Monday, October 29, 2012

New Pakistan outreach could aid Afghan peace deal

FILE - In this Aug. 5, 2012 file photo, Pakistani Taliban patrol in their stronghold of Shawal in the Pakistani tribal region of South Waziristan. Pakistan has stepped up outreach to some of its biggest enemies in Afghanistan, a significant policy shift that could prove crucial to U.S.-backed efforts to strike a peace deal in the war-torn country.The target of the diplomatic push has mainly been non-Pashtun political leaders who have been at odds with Pakistan for years because of the country's historical support for the Afghan Taliban, a Pashtun movement. (AP Photo/ Ishtiaq Mahsud, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 5, 2012 file photo, Pakistani Taliban patrol in their stronghold of Shawal in the Pakistani tribal region of South Waziristan. Pakistan has stepped up outreach to some of its biggest enemies in Afghanistan, a significant policy shift that could prove crucial to U.S.-backed efforts to strike a peace deal in the war-torn country.The target of the diplomatic push has mainly been non-Pashtun political leaders who have been at odds with Pakistan for years because of the country's historical support for the Afghan Taliban, a Pashtun movement. (AP Photo/ Ishtiaq Mahsud, File)

FILE - In this Monday, May 14, 2012, file photo, Pakistan's Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar, talks to reporters in Islamabad, Pakistan. Pakistan has stepped up outreach to some of its biggest enemies in Afghanistan, a significant policy shift that could prove crucial to U.S.-backed efforts to strike a peace deal in the war-torn country. The target of the diplomatic push has mainly been non-Pashtun political leaders who have been at odds with Pakistan for years because of the country?s historical support for the Afghan Taliban, a Pashtun movement. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed, File)

FILE-In this Nov 4, 2009 file picture Abdullah Abdullah, former Afghan Foreign Minister, gestures during a press conference in Kabul, Afghanistan. The influential politician, who was runner-up to Afghan President Hamid Karzai in the 2009 election, said Pakistani intelligence officials contacted him in previous years, but he refused to speak with them because he did not believe communication should be carried out in secret. Pakistan has stepped up outreach to some of its biggest enemies in Afghanistan, a significant policy shift that could prove crucial to U.S.-backed efforts to strike a peace deal in the war-torn country. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus, File)

FILE-In this Nov 4, 2009 file picture Abdullah Abdullah, former Afghan Foreign Minister, gestures during a press conference in Kabul, Afghanistan. The influential politician, who was runner-up to Afghan President Hamid Karzai in the 2009 election, said Pakistani intelligence officials contacted him in previous years, but he refused to speak with them because he did not believe communication should be carried out in secret. Pakistan has stepped up outreach to some of its biggest enemies in Afghanistan, a significant policy shift that could prove crucial to U.S.-backed efforts to strike a peace deal in the war-torn country. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus, File)

(AP) ? Pakistan has increased efforts to reach out to some of its biggest enemies in Afghanistan, a significant policy shift that could prove crucial to U.S.-backed efforts to strike a peace deal in the neighboring country.

The target of the diplomatic push has mainly been non-Pashtun political leaders who have been at odds with Pakistan for years because of the country's historical support for the Afghan Taliban, a Pashtun movement.

Many of the leaders fought against the Taliban when the fundamentalist Islamic group seized control of Afghanistan in the 1990s with Pakistan's help, and have accused Islamabad of maintaining support for the insurgents following the U.S.-led invasion in 2001 ? allegations denied by the government.

Many experts agree that Pakistan continues to see the Taliban as an ally, albeit a shaky one, in countering the influence of archenemy India in Afghanistan. But they also say Islamabad no longer believes the insurgents can take over the country or wants them to, a common misperception in the West.

"A Taliban victory on the other side of the border would give a huge boost to domestic militants fighting the Pakistani state," said Zahid Hussain, a journalist who has written extensively about Islamabad's war against the Pakistani Taliban.

Pakistan is also worried that unrest in Afghanistan following the withdrawal of most foreign troops in 2014 could provide the Pakistani Taliban with greater space to establish sanctuaries across the border.

The Afghan and Pakistani Taliban are allies but have focused on different enemies. The Afghan Taliban battle local and foreign forces in Afghanistan, while the Pakistani Taliban mainly wage war against Islamabad.

These concerns have led Pakistan to the conclusion that a peace agreement that includes all Afghan groups is in its best interests, and contact with its traditional foes among the non-Pashtuns is necessary to achieve that goal, said Moeed Yusuf, South Asia adviser for the United States Institute of Peace.

"I think the fundamental point here is that there is a serious realization among some people who matter in Pakistan that they can't continue to put all their eggs in the Taliban basket because it is too shaky," said Yusuf. "This is a major shift, and a shift that I think everybody should welcome."

The outreach comes as Pakistan, Afghanistan and the U.S. have stepped up efforts to breathe new life into the Taliban peace process, which has been hamstrung by distrust among all the parties involved.

The U.S. and Pakistan recently set up working groups to identify which Taliban leaders would be open to reconciliation and to ensure those holed up on Pakistani territory would be able to travel to the site of talks. Pakistan and Afghanistan have been in discussions to revive a joint commission set up to discuss the peace process.

Pakistan is seen as key to a peace deal because of its ties with the Taliban, and there is hope that Islamabad's increased engagement with non-Pashtuns in Afghanistan will facilitate the process.

"I think one of Pakistan's realizations is that if you want to play a bigger role to reconcile all these groups, you need to reach out to every group," said Rahimullah Yousufzai, a Pakistani journalist and expert on the Taliban. "They will be pushing the Taliban to share power with all these people, but it won't be easy because the Taliban aren't known to share power and the U.S. doesn't want to give them a major share."

Islamabad's historical support for the Taliban and other Pashtuns in Afghanistan, who make up about 40 percent of the population of 190 million, is partly rooted in the sizable number of Pashtuns who live in Pakistan. The ethnic group has always been seen as the best bet for furthering Pakistan's interests in the country.

Pakistan first advertised its overtures to non-Pashtuns in Afghanistan in February when Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar met with a range of ethnic Tajik, Uzbek and Hazara leaders during a visit to Kabul. Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf followed suit in July when he traveled to Afghanistan and invited the group to the opening of the new Pakistani Embassy in Kabul.

There have also been less publicized contacts by Pakistan's ambassador to Kabul, Mohammad Sadiq, and the country's army and intelligence service, according to Pakistani and Afghan officials.

Khar said the policy shift had been in the works for a while but was like a steering a large ship in a new direction.

"You're not able to do it immediately," said the foreign minister.

Pakistan's powerful army is the true arbiter of the country's Afghan policy, but experts expressed doubt that the Foreign Ministry would have pushed ahead without the support of the generals, who have historically had the closest relationship to the Taliban.

One key Afghan leader who has met with the Pakistanis, Abdullah Abdullah, said he appreciated the country's recent attempt to reach out because it was done publicly. The influential politician, who was runner-up to Afghan President Hamid Karzai in the 2009 election, said Pakistani intelligence officials contacted him in previous years, but he refused to speak with them because he did not believe communication should be carried out in secret.

"I see a lot of good in reaching out, in engagement, in dialogue," said Abdullah, who is half Pashtun but draws much of his support from the Tajik community.

The outreach has rattled the Taliban, who have warned Pakistani officials that they can't trust the non-Pashtuns, Yousufzai said.

Pakistan will have to overcome significant distrust among the non-Pashtuns. The government has old ties to some of the leaders, who worked with Pakistan in the 1980s to push the Soviets out of Afghanistan, but Islamabad's subsequent support for the Taliban created a huge amount of bad blood.

Despite that, the Pakistanis are hopeful.

"The Pakistani side's view of Afghan negotiations is that you kill on one day and kiss on the next, so while this will be very tough, they think that it's not entirely out of the realm of possibility that they may actually get somewhere," said Yusuf, the South Asia analyst.

____

Vogt reported from Kabul, Afghanistan.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-10-27-Pakistan-Afghan%20Outreach/id-1c9f588defa14ae5b7cdfe76e211de85

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Boeing touts outsourcing for suppliers to Mexico - Northwest - The ...

SEATTLE ? Boeing is encouraging its suppliers to attend a workshop next month to learn how to outsource business to Mexico.

The Seattle Times ( http://tinyurl.com/8g9p46h) reports that Patrick McKenna, director of Supply Chain Strategy and Supplier Management at Boeing Commercial Airplanes, has urged suppliers to attend a Nov. 15 workshop in Chicago to learn how to do business in Mexico.

"Several of our suppliers have successfully set up factories in Mexico because of the numerous advantages that Mexico offers to aerospace suppliers," McKenna wrote in a letter dated Oct. 17. "Boeing will be sending several people to this event, and we wanted to inform our supply base of this opportunity."

The event's organizers will waive the $200 registration fees for Boeing suppliers, he said.

Tom Wroblewski, president of District 751 of the International Association of Machinists, reacted to the letter in political terms.

"We'd think that Boeing CEO Jim McNerney, as chairman of President Obama's council on exports, would be particularly sensitive to the importance of exporting American products, not jobs," said Wroblewski, via email. "We plan on talking to Boeing about this. We believe it is counterproductive to what we are trying to accomplish here."

Boeing spokesman Larry Wilson said "it's a matter of routine business" to keep the company's suppliers informed of opportunities to expand their capacity around the world.

American Industries Group, a private company that helps locate manufacturing operations in Mexico, is running the workshop.

It can build or lease facilities there for corporate clients and also offers administrative support including human resources, customs, accounting and environmental regulatory approval, according to workshop coordinator Myrna De Las Casas.

American Industries has helped more than 200 corporations get started in Mexico, "80 percent of them from the U.S.," she said.

Boeing started promoting the event just recently, De Las Casas said, and she expects some to join the 18 companies already signed up.

Source: http://www.theolympian.com/2012/10/26/2298804/boeing-touts-outsourcing-for-suppliers.html

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Stimulating brain cells with light

ScienceDaily (Oct. 26, 2012) ? Introducing a light-sensitive protein in transgenic nerve cells ... transplanting nerve cells into the brains of laboratory animals ... inserting an optic fibre in the brain and using it to light up the nerve cells and stimulate them into releasing more dopamine to combat Parkinson's disease. These things may sound like science fiction, but they are soon to become a reality in a research laboratory at Lund University in Sweden.

For the time being, this is basic research but the long term objective is to find new ways of treating Parkinson's disease. This increasingly common disease is caused by degeneration of the brain cells producing signal substance dopamine.

Many experiments have been conducted on both animals and humans, transplanting healthy nerve cells to make up for the lack of dopamine, but it is difficult to study what happens to the transplant.

"We don't know how the new nerve cells behave once they have been transplanted into the brain. Do they connect to the surrounding cells as they should, and can they function normally and produce dopamine as they should? Can we use light to reinforce dopamine production? These are the issues we want to investigate with optogenetics," says Professor Merab Kokaia.

Optogenetics allows scientists to control certain cells in the brain using light, leaving other cells unaffected. In order to do this, the relevant cells are equipped with genes for a special light-sensitive protein. The protein makes the cells react when they are illuminated with light from a thin optic fibre which is also implanted in the brain. The cells can then be "switched on" when they are illuminated.

"If we get signals as a response to light from the host brain, we know that they come from the transplanted cells since they are the only ones to carry the light-sensitive protein. This gives us a much more specific way of studying the brain's reactions than inserting an electrode, which is the current method. With an electrode, we do not know whether the electric signals that are detected come from "new" or "old" brain cells," explains Merab Kokaia.

The work will be conducted on laboratory rats modelling Parkinson's disease. The transplanted cells will be derived from skin from an adult human and will have been "reprogrammed" as nerve cells. Merab Kokaia will be collaborating with neuro-researchers Malin Parmar and Olle Lindvall on the project. The three Lund researchers have received a grant of USD 75 000 from the Michael J. Fox Foundation, started by actor Michael J. Fox and dedicated to Parkinson's research.

The light-sensitive protein is obtained from a bacterium, which uses light to gain energy. Since it is not a human protein, the safety checks will be extra strict if the method is to be used on humans.

"We know that this is long term research. But the methodology is interesting and it will be exciting to see what we can come up with," says Merab Kokaia.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Lund University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/biochemistry/~3/siMMFAg3fSQ/121026084356.htm

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Jailbreaking Is Now Legal For Smartphones?But Not Tablets

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act outlaws attempts to "circumvent" digital rights management schemes, but Congress is able to grant exemptions to the rule. Yesterday a bunch of changes were published—making it legal to jailbreak phones, but not tablets. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/l3B_qKU_J1E/jailbreaking-is-now-legal-for-smartphonesbut-not-tablets

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Meningitis outbreak toll: 317 cases, 24 deaths

An outbreak of fungal meningitis has been linked to steroid shots for back pain. The medication, made by a specialty pharmacy in Massachusetts, has been recalled.

Latest numbers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as reported Wednesday:

Illnesses: 317, including five joint infections.

Deaths: 24

States: 17; Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.

___

Online:

CDC: http://www.cdc.gov/HAI/outbreaks/meningitis.html

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2012-10-24-Meningitis%20Outbreak-Toll/id-624036901ddf4d74baefdb63eeb0a040

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Saturday, October 20, 2012

Make Your Home Business Work For You - PDF

Make Your Home Business Work For You

You should know that there are so many great opportunities when it comes to home
business. It is great to work for yourself, and work the hours you want. Making your dreams a
reality can be achieved if you follow the tips and ideas in this article. How To Run Your Home
Business Like A Boss

Consider employing the help of an accountant to manage your business's financial
information. Trying to learn our increasingly complicated tax codes is not the best use of your
time when you are starting out with a new business.

Before you begin marketing and selling products, you should set your price point based off
market research. Research what your competition has and what they charge, and offer your
products at a more competitive price. Talking poorly about rivals is never good business;
simply build up your own business.

Consider charging a membership fee for your website to earn profits. Your site could
probably set up a membership subscription to increase your profits.

Dress professionally for your home business. In a home office scenario, you may feel the
desire to work in your pajamas. Dress business casual, as you would for most jobs outside
the home. Dressing professional means you think and act professional.

Communicate appropriately with your home business customer base; share information
without overwhelming them. Let them know about specials, discounts, new content, and so
on via your e-mail alerts and newsletters. You should always be wary of communication
overload, which means you should have a set schedule for contact.

Be sure to do your best to hire competent people by conducting the proper research before
hiring employees for your home business. Make sure that the people you are trusting are
reliable, and can do the job very well, or you could lose everything you have been working so
hard for.

Helpful Advice On Running A Home Based Business If it's appropriate, you could earn some
money with membership fees. For some websites, subscription fees or memberships can be
a great way to increase the bottom line.

When starting a home based business, it is vital to have a site that you can use to sell your
product. This gives your product a broader audience that can produce higher sales and
bigger profits. Setting up the website can be quick and easy, if you hire a professional to help
you.

If you don't know what you want to sell, think about what products you want or need. The


best new products address a previously unrecognized need. If there is a product that would
solve a problem in your life, it would probably be helpful to others as well.

Now that you have a greater idea of what you need to do to create and manage a home
business, you should start feeling like you can accomplish your home business goals.
Remember that the information you learned is only going to work if you apply it. If you follow
the tips in this article, then your home business should succeed. Tips And Tricks For A
Successful Home Business


Source: http://pdfcast.org/pdf/make-your-home-business-work-for-you

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Friday, October 19, 2012

Video: Kitten rescued from Florida storm drain

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

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/49477960/

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Freezing eggs for fertility works, caution urged

(AP) ? Freezing human eggs can be successful in treating infertility ? but guidelines issued Friday still urge caution for women hoping to pause a ticking biological clock.

Egg freezing had long been labeled experimental, but the American Society for Reproductive Medicine declared that's no longer the case. The group cited studies that found younger women are about as likely to get pregnant if they used frozen-and-thawed eggs for their infertility treatment as if they used fresh ones.

The move is expected to help cancer patients preserve their fertility, by pushing more insurers to pay for their procedure, and to boost banking of donated eggs, similar to sperm banking.

Here's the controversy: Should otherwise healthy women freeze their eggs as sort of an insurance policy against infertility in case they don't meet Mr. Right ? or just aren't ready for motherhood ? until their late 30s or beyond, when the childbearing window is closing fast?

The pricey technology, which insurance doesn't cover for elective reasons, is being marketed aggressively for just that use.

Yet the society that represents doctors who treat infertility stopped short of endorsing egg freezing solely for deferring childbearing until women are older. The conclusion: It's not at all clear who's a good candidate, or if women who store their eggs are being given a false sense of security.

"The bottom line is there is no guarantee," said Dr. Samantha Pfeifer of the University of Pennsylvania, who chaired the society's guideline committee. "A lot of women interested in using this technology are in their late 30s, early 40s, and they may have the worst success of anybody."

Anyone considering egg freezing needs careful counseling about their age and the odds of success if they want to later thaw those eggs for use in in vitro fertilization, the guidelines stress.

"It's an insurance policy that many of those women may never need to turn in," added Dr. Eric Widra of Georgetown University, who co-authored the guideline.

But proponents of egg freezing, known medically as oocyte cryopreservation, say lifting the experimental label will encourage more women to check out the option, and they'll make an educated choice.

"It's none of our business to tell someone, 'No, you shouldn't delay childbearing if you choose for whatever reason,'" said Dr. James Grifo of New York University, whose center has frozen more than 1,100 batches of eggs, mostly for elective fertility preservation. "It's not a promise. It's hope and insurance."

For Brigitte Adams of San Francisco, that hope of a future pregnancy was worth paying about $15,000 to freeze 11 eggs, especially when her parents covered half the bill.

"I'm glad I did it when I did it. I wish I had done it a few years earlier," said Adams, who had the procedure about a year ago at age 39. Her doctor estimated she'd have a 30 percent chance of pregnancy using those eggs later on, "and I thought a 30 percent chance was better than a zero chance."

Adams started a web site, eggsurance.com, to spread word of women's experiences with egg freezing. She says one of the most-asked questions is how to learn about clinics' success rates using frozen eggs. Specialists say lifting the experimental label means more clinics will start publicly reporting that information like they do now for other infertility procedures.

Sperm routinely are frozen. So are the extra embryos of couples undergoing infertility treatment, in case they want to use them for later pregnancy attempts.

But eggs proved more delicate and difficult to freeze than sperm or embryos. The problem: Eggs contain lots of water, and early methods of freezing and thawing allowed ice crystals to form that could destroy or damage them. In the past decade, scientists created a flash-freezing method called vitrification that appears to overcome that challenge.

For a number of years, egg-freezing has been offered experimentally for young women or girls who are diagnosed with cancer or other serious illnesses that would destroy their ovaries.

Then there's age-related infertility: About 1 in 5 U.S. women now have their first child after age 35, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Yet the ability to conceive begins dropping around 35 and more rapidly as the 40s near. Women have fewer eggs left, and these older remaining ones aren't as healthy, meaning even if the woman can get pregnant she's more likely to miscarry.

What's involved in freezing eggs: Women inject high levels of hormones for a week in order to ovulate as many eggs as possible. Retrieving them is an outpatient procedure that can cost $10,000 to $15,000, sometimes not including the cost of the medication. Clinics also charge a storage fee, and then women who wind up using their eggs will pay thousands more to undergo in vitro fertilization.

There are no estimates of how many women have had their eggs frozen. But Pfeifer's committee cited four well-controlled European studies that compared IVF using either fresh eggs or ones that had been frozen from younger women, and found the chances of pregnancy were comparable.

What about birth defects? There are only about 1,500 known live births resulting from frozen eggs worldwide, compared with about 1 million IVF births using fresh eggs. But a recent review of nearly 1,000 of the births from frozen eggs found no increased risk of birth defects, Pfeifer said.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press in Washington.

___

Online:

Society: http://www.asrm.org

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2012-10-19-HealthBeat-Egg%20Freezing/id-dd41bd0a002846c5a1c065f6a9f9f754

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

How To Decide If It's A DIY Home Repair - Business Insider

When we bought our home in foreclosure, it was suffering the effects of former fixes that didn't work out so well. That's being gracious.

Electric wire was stapled to the walls, snaking up to light fixtures and receptacles, with haphazard connections when the wire apparently ran short. Above-the-floor plumbing, combined with inadequate heat and no insulation, resulted in burst pipes.

The great miracle was not that anyone had lived there, but that they made it out alive.

This was exactly the kind of mess we were looking for. My husband, raised in the construction business and a master electrician, had the chops and tools for the job.

As we encountered each miserable attempt by the former owners, it was all too easy to question their judgment. What money they poured into the home was misspent. Years down the road, we have a vastly improved home, yet there are areas that make us scratch our heads and say, "What were we thinking when we did it that way?"

Some remodeling projects are completely doable by the homeowner, with the right tools, knowledge, materials, and prep work. Other projects are best left to a contractor. How do you know where the line is? That's mostly up to your experience, available time, and willingness to make the effort and spend the money to do it right. From a financial angle, it can really pay off to DIY. Even if you have to DIY twice, it's cheaper than hiring a contractor.

Sheer determination isn't always enough. You could harm the resale value of your home with a botched remodel. Your home could be canceled or turned down for coverage, as most insurance companies require proof that a contractor performed the work for major repairs.

Your safety is a graver matter. In a study by the Bureau of Labor and Statistics in 2008, the occupation with the second highest amount of fatalities was construction trade workers. Pause and think. Do you have good health and life insurance? Have you made out your will?

Here is a short list of repairs that need expert handling to guarantee quality and a good return on your investment:

  • Electricity: Any wiring inside the walls, ceiling, or panel box should be handled by a licensed, insured electrician.
  • Plumbing: Avoid jobs involving enclosed pipes, which, if done incorrectly, could weaken surrounding structures and cause mold.
  • Roofing: Steep roof angles and tricky dormer windows are just two conditions that could lead to costly mistakes.
  • Refinishing Hardwood Flooring: Running a drum sander is a little scary for a beginner. You can easily leave dips and scratches. Only attempt it if you have a less-conspicuous area for adequate practice, like a child's bedroom or the mudroom.

So how does a homeowner on a tight budget keep his home ship-shape? He evaluates his resources (or lack thereof) and blends them with the best help he can find to make the most of his investment. If you are anything like us, you'll stubbornly persist in finding a way to do it yourself (although even my husband wisely hired a contractor to install the HVAC system). Try these ideas:

  1. Barter your skills with another skilled tradesman.
  2. Attend classes. Home Depot and other home improvement stores hold classes on specific projects, like laying tile. Some classes are free.
  3. An online tutorial may be all you need to beef up on a subject. A case in point is drywall. It's a little tricky, but with a good tutorial and practice, you can do it. Be aware that some tutorials won't cover the odd bump in the road of a repair. Older homes are notorious for throwing a monkey wrench into the job just as you reach a very critical point. Practice sufficiently before you do the job.
  4. Sometimes more hands will improve the result nearly as much as skill level, such as roofing a house.
  5. Hire a contractor only for the most difficult parts of a project (he runs the drum sander on your wood floor, and you stain and finish), or work out a deal where you do the unskilled grunt work in exchange for a reduced bottom line.

Tackling a remodeling project is financially worthwhile and can be enormously gratifying. Ensure your project is a success story, and not a disaster, with plenty of research and foresight. Otherwise, your repairs could cost more in the long run, and all of your labor (sweat, blood and tears) will not turn into equity.

This article originally appeared on?The Dollar Stretcher.

NOW READ: These Are The Biggest Myths About Hybrid Cars >

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/how-to-decide-if-its-a-diy-home-repair-2012-10

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Watch Claire Danes cry again and again ...

By Courtney Hazlett, TODAY

If a lifetime achievement award for best cry-face existed, Claire Danes would definitely be in the running.

The actress has tackled few roles that didn't require her to go into crying mode, where there's full-face contortion and serious water works. From "My So Called Life" to "Little Women," to her current role as Carrie Mathison on "Homeland" and roles in between, there are countless crying scenes from which to choose, which is where the above video comes in.

The editing geniuses at Slacktory cobbled together the ultimate Claire Danes "Cry Face Supercut" and it's just perfect. Someone get this girl a tissue.

Also in TODAY entertainment:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2012/10/18/14535360-claire-danes-does-the-ugly-cry-a-supercut?lite

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Mitt Romney Is More Similar to George W. Bush Than He Thinks (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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/256283979?client_source=feed&format=rss

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'Butterfly' buildings would never need painting

1 day

A new material?inspired by butterfly wings repels water and gleams with brilliant color. Like iridescent butterflies, the material uses tiny structures on its surface to achieve both qualities.?

A material that's both colorful and water-repelling could someday go into sensors that regulate the interior temperature of "smart buildings," said Shu Yang, a University of Pennsylvania chemist whose research group made the new material.?

Color may come quickly to mind when people think about butterflies, but the little flutterers are remarkably water-resistant, too. "They have to fly, so they cannot afford to have any dirt on the wings," Yang told TechNewsDaily. The surface of butterfly wings has minuscule bumps that cause any water that hits the wing to form beads and roll away, Yang explained. That cleans off the dirt.

Yang and a team of architects and engineers are looking to make a sturdy sensor that changes color in response to temperature. The color change would trigger a computer program that automatically adjusts the heaters and air conditioners of a?smart building. "The general goal is for energy-efficient buildings," Yang said.?

Her material also could go on the outside of buildings, to provide colorful designs that are more durable than conventional paint and that resist dirt and mildew, she said.?

The color in the new material ? as in its insect inspiration ? doesn't come from the pigments and dyes that color most household items. Instead, the material's particularly bright hues come from well-ordered ridges and other structures that are invisible to the naked eye. The complex structures reflect light in particular ways, creating different colors that people see.?

Scientists call such colors?structural color. They can last longer than pigments because they don't fade in the sun. "As long as you don't destroy the structure, the color is always there," Yang said.

At the same time, to make a material waterproof, Yang's team needed to make the surface rough and bumpy. The roughness isn't apparent to the touch because the bumps are nano-sized, but the tiny textures?reduce water's ability to stick?to the material.?

Yang and her research team created a recipe for making a material that has both the patterned ridges for structural color and the nano-bumps for waterproofing. The researchers are now looking to change their manufacturing process to make it less expensive.

Yang's research projects usually focus on just structural color or just waterproofing, not both, she said. But "in nature, in all of these things, it's not just single-functional," she said. "It always is multifunctional."

?Yang and her colleagues?published a paper?about their work in the July issue of the journal Advanced Functional Materials.

You can follow TechNewsDaily staff writer Francie Diep on Twitter @franciediep. Follow TechNewsDaily on Twitter @TechNewsDaily, or on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 TechNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/butterfly-wing-buildings-would-never-need-painting-1C6504610

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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Voter asks Romney how he differs from Bush

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Obama, Romney tangle over immigration

(AP) ? President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney are clashing over immigration, with Romney accusing Obama of failing to reform the immigration system during his first term.

Romney says during the second presidential debate that the nation needs to stop illegal immigration, noting that 4 million people are trying to gain American citizenship legally. He says he won't grant amnesty to people who come to the U.S. illegally.

Obama says Romney has opposed the DREAM Act, a failed bill that would have provided a path to legal status for many young illegal immigrants.

He says Republicans in Congress have been unwilling to support comprehensive immigration reform and won't in the future with Romney as the "standard-bearer" of his party.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-10-16-Debate-Immigration/id-3c9cf98535de419bb7738dfaa9a603f7

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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Disaster Island(Males and Disasters Needed)

In my roleplay Disaster Island I need some guys. It isn't a very complicated RP very simple, but I would like it to be very active. Check it out, Make a character, and have some fun.
http://www.roleplaygateway.com/roleplay/disaster-island/

I have one more open girl spot and 4 guys open!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/x9OjCDwt9lY/viewtopic.php

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'From away': Maine's 6 Senate hopefuls hail from elsewhere

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) ? Maine has always been proud of the commodities it claims as homegrown, among them Stephen King, L.L. Bean, lobster, and a host of political icons including Edmund Muskie, George Mitchell and Olympia Snowe.

But no matter what happens in the election this fall to replace the retiring Snowe, Mainers won't get a native to represent the state. All six candidates ? a Republican, a Democrat and four independents ? are transplants from other states, or as folks in Maine say, "from away."

That's a bit of a shocker to the natives.

"Holy catfish. I get a chill down my back," said Maine humorist Tim Sample.

Independent Angus King hails from Alexandria, Va., attended Dartmouth College and moved to Maine, where he has settled in Brunswick. Democrat Cynthia Dill, born in Carmel, N.Y., attended the University of Vermont and Boston's Northeastern University and now lives in Cape Elizabeth. Republican Charlie Summers grew up and went to college in Illinois and has transplanted himself in Scarborough.

There also are three lesser-known independents: Steve Woods, of Yarmouth, grew up in Needham, Mass.; Danny Dalton, of Brunswick, hails from Massena, N.Y.; and Andrew Ian Dodge, of Harpswell, grew up in Britain and Florida and spent summers in Maine before attending Maine's Colby College and settling in the state.

Out-of-staters running for office isn't anything new, in Maine or elsewhere. Abraham Lincoln was born in Kentucky, moved as a boy to Indiana and settled in Illinois before launching his political career. Hillary Rodham Clinton and the late Robert F. Kennedy moved to New York to run for Senate.

The Maine politician who came closest to a White House run, 1800s newspaperman James G. Blaine, served as U.S. House speaker, senator and secretary of state despite being born in Pennsylvania, said Paul Mills, a lawyer, political analyst, newspaper columnist and historian from Farmington. In modern times, Sen. Bill Hathaway ran against Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, from Skowhegan, and beat her even though he was from Massachusetts.

But it's the first time in at least 130 years that all the Maine Senate candidates are transplants, Mills said.

Considering the sheer number of candidates, that's unusual.

King, who once worked for Hathaway, came to Skowhegan in 1969 to put his law degree to work for Pine Tree Legal Assistance, which helps poor Mainers. He fell in love with the state and stayed, serving as governor from 1995 to 2003.

"What I always tell people is that I wanted to be born in Maine but my mother was in Virginia that day. And since it was a big day for her, I thought I should be there," he joked.

Dill and Summers tell similar stories.

Summers followed his future wife to Maine, taking his first job as assistant manager of the Bangor Motor Inn. After his wife died unexpectedly, he became a single father caring for his children and trying to make ends meet. He's now remarried.

"People will judge you by the way you deal with them," said Summers, who grew up in Kewanee, Ill. "If you deal fairly and honestly with them, then they'll warm to you."

Dill became familiar with Maine through summer vacations as a girl ? and a couple of Grateful Dead concerts as a college student ? before getting legal internships in Brunswick and in Augusta.

"Intentionally choosing this state to live and raise a family and make a living, even though you could make more money other places, demonstrates a commitment to the state and its way of life," she said.

Heaping praise on Maine is a good thing, said Sample, of Bath, because the natives are a proud lot.

The state takes pride in its seafaring and lumberjack roots and its long tradition of independence, which includes parting with big brother Massachusetts in 1820 to become a state of its own.

Here, you can buy "native lobsters" and "native corn." One general store jokingly touts "fresh native ice cubes."

The us-versus-them theme is common among hardscrabble states like Maine that have a fierce loyalty to geography, Sample said. At the same time, there's a summer influx of wealthy vacationers from all over the world, giving rise to the "Vacationland" slogan emblazoned on license plates.

"They come here and they can buy everything, but the one thing they can't buy is native status. We hold it over them, and it drives them nuts," he joked.

When it comes to politics, Maine likes its hometown heroes, as well.

Muskie was a senator, secretary of state and presidential candidate. Mitchell was Senate leader and peace envoy. Smith, too, gained prominence through her "Declaration of Conscience" attacking McCarthyism. Snowe has been a popular centrist.

As for being from away, King proved that it doesn't have to be a political liability. He was only the second Maine governor from outside New England and only the third from away in the past 125 years, Mills said.

But he doesn't pretend to be a native.

He recalls, as a proud new father, excitedly telling a Maine farmer that his newly arrived firstborn son would be a Mainer. The farmer put him in his place. "He looked over his glasses and said, 'Just because a cat has her kittens in the oven don't make them biscuits.'"

___

Follow David Sharp on Twitter at http://twitter.com/David_Sharp_AP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/maines-6-senate-hopefuls-hail-elsewhere-170940522--election.html

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Apple's Cable Chip Has Been Cloned - Business Insider

Apple uses a special authentication chip in its accessories that your device looks for before letting you use them.

Now MIC Gadget reports that Chinese manufacturers ?have successfully cloned the latest version of this chip that runs in the new Lightning connector.

Here's why that could mean cheaper, more plentiful accessories.

If you've ever plugged your iPhone in to charge with a third-party cable and gotten the "iPhone does not support charging with this accessory" message, it's because the cable can't detect that crucial chip.

Apple uses this to guarantee compatibility and also collect fees under its Made For iPhone/iPad/iPod, or MFi, program.

MIC Gadget makes mention of a glowing Lightning cable that lights up when plugged in. It's possible that Apple would approve this device, but as we've reported, Apple has been very slow to approve new accessories under the MFi program.

Apple could combat these manufacturers through legal means, or by updating its software to detect counterfeit chips.

It will be great if we can get compatible cables and accessories for the iPhone 5 faster. But it will be bad if consumers have to figure out for themselves which cloned parts are truly compatible and which ones are deceptive, defective lookalikes.

Here's a much better solution, though: Getting its act together and cooperating with manufacturers to guarantee a plentiful supply of affordable, high-quality iPhone accessories.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/apple-lightning-chip-cloned-2012-10

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?????????????????????????????? Microsoft ????????????????????? Windows Phone 8 ????????????????????????????????????????????? 29 ???????????????????????????

?????????? Microsoft ??????? Windows Phone 8 ??????????????? 29 ????????? international update hot update

??? Microsoft ????????????????????????????????????? Windows Phone 8 ???? ?????????????????????????????????? ??????????? 29 ????????? ????????????????????????????????????? 10 ???????????????????

???????????????????????????????????????? Microsoft ????????????????????????????? Windows Phone 8 ?????? ???????????????????????????????? Windows Phone 8 ?????????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????? Microsoft ??????????????????? ??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? 1 ????????????????????????????????????

?????????????????????????????????????????????????????? OS ??????????????? ??????????????????????????????????????????? Windows Phone 8 ???????????????????????????????????? ????????????????? Windows Phone ?????????? OS ????????????????????????????

?????: Unwiredview

Source: http://www.mxphone.net/071012-officially-confirm-microsoft-will-introduce-windows-phone-8-29-oct/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=071012-officially-confirm-microsoft-will-introduce-windows-phone-8-29-oct

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Monday, October 8, 2012

Better Lunches: Michelle Obama's Heart-Healthy Campaign Pays ...

From The Post Gazette?..

Students are eating healthier school lunches and breakfasts these days and, despite their grumbling, this round in the war against childhood obesity goes to first lady Michelle Obama, Congress and innovative school districts that espouse the new federal guidelines.

Mrs. Obama has made childhood obesity her cause. She?s been an advocate of healthy lifestyles, urging children to exercise more and lay off sugary drinks and fat-laden snacks.

She planted a garden on the South Lawn of the White House, with the help of Washington students, and some of the vegetables end up on the Obamas? plates. She has shared her exercise routine and jeopardized her dignity using hula hoops and jumping rope. And she pushed a successful bill that imposes new guidelines on schools that provide free and reduced-price meals to 32 million children every day.

The guidelines call for daily servings of fruits, vegetables and whole grains. Portions and calorie counts are controlled, and meals must have less saturated fat, trans fats and salt.

Students aren?t always happy about the changes, as evidenced by a recent Twitter campaign at Plum Senior High School. But they?ll get used to the new menu ? and be eating healthier.

To read the full story?..Click here

This entry was posted in Health / Fitness Articles and tagged Childhood Obestiy, Len Saunders by Len Saunders. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://www.lensaunders.com/wp/?p=5297

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Jobs for a Land Surveyor in a Real Estate Investment Company

Pentagon Real Estate Investment Limited is a privately owned company incorporated on 6th February 2007 with the objective of providing Real Estate services to individuals and corporate bodies.
We are recruiting to fill the below position of:

JOB TITLE: LAND SURVEYOR
LOCATION:
Ogun

JOB DESCRIPTION
Prepare and maintain sketches, maps, reports, and legal descriptions of surveys in order to describe, certify, and assume liability for work performed.
Verify the accuracy of survey data, including measurements and calculations conducted at survey sites.
Direct or conduct surveys in order to establish legal boundaries for properties, based on legal deeds and titles.
Record the results of surveys, including the shape, contour, location, elevation, and dimensions of land or land features.
Calculate heights, depths, relative positions, property lines, and other characteristics of terrain.
Prepare or supervise preparation of all data, charts, plots, maps, records, and documents related to surveys.
Write descriptions of property boundary surveys for use in deeds, leases, or other legal documents.
Plan and conduct ground surveys designed to establish baselines, elevations, and other geodetic measurements
Search legal records, survey records, and land titles in order to obtain information about property boundaries in areas to be surveyed.
Coordinate findings with the work of engineering and architectural personnel, clients, and others concerned with projects.
Survey bodies of water in order to determine navigable channels and to secure data for construction of breakwaters, piers, and other marine structures.
Direct aerial surveys of specified geographical areas.
Determine specifications for photographic equipment to be used for aerial photography, as well as altitudes from which to photograph terrain.
Train assistants and helpers, and direct their work in such activities as performing surveys or drafting maps.
Analyze survey objectives and specifications in order to prepare survey proposals or to direct others in survey proposal preparation.
Compute geodetic measurements and interpret survey data in order to determine positions, shapes, and elevations of geomorphic and topographic features.
Develop criteria for survey methods and procedures.
Develop criteria for the design and modification of survey instruments.
Conduct research in surveying and mapping methods, using knowledge of techniques of photogrammetric map compilation and electronic data processing.
Adjust surveying instruments in order to maintain their accuracy.
Establish fixed points for use in making maps, using geodetic and engineering instruments.
Determine longitudes and latitudes of important features and boundaries in survey areas, using theodolites, transits, levels, and satellite-based global positioning systems (GPS).Locate and mark sites selected for geophysical prospecting activities, such as efforts to locate petroleum or other mineral products.

Method of Application
Interested applicants should send application and CV to: hr@pentagonrealestates.com

Application Deadline 12 October, 2012
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Source: http://www.recentnigerianjobs.com/2012/10/jobs-for-land-surveyor-in-real-estate.html

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Osborne to slash welfare after next election

BIRMINGHAM, England (Reuters) - Britain's Conservative-led government will trim an extra 10 billion pounds ($16 billion) a year from its welfare budget and make cuts across the board in the next phase of austerity if re-elected, its finance minister said on Monday.

The 2015 election is likely to be decided on the health of the economy, how fast the deficit should be tackled and what areas of spending and taxation each party would focus on to balance Britain's stretched public finances.

The Conservatives, who had bet growth would reduce the deficit and help them win the next election, are struggling with a recession and a series of blunders which have put them about 10 points behind the Labour Party in opinion polls.

Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance minister) George Osborne and Prime Minister David Cameron want to use their party's annual conference in Birmingham to project an image of economic prudence and win back support.

They hope voters will welcome a further 10 billion pounds of cuts in welfare spending - an area often portrayed in the media as rife with scroungers and waste.

"How can we justify giving flats to young people who have never worked?" Osborne told party supporters before a large Union Jack-design backdrop at a party conference whose slogan is "Britain can deliver".

"We made a promise to the British people that we would repair our badly broken economy. We will finish the job we have started," said Osborne, a close Cameron ally who was booed by crowds at a Paralympics medal ceremony last month.

In the 35-minute speech, Osborne said the Conservatives must appeal to those who aspired to improve their lot in life and said it was a delusion to believe the public finances could be brought back on track by raiding the "wallets of the rich".

Britain's "social protection" budget, by far the biggest of all departmental spending, is estimated at 207 billion pounds in 2012/13 - almost a third of total spending.

Labour, which wants to see more taxes on banks and the rich, says Osborne has cut spending too quickly and choked demand. The government says softening its austerity plan would endanger Britain's recovery by putting its low borrowing costs at risk.

Osborne accused the former Labour government of spending too much and said opposition leader Ed Miliband was thus partly responsible for Britain's economic woes: "Labour must never be trusted to run the country's finances ever again," he said.

OSBORNE'S GAMBLE

Osborne's March budget forecast he would have to cut borrowing by 49 billion pounds ($79 billion) in the two years following the 2015 election, after weak growth put paid to his plan to deal with the record budget deficit before the election.

Osborne has staked his reputation on preserving Britain's AAA sovereign credit rating and a 375 billion pound central bank-funded bond-buying project has reduced the cost of government borrowing to record lows.

But the underlying budget deficit has risen by a fifth so far this year compared to the same period last year and public sector debt rose to over 1 trillion pounds ($1.62 trillion) at the end of August - 66 per cent of gross domestic product.

Investors say Osborne, who delivers revised economic and borrowing forecasts on December 5, will be forced to either cut spending more deeply or extend austerity well after the next election to honor his pledge to tame the deficit.

Osborne has refused to say how far behind schedule his deficit reduction plan is but he rebuffed critics who say he should pump up demand with government spending.

"Our critics would gamble everything: our credibility, our financial stability, our low interest rates, the cost of our debt they would risk everything on the dubious idea that a few billion more of spending would dramatically improve the fortunes of the trillion-and-a-half pound British economy," he said.

Osborne said he would allow companies to offer shares in the business to new employees in return for giving up certain dismissal and redundancy rights. Workers would get tax breaks on share profits.

Shaving more off the welfare budget would allow cuts in other government departments to be held at a similar pace as is being enforced in current spending plans which run until the end of the 2014/15 fiscal year, according to Treasury calculations.

The government's next spending review, expected before 2015, will cover much of the 2015-2020 parliament and set the tone for the election battle.

But his plans may cause tension with the government's Liberal Democrat junior coalition partners: Osborne dismissed their calls for a "mansion tax" on expensive homes or a further tax on the wealthy.

"This party of home ownership will have no truck with it," Osborne said. "The great bulk of savings must come from cutting government spending - not increasing taxes." ($1 = 0.6176 British pounds)

(Additional reporting by Peter Griffiths; Writing by Matt Falloon and Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Giles Elgood)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/osborne-slash-welfare-next-election-124317764--business.html

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A Venezuelan art group tries to win youth votes for Ch?vez

There are close to 2 million newly registered voters, mostly under 20 years old, so a grassroots art collective is giving?Ch?vez a fresh look for election day with murals depicting him boxing and popping wheelies.

By Andrew Rosati,?Contributor / October 6, 2012

A mural of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez popping a wheelie, part of a series by art group Otro Beta in the run-up to the nation's presidential election.

Fernando Llano/AP

Enlarge

The dueling campaigns of President Hugo Ch?vez and challenger Henrique Capriles Radonski?have led the candidates to every corner of Venezuela; in President Ch?vez's case even the basketball court.

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The?Otra Beta?campaign, a grassroots art movement, has given the 58-year-old incumbent and his trademark red fatigues a fresh look for Election Day. Beyond rallies and motorcades, Ch?vez dunks, Ch?vez boxes, and Ch?vez raps in murals across Caracas. Ch?vez is?otra beta.

"Beta?is a word said in the?barrios,?the working class neighborhoods," says Carlos Zerpa, director of the art collective?Erejcito Liberacion Comunicional, which designed a spray-painted image of?El Comandante Ch?vez?rapping in the Sabana Grande and Petare neighborhoods of Caracas. "[Beta] is an idea, a thing, something different," Mr. Zerpa says.

What?s largely different about Otra Beta?s approach is who it targets: Venezuelan youth. There are close to 2 million newly registered voters in Venezuela since its last parliamentary election in 2010, the majority of which are first time voters between the ages of 18 and 20, according to ?ngel ?lvarez, a data analyst and political science professor at Universidad Central de Venezuela.

"[The youth vote] is incredibly important in this election," says Mr. ?lvarez.

The president depicted doing wheelies on a motorcycle certainly isn't typical, but campaigns elsewhere, such as ?Rock the Vote? in the US, have used musicians and artists to inspire young voters.?Otra Beta?focuses on urban youth, primarily in poor Caracas suburbs, encouraging them to vote for Ch?vez to improve their quality of life.

The campaign slogan reads, "With Ch?vez, otra beta is possible."

What's possible?

Otra Beta was created last year by a consortium of art collectives called Redada.

"We wanted to create an image that?s?Ch?vista?(pro government), but not so [typical]?Ch?vista," says Iskra Moreno, whose collective,?Alpargatas Rebeldes, forms part of Redada. We wanted "to show you don't have to wear a red shirt, or work for the government to support Ch?vez," Ms. Moreno says.?

The campaign hosts rap concerts, art workshops, basketball games, even motorcycle-wheelie contests to celebrate urban culture and the Ch?vez presidency.

Miguel 'Sico' Arena, an organizer, explains, "We work to show what's possible through the revolution."

Young votes

Since the massive student protests in 2007 over the closure of RCTV, one of Venezuela's most popular private television stations, and the proposed constitutional reform that would have abolished term limits among other sweeping changes, Venezuelan youth have played a prominent role in politics says Pedro Ben?tez, a historian and an economics professor at Universidad Central de Venezuela (UCV), and public policy coordinator for the opposition party MUD.

In his closing campaign speech on Thursday, Ch?vez acknowledged errors in his presidency, and assured his supporters that he "would not fail Venezuela?s youth" if reelected.

"Capriles' age [40] and personality ? helps him connect with youth,? says Mr. Ben?tez. "It?s similar to what happened when Ch?vez first ran in 1998, at 43, after the presidency of Carlos Andr?s P?rez," says Ben?tez. ?

Former President P?rez, who still lingered in the minds of Venezuelans after his impeachment, was nearing his 70s and spent over nine years in office by the time Ch?vez first campaigned for president.

Mr. Arena, who goes by Sico, and other?Beta?campaigners clarify, however, that they are not trying to make the president ? who after almost 14 years in office is seeking another six year term ? come off younger than he is.

"The media says that we're trying to rejuvenate Ch?vez, we're not," says Sico.?"We're showing that all youth support Ch?vez: the hair dresser, the metro sexual?."

Sico says, "We show that all of us [Venezuelan youth] can bring about the revolution."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/3mIPefnVn-c/A-Venezuelan-art-group-tries-to-win-youth-votes-for-Chavez

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