Friday, October 26, 2012

Video: Students find new use for old-world skills



>>> finally tonight, a labor of love, a place where people are using their hands to make something new of their lives, by learning some of the oldest skills in the book. our report on this from nbc's christian ja jansing.

>> reporter: the sounding coming from the school remind them of an earlier era. the scrape on wood, the notes on a piano. this trade school has been in boston since it started to train immigrants in 1885 . and today, without a computer in sight, they're teaching old-world technique to students looking for a new start.

>> they have had another career or they have gotten to another point in their education, where they're about to go out for a career and think i don't really want to do this.

>> reporter: erica worked in finance, for a decade when she was laid off.

>> a lot of colleagues went to another firm, and i knew that was the wrong answer for me.

>> reporter: now, she is using book binding , with plans to use her knowledge to start a business. when this lady lost her job as an architect, she saw furniture-making as a need, but one in constant demand.

>> there is always going to be a place for a well-trained, hand craft individual in the world.

>> reporter: the school has eight individual training programs that last nine months to three years, from fine jewelry making to hand-crafting violins.

>> this this shop, the beautiful work is sold. 85% of these people will find a job within six months of graduation, and in the first year, make 30-40,000.

>> reporter: that is much less than ryan stolz could make as a nurse.

>> that is fine by me.

>> reporter: he goes by the philosophy, do what you love every day, which may be why the dropout rate is under 5%.

>> somehow, they experience what they know is a meaningful activity for them, working with your hands, once you do it you don't want to stop doing it.

>> reporter: a simple but profound belief that one's work, a second act in life, should be nothing but first rate, boston.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/49560890/

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Monday, October 8, 2012

Painting Under the Sun: Paul Rasch, Paul's Home Improvement ...

If you live in the Shoals Alabama area, are remodeling your house, and need an experienced, professional painter to help you achieve the look that you want, we have a name for you--Paul Rasch of Paul?s Home Improvement, Florence, AL. We assure you that you will not be disappointed. Paul Rasch is the kind of person that you will welcome into your home. When he arrives at your home, he will be dressed in neat clothing--blue shirt featuring his logo and khaki pants. When he leaves, he will look just as neat, without a drop of paint on his clothing.

We have never encountered such a fine craftsman as Paul Rasch. He tackles every job with the same determination and skill to create the very best result. We were amazed at the amount of preparation that he applies to every step in a job. He pays special attention to using the very best materials and equipment--whether it is primer, caulking, brushes, sandpaper, or paint. He holds a light to inspect every aspect of his preparation (repairing, caulking, and sanding) to make sure that every surface becomes as smooth as possible. We were amazed as we watched Paul hold a light in one hand as he painted with the other. After the project is completed, Paul works to ensure that he leaves your home as neat as he found it by scrubbing every surface with clean cloths and vacuuming every floor.

If you need an expert painter, whether inside or outside your home, be sure to call Paul Rasch, Paul?s Home Improvement, at 256-762-8125 to receive an estimate on your job.

Source: http://tommythompsonart.blogspot.com/2012/10/paul-rasch-pauls-home-improvement.html

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Congress Solitaire - Apple iPhone / iPod Touch / iPad App Promo Codes to Giveaway

Congress Solitaire - Apple iPhone / iPod Touch / iPad App Promo Codes to Giveaway
Posted on 05th Oct 2012
This brilliant little card game will keep you entertained for hours on end, as you work your way through two decks, trying to build your foundations from ace to king. There are 8 piles in the main play area where cards can be dragged from the discard pile. ... (scroll down to enter giveaway OR read more...).
Developer / Publisher: Sprightly Software
Category: Games Watch Demo Video
Platform: iPhone | iPod Touch | iPad $1.99 Buy now
Original price of the app at time of giveaway.

How to enter:

Do one of the following or even better all 4 for 'BONUS ENTRIES' then click 'Enter Giveaway' (see below) and feel free to leave a comment too?
Like this app on Facebook = 2 Entries
Tweet this post on Twitter = 2 Entries
Join AppGiveaway on Facebook = 1 Entry
Follow AppGiveaway on Twitter = 1 Entry



What happens now?

1. The giveaway ends on 9th October 2012.
2. The winner(s) will be chosen at random (Don?t forget your BONUS ENTRIES above).
3. The winner(s) will be contacted by email and announced below.
?Watch this space ? it could be you or someone you know?

Comments


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Source: http://www.appgiveaway.com/id/944/Games/2012/05/10/Congress-Solitaire-apple-iPhone-iPod-Touch-iPad-app-promo-codes-to-giveaway/

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RFID chips for Texas students

posted at 6:31 pm on October 7, 2012 by Jazz Shaw

Is this a story of the nanny state gone (further) awry, a community ensuring the safety of at risk children, or just a group of bureaucrats trying to glam onto some extra cash? The San Antonio Times brings us the story of a school district which will begin ?tracking? students in middle and high school using RFID chips. What could possibly go wrong?

Northside Independent School District plans to track students next year on two of its campuses using technology implanted in their student identification cards in a trial that could eventually include all 112 of its schools and all of its nearly 100,000 students?

Northside, the largest school district in Bexar County, plans to modify the ID cards next year for all students attending John Jay High School, Anson Jones Middle School and all special education students who ride district buses. That will add up to about 6,290 students.

Sounds positively Orwellian, doesn?t it? In fact, that?s precisely one of the words which Lee DeCovnick uses at The American Thinker to describe this new intrusion into American privacy.

Farmers currently use chips to track cattle and hogs. RFID is also commonly used for tracking store retail inventories and monitoring vehicle access to gated properties. Now that we have the technology, we?re ?chipping? our children for money and their supposed safety? Orwell and Huxley must be outraged that their warnings have gone so unheeded.

DeCovnick is additionally concerned because these aren?t the old school, passive RFID tags which have to be pulsed by a transmitter to give up their data. These newer models have batteries installed and actually transmit data which could, in theory, be picked up by strangers, predators, etc. It?s a valid point. But if they are closely monitoring who has access to the data and they?re going to be tracking the kids only to make sure that evil persons don?t carry them away, then?

Oh, wait.

District officials said the Radio Frequency Identification System (RFID) tags would improve safety by allowing them to locate students ? and count them more accurately at the beginning of the school day to help offset cuts in state funding, which is partly based on attendance.

Okay? so they?re installing the system to qualify for a system whereby ? if they can show how many students are showing up for school and how many are riding the bus ? the district will take in a big additional chunk of state funds. (Far more than the cost of implementing and running the not inexpensive tracking system.) But as long as they?re improving safety by monitoring the movements of the children and could follow the perps if they are abducted too, then at least some good will still?

Oh wait. Again.

Chip readers on campuses and on school buses can detect a student?s location but can?t track them once they leave school property. Only authorized administrative officials will have access to the information, Gonzalez said.

?This way we can see if a student is at the nurse?s office or elsewhere on campus, when they normally are counted for attendance in first period,? he said.

On the one hand, I?m not sure how much of a privacy issue I want to make of this if and only if the parents approve and find some value in it. Their decisions about the safety of their children override the concerns of the students in a case like this. But I?m also not sure how much extra safety they are getting out of the deal in exchange for the potential anxiety being induced. And more than anything, it looks like the schools are simply looking for a way to qualify for bigger cuts of the tax dollar pie by proving how many bodies they can shove into the classrooms each week.

So what do you think? Privacy issue? Funding scheme? Too much? Not enough?

Source: http://hotair.com/archives/2012/10/07/rfid-chips-for-texas-students/

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Dish And The Dream Of Internet TV

dishmobileSo Dish is the latest company interested in building an Internet TV service, as Bloomberg reported last week that it was in talks with various networks about licensing their content and delivering it over-the-top. But while an over-the-top live TV would certainly be a welcome choice among video options, it's unlikely to be as cheap or as competitive as everyone would like it to be. Dish isn't alone in this pursuit: Over the last several years, we've heard about tech companies like Apple and Microsoft being in discussions with media companies to create their own bundled Internet TV services.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/7vmMNPP5-xc/

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Vonne Monai's Beauty, Health & Fitness Guide: Skinny Black Men ...

I am an American Mulatto.
My Mother is Cherokee & Seminole (tall, yellow, black kinky hair, (Bette Davis) brown eyes, pretty.
My Father is Italian American (tall, rock star skinny, curly blond hair, gorgeous blue eyes, incredibly handsome.

I am 5'7", 100 lbs., Size Zero, Brown Eyes, Curly Black Hair
Professional Actress, Model,?Composer, Artist & Poetess

My name is pronounced vonnie monay

I have created hundreds of original musical compositions, but due to the excessiveness of the Organized Criminal Gang Stalking I have to endured on a constant basis; I have only 60 songs?and only 60 poems?copywritten.

I also have not had the time to even present my work in a professional manner.

I figured I would present it raw since these creatures think they can erase me and my life. ?They are lowlives who think they can make their outrageous "frame ups" stick.

I have been a vegetarian all of my life.

I know it is not for everyone and have never and will never try to force anyone to eat the way I do. I was forced by my mother to eat meat because of my blood disorder, Thalassemia Minor. She tried to frighten me into eating it by telling me that I would die if I didn't. I am still alive!

?

I am a True Gemini a Syzygy and a Grand Cross!

Syzygy?in?Astronomy? is an alignment of three celestial objects, as the sun, the earth, and either the moon or a planet.

In a Grand Cross, there is one planet in each astrological element (fire, earth, air and water) but all the planets are in signs of the same modality or quality.

I am a victim of child pornographers, sadistic, homosexual, pedophile, rapists, kidnapping, forced breeding & sex slavery. I am still stalked by these slanderers. I will tell anyone who will listen until I have justice. I am so fed up with them that I have begun to names names.

These brute beasts twice dead (A New Teatament description of these creatures) ought to thank me for sharing their actual "Accomplishments" Crimes.

I think it is all about the land that was stolen from my family.

Tropicana Orange Juice is on it in Bradenton, Florida, USA.

These posts are designed to disrupt the MuslimTerrorist, Zionists/Jewish, Papist/Catholic Inquisitors/Mafia & Willie Lynch Slaves/Blacks , Third World/Illegal Aliens attempts to commit The Genocide of True Americans!

Source: http://vonnemonai.blogspot.com/2012/10/skinny-black-men-who-love-ugly-fat.html

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Pocono return celebrates IndyCar history

IndyCar driver Ed Carpenter had the chance to take a drive around Pocono Raceway, and promptly handed the car keys to racing great Mario Andretti.

With Pocono officially back on the IndyCar schedule after a 23-year absence, Carpenter wanted to pick up as many tips as possible from someone with experience at "The Tricky Triangle." Andretti was all too happy to turn some laps at Monday's event because "I am too damn old to drive this thing" in next July's race.

The return to Pocono is being celebrated as a nod to IndyCar's history and tradition. Pocono's three corners were designed in 1965 to model corners at Indianapolis, Milwaukee and now-defunct Trenton, and fans have always considered the track an important venue in open wheel racing.

"It was music to my ears when some of the noise began flying around we might be coming back," said Andretti, who lives in Pennsylvania. "This facility means not only a great deal to me personally, but also to the Northeast area fans that have been here since the beginning. The drivers will love this place ? the challenges it presents are just second to none as far as a superspeedway. There's nothing but good things ahead."

Carpenter recognized that when he entered the infield, where IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard and Pocono CEO Brandon Igdalsky on Monday celebrated the series return.

"Just pulling through the tunnel and coming into the facility, you get the feeling that this is a special place, the same kind of feeling that I get in Indianapolis, so I can't wait to get on track here in an IndyCar," said Carpenter.

With the return to Pocono comes the return of the "Triple Crown" challenge, which will award $1 million to a driver that wins the Indianapolis 500, the 400-miler at Pocono and the season finale at Fontana, Calif. The challenge will give $250,000 if a driver wins two of the three races.

"If you are going to bring history back, then you bring back Pocono and the Triple Crown," Bernard said. "That's what fans have been asking for the three years I've been here."

Pocono was part of a Triple Crown from 1971-1980 that included the Indianapolis 500, Pocono 500, and California 500 at Ontario. Al Unser in 1978 was the only driver to win all three in the same season. Ontario was closed in 1980, and replaced with the Michigan 500 through 1989, when Pocono stopped hosting open wheel racing.

But Igdalsky said fans had been vocal in wanting IndyCar back at the track.

"The excitement level is through the roof," Igdalsky said.

The race will only be 400 miles instead of the traditional 500 because Bernard wanted it on ABC, which gave IndyCar a three-hour coverage window.

Pocono was one of two new venues announced Sunday night by Bernard on a 19-race schedule for next season. The schedule includes doubleheader races at Detroit, Toronto and Houston, which is the other new venue.

A proposal for a street race in Providence, R.I., did not make the schedule because Bernard said promoters "ran out of time" to finalize a deal for the 2013 season and Bernard said he's not likely to add any more events for next year.

The scheduling announcements were threatened to be overshadowed Monday by a report that the IndyCar Series is considering an offer to sell to a group of team owners who had pooled their resources. Jeff Belskus, president and CEO of Hulman & Co. and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Corp., denied the report Monday and said the series "is not for sale" and the board has not received or considered any offers to purchase the series.

"The racing in 2012 showcased great competition on track and added to the foundation for growing the series," he said in a statement. "The just-announced 2013 schedule includes several new twists that could make the racing even more exciting. The combination of the return of nearly all the 2012 venues, including all the ovals, the addition of new tracks and the revival of the Triple Crown award make this one of the most exciting schedules in recent memory."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pocono-return-celebrates-indycar-history-183920529--spt.html

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Ohio ground game: Three yards and a cloud of dust

LEWIS CENTER, Ohio?For all the fascination with high-tech campaign apps and social networking strategies, the volunteer armies for Barack Obama and Mitt Romney go into battle equipped with the oldest political weapon of them all?the clipboard. The voter contact lists may be based on sophisticated algorithms, but the streetwalkers and the door-knockers of politics still depend on time-honored techniques like broad smiles, practiced pitches and infinite patience.

Wearing a bright red Romney T-shirt and carrying dog treats to win over barking pets, Sharyn Sytsma stands on Natalie Chubb?s front porch and says, ?My name is Sharyn?and I?m a volunteer for the Ohio Republican Party.? We are on Big Sur Drive (the Ohio Big Sur without oceans or mountains) in this affluent Columbus suburb where houses go for more than $300,000. This is a Republican neighborhood and within seconds Sytsma?whose only prior political volunteer work was as a college student for Richard Nixon in 1968?is racing back to the trunk of her car to get a Romney-Ryan lawn sign for Chubb.

With the cooperation of the Romney and Obama campaigns, I am accompanying dedicated canvassers on their appointed rounds. This is the non-glamorous side of campaign 2012,? the political equivalent of legendary Ohio State football coach Woody Hayes? strategy of "three yards and a cloud of dust." My footsore goal is partly to get a sense of the ground game that could make a difference in a close election. But I am also trying to piggyback on the Romney and Obama lists to spot the most elusive prey in 2012 politics?the truly undecided voter.

It is a sunny Saturday afternoon in the Columbus area with just a few fallen leaves dotting the sidewalks as a harbinger of autumn. I first caught up with Sytsma, a business manager, in a bustling strip mall that housed the Romney headquarters filled with more than three dozen volunteers serving the southern portion of Delaware County. (In 2008, John McCain carried Delaware County with 59 percent of the vote.)

Within a few minutes, Sytsma finds what I?m looking for. Phil Horstman, a middle-aged industrial engineer who voted for McCain in 2008, tells the smiling Sytsma, ?I really don?t like Barack Obama, but I don?t like the direction that the Republicans are going in either.? At my prompting, Horstman explains that Romney & Company are ?too pro-business.? He continues: ?They exclude a lot of folks. Most people don?t own a business.? Horstman also tellingly brings up Romney?s "47 percent" comment to illustrate the GOP nominee?s ability ?to put his foot in his mouth.?

But predicting voting behavior based on front-porch banter remains a tricky business. Horstman has scant affection for Obama (?too anti-business?) and will not be watching Wednesday night?s opening-gun debate because he has to work. But Horstman gave a hint of where his final voting sentiments are apt to end up when he says, ?I hope Romney does real well in the debate.?

Jay Smith, a 62-year-old Columbus commercial real estate broker, is Sytsma?s political doppelganger. The veteran Democratic volunteer?his sister Gayle Smith is a top White House foreign policy adviser?is the Obama leader in German Village, a hip neighborhood of 19th-century brick homes near downtown. Instructing a small group of new Obama canvassers on Saturday morning, the white-haired Smith tells them, ?Remember you?re representing the president of the United States. Overwhelm people with kindness.?

On Saturday morning, we have gone down a few steps on the economic ladder from German Village to knock on doors in the adjoining Merion Village. This is a largely Democratic transitional neighborhood on its way back up, where homes on small lots without historical pedigree cost about $100,000. When Smith finds Democratic voters like a woman in her late 50s with a faded ?Love Hurts? tattoo and a marginal job baby-sitting, he urges them to take advantage of Ohio?s early-voting rules.

But as we walk along Southwood Avenue, Smith?s canvass sheets direct him to Kevin Scholl, a wavering 2008 Obama voter. Scholl, a firefighter wearing shorts and a white T-shirt, explains that he is not making up his mind until he watches Wednesday night?s debate. Smith, ever the salesman, stresses that Obama needs another four years to get the job done; he also pauses in his hucksterism to admire the vintage jukebox in Scholl?s living room.

In response to my questioning, Scholl is vague about precisely what he is looking for in the debates. But he knows what bothers him?the bailouts. ?The bailout thing was a mystery to me,? he says. ?Not the auto bailout, but the Wall Street bailout.? Still, in a reminder that all politics is local, the major source of Scholl?s ire is Ohio Republican Gov. John Kasich and his efforts to curtail the collective bargaining rights of public-sector unions like the firefighters.

It is folly to draw any big-picture Ohio conclusions from my Saturday front-porch politicking in the Columbus area. But walking the beat with Sytsma and Smith did underscore a reality about ground-level campaigning for both Republicans and Democrats: Fewer than 20 percent of all voters are home and willing to chat with a stranger on their doorstep on a Saturday.

So the next time you hear a campaign operative for either Obama or Romney brag about the number of ?door knocks? by volunteers, remember that the real hidden number is ?door answers.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/the-ohio-ground-game--what-moves-the-undecided-voter-.html

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Bleacher Report's College Football Top 25 Poll: Week 6

Poll Points (first-place votes): 575 (23)? ? ? ?? ??????????????

Record: 5-0 (2-0, SEC)? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

Last Game: Sept. 29, beat Ole Miss, 33-14

Next Game: Oct. 13 at Missouri Tigers

Previous Ranking: 1

Alabama's defense picked off three Ole Miss passes as the Crimson Tide defeated the Rebels, 33-14.

Quarterback AJ McCarron completed 22 of 30 passes for 180 yards and two touchdowns for the Crimson Tide.

Alabama held Ole Miss to 218 yards of total offense.

Bleacher Report Voters: David Mayer (Poll Coordinator), Adam Jacobi, Alex Joseph, Alex Callos, Amy Daughters, Barrett Sallee, Carl Stine, David Luther, Rich Thomaselli, Eric Bowman,?Ian Berg, James Brown, Jason Fraychineaud, John Greely, John Rozum, Jonathan McDanal, Kay Jennings, Luke Pashke, Marty Sondermann, Max Rausch, Michael Felder, Sanjay Kirpalani, Zach Dirlam.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1345593-bleacher-reports-college-football-top-25-poll-week-6

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Chicago looks to Twitter for answer to gun problem

The city of Chicago is asking residents with ideas on how to get illegal guns off the streets to share their thoughts -- in 140 characters or fewer on Twitter.

The initiative is part of Chicago Ideas Week, an annual forum for innovators, artists, scientists and others to share ideas and inspire action.

Those who think they know how to cut off the flow of illegal guns into Chicago are being asked to tweet them with the hashtag (hash)whatifchicago.

The best submitted ideas will be debated at an Oct. 11 panel discussion.

Chicago's social media director, Kevin Hauswirth, says the effort is a great example of "the potential power that social media offers city government."

According to police, 382 people have been killed so far this year, many by guns, as of the middle of September.

Source: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/o-U-8ZGJXwc/

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