Tuesday, December 25, 2012

GLHFCasting ? Real Estate Management For All Types of Buildings

A property management and maintenance company will be a great resource for people who own real estate of all varieties. Property management works the same as management in any other field by monitoring what needs to be accounted, monitored, and cared for with any type of real estate. We will work to locate long-term residents who pay on time and care for your property. A property manager acts as a mediator between the owner and the tenant easing the responsibility of busy owners. Selecting a respected property manager can make real estate ownership easy. We have the skills and know-how to make your ownership experience easy and painless. Take comfort in knowing that we will treat your real estate as if we own it ourselves. Property Manager Virginia

Source: http://www.glhfcasting.com/real-estate-management-for-all-types-of-buildings-3/

solicitor general neighborhood watch dennis rodman dodgers sale tami roman jetblue captain los angeles dodgers

Monday, December 24, 2012

Cliff Negotiations Take Holiday Break (WSJ)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/272917508?client_source=feed&format=rss

adrienne rich autism cesar chavez day raspberry ketone ron burgundy millennial media nit championship

Blogging my way to health and fitness: Doylestown Back Pain Relief ...

By Emilia Kibbe

A large percentage of consumers are known to deal with all kinds of aches and pains throughout their entire body at some point in time. Back complications that are often present are some of the most challenging to manage as they are associated with limiting movement and creating risks when supporting normal body weight. Consumers looking for natural relief should know what a Doylestown chiropractor is able to provide.

Chiropractic therapy is aimed at helping consumers deal with issues that are present with their nervous systems. Doctors trained in this field are generally sought after by people dealing with injury pains that are persistent and difficult to manage. People dealing with back pain often discover a wealth of natural relief efforts with their use.

Anyone in Doylestown that is dealing with this particular issue has a vast array of professionals available to guide their efforts. People are often not aware of what this kind of doctor is even able to offer them for natural pain relief. Consumers that understand the common techniques performed are able to ensure their issues are successfully worked through.

Massage therapy is one of the most popular techniques utilized by this kind of professional. The use of massage is effective at helping people relax and enjoy a soothing source of comfort with their muscles. This particular technique also helps with creating increased circulation of blood and oxygen levels.

Professionals also recommend various supplements and vitamins as part of this regimen. The supplements and vitamins that are recommended are based on the ability to prevent future nerve damage and allow bold oxygenation to help correct sources of discomfort. Many supplements even offer increased wellness effects that go beyond pain relief.

A Doylestown chiropractor is also effective at helping consumers with posture and stretching guidance. Stretching the back muscles properly helps them adjust and realign correctly. Using correct posture is helpful at preventing pains from being a chronic issue.


About the Author:


Chiropractic care helps relieve groin, back and elbow pain naturally. You will get more information about an experienced Doylestown chiropractor at http://www.mcquaitechiropractic.com right now.

Source: http://bloggingmywaytohealthandfitness.blogspot.com/2012/12/doylestown-back-pain-relief-done.html

andrew young real life barbie zipper armenian genocide asteroid mining memorial day ivan rodriguez

Source: http://ruosbiryg.posterous.com/blogging-my-way-to-health-and-fitness-doylest

the colony kids choice awards ncaa final four 2012 texas chainsaw massacre uk vs louisville university of kansas buckeye

Performance Artist Narcissister Turns Self Love Into A Political Act At Envoy Enterprises (PHOTOS, VIDEO, NSFW)

Part Cindy Sherman, part Pinocchio, performance artist Narcissister turns self-love into a radical artistic act.

A performance artist trained at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center, Narcissister combines classical training and skill with an unusual disguise, namely a Barbie mask and a pubic wig. Her mask simultaneously hides her true identity while creating the identity of Narcissister, a radical proponent of agency through excessive self-interest.

narcissister

For her first solo exhibition, entitled "Narcissister is You," Narcissister invites others to indulge in superfluous self-reflection as she has done. Rather than view the activity of gazing in the mirror as wasteful or petty, Narcissister proffers it as a fruitful activity and impetus for collective change.

Her masked models resemble Barbie dolls who have undergone botched plastic surgery procedures, and yet have a power to them regardless. The show challenges viewers to put yourself in Narcissisters place and find out if you love what you see.

"Narcissister Is You" will show January 10- February 10 at Envoy Enterprises in New York. In the meantime check out her freaky-cool images in the slideshow below.

  • Untitled (black and white checker) 2012 c-print 40 x 30 inches edition of 2, 1AP

  • Untitled (plaid blonde) 2012 c-print 40 x 30 inches edition of 2, 1AP

  • Untitled (cigarette blonde) 2012 c-print 40 x 30 inches edition of 2, 1AP

  • Untitled (pink nails) 2012 c-print 40 x 30 inches edition of 2, 1AP

  • Untitled (gold earrings) 2012 c-print 40 x 30 inches edition of 2, 1AP

  • Untitled (afro) 2012 c-print 40 x 30 inches edition of 2, 1AP

  • Untitled (blue suit) 2012 c-print 40 x 30 inches edition of 2, 1AP

  • Untitled (diamond necklace) 2012 c-print 40 x 30 inches edition of 2, 1AP

Want more Narcissister? We don't blame you. Here is her performance "Hot Lunch."

NARCISSISTER- HOT LUNCH from Christopher Caruana on Vimeo.

Also on HuffPost:

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/23/narcissister-performance-art-envoy-enterpriess_n_2348185.html

don cornelius whitney houston i will always love you breaking news whitney houston carmen whitney houston last performance cpac straw poll i will always love you

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Demi Lovato Gushes Over MTV's Best Fans Of The Year

'I love you so much, and you truly are not just fans, you're my friends, you're my family. I love you,' Lovato told MTV News about her Lovatics.
By Cory Midgarden


Demi Lovato accepts her award for the Best Fans of the Year
Photo: MTV News

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1699371/demi-lovato-best-fans-of-the-year-2012.jhtml

new orleans weather sparkle sacagawea new hope baptist church associated press foster friess new orleans hornets

As gun control controversy rages, officials make only vague mention ...

"People had one level of care and now have a different level of care. To think those cuts didn?t have any effect would be foolish." - Sue Walther

Every week, Roger Morgenthal has to make the choice.

Is the person sitting in front of him an immediate danger to themselves or others because of severe mental illness? Should this person be kept in a hospital to receive treatment, even if it is against his or her will?

Morgenthal has served as the mental health hearing officer for Cumberland and Perry counties since 1976. In that time, he estimates he?s held between 9,000 and 10,000 such hearings for 5,000 to 6,000 people. He felt he had reason to worry that maybe 10 of those people, all in the throes of psychotic disorders, might be dangerously violent toward others.

Since Adam Lanza murdered his mother, 20 school children and six adults in Newtown, Conn., public officials from President Barack Obama down have talked about the need for a new dialogue on guns. Somewhere in those statements, the officials make vague mention of improving mental health care.

Gun laws have a Presidential task force. Mental health care, as usual, is receiving lower billing.

Gun control is controversial, but comparably simple. With one piece of federal legislation, Congress could install a national assault weapons ban.

Mental health care is vastly more complex, governed largely at the state level, with 50 different sets of laws that reflect dramatically different philosophies and levels of funding.

So far, we don?t know Lanza?s mental health history. It?s unclear if stronger commitment laws or better treatment options would have prevented the massacre in Newtown.

But other mass murderers, like Arizona shooter Jared Loughner, did have a history of mental illness. Some experts say better treatment and intervention measures might have kept Loughner from shooting former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and killing six people.

The politicians talking of improving care don?t specify if they mean for the very few people whose illness might prompt violence, or the majority of those living with mental illness who are more likely to be the victims of violence and crime.

Few are talking about the slipover affects of mental illness that touch our society.

According to the Treatment Advocacy Center:

? A third of the homeless population has untreated mental illness.

? About 16 percent of people in state prisons have untreated mental illness.

? About the same percentage of people living with bipolar disorder or schizophrenia will eventually take their own lives.

No major public official has yet to call for a significant increase in spending on psychiatrists, social workers, group homes, peer support services or pharmaceutical research to better treat the six percent of Americans living with serious mental illness.

Here in Pennsylvania, advocates say the lack of housing and other resources makes it difficult for those recovering from breakdowns to maintain necessary stability. That was made worse by budget cuts last year.

Most people who have never had contact with the mental health system through a family member or friend do not understand how it works. That ignorance, and the evil stigma that has long surrounded those with illnesses of the brain, has made it difficult for any reforms to gain popular support.

What?s more, the groups of advocates that care passionately about improving mental health care disagree about how far the state can go to compel people who are clearly not well to receive treatment. Some want the reach of the state?s commitment law expanded, others think it goes far enough. ?

?Resources needed?

Any attempt to reform the mental health care system begins with a question:

What scale do leaders want to aim this reform?

A small scale reform, aimed only at the minority of those living with severe mental illness who are potentially violent, would do nothing to lessen the other forms of human misery that plague the chronically untreated. Such narrow measures, advocates argue, would do nothing to prevent those with worsening conditions from deteriorating until they became a potential danger.

Reform on a larger scale, a combination of education, treatment, housing, support services and better drugs, could keep people off the streets, out of jail and safe. It would also be costly.

Advocates argue we?re not doing a good job of paying the mental health bills we already have.

Beginning with former Gov. Tom Ridge, Pennsylvania has closed many of its large mental health facilities.

That program continued through Gov. Ed Rendell?s administration, including the closure of Harrisburg State Hospital. At the same time, the state built smaller facilities in each county. Numerous studies have shown people with severe mental illness are more likely to recover in the least restrictive settings.

These new facilities were aimed at treating people with specific needs. In theory, a person could move from a crisis center to a residential treatment center to a structured group home to outpatient treatment.

But the system doesn?t always work that like.

Instead, waiting lists have been common at most of the midstate?s residential facilities since they opened. People wind up staying at inpatient hospitals ? designed to house someone for a few days ? for months.

And that was before last year?s budget.

The state cut payments to the county mental health offices by 10 percent. There was also a 10 percent cut to the Community/Hospital Integration Program Projects ? money specifically designated to pay to treat people in residential facilities and through outpatient services instead of state hospitals.

?For the first time in the modern history of hospital closures, the commitment was not honored because the dollars were cut, and they were cut significantly,? said Sue Walther, executive director of the Mental Health Association in Pennsylvania.

?People had one level of care and now have a different level of care. To think those cuts didn?t have any effect would be foolish.?

By eliminating the general assistance fund, the state also removed the payments that advocates said often covered co-pays on drugs for people waiting to qualify for Social Security disability.

The state Department of Public Welfare said that by allowing 20 counties ? including Dauphin County ? to accept the funding in block grants, the counties had more freedom to better use the money they were given.

However, most counties, including Adams, Cumberland, Lebanon, Perry and York, were not invited to participate.

When asked if services were cut along with the funding, Donna Kirker Morgan, a welfare department spokeswoman, wrote in an email: ?This would be up to the individual counties to determine how they would make changes, so I am going to defer to them.?

Kirker Morgan did not respond when asked if agency was doing anything to determine the potential impact of the cuts.

With the state facing serious financial challenges ? and little political will for a tax increase ? the welfare department was given a smaller budget last year. Many of the services it oversees, like Medicare, could by law not be cut, Kirker Morgan said. Mental health care was one of the areas that could.

She noted that, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation survey of 2010 data, Pennsylvania spent the fourth most per-capita on mental health care of any state in the country.

Advocates counter the lack of housing affects even the most serious cases.

When he has to decide if a person should continue to receive involuntary care, or what level of involuntary care they should receive, Morgenthal often finds his options limited.

?Honestly, I don?t have the option of saying I want this person in outpatient group care because the options just aren?t there,? Morgenthal said. ?If a social worker says we don?t have any place to put this person ? there?s a waiting list in structured group homes for six or eight months ? I don?t have a place to put this person.? ?

?Change the law?

?Only a small percentage of people with untreated severe mental illness are prone to violence, but those that are can have a disproportionate impact on society.

Ten percent of homicides in America are committed by people with untreated severe mental illness, according to the Treatment Advocacy Center.

By the letter of the law in Pennsylvania, a person can only be treated against their will if they present a serious harm to themselves or others in the past 30 days. Technically, a person would not just have to threaten to harm someone else, they would need to have attempted to carry out an act.

If the person does not meet the standard ? even if he or she has clearly decompensated and is not thinking rationally ? they can refuse treatment, including medication.

In theory, if the first time a person seriously attempts to carry out a violent act was a mass shooting, there would be no legal way to intervene before that.

Some advocates feel it?s time to change the law.

?There needs to be an expansion of the definition of a danger to self or others,? said Taylor Andrews, a longtime mental health advocate from Carlisle.

?For an individual that has a known condition, who has responded to treatment in the past, and is deteriorating and will likely continue to deteriorate if they aren?t treated, and you know they cannot make a rational decision about treatment, they should be considered a danger to themselves.?

Other states, like New York, allow for earlier intervention.

Since changing the law, and investing significant money, New York has seen a 74 percent drop in homelessness among the mentally ill, a 77 percent drop in hospitalizations, an 83 percent drop in arrests and an 87 percent drop in incarcerations.

State Sen. Stewart Greenleaf, R-Montgomery, has introduced legislation that would change Pennsylvania?s law, though it does not include new funding. Greenleaf estimates his bill would affect about 400 people a year.

The biggest problem with the law as its currently written, Greenleaf said, is it does nothing to help people with anosognosia ? a condition that prevents people with mental illness from recognizing the effects of the disease.

The way the law is written in Pennsylvania and other states, people with irrational minds need to keep making the rational choice to continue treatment in order to stay well, said Doris Fuller, the executive director of the Virginia-based Treatment Advocacy Center, which backs Greenleaf?s bill.

Many people who did not recognize their condition until after they were involuntarily committed said they would not have been able to recover without the initial ruling, Fuller said.

At the extreme end, Loughner, the Arizona shooter, was forced into treatment after his arrest. By the time of his sentencing, he said he understood what he had done and deeply regretted it. ?

?Medication isn?t enough?

Many in the mental health community do not agree with Greenleaf or the Treatment Advocacy Center.

The consumer movement began in the bad old days of mental health care, which were exactly that bad, and not that old.

Supported by research saying peer support groups, housing options and other support services were as important to successful long-term recovery as medication, they helped push treatment out of the large state hospitals and into the community.

The consumer movement also led the fight against the stigma that those with severe mental illness were evil or inherently dangerous.

When those in the consumer movement hear Greenleaf?s proposal, they see society trying to take a shortcut, instead of building holistic treatment options that help those with severe mental illness fully establish their lives.

?We need to look at what we?re offering and tailor the offerings to meet their needs,? Walther said. ?There?s evidence to suggest peer support and things like that can move people toward recovery.?

MHA and the Pennsylvania Mental Health Consumers? Association both oppose Greenleaf?s bill. So does DPW?s Office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, which believes the current standard is sufficient, Kirker Morgan said.

Walther is skeptical that anosognosia exists. Instead, she said, it?s a question of creating an environment where people are willing to be treated. Pennsylvania?s current commitment laws can protect a person in the most acute cases, she said.

?I understand why this has an appeal,? Walther said. ?But even if I could accept this argument, if you don?t have the support services there, forced medication is not going to be enough.?

?It requires money?

Morgenthal, the hearing officer, says both sides are right.

He has between 50 and 100 people he sees two or three times a year, his regulars. He also has another 100 or so he sees every few years, after their recover breaks down.

He believes the law as currently written does give him wiggle room when deciding to continue a commitment, especially in these cases.

?Frankly, if it?s a patient that I know well and they have a pattern, I?m not going to disregard their medical history,? he said. ?I?m going to say to the court, ?This is what?s likely to happen, let?s try and prevent that.??

He also thinks the law needs to go further.

A man or woman shouldn?t need to be able to carry out a plan to kill themselves in order to be committed.

?I think a good psychiatrist or psychologist has the ability to tell if someone has a sincere intent to harm themselves instead of just a cry a help,? Morgenthal said.

Most of the people he sees couldn?t carry out a violent attack in the actual world. But if they are having delusions telling them they should and are unwilling to be helped, he should be able to order them into treatment. He should be able to order they continue that treatment after they have been discharged.

But without a real investment in treatment options and support services, he said, simple changes in the wording can only matter so much.

Source: http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2012/12/as_gun_control_controversy_rag.html

franchise tag lesotho a wrinkle in time benjamin netanyahu storm shelters nick lachey chevy volt

Dental assistant fired for being 'irresistible' is 'devastated'

After working as a dental assistant for ten years, Melissa Nelson was fired for being too "irresistible" and a "threat" to her employer's marriage.

"I think it is completely wrong," Nelson said. "I think it is sending a message that men can do whatever they want in the work force."

On Friday, the all-male Iowa State Supreme Court ruled that James Knight, Nelson's boss, was within his legal rights when he fired her, affirming the decision of a lower court.

"We do think the Iowa Supreme Court got it completely right," said Stuart Cochrane, an attorney for James Knight. "Our position has always been Mrs. Nelson was never terminated because of her gender, she was terminated because of concerns her behavior was not appropriate in the workplace. She's an attractive lady. Dr. Knight found her behavior and dress to be inappropriate."

For Nelson, a 32-year-old married mother of two, the news of her firing and the rationale behind it came as a shock.

"I was very surprised after working so many years side by side I didn't have any idea that that would have crossed his mind," she said.

The two never had a sexual relationship or sought one, according to court documents, however in the final year and a half of Nelson's employment, Knight began to make comments about her clothing being too tight or distracting.

"Dr. Knight acknowledges he once told Nelson that if she saw his pants bulging, she would know her clothing was too revealing," the justices wrote.

Six months before Nelson was fired, she and her boss began exchanging text messages about work and personal matters, such as updates about each of their children's activities, the justices wrote.

The messages were mostly mundane, but Nelson recalled one text she received from her boss asking "how often she experienced an orgasm."

Nelson did not respond to the text and never indicated that she was uncomfortable with Knight's question, according to court documents.

Soon after, Knight's wife, Jeanne, who also works at the practice, found out about the text messaging and ordered her husband to fire Nelson.

The couple consulted with a senior pastor at their church and he agreed that Nelson should be terminated in order to protect their marriage, Cochrane said.

On Jan. 4, 2010, Nelson was summoned to a meeting with Knight while a pastor was present. Knight then read from a prepared statement telling Nelson she was fired.

"Dr. Knight felt like for the best interest of his marriage and the best interest of hers to end their employment relationship," Cochrane said.

Knight acknowledged in court documents that Nelson was good at her job and she, in turn, said she was generally treated with respect.

"I'm devastated. I really am," Nelson said.

When Nelson's husband tried to reason with Knight, the dentist told him he "feared he would have an affair with her down the road if he did not fire her."

Paige Fiedler, Nelson's attorney, said in a statement to ABC News affiliate KCRG that she was "appalled" by the ruling.

"We are appalled by the Court's ruling and its failure to understand the nature of gender bias.," she wrote.

"Although people act for a variety of reasons, it is very common for women to be targeted for discrimination because of their sexual attractiveness or supposed lack of sexual attractiveness. That is discrimination based on sex," Fiedler wrote. "Nearly every woman in Iowa understands this because we have experienced it for ourselves."

Also Read

Source: http://gma.yahoo.com/blogs/abc-blogs/dental-assistant-fired-being-irresistible-devastated-151724600--abc-news-topstories.html

blake lively Espn Fantasy Football Grandparents Day 2012 army wives 60 minutes go daddy Tom Kenny

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Spotted: Hilary Duff and Luca ? Food for Thought

Mama Hilary Duff keeps 9-month-old son Luca Cruz occupied with a teething toy as they head out to a pediatrician appointment Thursday in Beverly Hills, Calif.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/bmfu9QPoskU/

marine helicopter crash chicago weather star jones wheres my refund photo of whitney houston in casket carrot top george huguely

Writing Goals: 2013 [Part 5] ? Going Public | Go Into The Story

So after four days of looking at the Past, Present, Future, and Practical Matters, the big day has arrived: Time to etch in virtual stone our writing goals for 2013. Oh, and one more little thing: It?s important that you go public with your goals.

Today: Going Public

Why go public?

Because if we just think about your goals, they are nothing more than illusions, hazy, half-baked phantasms in our heads, here and potentially gone like all the other zillion thoughts that spurt through our consciousness each day.

Because if you don?t formalize your writing goals, you may forget them.

Because having some sort of tangible, physical list gives you a touchstone to remind you what you need be focusing on throughout the year.

Because by proclaiming your goals to the Universe, they become real.

And the biggest reason of all: That simple act of courage ? declaring your goals publicly ? engenders positive energy, recalling the line by the Rev. Basil King who said, ?Be bold and mighty forces will come to your aid.?

What then do I mean by going public?

Anything that gets the goals out of your head and into the physical universe. Such as:

* Write down your goals onto 3?5 index cards.

* Compose a letter to yourself with your goals, stick said letter in an envelope, and tack it to your desk where you can see and know it?s there when you write.

* Email your family and friends with the list of goals.

* Host a party at which you recite your goals and invite people?s moral and emotional support.

* Hire the Goodyear Blimp and flash your goals on it over the Rose Bowl.

Or you can simply post your writing goals for 2013 here on GITS. Just like I?m going to do now.

Scott Myers Writing Goals: 2013

As noted, I have three areas of my life and work that involve writing:

* Write stories.

* Write about Story.

* Teach writing.

Here are my writing goals next year for each area.

WRITE STORIES

I?m laser-focused on one project: a high concept comedy spec script. I have what I think is a great idea, a great way to tell it, and for the first time in several years, I pumped up to write a big mainstream commercial comedy.

WRITE ABOUT STORY

Okay, okay, I hear you. I?ll finally get some eBooks on the craft of screenwriting out there. Definitely one this year, maybe two.

TEACH WRITING

I will continue to teach screenwriting and mentor writers through Screenwriting Master Class. I have one more class I will put together in 2013: The Coen Brothers and the Craft of Storytelling, a compendium to Pixar and the Craft of Storytelling. That will make eight 1-week Craft classes to go along with eight 1-week Core classes, as well three writing workshops, Prep: From Concept To Outline, Pages I: The First Draft, and Pages II: Rewriting Your Script. And of course, The Quest, a 24-week comprehensive screenwriting program, both theory and practice which I introduced to great acclaim this year, and offer to a handful of writers on a private one-on-one basis.

I have a big decision to make: Do I offer The Quest Initiative again: Solicit logline submissions to work with four or possibly more writers in the 24-week program ? for free. I won?t decide that until I finish working with the 8 writers I took on this year and read their first drafts, but I will say this: I am quite pleased with what I?ve read so far of the Questers? scripts, so that?s encouraging. I should be able to make a decision about The Quest Initiative by some time in February.

Then there?s this: I want to explore two additional ways to teach:

* The first is a weekend seminar [Saturday-Sunday] in which I will present a condensed version of The Quest. I am targeting at least one trip to Los Angeles in the summer.

* The second is a writer?s retreat, working with a select group of people in a natural habitat conducive to reflection and writing, really digging into their stories in a week-long intensive, offering the opportunity to follow up with online writing workshops.

Finally there is GITS. I am committed to maintaining the basic approach to generating content and interacting with readers I have developed over the nearly five years I?ve been hosting the site. As always I will continue to solicit ideas and suggestions from you. And I look forward to exploring more possibilities that may emerge from the site?s partnership with the Black List. For example, expect to see a lot more interviews with top screenwriters as well as industry insiders in 2013, questions and answers I hope will speak to your creative needs and help you develop as writers.

So that?s what I aim to be writing in 2013. What if I land writing gigs like I did this year? What if I come up with another crazed idea like The Quest Initiative? Here?s how I look at writing goals: They are similar to the relationship a writer has with an outline.

An outline can be a tremendous benefit to a writer, wrangling the story and giving shape to it. But once you hit FADE IN, you have to be willing to follow the characters wherever they take you. Sometimes the characters follow the outline perfectly. Other times, they don?t. In the case of the latter, you never stifle your characters, instead you have to have the courage to set your outline aside, and go with the creative flow.

Same thing with writing goals and whatever opportunities come along. Your goals give shape to the potential narrative of your creative year. Sometimes events lay out just like you figured they would. But other times, some project pops up, a unique opportunity to write a story about which you feel passionate. In those cases, you have to be willing to veer away from the schedule for your goals ? not the goals themselves, just how and when you are go about realizing them.

Speaking of schedule, going public with your writing goals does not mean your planning work is done. It will do you little good if you generate a list of goals, but don?t figure out a time frame within which to accomplish those goals. So that is where we start the next step in the process on Monday: Working up a schedule. Following that on Tuesday through Friday, we will explore time saving and project management tips, mine and hopefully yours, to help facilitate reaching our writing goals next year.

For now, those of you who feel emboldened, I?ll see you in Comments and look forward to reading about your writing projects in 2013. And for those of you who want to keep that information to yourself, that?s completely fine. Just be sure to go public, even if it?s formalizing a list of writing goals on a 3?5 index card.

See you in Comments!

Source: http://gointothestory.blcklst.com/2012/12/writing-goals-2013-part-5-going-public.html

randy moss hunger games premiere the bachelor good morning america red meat bachelor ben jon hamm kim kardashian

Green Blog: The Latest Turns Along the Colorado River

In its naked irreverence, the image at the Web site of Save the Colorado, an environmental group, is about as different from the public persona of Interior Secretary Ken Salazar as the damp sharp-edged sawgrass of the Everglades is from the snow-clad firs of Glacier National Park.

And the headline posted there ? ?Thank you, Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar!? is not the kind of message that environmental groups are accustomed to sending to the cautious Cabinet official, whose policies on everything from oil drilling on federal lands in the West to wild horses have often set them on edge.

But a series of actions on the Colorado River over the last two months have given Mr. Salazar, a fifth-generation Coloradan, a different profile ? at least among those who know the history of the river, which has been poorly understood and misused for more than a century.

Dams and other controls have changed the Colorado?s ecosystem in the cavernous reaches of the Grand Canyon and have helped to dry up its delta in Mexico; misreadings of flow data have routinely ensured that pledges for its contents have been overstated. And all the while, more than 33 million people in the two countries have been drawing on its water supplies as states jostle for greater shares of it.

But Mr. Salazar and his deputy, David Hayes, have recently taken a series of actions that environmental groups believe show an understanding of the ecosystem?s past, and its future.

Under a 1920s compact, the federal interior secretary is the ?master? of the lower Colorado River and the ultimate arbiter of its water disputes. But what has happened in the past six weeks has little to do with playing Solomon. Instead, efforts that had been percolating in the Interior Department and its Bureau of Reclamation, the agency that actually handles the job of the river?s management, began to surface and bear fruit.

First came the announcement of an agreement with Mexico to share the impacts of both dry and wet years. The accord includes a pledge to help Mexico with the difficult job of rewatering the river delta.

Taylor Hawes, who directs the Colorado River program of the Nature Conservancy, welcomed the accord as ?a model for how we need to be doing water management in the future.?

Shortly thereafter, for the second time in four years, the Bureau of Reclamation, working with the National Park Service, released a large volume of water from the Glen Canyon dam in the hope it would stir up the river bottom and replenish the sand bars worn away since the bureau?s last such experiment.

Most recently, the bureau released a long-awaited study on the Colorado?s future. More than anything, the report affirmed the science-based prediction that the river?s water supplies, never as plentiful as early planners had figured, are likely to diminish as climate change brings more, and more severe, droughts.

However obvious the conclusion seems, the study opened an opportunity for the interior secretary to open an unvarnished discussion on the dimensions of the problem. Mr. Salazar was essentially backing a study that said in so many words, climate change is going to be a big problem for the river?s supplies before long and we need to focus on water conservation.

The group Save the Colorado has been gathering signatures for thank-you petitions ever since. It may not be a turning point in the river?s history, but it is certainly a moment worth noting.

Source: http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/21/the-latest-turns-along-the-colorado-river/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Michelle Obama Speech eva longoria Rihanna wiz khalifa Michael Clarke Duncan Nazanin Boniadi Deval Patrick

Friday, December 21, 2012

iPhone 5 Case Review: Pad and Quill Little Pocket Book for iPhone 5 Review

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

Source: http://www.mobiletechreview.com/ubbthreads/showflat.php?Board=news&Number=43932

college football college football ncaa football brian van gorder blazing saddles lsu alabama lsu game

Officials: 31 suspended in Army day care scandal

WASHINGTON (AP) ? At least 31 people were suspended from two Army day care centers at Fort Myer, Va., last week after officials scrutinized their backgrounds and found criminal convictions including fourth-degree sexual assault and drug use.

A defense official said Wednesday that an earlier statement that the 31 people had been fired was erroneous. Suspension allows for the possibility of reinstatement or dismissal.

The escalating scandal surrounding the Fort Myer Child Development Center has triggered a review of hiring procedures, angered defense leaders, and prompted a late-night telephone call Tuesday from President Barack Obama to the Army secretary. In the call, Obama expressed concern and urged a speedy and thorough investigation.

Details of the scandal emerged nearly three months after two workers were accused of assaulting children at the Fort Myer center.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/officials-31-suspended-army-day-care-scandal-030522117--politics.html

netanyahu aipac vanessa minnillo super tuesday epidemiology total eclipse of the heart jionni lavalle

Franson's union bill site may violate campaign finance law | Capitol ...

Posted at 2:54 PM on December 20, 2012 by Catharine Richert (3 Comments)
Filed under: MN Legislature

A new website set up by Rep. Mary Franson, R-Alexandria, to promote her bill to block unionization and paid for by her campaign committee may violate state campaign finance laws.

The site touts Franson's Family Freedom Act, which would block unionization of self-employed individuals. The legislation stems from Gov. Mark Dayton's earlier effort to unionize in-home child daycare providers who get subsidies from the state.

Local labor groups pushed the idea. This coming legislative session, workers who provide home care to the elderly and disabled want the Legislature to pass a bill that would allow them to unionize, and the Service Employees International Union is backing the effort.

"While a battle was won in 2012 the war on families continue," Franson's website says. "AFSCME and SEIU are now gearing up to unionize moms and also unionize family who receive state dollars to take care of their vulnerable family member."

But the website is paid for by Franson's campaign committee, Patriots for Mary Franson.

Minnesota Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board Executive Director Gary Goldsmith says the website amounts to a lobbying activity because it asks people to sign a petition and contact Dayton to discourage him from unionizing daycare and in-home care workers.

"Under chapter 10A, it's my opinion that there's nothing that would permit that kind of use of campaign money," Goldsmith said, citing state law that outlines what campaign funds can and cannot be used for.

In response to MPR's inquiry, Franson said it was a "simple oversight." And though she's not convinced that her site violates campaign finance law, she's having her web developer change the website's language.

"It's going to say something to the effect of 'If you support my legislation, sign the petition,'" she said.

Here are a few screen shots of Franson's website, prior to the changes she mentioned.

FreedomFamilyAct5.JPG

FreedomFamilyAct6.JPG

UPDATE: Franson's site has already been updated. Now it reads:

"According to Minnesota Campaign Finance Law I can't run a "petition" so instead of calling it a "Petition" I am asking you to sign up for "updates" on my legislation and "updates" on what the Governor and his union political allies are up to. Again it's not a "petition" it's an "update" - There that should satisfy the bureaucrats in St. Paul.

See more here.


Comments (3)

Oh my the Monster! Trying to inform Citizens!!!


Once again, Franson caught doing something wrong or idiotic and tries to make like somehow she is the victim.


Shouldn't we just refer to these people as 'the Clown Party'? They have no respect for their fellow citizens or for the law, nor have they the basic competence to work within the system to achieve their dogmatic, thoughtless and self-centered goals.


Source: http://minnesota.publicradio.org/collections/special/columns/polinaut/archive/2012/12/a_new_website_s.shtml

resolute national enquirer whitney houston casket photo jk rowling qnexa kingdom of heaven national enquirer whitney houston arizona republican debate

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Pitney Bowes pbSmartPostage


Similar in some ways to DYMO Stamps Online 2.5 (Free, 4.5 stars), Pitney Bowes pbSmartPostage (Free, $14.99 per month, or $16.99 per month) offers the same basic capability. pbSmartPostage lets you print your own stamps and other postage, eliminating the chore and wasted time of running out to the post office and standing in line. Unlike Dymo Stamps Online, which works with any printer even with the free version, pbSmartPostage limits its free tier to Brother label-printer owners. However its paid versions work with virtually any inkjet or laser printer.

As I pointed out in my review of DYMO Stamps Online, whether you prefer your postage printing software to run completely in the cloud or to run on your computer as a client app that connects to a cloud based server is largely a matter of personal taste. A key argument in favor of an online app like pbSmartPostage is precisely that it runs in the cloud. You don't have to download or install any software, and you don't have to worry about updates when postal rates change or Pitney Bowes adds a new feature. The next time you log on to the website, the change will simply be there.

That said, if you tend to print stamps and labels one at a time instead of in batches, you may well consider it annoying to have to enter your user name and password every time you want to print something. If so, you'll probably prefer a program that runs on your own system, like our current Editors' Choice, DYMO Stamps and DYMO Printable Postage version 2.5 (Free, 4.5 stars).

If you're not sure which approach you like better, you should particularly appreciate pbSmartPostage's 60-day free trial. If you have any doubts about using a cloud-based service, 60 days will give you plenty of time to try it and decide whether you like it.

The Basics
Setting up an account is straightforward, with three choices for the type of account. If you have one of the Brother label printers that work with pbSmartPostage, including, for example, the Editors' Choice Brother QL-700, you can sign up at www.pb.com/brother for a free account.

The free account will let you print individual stamps using a Brother label printer or print stamp sheets using any laser or inkjet?although you have to buy the stamp rolls and sheets separately from Pitney Bowes. (More on that in a moment.)? It won't let you print postage directly on envelopes or print labels for packages. For that, you need one of the paid tiers, which you can sign up for whether you have a Brother label printer or not.

If you already have a free account, you can upgrade it to a paid account whenever you like. To start with a paid account, you can go to www.pbsmartpostage.com to register, enter your billing information, and order stamp sheets. The $14.99 per month Standard choice includes unlimited use, except for the cost of postage and stamp sheets or other supplies, and also includes two free stamp sheets.

The $16.99 Preferred choice adds a 5-pound postage scale that connects to your computer by USB cable, to let you weigh your mail or package and automatically set the right amount of postage to print. (At least, it's supposed to. Pitney Bowes didn't supply one for testing.)? Alternatively, you can also buy any of several scales, at prices ranging from $49.99 to $105.99 (direct) and capacities of 5 to 70 pounds, and not have to pay the extra $2 per month.

Additional Costs and Potential Savings
How much pbSmartPostage will actually cost, or potentially save, depends entirely on how you use it. For the free service, you have to buy stamp rolls or sheets. The price varies with how many rolls or sheets you buy at a time, at $15.29 or $17.99 for a roll of 200 stamp labels, or $6.40 to $7.49 for a pack of five label sheets with 125 stamp labels per pack.

For either of the paid tiers, you can also use the rolls or sheets, but you don't have to. Instead of printing stamps, you can print postage directly on envelopes. And for packages, you can print labels on plain paper.

In addition to the potential cost of supplies, you also have to pay for postage. However, once you get beyond printing stamps, there's a possibility of saving money with US Postal Service (USPS) discounted rates. Also worth mention is that although you can get discounted rates for some classes of mail directly from the USPS Web site (take a look at https://www.prioritymail.com/online_discounts.asp for details), there are some classes of mail, including First Class Parcel and Media Mail, for example, that you can't print labels for from the USPS site, but can print with pbSmartPostage.

Printing Stamps and Labels
For my tests I used several printers, including a Brother label printer and two standard desktop printers that can print on up to legal-size paper. The only problem I ran into was with printing directly on an envelope with one of the standard printers, with pbSmartPostage insisting that the envelope was the wrong size.

According to Pitney Bowes, the real problem is that this particular printer won't allow printing to the edge of the envelope, which USPS regulations require. The company says this is an issue for only a few printers. Even so, before you sign up with pbSmartPostage, you might want to look at the FAQs on the support section of Pitney Bowes Web site to find out if your printer is on the list of printers that are known to work or known not to work.

Printing is otherwise easy enough and worked as promised in my tests. For stamps, an onscreen wizard with self-explanatory options takes you through the steps of choosing what to print on?a stamp sheet, a roll, or an envelope?setting the postage amount and how many stamps to print, and then printing.

With stamp sheets, you can specify different postage values for each stamp and print a full sheet with up to 25 stamps at a time. With rolls or envelopes you can print only one stamp value at a time, but can print as many as 25 stamps or envelopes. Other useful features for envelopes include optionally adding a mailing address, a return address, and a QR code (a two-dimensional bar code that can translate to plain text, a URL, an email address, or a telephone number). You can also save mailing addresses and QR codes so you can pick them from a list to reuse later.

A separate wizard for labels takes you through a similar series of steps, with choices for defining the box type (including choices like the USPS flat rate box); choices for class of mail;, options to add additional services, including signature confirmation and insurance; and too many other options to even list here. One last feature that demands mention, however, is the option to track a package by picking from a list of labels that you've created.

Whether Pitney Bowes pbSmartPostage is worth considering depends partly on whether you're looking at the free version or one of the tiers with a monthly fee. If you have a Brother label printer, it's almost certainly worth taking advantage of the free version, no matter how few stamps you print, for the convenience of not having to run out to the post office. Beyond that, you might or might not need labels often enough for the convenience of printing them to be worth the monthly price?or if you might even save money that way. If the answer isn't clear, it's certainly worth taking advantage of the 60-day free trial to give pbSmartPostage a test drive and find out.

More Productivity Software Reviews:

??? Pitney Bowes pbSmartPostage
??? LinkedIn
??? DYMO Stamps Online
??? Swizzle
??? Adobe Acrobat XI
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/NuAia3cpOpg/0,2817,2413274,00.asp

marines urinating on taliban critics choice awards super pac dre kirkpatrick mls superdraft school cancellations bald barbie

NY cardinal compares slain Conn. teacher to Jesus

Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York comforts a mourner after a funeral for teacher Anne Marie Murphy at the St. Mary Of The Assumption Church in Katonah, N.Y. Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012, Murphy was killed when Adam Lanza, walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., Dec. 14, and opened fire, killing 26, including 20 children, before killing himself. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York comforts a mourner after a funeral for teacher Anne Marie Murphy at the St. Mary Of The Assumption Church in Katonah, N.Y. Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012, Murphy was killed when Adam Lanza, walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., Dec. 14, and opened fire, killing 26, including 20 children, before killing himself. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

A boy wearing a Boy Scouts of America uniform waves at media while standing next to portrait of Benjamin Andrew Wheeler, outside of Trinity Episcopal Church before funeral services for Wheeler, Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012, in Newtown, Conn. Wheeler, 6, died when the gunman, Adam Lanza, walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Dec. 14, and opened fire, killing 26 people, including 20 children, before killing himself. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

Herb Pontow, left, and Tony Tipton, both from Maryland, try to clean and organize an overflowing memorial to the shooting victims in the Sandy Hook village of Newtown, Conn., Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012. Adam Lanza walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Dec. 14, and opened fire, killing 26 people, including 20 children, before killing himself. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Nancy Hotchkiss of Naugatuck, Conn. hangs an ornament on a tree at a memorial for the shooting victims in the Sandy Hook village of Newtown, Conn., Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012. Adam Lanza walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Dec. 14, and opened fire, killing 26 people, including 20 children, before killing himself. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Jeanne Walker of Newtown walks through an overflowing memorial to the shooting victims in the Sandy Hook village of Newtown, Conn., Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012. Adam Lanza walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Dec. 14, and opened fire, killing 26 people, including 20 children, before killing himself. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

(AP) ? A single bell tolled Thursday at the Connecticut funeral of a 6-year-old girl killed by a gunman at her elementary school, while a cardinal in New York compared a slain teacher to Jesus for giving up her life to protect others.

In Newtown, the site of the shooting rampage, grim-faced mourners hurried through the packed parking lot of St. Rose of Lima Church to attend the funeral Mass for 6-year-old Catherine Hubbard.

Catherine's family said in her obituary that she would be remembered for her passion for animals and her constant smile.

Catherine was among the 20 students and six teachers killed when Adam Lanza, armed with a military-style assault rifle, broke into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown on Dec. 14 and opened fire. Lanza killed his mother at her home before the attack and committed suicide at the school as police closed in.

Funerals were also scheduled in Connecticut on Thursday for 7-year-old Grace McDonnell and 6-year-olds Benjamin Andrew Wheeler, Jesse Lewis and Allison Wyatt, and a memorial was held for teacher Lauren Gabrielle Rousseau.

In New York, Cardinal Timothy Dolan told mourners at the funeral of 52-year-old Anne Marie Murphy that the teacher "brought together a community, a nation, a world, now awed by her own life and death."

Murphy's father, Hugh McGowan, said authorities told him that she died trying to protect her young pupils. Her body was found covering a group of children's bodies as if to shield them, McGowan said.

Dolan underscored her sacrifice.

"Like Jesus, Annie laid down her life for her friends," Dolan said. "Like Jesus, Annie's life and death brings light, truth, goodness and love to a world often shrouded in darkness, evil, selfishness and death."

About 15 people arrived at St. Mary of the Assumption Church in Katonah, N.Y., in a yellow school bus with "Newtown" written on its side. The church quickly filled and about 100 mourners waited outside.

Janelle Wingert, of Wyoming, said in an email interview that she met Murphy when they were involved in the same faith-based community service activities in the Newtown area. She said Murphy asked her after 9/11 what she would do if someone attacked a school where she was working.

"She was serious and so intense in the question," Wingert said in a Facebook post. "She died doing exactly what she said she would do ? put herself between the gunman and her little ones, who she saw as the most precious of all in God's heart."

Trinity Episcopal church on Newtown's Main Street was filled to capacity for the funeral of Benjamin Wheeler, and scores of mourners who couldn't get in milled about outside. The service for a child described as a lighthouse buff, budding musician and Beatles fan included a rendition of "Here Comes The Sun" and the hymn "Amazing Grace."

Benjamin's five uncles acted as pallbearers. About two dozen Boy Scout leaders lined the front pathway to the church in honor of the former Cub Scout.

In downtown Danbury, mourners filed into the ornate white-pillared First Congregational Church for a memorial service for teacher Lauren Rousseau. The congregation in the packed church sang "Morning Has Broken" and "Let There Be Peace On Earth."

Friends wept on the altar as they remembered the spirited, hardworking, sunny-natured young woman who loved children and animals, especially cats, and who had always wanted to be a teacher. They spoke of how the 30-year-old brightened their lives with her silliness and gave them all nicknames.

A U.S. Justice Department official told The Associated Press that Attorney General Eric Holder would travel to Newtown on Thursday to meet with first responders and law enforcement officials. The trip comes after Holder met with Vice President Joe Biden, who is tasked with leading an administration-wide effort to create new proposals for reducing gun violence.

The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the trip hadn't been publicly announced.

In addition to the services, the families of 6-year-old Olivia Rose Engel, behavioral therapist Rachel Marie D'Avino and school psychologist Mary Sherlach have calling hours Thursday.

At least nine funerals and wakes were held Wednesday, and more are set for Friday and Saturday.

___

Associated Press writer Frederic J. Frommer in Washington, Jim Fitzgerald in Katonah, N.Y., Christina Rexrode in New York, Helen O'Neill in Danbury, Conn., and Eilleen AJ Connelly and Tom Hays in Newtown contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-12-20-Connecticut%20School%20Shooting/id-f9a1e8175e184734941c21fc94d2a9fc

felicia day nfl 2012 draft st louis rams miami dolphins buffalo bills minnesota vikings pittsburgh steelers

Video: Dead Sea scrolls digitized by Google

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

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsVideo/~3/6ofUt697K8w/

roseanne barr guy fawkes gary johnson gary johnson walking dead where do i vote dixville notch

Despite emotions, little happens legislatively after mass shootings (CNN)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/272134083?client_source=feed&format=rss

freddie mercury Horshack Beady Eye david bowie Eric Idle rory mcilroy Fatboy Slim

Hospice Look after the Terminally Ill | ArticlePDQ.com

Hospice care serves people for whom all treatment techniques have actually been exhausted. They are terminally ill that they are in the last periods of their life. A group of devoted professionals takes care of the demands of such clients. They have various demands such as emotional, social, physical, and spiritual. The main aim of terminal in residence care is not to manage the illness. They aim to alleviate the suffering and improve the quality of life of the patient. This is done for whatever time the patient has left.

Typically, this type of a care is provided for individuals who have a short time left to live. Normally, this will certainly be 6 months or less. This is no quick rule, however. This form of care can be extended as long as it is required. People who sign up for such care have, in most cases, cancer or a similar ailment for which there is no remedy. People affected with other conditions such as heart disease, chronic pulmonary illness, or dementia could also need such care. The staff develops a sturdy bonding with the afflicted. Terminal in home care is given with a relative being the main health professional. The patient will be attended at home, hence the name. A home care giver can be employed or it could be a family member.

Care depends on the household?s demands in addition to that of the clients. Lots of clients prefer to spend their remaining time in their home, in the presence of their friends. This is the reason why most cases of such care are offered in your home. In some cases the patient may have to be shifted to the healthcare facility. This is because residences lack facilities. No matter where care is provided, it has to be expert. Hence people who are in charge of the terminally ill are particularly geared towards this activity.

Resolving the various needs of the critically ill:

The patient, being at their home, implies they get enough psychological support. Being with their families gives them a lot of support. They also do not suffer boredom, being always surrounded by their relatives. The quality of care offered will deal with the physical demands of the clients.

The family member must be geared to this activity. Home care services are typically skillfully well equipped. The spiritual requirements of the clients can be dealt with by occasional visits from men of the cloth. The family member could also pose open ended spiritual questions to the patient. This should not be forced upon them, however. If they look for such assistance, give it to them. The various needs of the individual client have to be considered.

Saying a final goodbye is always painful. Being at house, it is easier for the ill to tell their last wishes to the family members. Encourage them to share their feelings freely.

Source: http://articlepdq.com/health-fitness/hospice-look-after-the-terminally-ill/

The Campaign Kinesio tape randy travis Allyson Felix Kourtney Kardashian Baby Girl Ashton Eaton London 2012 basketball

David Letterman talks Newtown tragedy

By Seth Abramovitch , The Hollywood Reporter

David Letterman spent close to seven minutes of Monday's "Late Show" broadcast addressing the senseless shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown that took 20 first graders' lives.

Returning from commercial, the comedian, looking visibly saddened, noted the beauty of the Christmas decorations on the "Late Show" set.

STORY: Gun Scene Cut From Tom Cruise Movie Marketing in Wake of School Shooting?

"It makes me so sad," Letterman began. "They're really for kids. You think about this horrifying circumstance. What part of that do you think about that's going to make any difference? Do you think about the kids in the class? That's too awful to think about."

He continued: "Do you think about the parents and their friends and getting that message from the school and finding out that their lives are irrevocably broken, ruined? You think about your own kid. I take him to school every now and then. Are we supposed to be worried about dropping our kids off at school now? I never worried about it before. I always thought, well here, school is a good place where my son will be free of the idiot decisions made by his father."

Letterman then addressed the topic of guns and mental health -- ?two problematic areas that have become the focus of a fiery public debate over policy reform.

"Believe me, I'm not dumb enough to think that this is a problem of guns," Letterman said. "Before there were guns, people were killing one another. And you can't just say that it's mental health or emotional problems because people with all manner of problems don't necessarily kill each other."

But citing a document prepared by the show's researchers, Letterman did go on to acknowledge?some frightening statistics about firearms.?

STORY: Newtown Shooting Media Frenzy: Viral Fumbles, Morgan Freeman Misquote and Pro-Gun Senators Silent?

"Since 1994, there have been 70 episodes of school shootings, (all) after the Brady Bill had passed (in 1993). Good lord, does that surprise you?" he asked.

Letterman acknowledged that listening to President Barack Obama speak to the Newtown community at Sunday night's memorial made him "feel a little bit better about the situation."

"He's going on the record, (taking) some kind of action... In a small measure, I feel better that he's looking out for us in that regard. It's a sad, sad holiday season," Letterman concluded.

Related content:

More in The Clicker:

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2012/12/18/15997082-david-letterman-addresses-newtown-tragedy-on-late-show?lite

gunner kiel groundhog soulja boy did the groundhog see his shadow punxsutawney phil groundhog day ground hog

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Four decades ago, this gay couple sued for right to marry

R. Bertraine Heine / AP

In this May 18, 1970, photo provided by The Minnesota Historical Society, Mike McConnell, left, and Jack Baker attempt to obtain a Hennepin County marriage license in Minneapolis.

?

By Patrick Condon, The Associated Press

When Jack Baker proposed to Michael McConnell that they join their lives together as a couple, in March 1967, McConnell accepted with a condition that was utterly radical for its time: that someday they would legally marry.

Just a few years later, the U.S. Supreme Court slammed the door on the men's Minnesota lawsuit to be the first same-sex couple to legally marry in the U.S. It took another 40 years for the nation's highest court to revisit gay marriage rights, and Baker and McConnell ? still together, still living in Minneapolis ? are alive to see it.

On Friday, the justices decided to take a potentially historic look at gay marriage by agreeing to hear two cases that challenge official discrimination against gay Americans either by forbidding them from marrying or denying those who can marry legally the right to obtain federal benefits that are available to heterosexual married couples.

"The outcome was never in doubt because the conclusion was intuitively obvious to a first-year law student," Baker wrote in an email to The Associated Press. The couple, who have kept a low profile in the years since they made national headlines with their marriage pursuit, declined an interview request but responded to a few questions via email.

Same-sex couples wed in Seattle for first time

While Baker saw the court's action as an obvious step, marriage between two men was nearly unthinkable to most Americans decades earlier when the couple walked into the Hennepin County courthouse in Minneapolis on May 18, 1970, and tried to get a license.

New York City's Stonewall riots, seen now as the symbolic start to the modern gay rights movement, were less than a year in the past. Sodomy laws made gay sex illegal in nearly every state; most gay men and lesbians were concerned with much more basic rights like keeping their jobs and homes or simply living openly.

"People at the time said these guys were crazy," said Phil Duran, legal counsel to OutFront Minnesota, the state's principal gay rights lobby. "I think today, most people would say, 'Holy mackerel, you saw this when no one else did.' History will vindicate them. It already has."

Forty years after they appeared in a "Look" magazine spread and on "The Phil Donahue Show," Baker and McConnell have retreated from public life. The men, both 70, live in a quiet, nondescript south Minneapolis neighborhood. McConnell recently retired after a long career with the Hennepin County library system. Baker, a longtime attorney who ran unsuccessfully for Minneapolis City Council and a judgeship in the years after they pursued a marriage license, is mostly retired as well. Their case is no longer widely recalled in Minnesota, and the couple has mostly withdrawn from open activism, although the two men are working on a book about their lives.

Today, nine states have legalized gay marriage or are about to do so. The state-by-state approach adopted by gay rights groups has gathered steam, while the Supreme Court has yet to revisit its slim holding in Baker v. Nelson or address whether the Constitution extends marriage rights to straight and gay couples alike.

Just a day after Washington became the latest state to allow gay couples to marry, the U.S. Supreme Court will take a serious look at same-sex marriage for the first time ever. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

?

The high court in October 1972 declined to hear arguments in Baker v. Nelson, rejecting it in a one-sentence dismissal "for want of a substantial federal question." Now, in taking up the dispute over the California constitutional amendment banning gay marriage, the court may confront the issue of whether the U.S. Constitution forbids states from defining marriage as the union of a man and a woman.

"I am convinced that same-sex marriage will be legalized in the United States," Baker told a group of lawyers on Oct. 21, 1971, quoted then by the St. Paul Pioneer Press (in a story that described him as an "admitted homosexual"). But for years after the high court refused to hear arguments in Baker v. Nelson, its single sentence was cited as precedent by federal courts that ruled against same-sex unions.

US Supreme Court to take up same-sex marriage issue

According to an unpublished book about their case by Ken Bronson, a Chicago-based amateur historian who extensively interviewed Baker and McConnell, the two met at a Halloween party in Norman, Okla., in 1966. McConnell, at this first meeting, expressed his belief that gay people should not be treated like second-class citizens. Not long after, Baker ?a U.S. Air Force veteran with an undergraduate degree in engineering ? was fired from a job at Tinker Air Force base for being gay.

Soon the couple relocated to Minneapolis and the University of Minnesota, McConnell to take a job at its library and Baker to study law. He joined a campus group called FREE (Fight Repression of Erotic Expression), an early gay-rights group.

"The fear then wasn't that you'd be discriminated against, that was a given," said Jean Tretter, a member of FREE who went on to decades of gay activism in Minnesota. "You were a lot more afraid that someone might come after you with a shotgun."

Baker and McConnell ? educated, clean-cut and handsome ? contrasted with the typically scruffy counterculture activists of the era. But the Hennepin County attorney blocked their bid for a marriage license, a decision upheld by a district judge and affirmed by the state Supreme Court with reasoning that echoes in today's arguments against gay marriage: "The institution of marriage as a union of man and woman, uniquely involving the procreation and rearing of children within a family, is as old as the Book of Genesis."

Advocates on both sides hope for Supreme Court clarity on same-sex marriage

Asked via email why they pursued the case, Baker wrote, "The love of my life insisted on it."

It was a stormy time for the couple. Soon after McConnell relocated to Minnesota, the University of Minnesota's Board of Regents yanked his job offer because he was openly gay; the U.S. Supreme Court rejected his separate lawsuit to get it back. In April 1971, amid both legal dramas, Baker was elected and then a year later re-elected as president of the university's student government.

Two decades after the U.S. Supreme Court dismissed Baker v. Nelson, the Hawaii Supreme Court in 1993 ruled that homosexuals had a constitutional right to marry. It started the ball rolling on a movement that has seen many victories and setbacks since.

"Jack was the politician ? outgoing and effective, manipulating the material world," said Roger Lynn, a retired Methodist pastor who performed a marriage ceremony for the men in 1971, and who remains in touch with them occasionally. "Michael was the librarian, detail-oriented, more introverted. They were a good match, and they're still making it work."

In a strange twist to their story, Baker wrote via email that he and McConnell would be personally unaffected if Minnesota legalizes gay marriage. In 1971, about 18 months after Hennepin County rejected their application, the couple traveled to southern Minnesota's Blue Earth County, where they obtained a marriage license on which Baker was listed with an altered, gender-neutral name.

That license was later challenged in court but was never explicitly invalidated by a judge. While Baker recently predicted on his blog that gay marriage would be legalized in Minnesota soon, he emailed that he and McConnell don't see a need to make it official in Hennepin County.

"We are legally married," Baker wrote.

More content from NBCNews.com:

Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/10/15817378-41-years-ago-this-gay-couple-sued-for-the-right-to-marry-and-the-supreme-court-rejected-them?lite

seattle times seattle times walker recall censor pipa and sopa sopa pipa wikipedia blackout

Boustany wins La. congressional seat, year's final House contest (Washington Bureau)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/269514038?client_source=feed&format=rss

arpaio carol burnett neil degrasse tyson neil degrasse tyson davy jones death born this way foundation lytro camera