Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Butternut Manicotti Recipe | Healthy Vegetable Recipes

Posted on by FitNut ?

This Butternut Manicotti Recipe is a new creation born out of my own ?butternut inspirations?. There is always room for your own creativity, so don?t be afraid to make it your own! This recipe is lighter on the cheese than the traditional variety

1 box manicotti noodles
1 lb bulk hot Italian sausage
? large butternut squash shredded
1 small container of ricotta cheese
1 small package of dry cheese curds
1 small onion
1 jar of spaghetti sauce
1 tsp Sea Salt
? tsp Red Pepper
1 tsp oregano
1 clove minced garlic

Brown sausage in medium saucepan, drain and set aside to cool. I like to run the meat through the food processor a little to create a finer consistency. Mix cheeses with diced onion and oregano in a large bowl. Add sausage, shredded butternut, and remaining seasonings. Mix until all ingredients are evenly distributed.

Prepare manicotti noodles as directed on the box. Allow to cool so that they are easier to handle. In a large cake pan, smear the bottom of the pan with a little spaghetti sauce to keep manicotti from sticking. Gently stuff manicotti noodles with stuffing mixture. Make them as full as you can without splitting the noodles! Line the stuffed manicotti in the cake pan. Pour remaining spaghetti sauce over the manicotti. Place in a pre-heated oven at 375 degrees for 40 minutes. Enjoy!

Related posts:

  1. Great Gluten Free Alternative to Traditional Spaghetti Sauce!
  2. Gluten Free Scalloped Sweet Potatoes Recipe
  3. Simple Food Substitutions
  4. Quinoa Pistachio Granola Recipe
  5. Food Substitutions Can Add Nutrients

Source: http://fitnessnutritiondenverboulder.com/butternut-manicotti-recipe/

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Video: Dramatic NYPD roof rescue caught on video

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Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/49620863/

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Businesses attack plans to cut empty shop rates as 'tax on distress ...

Business leaders have criticised the Scottish Government's plans to cut rates relief for empty shops and offices.

CBI Scotland said the proposal would increase the burden on companies by ?18m a year and put struggling firms at a disadvantage.

The government has said legislation on the issue is just one part of a plan to support town centres and that rates relief will remain more "generous" than in England.

It said the reforms would encourage landlords to let out empty properties and new rates discounts were being created for entrepeneurs who moved in.

CBI Scotland director Iain McMillan said: "This increase in taxation will make it more expensive for firms to invest and create jobs and is simply the wrong approach.

"Far from being an incentive to encourage the use of empty properties, for many firms this tax rise feels more like a stick than a carrot.

"After all, commercial premises are rarely left empty on purpose as they do not generate an income. Ultimately this proposal remains a tax on distress."

David Melhuish, director of the Scottish Property Federation, said: "Increasing further empty property rates costs is a major blow to businesses and investors.

"This will lead to further administrations as landlords struggle to pay an 80% increase in their vacant rates costs and will put pressure on ratepayers who cannot sublet or dispose of unwanted property assets.

"The increase in vacancy costs is also another deterrent to new commercial development. This is a dangerous tax rise at exactly the wrong time in the economic cycle."

Opposition to the government plan also came from the Scottish Chambers of Commerce, Scottish Retail Consortium, the Business Centre Association, the British Council of Shopping Centres and Scottish Land & Estates.

MSPs will vote on the third and final stage of the Local Government Finance (Unoccupied Properties) (Scotland) Bill on Wednesday.

A Scottish Government spokeswoman said: "Scotland's town centres are blighted by empty buildings and our suggested reforms will encourage landlords to let out empty properties as well as create new rates discounts for entrepreneurs who take on these properties.

"Reform of empty property rates, which currently costs over ?150 million a year, is only part of our proposals to support town centres.

" The total relief package offered by Scottish Government now exceeds ?500 million per year and has either eliminated or substantially reduced business rates for three out of every five commercial properties."

Related articles

Source: http://news.stv.tv/politics/197054-businesses-attack-plans-to-cut-empty-shop-rates-as-tax-on-distress/

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Ryan Gosling Dashes Away From 'Logan's Run'

Breakups are never easy. That's why we're hoping that Ryan Gosling leaving Warner Bros' adaptation of "Logan's Run" doesn't mean the end of his collaborations with director Nicolas Winding Refn. Variety's Justin Kroll tweeted out yesterday that the star had severed ties to the sci-fi film. "Rough news for those LOGAN'S RUN fans, I can [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2012/10/25/ryan-gosling-logans-run/

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Guillen fired as manager of last-place Marlins

MIAMI (AP) ? The lingering backlash caused by Ozzie Guillen's praise of Fidel Castro contributed to another Miami Marlins managerial shakeup Tuesday.

Guillen was fired after only one year with the team, undone by too many losses and one too many ill-advised remarks.

A promising season began to derail in April with his laudatory comments about Cuba's former leader. Six months later, the episode was a factor in the decision to fire Guillen, Marlins officials said.

"Let's face it. It was not a positive for the team; it was not a positive for Ozzie," president of baseball operations Larry Beinfest said. "It was a disappointment, no doubt about it."

A lousy team didn't help, either. The Marlins took high hopes into their new ballpark following an offseason spending spree but finished last in the NL East at 69-93, their worst record since 1999.

Miami's next manager will be the fifth for owner Jeffrey Loria since early 2010. The latest change comes even though Marlins still owe Guillen $7.5 million for the three years remaining on his contract.

"We all felt we had a pretty good ballclub coming out of spring training, and we just didn't play well," Beinfest said. "We all share in this. This is not a fun day for me, certainly not for Ozzie or Jeffrey or anybody involved. This is an organizational failure. But we felt like we needed to make this change so we could move forward."

There had speculation that Beinfest's job might also be in jeopardy, but he'll continue in his current role. The search for a new manager has just begun, he said.

"We could definitely use some stability in the dugout," said Beinfest, who has been with the Marlins since Loria bought the team in 2002. "We're looking for a winner. At times we've done a better job of identifying that individual. Other times we haven't. We're going to try to find the right guy this time."

On Twitter, Guillen said the firing left him with "my head held up high, real high."

"To the fans that support me and for those who are happy as well my love and respect to you," Guillen tweeted. "In life there are worse things and I have experienced them. I have lived through bad moments and I will get through this with support."

In spring training, Guillen touted his team as well balanced and ready to win. But a dismal June took the Marlins out of contention for good, and management dismantled the roster in July.

The season went sour from the start. Guillen's comments praising Castro in a magazine interview angered Cuban Americans, who make up a large segment of the Marlins' fan base. The Venezuelan manager apologized repeatedly at a news conference for his remarks, then began serving a five-game suspension only five games into his stay with the team.

"That was a very, very hard situation for me and the people around me," Guillen said in September. "It was maybe the worst thing I ever did."

Marlins officials believe the damage was lasting. They blame disappointing attendance at the new ballpark in part over lingering fan resentment about the Castro comments.

The decision to fire Guillen came on the eve of the World Series, nearly three weeks after the Marlins' final game, following a lengthy assessment of what went wrong this year.

"Everybody wanted to take a step back," Beinfest said. "It was really an organizational decision."

Guillen was returning Tuesday from a vacation in Spain and was informed of his dismissal by phone by Beinfest in a brief conversation.

Guillen left the Chicago White Sox a year ago after eight seasons. Some 24 hours later he sealed a four-year deal with the Marlins, where he was a third-base coach for the 2003 World Series championship team.

"I feel like I'm back home," he said at the time.

Loria traded two minor league players to obtain Guillen and gave him a team-record $10 million, four-year deal. But by June, the Marlins had fallen below .500 for good.

Despite the frustrations of losing, the talkative, opinionated, profane Guillen kept his cool for the most part, and he repeatedly accepted responsibility for the team's performance. Mindful of speculation his job might be in jeopardy, he said two weeks before the end of the season he was glad he rented a house in Miami rather than buying when he took the job.

"With the job I did this year, do you think I deserve to be back here?" Guillen said on the final day of the season. "Of course not. But I'm not the only one. ... Let's start from the top. The front office failed, Ozzie failed, the coaching staff failed, the players failed, everybody failed."

In December, the Marlins signed All-Stars Jose Reyes, Mark Buehrle and Heath Bell to contracts worth a combined $191 million. But Bell was a bust as the closer, and the Marlins were plagued by poor hitting, especially in the clutch.

Bell was traded last week to Arizona.

In the Marlins' 20 seasons they have reached the postseason only twice, as wild-card teams in 1997 and 2003. Both times they won the World Series.

Under Loria they have usually been among baseball's thriftiest teams. With attendance and revenue falling short of projections this year, the spending binge of last offseason ago is unlikely to be repeated.

"We need to spend some time redefining ourselves in conjunction with a new manager," Beinfest said. "I can't tell you exactly what the Marlin way is today."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/guillen-fired-manager-last-place-marlins-202003198--mlb.html

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How Can I Win Her Love Back - 5 Strategies To Win Back Lost Love

How Can I Win Her Love Back  -  5 Strategies To Win Back Lost Love

Dear Kurt

How can I win her back?

Here's what happened. We'd been going out for about 6 months and everything was going smooth and our relationship was starting to get a little more serious.

Then out of no where she broke up with me. I was totally shocked and didn't know what to do. She said it was because we fought too much and that we were getting too serious too soon. I really care about her and want to get her back. Is there anything I can do?

- Broken Hearted

Dear Broken Hearted:

Out of all the emotions that we have, love is the strongest and most powerful one so when a relationship endsit stands to reason that it's going to hurt quite a bit. Now despite the pain that you're going through there are things you can do to win back the one you love but you need to know what to do and how to do it properly.

When it comes to getting someone back after a breakup, the most important thing you can do is to get them looking your way and thinking about you again. This article will give you five strategies you can use that will help get your ex thinking about you again and hopefully get you back together again.

1. The first thing you need to do is be honest with yourself about the relationship and the part you played in the breakup. I know it's not pleasant but it needs to be done. Your girlfriend said she broke up with you because you fought all the time. If this is true then it needs to be addressed by you. This is not the time to point fingers and lay blame, instead use your time apart to analyze the relationship. In fact I recommend that you get a pen and paper and write it out. List all the things things that might have contributed to the breakup and see which ones you can change. If you want to get her back you need to address this before you do anything else.

2. The next thing you need to do when it comes to getting your ex' attention again is to be dependable. Even though you've broken up you still need to be there when and if she needs you. Just be her friend and show her that you're someone that she can depend on and in return she'll start to see you as someone worth being with. Now this doesn't mean that you're going to get back together right away, but being depandable lays the ground work and the foundation for restoring the relationship you once had.

3. The third thing you should do if you want to get your ex to start thinking about you again is to encourage and support them. One of the things that people miss most during a breakup is the support they got from their significant other so if the opportunity arises, be her personal cheerleader. For example, if she's got a job interview, send her a quick 'good luck' email or something along those lines. Either way you want to show her that you've got her back and have her best intetests at heart.

4. Listen to her. Chances are she's going to call you at some point, especially if you've cut off all contact with her. When she does call, make sure you listen to what she is saying and VALIDATE her concerns. Not feeling validated or understood is the leading cause for fights in a relationship and since this was her main concern with you during the breakup it's something that you need to focus on here. Listen to what she is saying and take some mental notes and get your foot in the door.

5. Get a life. Don't sit around and sit on the sidelines. Instead get out there and live it up. Go out, have fun and rediscover yourself. This accomplishes 3 things. First it gives you self confidence which makes you more attractive to your ex. Second it reverses depression by taking your mind off things by keeping you busy. Third is that it gives you peace of mind by giving you both space and time which are key elements when it comes to dealing with your emotions after a breakup.

The Bottom Line

The key to win her back especially when she's dumped you is to get her looking your way and thinking about you again.

If you follow the 5 points in this article you will greatly increase your chances of getting back together because you will have improved as a person since the breakup which will make you more attractive to her.

Source: http://www.streetarticles.com/reconnecting/how-can-i-win-her-love-back-5-strategies-to-win-back-lost-love

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Saif And Kareena Return To Mumbai After Wedding


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Source: http://www.nowrunning.com/event/bollywood/saif-and-kareena-return-to-mumbai-after-wedding/58644/gallery.htm

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Outsourcing Success Secrets 10/24 by Scott Fox | Blog Talk Radio

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    On his show, Comedian Rodney Perry covers arts and entertainment, everything from comedy and politics to music and acting, with his signature comedic slant.

  • MashUp Radio is a 30-minute podcast that discusses the fusion of technology, life, culture and science. Host Peter Biddle, engineer and executive for Intel?s Atom Software, dishes up a thought-provoking discussion.

  • Deepak Chopra Radio provides an online forum for compelling and thought provoking conversations on success, love, sexuality and relationships, well-being and spirituality.

  • The Bottom Line Sports Show is hosted by former NBA stars Penny Hardaway, Charles Oakley, Mateen Cleaves. Tune in to get the inside scoop on what's happening in sports today.

  • Joy Keys provides her listeners with insight to improve their lives mentally, physically, monetarily and emotionally. Past guests on the show have included Meshell Nedegeocello, Blair Underwood, in addition to an impressive list of CEOs, humanitarians and authors.

  • Hits Radio covers basketball, sports culture and entertainment with past guests including Jason Kidd, Robin Lundberg and Chris Herren.

  • Listeners get an earful on The Halli Casser-Jayne Show, Talk Radio for Fine Minds. Whether it?s the current political cocktail or the latest must-read award-winning book, Halli tackles all topics and likes to stir ? and sometimes shakes ? things up.

  • Award-winning World Footprints is a leading voice in socially responsible travel and lifestyle. Hosts Ian & Tonya celebrate culture and heritage and bring a unique voice to the world of travel.

  • Football Reporters Online is a group of veteran football experts in the fields of coaching, scouting, talent evaluation, and writing/broadcasting/media placement. Combined, the group brings well over 100 years of expertise in sports.

  • Host John Martin interviews the nation's leading entrepreneurs and small biz experts to educate small business owners on how to be successful. Past guests have included Emeril Lagasse and Guy Kawasaki.

  • The Movie Geeks share their passion for the art through interviews with the stars of and creative minds behind your favorite flicks and pay tribute to big-screen legends. From James Cameron and Francis Ford Coppola to Ellen Burstyn and Robert Duvall, The Geeks have got'em all.

  • Sylvia Global presents global conversations pertaining to women, wealth, business, faith and philanthropy. Sylvia has interviewed an eclectic mix from CEOs and musicians to fashion designers and philanthropists including Randolph Duke and Ne-Yo.

  • Seasoned entertainment reporter Robin Milling gets up close and personal with the world's most compelling celebs. From Michael Douglas to Katie Holmes to Kevin Kline to Ashley Judd to America Ferrera, she sits down in person each week with each and every A-lister.

  • Mr. Media host Bob Andelman goes one-on-one with the hottest, most influential minds from the worlds of film, TV, music, comedy, journalism and literature. That means A-listers like Kirk Douglas, Christian Slater, Kathy Ireland, Rick Fox, Chris Hansen and Jackie Collins.

  • Paula Begoun, best-selling author of Don't Go to the Cosmetics Counter Without Me, separates fact from fiction on achieving a radiant, youthful complexion at any age. She?s regularly joined by health and beauty experts who offer the latest on keeping your skin in tip-top shape.

  • Source: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/scottfox/2012/10/24/outsourcing-success-secrets

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    Back to the Future

    154592237 Did Romney get what he needed from the third debate?

    Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images.

    BOCA RATON, Fla.?Halfway through the final presidential debate, after Bob Schieffer asked about negotiations with Iran, Mitt Romney asked the audience to remember something that never happened.

    ?The president in his campaign four years ago said he would meet with all the world's worst actors in his first year,? said Romney. ?He'd sit down with Chavez and Kim Jong-il, with Castro and President Ahmadinejad of Iran. And I think they looked and thought, well, that's an unusual honor to receive from the president of the United States. And then the president began what I have called an apology tour.?

    Yes, when he was a candidate for the presidency and a suitor for anti-war voters, Barack Obama had pledged to meet a mug?s gallery of dictators ?without preconditions.? During the campaign, it became a sort of accidental foreign policy. Then Obama became president, and?apart from one awkward photobomb from Chavez at a meeting of Latin American nations?the meetings never happened. Neither did the ?apology tour,? really. It was as if Romney had written down some zingers in 2009 and accidentally brought the wrong notes to the table.

    Most of the debate felt that way. On the most ringing foreign-policy questions, on Afghanistan and Iran, Romney blurred the differences between Obama and himself. The ?crippling sanctions? on Iran were ?absolutely the right thing to do,? and ?something I called for five years ago, when I was in Israel, speaking at the Herzliya Conference.? Troops would come home from Afghanistan on basically the same timetable that Obama had drawn, because ?the commanders and the generals there are on track to do so.?

    Which is what Obama always says. He pointed this out, with relish. ?There have been times,? he said, ?Governor, frankly, during the course of this campaign, where it sounded like you thought that you'd do the same things we did, but you'd say them louder and somehow that would make a difference.? It rang true.

    When Romney wasn?t nudging the debate back to domestic policy (Obama usually went along), he was either congratulating him on tactics or demanding a tougher strategy. The ?apology tour,? as Romney finally defined it, meant that Obama ?went to the Middle East and you flew to Egypt and to Saudi Arabia and to Turkey and Iraq.? Again, this happened years ago. In the spin room after the debate, as he successfully dodged Triumph the Insult Comic Dog, Romney strategist Eric Fehrnstrom confirmed that Romney wanted to retell voters about ?candidate Obama in 2008? and ?the Obama we saw in the first 18 months of his administration.?

    Obama?s response to this was to look even further into the past. He emptied out his briefing books, asking Romney to explain why he?d switched positions when, as a candidate, he needed to be a critic of the administration. What had proved Obama right? The killing of American enemies who?d been threats for a decade or more. He mentioned Osama Bin Laden six times, and mentioned Muammar Qaddafi twice, shutting down the discussion of Libya by pointing out that its old rulers killed more Americans than had died in Benghazi.

    Republicans were unimpressed. ?He was using a dramatic name to play on an old fear,? shrugged Rep. Peter King, chairman of the House?s Homeland Security Committee, who?s been calling for the Obama administration to fire U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice over her Benghazi statements. ?The fact is, Qaddafi was nullified by Bush. He was not a threat.?

    While every post-debate poll called it for Obama, this interplay?the focus on the recent past?was on balance good for the challenger. The CNN poll that gave Obama a 48-40 overall win also asked independents whether they could see Romney as commander-in-chief. By a 62-36 margin, they said yes. Asked that question about Obama, they gave the same margin.

    If that number holds, it?ll be because Romney managed to make the ?say it louder? argument without getting caught. His description of an anti-terror strategy that didn?t involve apologies made almost no sense. He would rely on the advice of ?Arab scholars,? and ?interrupt? the ?bad guys,? but not go to war. ?We don't want another Iraq,? he said. ?We don't want another Afghanistan. That's not the right course for us.?

    That made Romney sound like he was cold on more military commitments, even as he inflated the military budget. Take this further into the present, and you can attach real missions to it. I asked Sen. Lindsey Graham, the South Carolina Republican who?s become a sort of leader of the hawks, exactly how a Romney presidency might tackle its first problems, starting with Libya.

    ?The first thing I?d recommend that a President Romney do is go into Libya and help train a national army to de-fang the militias,? he said. There might be different responses in different nations. ?In northern Mali, it might be special forces operations.?

    Graham framed all of this in a criticism of the last administration, the Bush team. ?I remember being told that we didn?t need 160,000 troops. I remember being told it would cost $50 billion.? As we talked, some veterans of the Bush team, like Romney?s senior foreign-policy adviser Dan Senor, walked around spinning for Romney. Why was he confident that these people would get it right?not just perfect hindsight, getting it right on the next crises?if they took power again?

    ?They eventually readjusted their strategy,? said Graham. ?I think they have the lessons of Bush seared into their brains. If I were Romney, I?d tell the American people I won?t be a cowboy, and I won?t be an apologist. I?m gonna be smart.?

    Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=7a2c23bccc839da4ca80ddd8e95b79e6

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    Tuesday, October 23, 2012

    Share your thoughts - Jason Foscolo LLC | Food Law

    It has been an astonishingly busy two months. Here?s what we?ve been up to lately:

    We just returned from the American Agricultural Law Association annual conference in the glorious city of Nashville, TN. Is it just me, or does it seem as though everyone you meet in Nashville has extraordinary musical talents. We caught up with old friends and alumni, and participated in a panel discussion on cottage food laws alongside Professor Jason Jones of the Charlotte School of Law and Beth Crocker, General Counsel to the South Carolina Department of Agriculture. Also got a chance to meet up with one of my favorite writers, Clare Leschin-Hoar?at The Oak Bar in the Hermitage Hotel, where I killed the fried green tomatoes.

    We did play a little hooky so H could pick out his first pumpkin.

    We are in deep-preparation mode for a few more upcoming academic events. Coming up this Monday, October 29, Cari Rincker and I are headed to Pace University School of Law, our old law school, to host a Continuing Legal Education course on food law. The event is open to the public, but attorneys can get CLE credit for attending. Cari and I are big believers in the burgeoning ?Food Law? brand, so we put together a course that will convey to the attendees just how uniquely the food system is regulated and how these special regulations can affect new farmers and food entrepreneurs. Follow the link to register!

    We are also headed back to Iowa on behalf of the Farmer Veteran Coalition?in early November. We?ll participate in the very first national meeting of the Farmer Veteran Coalition, as well as moderate a panel discussion at the Third Drake Forum on America?s New Farmers on November 8 and 9. My good buddy Ed Cox will be debuting a lecture I am very much anticipating, ?Legal Issues in Developing Retail Agriculture?. Get ready for us to plagiarize you, Ed.

    Our latest article has been published in the fall issue of Cornell?s Small Farm Quarterly, and we now have a recurring column there called ?The Policy Corner? which will begin appearing in the upcoming Winter Issue.

    Finally, we?ve been invited to be a member of the Regulatory and Academic Committee of the American Cheese Society. We made some great relationships when presenting at the last conference in Raleigh, North Carolina?and look forward to providing the very talented members of this organization with the legal guidance they need to compete in a highly regulated industry.

    I know I said ?finally? but I lied. One more thing ? we?ll also be presenting at the Carolina Meat Conference?on December 3 and 4. We?d better put on a good show. A room full of butchers know how to make a bad presenter ?go away?.


    Categorised as: Food Law


    Source: http://jasonfoscolo.com/?p=829

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    Improving Healthcare Response in Haiti

    ?

    EU--(ENEWSWPF)--23 October 2012

    Earthquakes, tsunamis and hurricanes have taken their toll on many parts of the world. Communities struggle for years to rebuild without immediate access to basic necessities like proper healthcare. Satellites are helping to make this transition easier.
    ?
    A new system designed by The Institute for Space Medicine (MEDES) in France and Local Insight Global Impact (LIGI) in Portugal, and supported by ESA through its integrated Applications programme, provides access to healthcare using satellite telephones and satellite navigation. It is designed for regions where trained medical professionals are sparse and where communications are limited due to the damage caused by a natural disaster. Telephone cables can be blown down, rendering phone networks useless. ??

    The system has been used with success in Haiti, where the massive earthquake of 2010 has left its mark. Health units in many Haitian regions are few and far between and if someone decides to make the journey to a unit, there is a very good chance no one will be there to provide care. This system makes up for the lack of local health care by ensuring anyone from anywhere can be trained to report the symptoms of a patient accurately. It uses a special interface designed for satellite and smartphones that walks a user through a series of steps to send data as SMS messages via satellite or a ground-based system, if available. This information is then accessed by local and national health systems via an Internet portal.

    Feedback on what to do for the patient can be given within a few minutes. For example, if serious medical attention is needed after the diagnosis, this is dispatched immediately. Because these data are sent in real time, it can also help the early detection of potential epidemics by revealing trends in symptoms. Satnav signals are used to ?geo-tag? symptom records, simplifying where the data are being collected. This helps to map potential epidemics based on the symptoms reported. Geo-tagging can also help to put patients in contact with the nearest healthcare provider.?

    A five-month trial took place in Carrefour, a poor district in the Ouest Department of Port-au-Prince, where 10 teachers from urban and rural areas were trained to use the interface. More than 4300 symptom declarations were sent, allowing health care professionals to diagnose and make decisions on treatment almost immediately. ?We have shown that the interface is easy to use, and that non-health professionals can be trained to use it,? explains Susana Frazao Pinheiro, representing LIGI. ?This system can make basic healthcare more universal by making a more efficient and cost-effective use of resources, information and knowledge.? LIGI and MEDES will be expanding the system in Haiti to include more remote areas.

    Source: esa.int

    Source: http://www.enewspf.com/latest-news/health-and-fitness/37693-improving-healthcare-response-in-haiti.html

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    Japanese court: Apple did not infringe on two Samsung patents ...

    Samsung and Apple are waging a legal battle in courts all over the world. Though the decisions in the US, UK and Germany garner most of the attention, other cases in other jurisdictions are also making their ways through their court systems. In Japan, two rulings favorable to Apple were handed down in September and October, according to a report from the Asahi Shimbun.

    In these cases, the Tokyo court said Apple's Japanese unit did not infringe Samsung's patents and denied the Korean manufacturer's request to ban the iPhone in Japan. The two patents in the Japanese cases cover the downloading of an app to a smartphone and the use of airplane mode to turn off a phone's cellular and wireless radios when flying.

    [Via AppleInsider and FOSS Patents]


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    Source: http://www.tuaw.com/2012/10/22/japanese-court-apple-did-not-infringe-on-two-samsung-patents/

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    Monday, October 22, 2012

    Cat Financial Announces Third-Quarter 2012 Results | Net PR

    NASHVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 22, 2012 (NETPR News) Cat Financial reported third-quarter 2012 revenues of $678 million, an increase of $10 million, or 1 percent, compared with the third quarter of 2011. Third-quarter 2012 profit after tax was $109 million, a $16 million, or 17 percent, increase from the third quarter of 2011.

    The increase in revenues was primarily due to a $63 million favorable impact from higher average earning assets (finance receivables and operating leases at constant rates), partially offset by a $44 million unfavorable impact from lower average financing rates on new and existing finance receivables and operating leases and a $9 million unfavorable impact from gains/losses on returned or repossessed equipment.

    Profit before income taxes was $153 million for the third quarter of 2012, compared to $126 million for the third quarter of 2011. The increase was primarily due to a $26 million favorable impact from higher average earning assets and a $14 million favorable impact from mark-to-market adjustments that were recorded on interest rate derivative contracts. These increases were partially offset by a $9 million unfavorable impact from gains/losses on returned or repossessed equipment.

    The provision for income taxes in the third quarter of 2012 reflects an estimated annual tax rate of 27 percent compared to 25 percent in the third quarter of 2011.

    New retail financing in the third quarter of 2012 was $3.21 billion, an increase of $565 million, or 21 percent, from the third quarter of 2011. The increase was a result of growth across all operating segments, with the largest increase occurring in our Europe and Caterpillar Power Finance operating segment.

    At the end of the third quarter of 2012, past dues were 2.80 percent compared with 3.35 percent at the end of the second quarter of 2012, 2.89 percent at the end of 2011 and 3.54 percent at the end of the third quarter of 2011. All Cat Financial operating segments reported improved past dues. Write-offs, net of recoveries, were $29 million for the third quarter of 2012, down from $50 million in the third quarter of 2011.

    As of September 30, 2012, Cat Financial?s allowance for credit losses totaled $404 million or 1.47 percent of net finance receivables, compared with $369 million or 1.47 percent of net finance receivables at year-end 2011. The allowance for credit losses as of September 30, 2011, was $362 million, which was 1.49 percent of net finance receivables.

    ?Cat Financial?s business continues to perform well, and we are especially pleased with the continued improvement in the performance of our portfolio,? said Kent Adams, Cat Financial president and vice president of Caterpillar Inc. ?Past dues and write-offs are down from the third quarter of last year, and the global Cat Financial team remains focused on helping Cat customers and dealers succeed through financial services excellence.?

    For over 30 years, Cat Financial, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Caterpillar Inc., has been providing financial service excellence to Cat customers. The company offers a wide range of financing alternatives to customers and Cat dealers for Cat machinery and engines, Solar? gas turbines and other equipment and marine vessels. Cat Financial has offices and subsidiaries located throughout the Americas, Asia, Australia and Europe, with headquarters in Nashville, Tennessee.

    STATISTICAL HIGHLIGHTS:

    THIRD QUARTER 2012 VS. THIRD QUARTER 2011

    (ENDED SEPTEMBER 30)

    (Millions of dollars)

    2012 2011 CHANGE
    Revenues $ ? ? 678 $ ? ? 668 1%
    Profit Before Income Taxes $ ? ? 153 $ ? ? 126 21%
    Profit After Tax $ ? ? 109 $ ? ? ? 93 17%
    New Retail Financing $ ?3,210 $ ?2,645 21%
    Total Assets $33,834 $29,465 15%
    NINE MONTHS 2012 VS. NINE MONTHS 2011

    (ENDED SEPTEMBER 30)

    (Millions of dollars)

    2012 2011 CHANGE
    Revenues $ ?2,014 $ 1,983 2%
    Profit Before Income Taxes $ ? ? 467 $ ? ?393 19%
    Profit After Tax $ ? ? 333 $ ? ?283 18%
    New Retail Financing $10,108 $ 8,313 22%

    CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

    Certain statements contained in this earnings release may be considered ?forward-looking statements? as that term is defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.? These statements may relate to future events or our future financial performance, which may involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties and other factors that may cause our actual results, levels of activity, performance or achievement to be materially different from those expressed or implied by any forward-looking statements. From time to time, we may also provide forward-looking statements in oral presentations to the public or in other materials we issue to the public. Forward-looking statements give current expectations or forecasts of future events about the company. You may identify these statements by the fact that they do not relate to historical or current facts and may use words such as ?believes,? ?expects,? ?estimates,? ?anticipates,? ?will,? ?should,? ?plan,? ?project,? ?intend,? ?could? and similar words or phrases.?? These statements are only predictions. Actual events or results may differ materially due to factors that affect international businesses, including changes in economic conditions and ongoing challenges in the global financial and credit markets, and changes in laws and regulations (including regulations implemented under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act) and political stability, as well as factors specific to Cat Financial and the markets we serve, including the market?s acceptance of our products and services, the creditworthiness of our customers, interest rate and currency rate fluctuations and estimated residual values of leased equipment. These risk factors may not be exhaustive. We operate in a continually changing business environment, and new risk factors emerge from time to time. We cannot predict these new risk factors, nor can we assess the impact, if any, of these new risk factors on our businesses or the extent to which any factor, or combination of factors, may cause actual results to differ materially from those projected in any forward-looking statements. Accordingly, forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as a prediction of actual results. Moreover, we do not assume responsibility for the accuracy and completeness of those statements. All of the forward-looking statements are qualified in their entirety by reference to the factors discussed under the captions ?Risk Factors? and ?Management?s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations? in our annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2011, and similar sections in our quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, that describe risks and factors that could cause results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Cat Financial undertakes no obligation to publicly update forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

    Source: http://netprnews.com/cat-financial-announces-third-quarter-2012-results/121621/

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    Correction: Presidential Campaign-Hispanic Voters

    LAS VEGAS (AP) ? In a story Oct. 21 about Hispanic voters, The Associated Press misidentified New Mexico's governor. Her name is Susana Martinez, not Susannah Martinez. The AP reported erroneously that President Barack Obama signed an executive order in August adopting a new immigration policy for young people. He announced the policy change in June and an implementing directive was signed by Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.

    A corrected version of the story is below:

    Obama immigration stance locks in Hispanic support

    In battle for Hispanic voters, Obama's immigration stance gives him a big edge

    By NICHOLAS RICCARDI

    Associated Press

    LAS VEGAS (AP) ? Elizabeth Alvisar is exactly the sort of voter Mitt Romney needs.

    A victim of the brutal economy in this swing state, the 30-year-old tax preparer has been out of work for months. She's a foe of abortion and gay marriage, and was naturally drawn to the Republican ticket.

    But Alvisar has switched her support to President Barack Obama because of his support for legislation known as the DREAM Act. While Democrats failed to get the bill through Congress, Obama in June announced a change in policy to implement its key provision ? allowing young people brought into the country without authorization as children to avoid deportation if they graduate high school or join the military.

    "I have a lot of friends who've taken advantage of that opportunity," Alvisar said.

    In the heavily Hispanic neighborhood where Alvisar lives, unemployment is high and home values are down. But Obama's immigration stance, and especially his policy change, has locked in support from a fast-growing demographic group that has been trending sharply Democratic in the wake of increasingly hard-line Republican positions on immigration.

    Obama's campaign is counting on Hispanics providing the margin of victory not just in Nevada, but also in other swing states such as Colorado, Iowa, Virginia and North Carolina

    "They know that he's on the right side of the immigration issue and wants to work with Congress for comprehensive immigration reform," deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter said. "They know he wakes up every day and thinks about how to secure the middle class and make it easier for young people to enter the middle class."

    The importance of Hispanics as a voting bloc and immigration as an election-year issue was brought home during last week's presidential debate. Obama reminded viewers that Romney, who went hard to the right on the issue during the GOP primaries, had argued for "self-deportation" to solve the illegal immigration problem and took advice on the issue from the law professor who helped write Arizona's controversial immigration statute. The Republican challenger noted that Obama had promised to pass an immigration overhaul and had failed.

    The Romney campaign says Hispanics, enduring a 9.9 percent jobless rate, which is more than 2 points higher than the national average, are a natural draw for the GOP ticket. "Hispanics are hurting almost more than any other demographic group under the Obama economy," Romney's Spanish-speaking son Craig, a frequent surrogate in the Hispanic community, said in a brief interview. "They're really struggling and they understand that this president has failed them and we need someone who understands how to create jobs."

    The Romney campaign opened an office here in September and last week hosted New Mexico's popular Hispanic governor, Susana Martinez, in an effort to cut into Obama's edge in East Las Vegas, home to 42 percent of Nevada's Hispanic population.

    But even some Romney supporters are pessimistic that Republicans can make inroads with a population that, many polls show, favors Obama by a 2-to-1 margin.

    "It's going to take several years because we haven't engaged this community at all," said Joel Garcia, a conservative who formed a coalition to recruit Hispanics here. "You've got a lot of Hispanics who are conservative in how they live their lives and their values, but there's this hook in their mouth pulling them left called immigration."

    Much like any other group, Hispanics often list the economy, jobs and education as top issues in polls. But the acrimonious immigration debate of the past decade has given that issue extra weight for them. "What started as a war on illegal immigration is now being perceived as a war on Latinos," said Matt Barreto, who polls Hispanics for the company Latino Decisions.

    Nevada is a prime example of that dynamic. In 2010, Hispanics helped Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid win re-election against a tea party candidate who promoted her staunch anti-illegal immigration stance. Republican Brian Sandoval, a Hispanic who was elected governor at the same time, only won 33 percent of the Hispanic vote.

    Until Obama's executive order, Hispanic activists were frustrated that Obama had not pursued plans to legalize more illegal immigrants. Instead, his administration was deporting them in record numbers.

    "Before President Obama made his decision to go forward with deferred action, it was pretty dismal," said Vicenta Montoya, an immigration attorney and Democratic activist. "I was going to vote for Obama but it wasn't going to be with grand enthusiasm."

    Now Obama's order has fired up Montoya and others in East Las Vegas, a swath of shopping centers, tire shops and weathered ranch houses sprawling east from the Strip. It's the neighborhood of the often-unionized people who make Sin City function ? housekeepers, card dealers and taxi drivers.

    For some, Obama's order pulled them into politics. Earlier this month, Hector Rivera's father asked him what he was going to do with his future. Rivera, a high school senior who was brought into the United States without authorization when he was 5, went to the East Las Vegas Obama campaign office and volunteered.

    The teenager already has applied for documents allowing him to work under Obama's program. "It's an opportunity for me and future generations," said Rivera, 17, imagining how his own unborn children could benefit someday. "Even though they'll be born here, I want to get a better job to give them a better opportunity so they can live a better life."

    Others, like Sergio Solis, have suffered economically but see the president as on their side. Solis had to close a restaurant in Southern California and move here to work as a salesman for an energy company. But, after approvingly mentioning the DREAM Act, Solis said it will take time to correct the country's course following the eight years of the George W. Bush administration.

    "This building here, I can dynamite it and destroy it in five minutes," Solis said, gesturing to a supermarket where he was handing out brochures. "But I can't build it back up in five minutes."

    The Romney campaign's East Las Vegas office shares a strip mall with a bail bond company and a tortilleria. It opened after volunteers in the neighborhood urged the campaign to set up shop closer to their homes, so they didn't have to drive to the suburbs to phone-bank or collect yard signs.

    Susana Loli, 56, is thrilled. The hotel housekeeper didn't vote for Obama in 2008. But as the economy collapsed before his inauguration, she hoped he could keep the country healthy. Now her side business fixing garage doors has shriveled, and she had to sell family property in Peru to stave off foreclosure on her Nevada house.

    "With Mitt Romney, we'll have a better future for my children and grandchildren," Loli said. "The Latinos who are going to vote for Obama haven't studied the problem. When you talk to them and explain the situation, then they understand."

    Ana Maria Gonzalez, 50, was disappointed that some Hispanics support Obama because of his executive order. She backs Romney because of her faith in his business acumen and moral values, but also because she thinks he's more likely to deliver a humane overhaul of the country's immigration system.

    "In four years, President Obama did nothing," Gonzalez said, adding, that she was certain Romney would come up with a way to let DREAM Act youth and other deserving illegal immigrants stay in the country.

    ___

    Follow Nicholas Riccardi on Twitter at www.twitter.com/nickriccardi

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/correction-presidential-campaign-hispanic-voters-195541274--election.html

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    Get The Right Gear Before You Start Playing Sports

    Sports is a great way to have a lot of fun. It's great exercise, gives you plenty of motivation, and allows for a lot of social interaction. Sure, you might get a better workout if you put on your headphones and sweat for hours at the gym every day, but that requires tremendous amount of willpower, and it's generally not a lot of fun. When people think of going to the gym, it's generally something they think "have to do," rather than something they look forward to.

    But when you play a sport, any kind of team sport, it's a lot more fun. This not only means you'll be able to look forward to it, but it means you'll likely do it more often. Picking a sport is generally a matter of trial and error. Maybe some guys are leaving work on Friday afternoon and they ask you in passing if you'd like to join them for a game of volleyball. You decide to, think it's fun, and you're hooked.

    Other ways to get into a sport is by watching it on TV, and then deciding it looks fun. For example, when various countries teams make it to advanced levels in the Soccer World Cup, many citizens in that country decide to take up soccer for the first time. Other people may decide to take up a sport that is positively displayed by a local athlete during the Olympics.

    However you choose your sport, it's very important to have the right gear. You don't want to be caught with your pants down, so to speak. That's why you should take your time to make sure you've got the right stuff. There's a couple ways of doing this. One is to simply ask around. Find some people who are already involved in the sport. Get their opinions on the best gear. Not only will you find some expert opinions, but you might get some great deals on some used equipment. Many people that have played sports for a while have tons of old stuff that they don't know what to do with.

    Of course, there are some basics that you'll need for every sport. A good pair of shoes, the proper clothing, and whatever kind of athletic socks you like. Many people forget about getting socks, but without the right socks of the right construction, you might get plenty of blisters. Nobody likes blisters.

    Source: http://www.artipot.com/articles/1411053/get-the-right-gear-before-you-start-playing-sports.htm

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    Sunday, October 21, 2012

    Video: Here kitty, kitty: Are tiger pool parties a good idea?

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

    Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/49487041/

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    Wenham Tea House to Pour First Drink with New License Saturday ...

    Eight months after Wenham Town Meeting unanimously backed a pouring liquor license for Wenham Tea House, the license will be publicly?put to use for the first time on Saturday.

    Christopher Keohane, the Tea House's operation manager, said the license was received on Wednesday. The Tea House hosted a private engagement party on Friday night and will use it for the first time for breakfast and brunch on Saturday.

    The license allows liquor to be poured from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m.-10 p.m. on Saturday and 8 a.m.-11 p.m., although the Tea House's hours don't include all those hours. It can also be used for private functions.

    The license also bars the Tea House from setting up a bar and requires that liquor is served with food.

    Keohane said mimosas and Bloody Marys, for example will be served along with beer and wine. He is also working on developing a menu that will include tea-infused and coffee-infused cocktails.

    Keohane said he is also "moving slowly" at serving dinner on Friday and Saturday nights, possibly starting in 2013.

    The license is limited only to the Wenham Tea House and could not be transferred or sold.

    The process started in February when Tea House operator Henry's said it wanted a pouring license. After the Special Town Meeting vote in February, the measure went to?Beacon Hill as a Home Rule Petition. It was?passed by the legislature and signed by Gov. Deval Patrick in June.

    Last month the Wenham Board of Selectmen approved it after a public hearing where nobody spoke against it. Keohane said he picked up the license on Wednesday from Tracy Masterson at Wenham Town Hall, and immediately took it down to Henry's Market, where his father was working.

    "It was not just us, there was a lot of other people who helped make it happen," John Keohane said on Friday afternoon as he was setting up to pour the first drinks with the license.

    In July. John Keohane said he expected to have the license in hand this fall. The license, he said, is a?key to many components of his plans for the operation. The Tea House reopened under the management of Heny's?in?March.

    Source: http://hamilton-wenham.patch.com/articles/wenham-tea-house-to-pou-first-drink-with-new-license-saturday

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    Student loans: Even military worries about rising debt

    Student loans come with protections for US troops, but loan companies seem to be misleading them, a new Pentagon report says. Student loans, held by 41 percent of troops, are among their top concerns.

    By Reuters / October 21, 2012

    In this October file photo, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta speaks at NATO headquarters in Brussels. Financial troubles ? including big student loans ? are the No. 1 reason US troops lose their security clearance, he says,

    Virginia Mayo/AP/File

    Enlarge

    The U.S. military voiced concern on Thursday over mounting student loan debt owed by American troops, saying loan companies appeared to be taking advantage of U.S. forces - guiding them away from special protections they earned through service.

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    Some 41 percent of America's armed forces are holding student debt, according to one recent survey, and Pentagon officials say financial troubles are among the top sources of anxiety among troops -- sometimes even topping war itself.

    Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told reporters that the No. 1 reason troops lose security clearances was financial troubles, which include things like overwhelming debt for mortgages, credit cards and student loans.

    "And that's something that we absolutely now have to address," Panetta said at a Pentagon press conference detailing a new report on student loan debt.

    "Because of their sacrifice, it should be easier, not tougher for service members to be able to pay off their college debt," he said.

    The growing student loan burden in the military appears to partly reflect a trend in America generally. Two-thirds of U.S. college seniors who graduated in 2011 had student loan debt, with an average of $26,600 per borrower, according to a study released on Thursday by the California-based Institute for College Access and Success.

    The Pentagon report cited a figure from 2008 showing that the amount of student debt for active-duty service members graduating from college in 2008 was $25,566.

    But troops, unlike the general population, should benefit from laws meant to help them manage their student debt, including the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA), which cuts interest rates to 6 percent during active duty service on debt incurred prior to service.

    Instead, the report warned that troops confused by the complexities of their benefits through acts like SCRA were being guided into unfavorable debt repayment plans or refused their legal benefits.

    "I'm concerned that the report that is being issued today warns of student loan companies that not only may confuse service members, but even violate the law in the approach that they take," Panetta said.

    Holly Petraeus, a top official with the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau who advocates for troops, noted documented cases of abusive mortgage lending practices against troops, resulting in more than 300 improper foreclosures.

    "I think the problem may be greater with student loans than it was with mortgages," Petraeus, wife of CIA Director David Petraeus, said, explaining that "many more young servicemembers enter active duty with student loans than with a mortgage."

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/EAvEJal6xz8/Student-loans-Even-military-worries-about-rising-debt

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    Saturday, October 20, 2012

    Saying no to the boss: Why it's essential - Fortune Management

    FORTUNE ? We all know the feeling: the boss has given us an unpleasant task we may not even agree with but ultimately have to perform. Many times, these orders are essential to making a company run. But not always. And sometimes they seem plain wrong.

    In those cases, companies ultimately benefit when a subordinate speaks up, according to James Detert, a management professor at Cornell's Johnson school. But right when their input is needed most, many employees lose their voice. "In the vast majority of cases where companies end up with whistleblowing-level disasters, almost always we can trace them back to an early conversation where somebody tried to communicate directly up the chain and couldn't or were so afraid to do so that they let it pile up," he says.

    Sometimes, it's impossible to push against powerful people. But employees often have resources to empower themselves that they may not recognize.

    Every whistleblowing-level disaster comes with its unique combination of communication and cultural mishaps. After the 2010 BP oil spill, it came to light that the company had a systemic problem with reporting safety issues up the chain. A rogue trader at UBS?(UBS) is currently on trial in London on charges that he acted illegally when he made trades that lost the bank over $2 billion in 2011. Yet, he was probably part of a corporate culture that encouraged risky bets and big returns.

    MORE:?5 ways to make the most of a campus career fair

    Some organizations penalize staffers for speaking out. At the same time, plenty of executives claim they want to encourage an "open culture," Detert says. Managers can take several steps to pull this off, but in the meantime, there are a couple of ways all employees can protect themselves from a boss forcing their hand.

    The first step is to question the nature of power at work. We may think power is directly related to job titles, but it's more nuanced than that. "Power really resides in one's dependence on somebody else, and their dependence on you in the other direction," says Adam Kleinbaum, a professor at Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business. Subordinates can increase their power in a couple of ways, he suggests. "One is by doing excellent work that makes them completely indispensable to the manager." The second is to reduce dependence on that manager by developing a broad network, including peers and mentors. When a manager makes an ethically gray request, an employee can use his or her allies as backup to deflect it.

    All of us who have bosses could benefit by thinking about the origin of our ideas about power. Many of us have set beliefs about how executives and managers behave regardless of how they actually act, according to a 2011 study co-authored by Detert that was published in the Academy of Management Journal. After interviewing 190 people at a tech company, the researchers found that many demonstrated what's called "implicit" -- or non-evidence-based, yet deep-rooted -- beliefs. Those included the idea that voicing an opinion different from the manager's would seem like a challenge to his or her ability, even if employees had seen evidence to the contrary.

    "There seems to be some really silly notion that if we don't all pretend that managers know more, then the whole hierarchy would all crumble down," Detert says.

    Managers who want to create an open culture first have to work to overcome how their employees naturally understand power. In fact, people who consider themselves powerful may unintentionally give off signals that they aren't open to another perspective, according to a 2012 study by Professor Shirli Kopelman at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business. In the study, participants viewed pictures of deans from various schools. Without any information about where the deans work, people said that those from higher-ranked universities seemed less cooperative than those from lower-ranked universities. Furthermore, when asked how they would negotiate funding, participants generally said they would ask for less money from the deans from higher-ranked universities.

    MORE:?The robot doctor will see you now

    The upshot, Kopelman suggests, is that highly ranked people might exude dominance, which others can interpret as a lack of cooperation.

    We are probably hard-wired to respond to dominance this way, suggests a 2009 paper published in Research in Organizational Behavior titled "Silenced by fear: The nature, sources and consequences of fear at work." Humans who could pick up cues from dominant group members had an advantage over those who couldn't, the report suggests. And modern humans are raised in hierarchies: parents have more power in families, and teachers in schools. By the time we enter the workforce, most of us are conditioned to do what we are told.

    Managers aiming to get the best out of their workers have to combat all of this.

    "You have to decrease the perceived risk of speaking up, you have to increase the perceived rewards of speaking up, and you have to increase the cost of silence," Detert says. "In other words, you have to be a company where people would say that the worst thing you could be is be a 'yes man,' " because companies are stronger when employees have the power to say "no."

    Source: http://management.fortune.cnn.com/2012/10/19/saying-no-to-the-boss-why-its-essential/

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    Lebanese on edge after car bomb linked to Syria

    A family walks past flaming tires used as a roadblock to protest the death of Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan, head of the intelligence division of Lebanon's domestic security forces in a car bomb attack targeting his convoy, in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon, Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012. Protesters burned tires and set up roadblocks around Lebanon on Saturday in a sign of boiling anger over a massive car bomb that killed a top security official and seven other people a day earlier ? a devastating attack that threatened to bring Syria's civil war to Lebanon.(AP Photo/ Mohammed Zaatari)

    A family walks past flaming tires used as a roadblock to protest the death of Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan, head of the intelligence division of Lebanon's domestic security forces in a car bomb attack targeting his convoy, in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon, Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012. Protesters burned tires and set up roadblocks around Lebanon on Saturday in a sign of boiling anger over a massive car bomb that killed a top security official and seven other people a day earlier ? a devastating attack that threatened to bring Syria's civil war to Lebanon.(AP Photo/ Mohammed Zaatari)

    Lebanese students pass a burning tire laid by Sunni protesters, angry at the killing of Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan, to block a road in Beirut, Lebanon, Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012. A car bomb ripped through Beirut on Friday, killing a top security official and several others, shearing the balconies off apartment buildings and sending bloodied residents staggering into the streets in the most serious blast the Lebanese capital has seen in four years. Dozens of people were wounded in the attack, which the state-run news agency said targeted the convoy of Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan, a top security official in Lebanon. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

    A highway link to Beirut International airport is blocked by garbage containers laid by Sunni protesters, angry at the killing of Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan, in Beirut, Lebanon, Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012. A car bomb ripped through Beirut on Friday, killing the top security official and several others, shearing the balconies off apartment buildings and sending bloodied residents staggering into the streets in the most serious blast the Lebanese capital has seen in four years. Dozens of people were wounded in the attack, which the state-run news agency said targeted the convoy of Brig. Gen. al-Hassan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Omar)

    A Lebanese man passes between a burning tire and garbage containers laid by Sunni protesters angry at the killing of Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan, to block a road in Beirut, Lebanon, Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012. A car bomb ripped through Beirut on Friday, killing the top security official and several others, shearing the balconies off apartment buildings and sending bloodied residents staggering into the streets in the most serious blast the Lebanese capital has seen in four years. Dozens of people were wounded in the attack, which the state-run news agency said targeted the convoy of al-Hassan. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

    Lebanese citizens ride their motorcycles between garbage containers laid by Sunni protesters, angry at the killing of Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan, to block roads, in Beirut, Lebanon, Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012. A car bomb ripped through Beirut on Friday, killing the top security official and several others, shearing the balconies off apartment buildings and sending bloodied residents staggering into the streets in the most serious blast the Lebanese capital has seen in four years. Dozens of people were wounded in the attack, which the state-run news agency said targeted the convoy of Brig. Gen. al-Hassan. (AP Photo/Ahmad Omar)

    (AP) ? Lebanese protesters erected flaming roadblocks and gunmen roamed the streets Saturday in a city on edge after the assassination of a top security official in a powerful car bomb the prime minister linked to the civil war in neighboring Syria.

    The crisis raised a terrifying specter for Lebanese who fear their country could easily plunge back into cycles of violence and reprisal that have haunted it for decades.

    Friday's blast in the heart of Beirut's Christian area killed eight people, including the country's intelligence chief, Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan. It was the deadliest bombing in Beirut in four years, shattering the country's uneasy calm.

    The government declared a national day of mourning for the victims Saturday, but protesters burned tires and set up roadblocks in anger.

    Sharbal Abdo, who lives in the neighborhood where the bomb went off, brought his 6-year-old son, Chris, and 12-year-old daughter, Jane, to see the destruction Saturday.

    "They were very afraid yesterday," he said. "They need to face this situation. It may be their future."

    Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Saturday linked the bombing to al-Hassan's high-profile investigation this summer that uncovered what authorities called a plot by Syria to provoke chaos in Lebanon with bombings and assassinations.

    "I don't want to prejudge the investigation, but in fact we cannot separate yesterday's crime from the revelation of the explosions that could have happened," Mikati said at a news conference following an emergency Cabinet meeting.

    Mikati, who opponents believe is too close to Syria and the Shiite militant group Hezbollah, offered to resign after the bombing, but was asked by President Michel Suleiman to stay.

    Al-Hassan's probe led to the arrest of former Information Minister Michel Samaha, one of Assad's most loyal allies in Lebanon. Samaha, who is in custody, is accused of plotting a wave of attacks in Lebanon at Syria's behest. Indicted in absentia in the August sweep was Syrian Brig. Gen. Ali Mamlouk, one of Assad's highest aides.

    Samaha's arrest was an embarrassing blow to Syria, which has long acted with impunity in Lebanon. Syria has powerful allies here, including the Shiite militant group Hezbollah, which now dominates the government.

    For much of the past 30 years, Lebanese have lived under Syrian military and political domination.

    Damascus' hold on Lebanon began to slip in 2005, when former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri was assassinated in truck bomb along Beirut's Mediterranean waterfront. Syria denied having any role. But broad public outrage in Lebanon forced Syria to withdraw its troops from the country.

    The killings of anti-Syrian figures continued for years, however, and Assad has managed to maintain his influence in Lebanon through Hezbollah and other allies.

    Now, as the Syrian civil war rages just across the border, Lebanon increasingly is getting sucked in.

    Mikati said Saturday he had offered to resign after Friday's car bomb, but said Suleiman asked him not to plunge the country into more uncertainty.

    The bombing raised fears that the crisis could unleash Lebanon's sectarian tensions, a dire scenario for a country that endured a devastating civil war of its own from 1975-1990.

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon spoke Saturday with Suleiman and stressed the importance of "dissociating the country from regional events" and in Lebanon's sovereignty, a U.N. spokesman said.

    The Syrian unrest has already enflamed tensions here. Many of Lebanon's Sunni Muslims have backed Syria's mainly Sunni rebels, while Shiite Muslims have tended to back Assad. Al-Hassan was a Sunni whose stances were widely seen to oppose Syria and Hezbollah.

    Hundreds of Sunni protesters marched in force through downtown Beirut Saturday, placing the blame squarely on Syria and Hezbollah for al-Hassan's killing.

    "Hezbollah is a terrorist group!" they shouted.

    Police were trying to identify the bombers and find out how they managed to target al-Hassan, an important security figure who traveled under great protection and who likely took more precautions following Samaha's arrest.

    "We don't expect to reveal the crime within few hours," police commander Maj. Gen. Ashraf Rifi told Future TV. "The investigation is like a puzzle. You collect the pieces and put them together in a logical way."

    Al-Hassan had many potential enemies.

    Besides his investigation of Samaha, al-Hassan helped investigate the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, a powerful Sunni figure. An international tribunal indicted four members of Hezbollah for Hariri's killing, although the group denies involvement.

    His department also had a role in breaking up several Israeli spy rings inside Lebanon in recent years, Lebanese officials said.

    Al-Hassan, 47, who was married with two children, is expected to be buried Sunday next to Hariri's tomb in downtown Beirut. His family arrived in Lebanon on Saturday on a private plane from Paris, where they live.

    Lebanon's top Sunni cleric, Grand Mufti Mohammed Rashid Kabbani, condemned the assassination, calling it a "criminal explosion that targets Lebanon and its people." He also called for self-restraint, saying "the criminal will get his punishment sooner or later."

    But many Lebanese were seething with anger.

    In the eastern town of Marj, protesters tried to storm an office of the pro-Syrian Itihad group. Lebanese soldiers pushed them away, wounding five protesters, security officials said. Dozens of people who marched in protest in the border town of Moqueibleh came under fire from the Syrian side of the border, forcing them to disperse, the officials said.

    The highway linking central Beirut with the city's international airport was closed, as well as the highway that links the capital with Syria, the officials said.

    In the predominantly Sunni northern city of Tripoli, gunmen were roaming the streets on motorcycles and opening fire in the air.

    The army issued a statement urging Lebanese to overcome the crisis and coordinate among themselves in order to give a chance to the "the criminal killers who tried through the crime to incite strife and split the country."

    ___

    Associated Press writer Barbara Surk contributed to this report.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-10-20-Lebanon/id-ddcb9d91298041feae8b49415bd56ed7

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    Can I be taxed twice on my retirement plan? - The Help Desk ...

    I paid state taxes on retirement contributions. Now I'm being taxed on withdrawals. Is that legal? ? John Wallach,?Elkton, Md.

    Unfair, yes, but still legal. Pennsylvania, your former home, is one of only two states?New Jersey is the other?that tax retirement plan contributions that aren't taxed at the federal level. Instead, it's distributions that are tax-free in Pennsylvania. Maryland, like most states, taxes distributions, not contributions. Easing the pain: If you're 65 or older, up to $26,300 of 401(k) income is excluded from taxes, though Social Security income reduces that break, says Westminster, Md., CPA Lee Sturgill.

    Checking out a state's tax laws before retiring pays off. "It's not just about income taxes," says Baltimore planner Kirk Kinder. "Different estate tax laws play a factor too." You can start researching at retirementliving.com.

    ?Kate Ashford

    Got a question for the Help Desk? Send it to?helpdesk@cnnmoney.com.

    Source: http://helpdesk.blogs.money.cnn.com/2012/10/19/taxed-twice-on-retirement-plan/

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