reviews:
??? Monster Clarity HD Model One
??? Energy Take Classic 5.1
??? Nuforce Cube
??? Libratone Live
??? M-Audio BX5 D2
?? more

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Cervical cancer. How to make this an extinct problem. | Dr. Leslie ...

Many cancers are difficult to prevent, detect or cure? none of these are true of cervical cancer.? Women need to have regular medical testing and vaccination (if age-appropriate).

What is cervical cancer?? The cervix is the lower part of the uterus?the part that connects with the vagina.? The cervix can be affected by sexually transmitted infections, including the human papillomavirus (HPV), which is thought to be a precursor to cervical cancer.? Cervical cancer can occur in women of any age.

The ?Pap? test was introduced in the 1950s.? During this test, cells from the end of the cervix are brushed and put into a specimen container.? The Pap does not detect cancer of the uterus, ovaries, or any other part of the body.

We now know that abnormal cervical cells are usually caused by HPV.? In some cases, the body fights off the HPV?and clears it.? In others, the HPV causes genital warts and changes of cervical cells.

Cervical cancer takes years to develop and has NO symptoms.? Women should have a Pap test taken beginning at age 21 and may need a follow-up test more of less often than each year.

A vaccine to prevent HPV?infection has become available in recent years.? The vaccine protects against four types of HPV, but not all.?? The Centers for Disease Control recommends that Gardasil be given to girls at age 11, or up to age 26 if not previously vaccinated.

Vaccinate.? Pap.? Be aware.

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I have been practicing as a family physician for 15 years--as both an educator of physicians and clinician. From infancy to the elderly, I perform obstetrics and general medicine. I love my career and am passionate about my field of knowledge and my patients. Follow me on Facebook at Leslie Md Greenberg Medical Disclaimer The content of this website is provided for general informational purposes only and is not intended as, nor should it be considered a substitute for, professional medical advice. Do not use the information on this website for diagnosing or treating any medical or health condition. If you have or suspect you have a medical problem, promptly contact your professional healthcare provider. This entry was posted in Uncategorized, Pediatrics, Women's Health, Vaccines, pap test and tagged wichita, kansas, Andover, Dr. Greenberg, Dr. Leslie Greenberg, Family Medicine, Family Doctor, family physician, pap, cervical cancer, gardasil. Bookmark the permalink.

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বুধবার, ২৭ জুন, ২০১২

T-Mobile to offer prepaid and monthly4G service at participating Dollar General stores

TMobile to offer prepaid and monthly4G plans at participating Dollar General storesDon't let Carly's leather skinsuit fool you -- Magenta may be rebranding with a focus on high-speed network flash, but it hasn't forgotten the budget base it's built upon. Starting this July, the operator's bringing its prepaid and monthly4G no contract plans to shoppers at over 6,000 Dollar General stores. Cost-conscious consumers that take the plunge won't have the luxury of cherry-picking their chosen device, though, as only Samsung's t139 (a modest flip phone, remember those?) will be on offer. Need to know more? Then click on past the break for the official presser.

Continue reading T-Mobile to offer prepaid and monthly4G service at participating Dollar General stores

T-Mobile to offer prepaid and monthly4G service at participating Dollar General stores originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jun 2012 22:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Designated Greek finance minister resigns

Louisa Gouliamaki / AFP - Getty Images

This file photo taken on June 21, 2012 shows newly appointed Greek Finance Minister Vassilis Rapanos attending the new Government's first cabinet meeting at the Greek Parliament in Athens.

By msnbc.com staff and news wires

Vassilis Rapanos, Greece's finance minister-designate, resigned Monday after being hospitalized for several days even before he could be sworn in to what would likely be one of the more thankless jobs in international finance.

The?office of Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaris?said it accepted?Rapanos' resignation after receiving a letter from the ailing official, who is 64. Rapanos had been rushed to the hospital Friday after complaining about dizziness and abdominal pains. He was to be released from hospital on Tuesday, but no further details were available.

His resignation tosses a monkey wrench, for now,?into Greek plans to renegotiate?the crippling austerity program it agreed?to in exchange for aid to prop up its debt-burdened economy.?

Samaras himself was released from hospital Monday after undergoing eye surgery to repair a detached retina over the weekend, but will have to stay home for several days.

Rapanos' resignation?came as Germany tamped down expectations that this week's European Union summit Thursday and Friday would emerge with any significant action on Greece.

The EU summit?comes just a week after Greece's new coalition government was formed following months of political turmoil and two inconclusive elections. It was to have been a key test of Athens' hopes of renegotiating some of the austerity measures it has agreed to in return for billions of euros in rescue loans from the International Monetary Fund and other European Union nations that use the joint euro currency.

It was to have been preceded by a visit to Athens starting Monday of Greece's debt inspectors, known as the Troika ? representatives from the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF. But that visit was postponed until Samaras can recover.

Without the troika report on Greece's progress in economic reforms required by its international bailout, Germany said it would be premature to expect any new decisions this week. Samaras has been pressing Greece's creditors to revise the bailout deal, which is despised by many ordinary Greeks.

Greece will still be present at the EU summit, sending a delegation with outgoing Finance Minister Giorgos Zanias, one of the key negotiators in Greece's bailout agreement. As Rapanos fell ill before he could be sworn in, Zanias still holds the title.

And the delegation will be led by the country's president, 83-year-old Karolos Papoulias, the government announced Monday. While the presidency in Greece is a largely ceremonial post, his presence would adhere to EU regulations about summits.

It was unclear when the postponed troika visit would take place.

"First, our concern is for the health of the prime minister and finance minister," European Commission spokesman Amadeu Altafaj Tardio said in Brussels, adding that debt inspectors would head to Greece "as soon as possible."

Samaras' government, comprised of his New Democracy conservatives, their long-time socialist rivals PASOK and the small Democratic Left party, has issued a policy statement outlining changes it would like to make to the terms of its international bailout. Those include repealing certain tax hikes, freezing public sector layoffs and extending by two years the mid-2014 deadline for tough austerity measures.

Whether Greece can amend the terms of its loan agreement will depend on how the proposals are viewed by its international creditors. Germany, the largest single contributor to eurozone bailouts, has repeatedly said Athens must stick to its austerity pledges.

"One thing is clear," German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said from Luxembourg. "We cannot allow everything to be negotiated again. We can also not allow discounts to be granted. What has been decided upon stands. That the (Greek) election campaigns have cost time is obvious. That's the situation and we have to deal with it. But the fact remains that the agreements must be implemented."

Seibert also stressed that Greece must stick to its commitments.

"A program has been agreed upon, a program goes for every government, no matter if it's a new government, and the program is the best way to see Greece return to economic health," he said.

In Brussels, Altafaj Tardio also stressed that "Greece has to face its financial obligations," adding that before any further funds can be disbursed "there has to be a thorough analysis."

"It's no secret that there have been delays in several areas of implementation," he added.

The latest figures released by the finance ministry Monday showed that Greece's budget deficit for the first five months of the year was better than expected, standing at ?10.87 billion ($13.63 billion) instead of the target of ?12.89 billion ($16.17 billion) on a modified cash basis.

Revenue, however, was below target with the state budget net revenue standing at ?19.67 billion ($24.56 billion), ?926 million ($1.15 billion) short of the targeted ?20.6 billion ($25.73 billion), due in part to lower domestic consumer demand and lower tax revenues.

The ministry said "this revenue shortfall was more than compensated for by the savings in State Budget expenditures for the first five months of 2012."

Reuters contributed to this report.??

CNBC's Michelle Caruso-Cabrera reports that Greece's finance minister will resign. And Greece hopes to name a new finance minister today or tomorrow.

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৬ জুন, ২০১২

Dumped after Coldplay?! Tales of first concerts

By TODAY.com staff

Firsts are always memorable, even when they don't deserve to be. Your first kiss may not be the best ever, but you'll know till your dying day where and with whom it happened. Ditto for first concerts. Very few of us saw The Beatles at The Cavern Club for our first show, we were much more likely to catch The Police in a soccer stadium or Tiffany at the mall. Those memories fade a little -- you may not remember who went with you or how much the ticket was --?but the song remains the same. Travel down a musical memory lane with us, and share your own first concert experience.

Coldplay,?George, Wa., July 2009
It was a balmy summer evening at the breathtakingly beautiful Gorge Amphitheater in central Washington State when the British pop-rockers Coldplay took to the stage. In front of a golden sunset that descended upon the twisting Columbia River and its surrounding canyons, we sat on the terraced lawn listening to the soaring melodies of ?Viva La Vida? and the pitch-perfect ballad, ?Yellow.?? Like all good things, it came to an end. This, however, was a harshly abrupt end. Near the finale, a drunken duo couldn?t quite keep from spilling their beers on us; then on the drive home,?my girlfriend?decided to break up with me -- apparently the summer is no time for stifling relationships.?So let me start over: On an ominous evening where the harsh waters of the Columbia River crashed into its surrounding canyons, I waited for the washed-out Chris Martin to deliver yet another contrived ballad created with the sole purpose of consoling sexually frustrated middle-age women who deal with their depression with a?bottle of white wine and a ?Viva La Vida? CD. I?ve had better evenings.??? --Cody Delistraty

The Dazz Band and Berlin, Disneyland, May 1983
One of the many benefits of being a California girl is the high school graduation ritual that is Grad Nite. Each year, seniors from schools around the state load up in buses and?head to?Anaheim to be locked into Disneyland for the night to enjoy the rides and several concerts. At daybreak, the tired masses stumble back on the bus for a long, (in my case a 400-mile drive back to the Bay Area) sleep-filled drive home. That night, there were several acts performing, but I attended two. Being a stone-cold R&B fan, my first pick was The Dazz Band. The Cleveland-based funk group were riding high on the charts with their hit single, ?Let It Whip,?and since I was there to have ?big fun,? oh, yeah, I let it whip! To this day, whenever I hear that song, I think of dancing with a couple of hundred of my new best friends in my best big-shouldered ?80s dress (girls had to wear dresses for Grad Nite back in the day). Next on the concert ticket was Berlin, one of the many emerging New Wave-synch pop bands of the early ?80s. Thanks to MTV, which was brand new to the TV dial at the time, I fell in love with New Wave. Berlin, fronted by the very cool Terri Nunn, would go on to score a huge hit with ?You Take My Breath Away? later in the decade, but that night their show-stopper was ?The Metro.??It would be many, many years later until I rode le Metro in Paris, but yes, that song came into my head, as well as a cherished memory of one night in The Happiest Place on Earth.??? --Denise Hazlick

Jason Kempin / Getty Images

Singer Mike Score of Flock Of Seagulls performs in 2012. Sadly, a hat covers his once-famous 1980s hair.

The Police/Flock of Seagulls/The Fixx, Rochester, N.Y., August 1983
When I was growing up in Rochester, N.Y., I could hear the music when bands played Holleder Stadium, three blocks from my house. I remember Deadheads sitting on our front lawn. And I remember my first show inside the stadium, where I had only ever been to see the Rochester Lancers soccer team play. The Police were on their 1983 ?Synchronicity" tour and the regular set list included all the hits you would expect -? ?Every Breath You Take,? ?King of Pain,? ?Wrapped Around Your Finger? and so on. The tour T-shirt remains iconic to me with its red, blue and yellow slashes of color. As a 14-year-old skateboarder at the time, I think the opening bands were a bigger draw for me. The Fixx and Flock of Seagulls were new wave heavyweights and were in heavy rotation on MTV. I can?t remember if Seagulls? lead singer Mike Score?s amazing hair was visible from my seat at the show. But the Internet coughed up a copy of the ticket, and $15 sure sounds like a deal today.?? ?-Kurt Schlosser

Chicago, St. Paul, Minn., 1985
Does anybody really know what time it is? Does anybody really care? Does anybody really know if my first concert was in 1984 or 1985? At the St. Paul Civic Center, or the St. Paul Auditorium? Those details have faded, but I know the band was Chicago, the album was ?Chicago 17,? and I?m pretty sure I went with my best high-school friend Kate. I?m also pretty sure her parents dropped us off and picked us up since neither of us were old enough to drive. Admittedly, looking back, Chicago wasn?t the coolest band to claim as your first concert. Born the same year as me, 1967, they?ve been around forever, prominently feature horns, and are a staple of light-rock stations and dental offices. ?In short, they?re no Clash. But they?re also second only to the Beach Boys in Billboard singles and album chart success, so take that, cool kids! You know our love was meant to beeeeeeee ? the kind of love to last forever.??? ?-Gael Fashingbauer Cooper

Jason Kempin / Getty Images

Singer Tiffany, known for her 1980s mall concerts, performs in 2012.

Tiffany, Pittsburgh, Pa., April 1988
If I had known that ?what was your first concert?? would become a common icebreaker once adulthood struck, I might have made a more careful choice. But that was the furthest thing from my mind in the late 1980s, when I was all about a certain pop singer who went by one name. No, not Madonna. Tiffany. The events leading up to the concert and the show itself are fuzzy memories. I do recall my mother reacting to one of Tiffany?s hit songs -- ?I Saw Him Standing There? ? with two words: ?Awful, Courtney.? ?Too young to understand that it was a total bastardization of the Beatles song of the same name, I was entranced by the sheer pop quality of it, and the thought of seeing her perform it live? It was Christmas come early. So it?s ironic that I don?t remember the concert per se, but I do remember one important fact. It was my dad who took me and my friend to the actual show. Robert Hazlett sat patiently by our sides as we screamed and sang, disappeared just long enough to make us feel grown up, and bought what I?m sure was a very overpriced T-shirt to commemorate the event. ?So while I?m a little mortified that the answer to this question will forever be an artist who was a total flash in the pan, I am happy about the rest of the memory ? that it was my dad who made it all happen.??? --Courtney Hazlett

Air Supply, Columbia, Md., 1982
I?was 12 and couldn?t exactly drive myself to the venue. That meant whatever rock concert I was going to go to had to come with mom?s stamp of approval. Fortunately, Air Supply was the very definition of mom-approved rock. And heck, I was pre-adolescent and hormonal and just loved all of their deeply sappy love songs with a passion. To top it all off, I was in an Australo-philia phase and was working on finding ways to work lingo like ?wowser? into my daily vocabulary, so the fact that they were from Down Under made them even more exciting. I went with my friend Valerie and both of our moms to Merriweather Post Pavillion in Columbia, Md., and the first thing we did was purchase a $10 T-shirt in the parking lot, a shirt which I described in great detail ?- along with a drawing of the Outback-themed stage set ?- in my diary later on. Yes, the dreary Livingston Taylor may have been the opening act, but otherwise the show had everything I could have hoped for: Lasers, moving platforms, and, of course, those deeply sappy love songs. Air Supply rocked (softly) for a couple of hours, and as I told my diary later, ?I had the time of my life. Oh, yes, I also got a big program for $6.???? --Randee Dawn

Nelson, Seattle, 1991
I was the ripe old age of 12 when I attended my first concert with my best pals Bridget and Vilde -- and Bridget?s dad. I remember the three of us jumping up and down on our seats (we weren?t very tall for 12 year olds), screaming the lyrics back at the pair of beautiful, blond, identical twin boys on stage and loving every second of it. And after the show, we dropped way too much cash on some cheesy looking concert T-shirts. (In fact, it was this one that I bought:? If only I had kept it, I could sell it today for nearly twice the price I paid!) Sure, Nelson may not have maintained their ?cool band? status (some might even argue they were never cool to begin with, but whatever), but after all these years, I can still remember the majority of the lyrics from their debut album and adore it ?More Than Ever? even though my musical tastes moved on long ago.?? --Anna Chan

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Richard Marx,?Concord, Calif.?1989
I?ll admit that my concert track record hasn?t always been the greatest. My first concert was Richard Marx?s 1989 ?Repeat Offender? tour ?- where I was less impressed with the music than I was in trying to impress the two older guys ? senior basketball players! ? who let me tag along. From there, I made a few more questionable choices ?- Milli Vanilli (turns out they WERE lip-syncing!) and New Kids on the Block (a friend made me go, I swear). I made up for it later by scoring fourth-row tickets to Madonna?s 1990 ?Blond Ambition? tour. You just haven?t seen anything until you?ve had a closeup view of Madonna wearing breast cones and gyrating on a red velvet bed. But the concert-going pinnacle of my teen years was Dec. 31, 1991, when rising stars Pearl Jam and Nirvana opened for the Red Hot Chili Peppers at the San Francisco Cow Palace. Who could have predicted then that grunge would eventually lead me to my current home in Seattle????? --Joy Jernigan

Kansas/Loverboy, LaCrosse, Wisc., 1981
Wow, a famous band like Kansas and a hot, new, up-and-coming band like Loverboy were going to play the first big rock concert in the new LaCrosse Center, and I had a ticket! ?By the time my friend Steve?s parents dropped us off, Loverboy was already playing. Mike Reno was energetically running around the stage while his cohorts rocked the crowd. Then, during an extended version of ?Working for the Weekend,? Mike and guitarist Paul Dean began pitting the left side of the audience against the right side, ?C?mon you guys, you?re louder than them?.? I remember only?two things about Kansas, the guy who played the violin had like crazy long hippy hair, and wow, he played the violin a lot.??? --David Gostisha

What was your first concert? Where was it, and who went with you? Share your musical memories on Facebook.

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Paleo Diet - Key To Susan's Journey To Health

Written by Susan Thomas:

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Dear Robb:

I wrote my first draft the old-fashioned way with pen and paper.? Not just any paper, mind you.? I wrote in my trusty journal where I track everything from my WOD?s, to the food I eat, and many, many thoughts, feelings, and desires in between.

I was honored when you asked for my story.? Yours resonated with me immediately; especially upon hearing your mother also has SLE.? We have actually spoken (or skyped, as it were) about two years ago in a nutritional seminar where you suggested I increase my fat intake in the morning.? I was counting salmon pills as a fat.? You correctly pointed out that it was a supplement.? I digress.

My story started long ago, when I was about 11 years old.? I started to loose weight and generally felt awful.? When the doctors ordered blood tests, it was discovered that my blood count was abnormal.? In fact, it was so low that I was hospitalized almost immediately.? For the following year, I was in and out of the hospital.? No treatments seemed to help the ?blood disorder?.? The doctors ordered a bone marrow test because they were convinced it was leukemia.? Just before I had the test, I had a normal blood test.? I don?t remember much from that time.? My roommate died in the bed beside me, which stays vivid to this day.? The only other memory was the pain.? Even the gentlest touch hurt.

Fast forward about six years.? The sick 11 year old has grown into an active healthy teenager.? Then I started to get these awful, painful, swollen red lumps on my claves about the size of golf balls.? They would come and go, but my doctor could not seem to pin down a cause.

Over the next decade, the lumps would continue to come and go.? It is called Erythema Nodosum and is relatively harmless.? I had one biopsied.? The only comment the doctor made was that I had a positive ANA test at the time.? It meant nothing really, according to the doctor.? False positives happen all the time.

A few years later, I contracted a viral infection.? The worst side effect was loosing my voice for a week.? My husband thought this was wonderful.

It was strange though, because I didn?t bounce back.? I was always fatigued, loosing weight and it literally hurt to touch me.? It reminded me so much of how I felt as a child with that ?blood disorder?.? I also had a severe pain in my lower back.?? I saw my family doctor who diagnosed depression.? I left his office with a prescription for anti-depressants.

The symptoms did not improve with the medication.? In fact, they got worse.? I was always feverish and the pain in my lower back was excruciating.? I finally went to the emergency room.? They put me in a room and started me on intravenous morphine.? The pain dulled slightly.? After a battery of tests determined there was fluid near my kidneys, they called in the OBGYN.

As you mention in your book, autoimmune disease is often interconnected.? I had endometriosis pretty much since initial menstruation.? I had already had two laparoscopic surgeries by this point so the logical thing to do was call in the gyno.? He couldn?t tell what was causing the fluid, so he booked an OR for the following morning.

I woke up from the surgery to find the pain in my back had subsided.? The doctor had removed more endometriosis and drained the fluid.? ?Idiopathic? was the term he used for the fluid.? Translation: ?I have no idea what caused it.?

After another few days in the hospital, I was anxious to get out.? I had started a new position within the bank as an investment specialist and was missing some very valuable training on trusts and estates.? My husband took me from the hospital and drove me to the training centre.? I finished the course in a wheelchair.

I came home 5 days later to have my symptoms return, only worse.? The pain was unbearable.? We returned to the hospital and discovered the idiopathic fluid was again, floating around my kidneys.? The IV was inserted and the morphine pumped into my veins, but nothing seemed to help.? Once again, the doctor performed a laparoscopy to remove the free floating fluid.? I was in the hospital over two weeks before they sent me home.

I wasn?t home a week when my fever spiked, the pain worsened and we were once again, off to the hospital.? By now, my blood cell count was abnormal.? The doctors were checking for lymphoma.? All I wanted to do was simply die to escape the pain.? Of course, the fluid was back.? The final surgery was assisted by an urologist.? It wasn?t by laparoscope either.?? They cut me open, removed my left ovary, fallopian tube and part of my peritoneum.

All told, I had 6 admissions and spent over 6 months in the hospital.? I couldn?t do my new job and subsequently lost it.? I didn?t care though.? I was convinced I was going to die.

I was taking long term morphine, statex (short term) morphine, and duragesic patches but nothing worked on the pain in my back.? As one doctor remarked, ?You take enough painkillers to tranquilize a horse.? How on earth are you able to carry on a conversation??

I was bed ridden another year.? I couldn?t even go to the washroom unassisted.? We?d seen every specialist it seemed, but no one could find out what was wrong.? My family doctor finally referred me to my rheumatologist.? He took the massive file I brought and set it aside.? ?I?d like to examine you first.?? He said.? ?So the other doctor?s opinions do not cloud my judgement.?

That appointment changed my life.? He said, ?I think you have lupus? and injected me with Depo-medrol to get the immediate symptoms under control.? I also started several medications including Plaquenil, an anti-malarial, NSAIDS and immune suppressants.

6 months later, I could get out of bed.? I started to take my ?trusty sidekick?, (as I like to call him) our big loveable mutt, who never left my side out for walks.? He was patient.? I counted my progress by streetlights.? I walked to the first one and back.? Over the next month, we worked up to walking around our small block.? I then set a goal for myself to be on a volleyball court in 4 months.? I stopped taking painkillers.

I did play volleyball 4 months later.? My health continued to improve.? I had setbacks over the next few years.? The worst setback was when I herniated 3 disks in my back playing volleyball and ended up, once again, in the hospital for a few weeks.? I just thought it was my typical back pain and kept playing.

The hard part was the immune-suppressing drugs.? I couldn?t tolerate methotrexate and was weak and nauseous all the time.? The doctor switched me to an injectable form of the drug.? I injected myself Friday so I could be sick all weekend and have a relatively normal work week.? I was tired all the time and I was starting to develop cellulite on my legs.? I went to my trainer for advice.? He asked me to watch a simple you-tube video called, ?Paleo in a Nutshell?.? It made total sense.

I have been Paleo now for 3 years.? My body fat is just over 12%.? My weight is 142 lbs (I am 5?10??) and has been steady for those 3 years.? I have so much energy.? I am 41 years old and just PR?d my ?Fran? time- 4:15.? I get stopped on the street and asked what my secret is.

Most importantly though, I have stopped taking immune suppressing drugs!? I went off them in December and I hope I never need them again.

A great thing happened about 2 weeks ago.? I was at Crossfit Orillia and had just finished a WOD.? The next class was starting to filter in and among them, one of my nurses from the hospital over 10 years ago.? ?Hi Kate,? I said.? ?Remember me??? There was a look of recognition and then utter shock.

?Oh my God Susan!? she exclaimed, ?You look so good- so healthy!?? She couldn?t believe the transformation.? ?I honestly thought you weren?t going to make it.?

I honestly thought I wasn?t going to either.? The Paleo diet was the key to my journey back to health.

Thanks for listening.

Susan

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Plenty of compelling stories beyond Phelps, Lochte

Katelyn Sowinski stretches during practice at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials, Sunday, June 24, 2012, in Omaha, Neb. The trials are scheduled to start on Monday. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Katelyn Sowinski stretches during practice at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials, Sunday, June 24, 2012, in Omaha, Neb. The trials are scheduled to start on Monday. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Jessica Hardy arrives at a news conference at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials on Sunday, June 24, 2012, in Omaha, Neb. The trials are to start on Monday. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Water drips from the face of Lindsey Horejsi, 14, of Fairbault, Minn., as she takes a position on a starting block during practice at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials on Sunday, June 24, 2012, in Omaha, Neb. The trials are to start on Monday. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

An unidentified swimmer dives during practice at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials, Sunday, June 24, 2012, in Omaha, Neb. The trials are scheduled to start on Monday. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Missy Franklin speaks during a news conference at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials on Sunday, June 24, 2012, in Omaha, Neb. The trials are to start on Monday. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

(AP) ? Forty-somethings and teen phenoms.

Records and rivalries.

Comebacks and farewells.

While Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte are getting much of the attention, there's no shortage of compelling stories heading into the U.S. Olympic swimming trials, which begin Monday at a temporary pool in America's heartland.

"This is not a swim meet anymore," said Chuck Wielgus, the executive director of USA Swimming. "This is a major sporting spectacle."

With eight straight nights of primetime television coverage from the 13,200-seat CenturyLink Center Omaha, where pyrotechnics and high-tech videoboards are as much a part of the show as the pool, swimming will solidify its position as one of the glamour sports heading into London. Much of that attention can be attributed to Phelps, who won a record eight golds medals in Beijing and is the winningest Olympian ever with a total of 14 golds.

"His importance to the sport is immeasurable," said Gregg Troy, head coach of the men's team.

Phelps made more news Sunday, passing on a chance to scratch from the 400-meter individual medley, a grueling event he dropped after Beijing but brought back over the past year. That could set up a showdown with Lochte on the very first night of what Phelps says will be his final Olympic trials. He plans to retire after the London Games.

"We would like to see what he can do in the event," Phelps' coach, Bob Bowman, said in a text message to The Associated Press. "He's done a few decent ones in season, so we are taking a shot and seeing how it goes."

But the Americans have plenty of star power beyond Phelps and Lochte, who won five golds at last year's world championships ? including a sweep of both head-to-head races with Phelps.

Start with Natalie Coughlin, who's two medals away from becoming this country's most decorated female Olympic swimmer. Move on to Missy Franklin, just 17 years old but already touted as the sport's next big star. Savor the return of 40-year-old Janet Evans, now a mom with two kids attempting an improbable comeback after a decade-and-a-half retirement. Throw in Dara Torres, going for her sixth Olympic team at age 45.

"I'm so excited to be here," Franklin said Sunday. "I feel ready. I feel so prepared. I just want to get started."

She's not the only one. Brendan Hansen, one of America's greatest breaststrokers, called it a career after disappointing at the last two Olympics. But the tug of the water was just too strong, so the 30-year-old is back to try again for a more fitting capper to his career.

"My main purpose and goal for coming back was to make the Olympic team and go to the Olympics and show the world and my country what I can do," Hansen said. "The two Olympics I was in, I didn't do that."

Jessica Hardy is another swimmer with something to prove. She qualified for the Olympic team four years ago in Omaha, but had to drop out after she failed a doping test. She faced a two-year suspension and possible banishment from the London Games, but an arbitration panel ruled the positive result wasn't her fault. Her suspension was cut in half and she was cleared to swim in the Olympics if she makes the team.

"Obviously, I have a lot of traumatic feelings about being back. I'm working through those and trying to calm down," said Hardy, a world-record holder in the breaststroke. "I know a lot of people have strong opinions about me and my career. But really, I just swim for myself. I have high goals for myself and if I get close to those, I'll be happy.

One of the most intriguing figures at the trials is Anthony Ervin, who won a gold medal in the 50-meter freestyle at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, then mysteriously walked away from the sport before the next games in Athens. He sold off his gold medal to raise money for victims of the Indian Ocean tsunami, lost the relay silver he won in Australia, and generally just roamed around the country, working odd jobs, finishing college and searching for a deeper meaning to life.

Then, out of nowhere, he returned to the deck last year. Now 31, he's already put up times that stamp him as one of the top contenders in the 50 free, a chaotic dash from one end of the pool to the other.

"It's been quite a journey," Ervin said. "However the dice fall, it's been great. I'm glad I've been able to come back. There was never any intention to return to what I was."

Franklin is just getting started on her journey. She's still very much a kid, which is obvious from her excessive use of the word "awesome" and boundless enthusiasm for, well, just about everything.

"I can't wait to shave!" she proclaimed.

But Franklin, who just finished her junior year of high school, is a grown-up in the water. She won three golds and five medals overall at the 2011 worlds in Shanghai, establishing herself as America's top female hope.

Of course, Coughlin might have something to say about that. She won 11 medals over the last two Olympics, leaving her one shy of Jenny Thompson's career record, and is still a formidable force in a wide range of strokes as she approaches her 30th birthday. She's not ready for a changing of the guard just yet, even though there are teenagers coming at her from all directions.

Franklin and 18-year-old Rachel Bootsma will challenge Coughlin in the 100 backstroke, an event the veteran won at the last two Olympics. Franklin also will try to knock off Coughlin in another of her signature events, the 100 free. Nineteen-year-old Elizabeth Beisel is a serious challenger in the 200 individual medley.

"I don't think Natalie looks at it like she's going head-to-head with Missy or anybody else," said Teri McKeever, who is both Coughlin's coach and head coach of the U.S. women's team. "She's going head-to-head with Natalie. That's what the challenge is for the next eight days, for her be at her best and work on where she is now compared to 2008 or 2004. She and I have absolutely no control over what Missy or anybody else does. I don't think she spends too much time thinking about that."

___

Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

Associated Press

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সোমবার, ২৫ জুন, ২০১২

Vatican hires Fox News reporter as communications advisor

Details:

The Vatican has brought in the Fox News correspondent in Rome to help improve its communications strategy as it tries to cope with years of communications blunders and one of its most serious scandals in decades, The Associated Press learned Saturday.Greg Burke, 52, will leave Fox to become a senior communications adviser in the Vatican?s secretariat of state, the Vatican and Burke told the AP.

?I?m a bit nervous but very excited. Let?s just say it?s a challenge,? Burke said in a phone interview.

He defined his job, which he said he had been offered twice before, as: ?You?re shaping the message, you?re molding the message, and you?re trying to make sure everyone remains on-message. And that?s tough.?

The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, confirmed the move to the AP, saying Burke will help integrate communications issues within the Vatican?s top administrative office, the secretariat of state, and will help handle its relations with the Holy See press office and other Vatican communications offices.

Burke, a native of St. Louis, Missouri, is a member of the conservative Opus Dei movement. Pope John Paul II?s longtime spokesman, Joaquin Navarro-Valls, was also a member of Opus Dei.

Read more.

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Are Working Moms Healthier and Happier? | FYI BeHealthy

by

Posted 06/23/12 1:50 PM ET


WebMD Medical News


Are Working Moms Healthier and Happier?

WebMD does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See additional information.

This entry was posted in Parenting, Parenting and Pregnancy and tagged Parenting by . Bookmark the permalink.

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Football Trumps the Euro

This evening in the European soccer championships? quarterfinals, the country where I was born in 1958 (England) plays the country where I have lived since 1998 (Italy).

Whom do I support? England, for one simple reason: I am English. But even when Italy is playing some other nation, I want Italy to lose because I love nothing better than winding up Italians!

I have lived and worked in Italy for years and am married to an Italian. But that makes no difference. I do not feel in the slightest bit Italian, let alone European. I could even become an Italian citizen if I wanted to because I have been here so long. Does the idea interest me? You must be joking. Italians may be great fun on the beach or on the dance floor for a few days when you are on holiday, but try living and working cheek-by-jowl with them day after day. If that makes me a racist, then so is every other normal human being in any of the 27 nations that make up what is so dishonestly called the European Union. And let?s not get started on the Germans. Although Greece lost, the entire continent wanted the bossy Krauts to lose to the poor Greeks in another quarterfinal on Friday.

?Here is why there will never be a United States of Europe: People are more loyal to their nation than to their class.?

So when England wins tonight and my team proceeds to the semifinals in this year of my Queen?s Diamond Jubilee to play the Germans?whom they will also defeat?I shall go immediately after the final whistle to celebrate at La Petit Arquebuse, the radical-chic bistro below my office in Forl? where all the champagne commies go.

I shall stride into La Petit with my head held high, brandishing a Union Jack, and singing the triumphal chorus of ?Rule, Britannia!? at full throttle.

After being off the booze for nearly a year now, I shall probably reward myself with a very large glass of red wine. Or two. Why not? I deserve it simply for being born an Englishman.

And just to irk all those bourgeois lefties who have swapped the European Union for the Soviet Union as the totem pole around which they dance, I shall belt out a few rousing choruses from other patriotic songs such as ?Land of Hope and Glory.?

And when I have done singing and trotted out the joke about Italian tanks having five gears?one for going forward and four for reversing?I shall say to the Italians in La Petit: ?Hey guys, why all the long faces? You?re Europeans now, not Italians, no??

Clearly, if I were to do any of this I would risk ?having the shit kicked out of me,? as they say in London?s rougher parts?even if it?s by a bunch of Italian champagne commies who define themselves as pacifists whenever America sends in its military.


Copyright 2012 TakiMag.com and the author. This copy is for your personal, noncommercial use only. You can order reprints for distribution by contacting us at editors@takimag.com.

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Vern Buchanan, GOP Rep, Dodges Questions About Ethics Probe (VIDEO)

An influential three-term congressman dodged questions about alleged ethics violations he committed while running for office.

According to CNN, Vern Buchanan is facing allegations that he tried steal money from car dealerships he owned to use for his own political campaigns. He also being accused of attempting to silence a witness --former business partner Sam Kazran--to the alleged finance fraud.

CNN on Saturday attempted to interview him about the allegations, but he remained tight-lipped.

"I wanted to ask you about this deal with Sam Kazran. Did you make him sign this affidavit to try to get him to sign this affidavit with this campaign cash scheme," asked CNN's Drew Griffin.

"No ... I got to get to another meeting, you can call my office," he said.

Griffin followed Buchanan down the hallway, asking more questions about the invesigation, but the congressman repeated: "Just call my office."

Buchanan is in charge of fundraising for the RCCC. He is also one of the richest members of Congress. Last month, an ethics panel found that he may have broken laws in trying to get Kazran to lie to the FEC.

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শনিবার, ২৩ জুন, ২০১২

call centre services, telemarketing services, business sales | B2B ...

b2b telemarketingThese days, more and more businesses want to target companies that are residing in Australian soil. One of the main reasons why this is so is because the country has been widely known for its lush economy. As such, many companies within the land down under has already claimed a stable financial standing and would therefore be great business partners.

In order to reach these companies, many have used various marketing methods in order to get the word across the Australian country about their products, services, and most importantly their brand name. With these marketing methods, there are those means that stand out from above the rest. One such marketing method that proves its greatness time and time again is the process of telemarketing.

Through telemarketing, a business can reach companies in Australia in just a few presses of the buttons on the telephone. As such, travel costs will be put down to a very small amount. Business owners no longer have to pay a very large amount of money for travel fare as they can talk to their prospects in the comforts of their own office chairs.

Telemarketing is a very good asset to have when targeting Australian companies. Still, one should not give in to the temptation to bringing up the campaign in-house if they are in a tight budget. Sure the initial costs for the campaign to be brought up may be low;however, it always needs the right supples and the right technologies in order to make the campaign run smoothly. Hence, business owners may be spending more for their campaign than it is making money for them.

The best solution to go about telemarketing in Australia is to outsource it to an outbound call centre. Through these outsourced telemarketing services, a business owner?s headaches can be lessened out thoroughly. For one thing, they no longer have to think about their telemarketing campaign too much as it is now in the hands of capable telemarketers.

With these outsourced call centre services, telemarketing costs can be brought down to a siginificant amount. Some examples of the costs that are lessened thoroughly are:

  1. training
  2. travel
  3. supplies
  4. utilities
  5. office space

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These savings are some of the reasons why these outsourced telemarketing services are better than bringing the campaign in-house.

Aside from the benefit wherein businesses can save a ton of money for their telemarketing campaign, these third party companies also use privacy-compliant lists when targeting companies in Australia. These lists contain leads and prospects that have been carefully gathered and checked (and even rechecked) if a specific entry can be located in the Australian Do-Not-Call Registry. If a particular entry has a match within the registry, then these providers make sure to not call them in order to protect their client?le?s name.

Through the list that they use, telemarketing in Australia can be dealt with much ease. Business owners no longer have to spend more hours in their important days thinking about how to reach these Australian companies as the call centre can take care of that challenge. They can then think about other important matters for their organizations so that it maintains its competitive standing over other firms.

Getting these outsourced services for one?s telemarketing campaign is provides a huge benefit to just about any business that gets the aid of these call centres. Through these services, targeting Australian companies for one?s marketing campaign has never been this stress free.

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'Brave,' 'Hunger Games' And The History Of Lady Archers

As Princess Merida joins the big-screen leagues of Katniss Everdeen, we look at the sport's storied past, in Hobnobbing.
By Amy Wilkinson


Jennifer Lawrence in "The Hunger Games"
Photo:

A fiery bow-and-arrow-wielding heroine not named Katniss Everdeen? Color us intrigued!

This weekend, Pixar will take aim at the box-office bull's-eye with its first foray into the fairy-tale princess pic. "Brave" follows a young Scottish royal named Merida, who bucks her parents' wishes, insisting on paving her own path — with bow firmly in hand.

Of course, the animated flick is only the latest this year to feature an adept bow-woman (or bowman). There was Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner) in "The Avengers," William (Sam Claflin) in "Snow White and the Huntsman" and, our obvious favorite, Katniss (Jennifer Lawrence) in "The Hunger Games." Unsurprisingly, this slew of big-screen portrayals has helped revive interest in the ancient sport, with more and more amateur archers sizing up their targets.

But let's be clear about one thing: Bow-besotted babes are nothing new. Lady archers have been around practically since the dawn of time. Follow me down their storied path:

Like most grand ideas, the concept of a woman and her bow has roots in Greek mythology. "Amazon" may be a compliment for a leggy lady nowadays, but maybe it shouldn't be, considering the ancient archers were often depicted with their left breast cut off to make wielding their weaponry simpler. The Greek goddess of the hunt, Artemis, was also frequently pictured holding a bow and arrow (sans missing mammary glands).

Throughout the Middle Ages, archery served dual purposes: fending off enemies and hunting prey for sustenance. But by the Elizabethan era, it had become a posh pastime, with proper ladies learning the sport — along with dancing and riding — as part of their studies. (P.E. was soooo much cooler back then.) In fact, Queen Elizabeth I herself (daughter of Henry VIII) is said to have been a skilled archer.

A few hundred years later, the sport made its Olympics debut in 1900, with women taking up arms at the 1904 games. The event took a hiatus from the Games between 1920 and 1972, reappearing at the Munich Olympics. And while plenty of Hollywood heavyweights have learned the skill for a movie, one took it upon herself to learn for the sport of it. Actress Geena Davis made it all the way to the semifinal rounds of the Olympic trials in 1999, hoping to compete in the 2000 games in Sydney. The games and a gold medal were not in Davis' future, but she already has one gilded goody (namely, an Oscar) to console herself.

And speaking of actresses and archery, the last few decades have offered up a bumper crop of bow roles, from Gwyneth Paltrow in "Emma" to Saoirse Ronan in "Hannah." And, of course, Lawrence in "The Hunger Games."

All we have so say is, may the odds be ever in your favor, lady archers!

Is Katniss your favorite fictional archer? Do you plan to see "Brave" this weekend? Sound off in the comments below and tweet me @amymwilk with your thoughts and suggestions for future columns!

Earlier "Hunger Games" columns:
» "Catching Fire" In IMAX: Time To Embrace The Big, Big Screen?
» "Hunger Games": Five Things We Learned At Movie Awards
» How "Catching Fire" Could Set Taylor Kitsch's Career Ablaze
» "Hunger Games" At The Movie Awards: Dos And Don'ts
» "Catching Fire" Countdown: What to Watch While You Wait

Check out everything we've got on "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire."

For young Hollywood news, fashion and "Twilight" updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com.

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Can the Florida Keys school district get any weirder? ? You betcha!

Two finalists for school superintendent announced

Anne Constable | The New Mexican
Posted: Friday, June 22, 2012 -

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On Friday, the Santa Fe Public Schools Board of Education announced two finalists for the position of superintendent.
They are Michael McKie, of Missouri City, Texas, currently the assistant superintendent for the Fort Bend Independent School District in Sugar Land, Texas and Joel Boyd, of Philadelphia, Pa., who is currently assistant superintendent for the School District of Philadelphia.

Meaning, Jesus Jara was eliminated from getting that job. That sure puts our school board members in the crosshairs. Our superintendent has no job waiting elsewhere. He has a wife and children living in the Miami area. Would you pick him from the 5 candidate shortlist based solely on his job performance in this school district, if you were on the school board? I might, but not because I felt he deserrved it. I might do it to let him prove to everyone in the Keys that this school district is systmetically dysfunctional and the only way to straighten it out is to eliminate the school board and superintendent?s say so in how this school district operates. The only way I see to do that in a way that allows for self-determination staying in the Keys is for each school to vote to be a charter school.

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On Jara not getting the Santa Fe job and the superintendent seleciton, this in The Key West Citizen today:

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Public to meet school finalists

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The Monroe County School Board, along with the rest of the county, will get a first look this week at four of the five finalists in the running to become the district?s first-ever hired superintendent.
Superintendent Jesus Jara, appointed by the governor in August, joins four educators who will meet the public starting 5:30 p.m. Monday at First State Bank at 1201 Simonton St. in Key West. The board-hosted reception will last until 7:30 p.m.
?The only one we know is Dr. Jara,? said board Chairman John Dick. ?The other candidates will all be new for me. That will be my first time speaking with them on Monday.?
The Florida Keys is now the only place where Jara remains a contender for a superintendent job.
On Thursday, he withdrew his name from the schools chief selection in Santa Fe, N.M., after going through a series of interviews along with five other semifinalists.
?I just felt it wasn?t meant to be for me to be there,? Jara said Friday, while on the road back to South Florida.
Last Monday, Jara lost out on his bid to run public schools in Springfield, Mass. Springfield?s school committee instead voted 5-2 for an insider who has worked there for 37 years.
All of the finalists for Monroe County schools chief are men. They are Jara, and:
? Edward Shine, who is retiring from the superintendent?s job in Rye City, N.Y., after 16 years there;
? Mark Porter, formerly of the South Washington County School District, where the school board in December voted not to renew his contract;
? Shannon Goodsell, superintendent of Tahlequah Public Schools in northeastern Oklahoma; and
? Thomas Gay, president/CEO of the Quality Schools Group, which runs a private school in Broward County.
The five will take part in an interviewing blitz this week, culminating with Thursday?s 2 p.m. board meeting at Marathon High School, where the panel plans to select a superintendent.
?I don?t believe we will go home Thursday until we come up with someone we make an offer to,? said Dick. ?There won?t be any contract offer on Thursday. We have a committee that will work with this person to determine a contract.?
That three-person committee comprises School Board member Robin Smith-Martin, City Attorney Shawn Smith,sunand Monroe County Clerk Danny Kolhage.
The school?s attorneys will write the language of the contract, while the committee will negotiate the deal.
Aug. 1 is the start date for the new superintendent, who will make between $125,000 and $150,000.
?You never know,? said Dick. ?Sometimes they don?t come to agreements. We should have a second choice and maybe even a third.?

Strange comment from the school board member who all along has tried to make this a one-man race, that one man being Jesus Jara.
After Monday?s Key West reception, the superintendent search will move up U.S. 1 to Key Largo for a 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday event at Centennial Bank, 100280 Overseas Highway.
On Wednesday, the ?meet-and-greet? series heads to Marathon for a 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. event at Iberia Bank, 5601 Overseas Highway. This event is longer because each candidate will make a brief presentation and get a public question-and-answer session.

I think I will take in this event because I want to see how the candidates do on their feet, and I want to make sure each of them knows just how fucked up this school district is, which I seriously doubt anyone who matters has explained to them.
Thursday is the big final day, with board members taking turns meeting one-on-one with each candidate from 9 a.m. to noon at Marathon High School. Those interviews are closed-door and not open to the public.
The board will then go into a 2 p.m. meeting at the school?s library.

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On same topic, this from Larry Murray yesterday:

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Then this from Larry:

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Date: Fri, 22 Jun 2012 18:10:08 -0700
From: citizenlarry007@yahoo.com
Subject: Are You Serious?
To: robin.smith-martin@keysschools.com; ron.martinsb@keysschools.com; duncan.mathewson@keysschools.com; John.Dick@KeysSchools.com; andy@fishandy.com
CC: keysmyhome@hotmail.com; mhowell@keysnews.com; island@bigpinekey.com; johnlguerra@gmail.com; gfilosa@keysnews.com; skinney@keynoter.com; bigpinenews@aol.com; news@us1radio.com;
rd.boettger@gmail.com

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John:

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Are you serious? You have postponed the regular Tuesday meeting of the School Board and moved it to Thursday, styling it a ?Special Board Meeting?. However, the meeting?s speciality is quickly lost in the agenda, which characterizes the meeting as ?Regular?, which is the case.

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If you go to the agenda and read along, you learn that the last item is the selection of the Superintendent. So much for a special meeting of the School Board to make the most important decision that any School Board has in the history of Monroe County.

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You plan to start with two Closed Attorney/Client sessions and then wade through the usual items, including five budget amendments to spend money that the District does not have. There will be the usual the ?Public Comment? section which I am told will be lengthy and lively in view of Superintendent Jara?s decision today to alter the District contribution to health insurance for administrators. Also, there will be public hearings on three subjects.

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Finally, and I mean finally, after everyone is suitably exhausted, the Board will shift its attention to the selection of the superintendent. How the selection process will proceed no one knows as the Board has not chosen to share that. It should be, as my father said of WWII, ?very interesting?.

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What was wrong with having the regular School Board meeting on Tuesday as scheduled and then have a truly special meeting on Thursday dedicated exclusively to the selection of the superintendent? Were you trying to save on travel? Staff time? or what? Also, scheduling the meeting at 2:00?was that intended to limit public involvement in the selection of the first appointed superintendent?

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I guess that I should not be surprised as every other aspect of the superintendent selection process has been muddled.

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Dr. Larry Murray

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PS: Are you laying the groundwork for an age discrimination suit with your repeated public comment that you do not want a superintendent ?who will retire here.? I suspect that Larry Tyree would take some offense to that observation.

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I will be at that school board meeting because I want to see what the each of the 5 board members does with the selection of a new superintendent. I imagine the less people there, the better the 5 board members will like it.

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This also from Larry yesterday, just to me.

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Sloan:

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Earlier this evening, I attended the Leadership Monroe recruiting gathering. The glitterati were there.

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Among those in attendance was Andy Griffiths. I asked for his opinion on the Gentile CPA affair. He was emphatic in his response. His voice rose and cracked as he said that Gentile should be fired for falsifying his credentials.

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I told Andy that I would hold him to his statement. School Board members are notorious for making statements and then, when the time comes to act, they become conveniently silent. We shall see if Andy ?puts his money where his mouth is? and takes further action. The School Board meets next Thursday and that will be a very convenient opportunity to express himself publicly and to take action with regard to the Board?s sole employee.

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Larry

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It will be interesting to see if Andy follows through on what Larry reported of their conversation. Interesting, because Andy and the other four current board members knew from the Mercer Group report vetting Gentile?s resume that the Mercer Group could not verify Gentile was a Florida CPA. Yet Andy and the other 4 board members voted to hire Gentile. Looks to me Andy needs to fire Andy.

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Larry told me last night, on US 1 Radio Morning Magazine yeterday, John Dick said he could not remember if he had read the Mercer Group?s report. I said baloney, the school board knew what was in the Mercer report and they hired Gentile anyway. In hiring Gentile, they waived being able to fire him over his resume saying he was a Florida CPA. If they fire Gentile, they will have to pay him the rest of what he is owed under his employement contract, which I understand runs to next March.

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I told Larry what this really all boils down to is yet another solid piece of evidence of just how terminally fucked up this school district is. Larry said he could not argue with that.

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This Editorial in The Key West Citizen today:

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Can district reserves be fixed by a garage sale?

Of the myriad controversial issues the Monroe County School District has dealt with over these past few tumultuous years, one of the biggest has been the district?s fund balance ? or lack thereof.
If one wants to get a quick snapshot of an organization?s financial health, a look at the fund balance (cash reserves) is the first place to go. A look at our School District?s dismal fund balance is actually an appropriate snapshot of the seemingly never-ending train wreck we have all been watching.
Back in 2004, under the reins of then-Superintendent John Padget, the district had a fund balance of $12.5 million, which was exponentially higher than the fund balance the district finds itself with today. It has been all downhill financially since then.
In December, Superintendent Jesus Jara had the unpleasant task of writing a letter to the Florida Department of Education, notifying them that the district?s fund balance had fallen below 3 percent.
If a district?s reserves fall below 2 percent, drastic remedial measures can come into play, including the possibility of the state assuming control of the district?s financial management.
A recent change of administrative responsibility for the district?s Finance Department has brought with it a startling improvement of the district?s fund balance. Chief of Staff Ken Gentile, in his first budget presentation to the School Board, assured board members that past concerns over the district?s reserves had been successfully addressed.
At first this development appeared to be welcome good news. But a closer look gives cause for concern.
While some of Gentile?s budget magic came from cutting expenses, about $2 million came from district assets not previously considered as reserves. In describing this ?new? money, Gentile explained that ?inventories count; you could sell it and spend it.?
That left a lot of folks, including some board members, doing double takes. Did he really just say that? He was kidding, right?
We are under the impression that reserves consist of unencumbered cash ? not some vague inventory that can be converted to cash.
To hear Mr. Gentile say we could, in effect, conduct a garage sale if things get tight is ridiculous ? and is an insult to all the people who recently have been ?downsized.?
Of course, maybe Mr. Gentile is right and his numbers, while creative, are acceptable to the state Department of Education. Were the old numbers wrong? Are some of the district?s budget woes merely the result of not thinking outside the fiscal box?
Or is the district?s financial management just getting weirder and weirder? Can it get any weirder?
? The Citizen

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Here is my email eight days ago to the Commissioner of the Department of Education, and the auto reply that came back. So far, nothing further from the Commissioner.

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From: keysmyhome@hotmail.com
To: commissioner@fldoe.org
Subject: Monroe County School District reserve fund balance question
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2012 13:24:10 -0400

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Dear Commissioner:

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This article about the Monroe County, Florida School District was in yesterday?s Key West Citizen, the daily newspaper in the Florida Keys. I highlighted the areas of concern to me and others. A few comments after the article.

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From The Key West Citizen:

District: Reserve fund OK

Gentile: Schools can use inventory in calculation

Monroe County School Board members this week heard some good financial predictions for a change ? that the district?s reserve fund will remain high enough to ward off state intervention.
When the 2012 fiscal year ends June 30, the reserve will likely amount to 4 percent of the year?s revenues, or about $3.2 million, Chief of Staff Ken Gentile told the board Tuesday.
The reserve, commonly called the ?fund balance,? is a bellwether of a school system?s financial health, so much so that the state Department of Education requires immediate notification if it dips below 3 percent of projected revenues.
Superintendent Jesus Jara sent such a notification letter to DOE in December, when the district?s best numbers showed that the fund balance wouldn?t hit 3 percent.
Although the district?s final numbers for 2012 won?t come in until a couple weeks after June 30, the end of the fiscal year, all signs point to a fund balance that will meet the state?s standard of 4 percent.
The funds are set aside as a reserve for unanticipated expenses, such as meeting state class-size requirements.
?These are the best numbers we have to date,? Jara told the board.
By 2013, the district projects an ending fund balance of 5 percent, which is what the five-man board had practically demanded.
?Things have changed,? said School Board Chairman John Dick. ?Some real frugal things have been done by the district since then, and we have been able to enhance our fund balance.?
Jara?s team went after funding that was owed to the district, decided not to fill positions when people quit or retired, and cut back spending, said Dick.
?I would say we?re fine,? he said. ?We?ve got to do what we?ve got to do. The district will survive.?
Gentile?s fund balance figures for 2012 and 2013, however, include some ?unavailable? money, in the form of about $2 million in assets the district could tap if necessary.
?Inventories count,? said Gentile. ?You could sell it and spend it.?

Once a school system?s fund balance falls below 2 percent, that district must submit to the state a plan on how to rebuild it.
In Monroe County, the fund balance is a touchy subject.
When John Padget left the superintendent?s office in 2004, the fund balance amounted to a flush $12.5 million.
Once voters handed the district?s reins to Randy Acevedo, the schools spent most of that reserve. By 2010, the year after the governor removed Acevedo from office after the financial scandal that sent his wife, Monique Acevedo, to prison for embezzlement, the fund balance was down to $2 million.
But by the end of the 2010 fiscal year, the fund balance had risen to 5 percent of revenues, or about $4 million, according to Gentile?s presentation to the board Tuesday.

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__________________________________

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To me and others, reserve fund balance is the difference between revenues and expenditures. Inventories are not factored into it. Would not surprise me, if the State audited this School District, it would find the fund balance at or below 2 percent. That may seem like a fantastical statement way up in Tallahassee, but down here in the Keys, we have come to expect the fantastical out of this school district.

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For your information, I am a write-in candidate for one of the School Board seats in this year?s election. Looks to me like my role is showing the voters what is really going on in their school district; can?t imagine getting elected. I am a former practicing attorney, in Alabama. Perhaps your legal department needs to look over this inquiry?

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Thank you.

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Sloan Bashinsky

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1031 Grand Street, Little Torch Key, FL 33042

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(305) 872-1705

(305) 407-4285 (cell)

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Subject: Thank you for contacting the Commissioner
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2012 13:24:13 -0400
From: commissioner@fldoe.org
To:
keysmyhome@hotmail.com

Thank you for contacting the Commissioner at the Florida Department of Education. Due to the volume of emails received, please understand that there will be a slight delay in response to your correspondence. However, this in no way lessens the importance and seriousness of your issue for the Department.
Sincerely,
Office of the Commissioner

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There is one other thing stuck in my craw, which is how Andy Griffiths came to the Sugarloaf School barn-burner last Wednesday night. He came in his big double-cab white pickup with ?Andy Griffiths for School Board? magnet signs on the two front side doors, and a much larger 2-sided billboard in the truck bed, saying much the same thing, with 2 American flags flapping in the wind, attached by short poles to the top of the billboard. I could not imagine anything more tastless and insensitive than to arrive like that at a meeting so serious and disturbing to the children, parents, teachers and principal of that school. It told me nothing is more important to Andy than being reelected. Nothing.

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