Friday, August 31, 2012

10-year-old sculpts adorable ?Lord of the Rings? clay figures; sells them via Etsy

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - The Pakistani scientist who sold nuclear secrets to Iran, North Korea and Libya, may try his hand at politics to rescue a country he says has become worse than a banana republic. Abdul Qadeer Khan, still lionized as the father of Pakistan's atomic bomb despite his fall from grace in 2004, may have some appeal ahead of elections due next year. Many Pakistanis are deeply frustrated with their leaders over everything from chronic power cuts to their strategic ties with the United States, and they might welcome someone seen as a national hero on the political stage. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/technology-blog/10-old-sculpts-adorable-lord-rings-clay-figures-173521198.html

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Vicki Blackburn, 59, Paso Robles, California

When I come to the end of my journey
And I travel my last weary mile,
Just forget if you can, that I ever frowned
And remember only the smile.
Forget unkind words I have spoken;
Remember some good I have done.
Forget that I ever had heartache
And remember I've had loads of fun.
Forget that I've stumbled and blundered
And sometimes fell by the way.
Remember I have fought some hard battles
And won, ere the close of the day.
Then forget to grieve for my going,
I would not have you sad for a day,
But in summer just gather some flowers
And remember the place where I lay,
And come in the shade of evening
When the sun paints the sky in the west
Stand for a few moments beside me
And remember only my best.

Source: http://kcoy.tributes.com/show/Vicki-Blackburn-94353372

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Central Florida Ruins Bowden's Akron Debut 56-14

AKRON, Ohio (AP) ? Turnovers ruined Terry Bowden's first try at turning around Akron's football program.

Central Florida had four takeaways and Blake Bortles passed for 168 yards and three touchdowns as the Knights ruined Bowden's coaching debut at Akron, routing the mistake-prone Zips 56-14 in the season opener for both teams Thursday night.

"Not a lot of mysteries as to why they won," Bowden said following his much-anticipated return to major college football 19 years after the end of his short but successful run at Auburn.

"They played better," Bowden said. "We would have had to be about perfect to win, but we turned the ball over."

Akron lost three fumbles, including two inside its own 10-yard line, and also had an interception.

"Getting those turnovers was huge," Knights coach George O'Leary said after UCF's seventh straight season-opening win.

Bowden came to Akron after guiding North Alabama to a 29-9 record the past three seasons in Division II following 10 years as a TV analyst. Prior to that, he went 47-17-1 at Auburn, going undefeated his first year in 1993.

The energetic Bowden said it was a day of anxiety and, though the young Zips lost badly, he was proud of their tenacity.

"No matter what happened, it was the start of a push to turn this program around," Bowden said.

Akron, 1-11 in each of the past two years, couldn't keep up with the bigger and stronger Knights, who built a 35-0 halftime lead.

Bortles went 13 of 16, connecting with Rannell Hall for TDs of 18 and 56 yards, and opening the scoring with a 5-yard pass to Chris Martin.

Latavius Murray gained 108 yards with one score on 14 carries, playing little more than one quarter. He rushed for 68 yards on UCF's opening drive of 73 yards, and Murray's 2-yard run later made it 14-0.

"(Murray) had a sore shoulder, and we wanted to see some other backs, too," O'Leary said of his running back's limited time.

Miami (FL) transfer Storm Johnson scored on runs of 2 and 3 yards, both after the Knights recovered fumbles. Knights backup Tyler Gabbert also threw a 12-yard TD pass to Rob Calabrese.

O'Leary said he wanted to throw the ball even more and will try to put in a few more passing plays for the Knights' second game against Ohio State.

"We look forward to the opportunity," he said. "We'll have to play our 'A' game."

Akron quarterback Dalton Williams went 30 of 51 for 255 yards. He threw touchdown passes of 13 yards to L.T. Smith and 16 yards to Marquelo Suel in the second half.

Akron ran 81 plays under Bowden's spread offense, which surprised even Williams.

"Eighty-one ... " he said. "That shows we are playing at a high tempo and that we have bought into coach Bowden's philosophy."

Bowden knows it won't be easy. Akron hasn't had a winning season since going 7-6 in 2005.

"We're going to win some and we're going to get thumped some," he said. "But I felt some excitement from the fans. I told them to buy season tickets. That way, they'll see them all because we're going to get better."

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2012/08/30/sports/ncaafootball/ap-fbc-ucf-akron.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Thursday, August 30, 2012

Ludacris: R.I.P. Chris Lightly who always had the best energy every time I had an encounter with him. He will be misse http://t.co/9ADmfaMt

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Source: http://twitter.com/Ludacris/statuses/241240755434319872

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Will the Bankruptcy Trustee Take Your Tax Refund? ? Charleston ...

Guest Post by By Victoria Maydanik, consumer bankruptcy attorney in San Jose, California and owner of Maydanik Law Firm.

Each year during tax season, hundreds of people lose some or all of their tax refund in bankruptcy court.? After the first of each year, here is a fairly typical discourse between the bankruptcy trustee and the person who filed the bankruptcy petition, also known as the debtor:

Trustee: Have you already filed your taxes for last year?

Debtor: ? Yes, I filed taxes a week ago.

Trustee:? Will you be getting a refund?

Debtor: Yes.

Trustee: How much?

Debtor: $4,000.

Trustee (nonchalantly): Based on your schedules, you can still exempt $1,000. The other $3,000

is not exempt. Write a check payable to me for the $3,000, or send your payment to

the address on this card.? Any creditors present? No creditors are present.? This

concludes the meeting.? Good bye.

What has just happened? In essence, the debtor was told he had to pay $3,000 to creditors and the trustee to make sure that his bankruptcy case completed successfully.

Is this something the debtor expected? Probably not.

Did it have to happen? Probably not.

Let?s rewind. The bankruptcy trustee was asking the debtor if he was expecting a refund because the trustee wanted to figure out if the debtor had any additional money coming his way.? This matters because case, all of your property becomes property of the bankruptcy estate and can be distributed or sold to creditors unless you can exempt it. If you have already used up all available exemptions, then any new property or funds that you acquire during the case would be channeled to creditors. If you still have some exemptions left, then you may be able to exempt part of the extra funds, and would have to part with whatever is not exempt, just like in the example above.

If this debtor delayed filing taxes, for example by getting an extension until October, this would not have helped, because he is still entitled to claim the refund during his case. If someone has a right or an expectation of receiving any funds or property, it usually counts the same way in the bankruptcy case as if he already had the funds in his pocket. An easy illustration of this concept is a winning lottery ticket for $5,000 that has not been cashed yet.? Although the debtor does not have the $5,000 yet, he has a definite right to receive $5,000, which is the same from the trustee?s point of view.

If the debtor had no idea how large his refund would be, the trustee would wait.? And wait. ?And wait. It doesn?t help to delay the resolution of the question, because the longer the case stays open, the more issues can brew up. The trustees can wait a long time ? in some extreme cases, more than 10 years ? if there is an unresolved question as to how much the debtor is entitled to receive.? If there are unfiled taxes, the trustee would expect them to be filed, and any non-exempt refunds to be given to the trustee before the case is completed.

If the debtor gets tired of waiting for the discharge of his debts and decides to walk out of the Chapter 7 case?well, he may not necessarily be able to do it.? Although the debtor can ask the court to dismiss the case, the right to leave the case is not automatic or absolute. If the trustee thinks there could be some significant funds that could be distributed to her and the creditors, the trustee will likely oppose debtor?s request to close the case.

If the debtor is not in a Chapter 7, but is instead in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy with a payment plan, then any non-exempt funds received before the payment plan is confirmed might? increase the amount of the monthly Chapter 13 payment.

Last but not the least, the debtor in our example probably could have easily avoided both the surprise and the loss of the funds. Unless there was some emergency that necessitated the rushed filing of the case, he should have filed all his taxes before filing bankruptcy, then received and spent the refund. If he had some legitimate expenses such as insurance, mortgage, medical treatments, groceries, or car maintenance that the refund could be used for, these expense should have been paid before the case was filed.

The same holds true for any other uncertain asset or recovery. For example, if somebody defrauded you or injured you, and you have a right to file a claim or lawsuit against them, you may want to get that claim resolved before your bankruptcy case. Your local bankruptcy attorney should advise you on available bankruptcy exemptions that you can use.

Don?t put off the resolution of uncertainties, and you will minimize the risk of delays in your bankruptcy case, surprise requests by the trustee, and unnecessary loss of funds and property.

Related posts:

  1. Will the Bankruptcy Trustee Take My Jewelry?
  2. Bankruptcy and Your 401(k) Loan
  3. Can Creditors Take My Retirement Funds? (Part Two)

Source: http://www.scbankruptcyattorney.com/blog/will-the-bankruptcy-trustee-take-your-tax-refund/2012/08

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The Intentional Mustard Seed: It's not you, it's me...

The Intentional Mustard Seed: It's not you, it's me...

It's not you, it's me...

Today marks three weeks since I started my new job at The U.? Learning how to lead a team while also filling in for a vacant position has been nothing short of baptism by fire.? Fortunately, things will calm down?soon and I'll have an opportunity to focus on leadership.

I am a learn-aholic.? Especially when it comes to self-improvement.? So, my inner-nerd has been digesting Dave Ramsey Entreleadership Podcasts during the evening commute this week. Tonight I listened to an older podcast with a powerful message about succeeding in leadership:

Opportunity does not limit your organization, your leadership limits your organization.

Dave's point is this: if you aren't getting the result you want, you need to look in the mirror and figure out how you are contributing to the problem.

I needed this reflection now.? I could create a lot of excuses with my schedule these days.??But here are my questions for myself:?How do I limit...
  • The effectiveness of my work team
  • My access to free time
  • The success of my blog and other outside ventures
  • My ability to complete a?dissertation this semester
  • My dating relationships
  • My friendships
  • My own potential
Deep thoughts, but definitely ones worth considering.? How are you limiting yourself or business?

?

Source: http://theintentionalmustardseed.blogspot.com/2012/08/its-not-you-its-me.html

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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

3 Month Payday Loans Easy Solution To Your Monetary Issues Article

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Source: http://uploadons.com/blog/3-month-payday-loans-easy-solution-to-your-monetary-issues-article-finance-lo/

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Information helps men make prostate cancer decisions

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - When given additional information, prostate cancer patients are less likely to remain undecided about which treatment they want and are less likely to want their prostates removed, in a new study.

Perhaps not surprisingly, Dutch researchers found that just 2 percent of patients remained undecided after being educated about the two or three treatments available to them. That's compared to about 8 percent of patients who had normal doctor's visits.

Additionally, 65 percent of patients in the educated group preferred to have their prostates removed - a surgery known as a radical prostatectomy - compared to 73 percent of patients who were not given additional information.

"The contribution this study makes is that it fits with a number of other trials that have been done with surgery," said Floyd J. Fowler, senior scientific advisor for the Informed Medical Decisions Foundation (IMDF) in Boston.

Fowler, who was not involved with the new work, said past research shows people usually pick more conservative treatments after they're exposed to more information.

For example, the new study found that the educated patients were more likely to prefer one of two radiation treatments that may allow them to keep their prostate instead of having the gland completely removed.

To see whether a "decision aid" - a structured meeting that provides patients with the pros and cons of various treatments - helped those with prostate cancer to decide on a treatment choice or changed their existing choice, the researchers monitored 240 patients at three Dutch hospitals between 2008 and 2011.

The researchers, led by Julia J. van Tol-Geerdink at Radboud University Medical Centre in Nijmegen, The Netherlands, randomly assigned 163 patients into a group that received the additional education, while 77 were assigned to a comparison group that had regular doctor's visits.

In each group, urologists met with prostate cancer patients and told them about the available treatment options, but did not decide on one during those first visits.

Those in the education group then had a second visit with a researcher who described each treatment through a standardized discussion, while those in the comparison group had a normal follow up visit with their specialists.

The patients' treatment preferences - along with which side effects they were most concerned about - were then recorded.

Overall, 65 percent of those in the education group preferred to have their prostates removed, 33 percent preferred a form of radiation and 2 percent remained undecided.

In those who had normal doctor's visits, 73 percent preferred a radical prostatectomy, 20 percent preferred radiation and 8 percent were undecided.

As for what the patients were most concerned about, researchers found that - aside from survival - bowel and urinary problems were most important, while sexual problems and the procedure itself were less so.

van Tol-Geerdink did not respond to requests for comment by deadline.

WATCHFUL WAITING?

The study is part of a long body of research that says involving patients in decision making leads to making better decisions, Dr. Michael J. Barry, a primary care doctor at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and IMDF president, told Reuters Health.

"People should know what all of their options are, and with prostate cancer there are a lot of options," Barry, who was also not involved with the new study, added.

But both Barry and Fowler said the study would have been better if the researchers also offered patients the option to just monitor the cancer's growth - an approach known as "watchful waiting."

"I think you might have seen more interesting results if they included that," said Fowler.

Despite that limitation, researchers, writing in the British Journal of Urology International, recommend that hospitals and doctors use similar "decision aids" to help patients reach a decision.

As for now, Fowler said patients should ask their doctors for information on all of their treatment options.

"I think if a patient goes in and says, 'I want to understand the pros and cons of all my options - including doing nothing,' most (doctors) would do it," he said.

The American Cancer Society projects that 241,740 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2012, and 28,170 will die from it.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/POeCfb British Journal of Urology International, online August 10, 2012.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/information-helps-men-prostate-cancer-decisions-202124256.html

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Movie review: Lawless | canada.com

Starring: Tom Hardy, Shia LaBeouf, Guy Pearce, Jessica Chastain

Rating: 3.5 out of 5

Moonshine, fast cars, guys getting their throats slit, other guys getting important parts sliced off, and guns, guns, guns: it?s all there in Lawless, a rootin? tootin? hillbilly gangster film that has just about everything you might want, with the possible exception of a point. As often happens in these projects, brutal violence, strong language and nudity become their own reward.
Lawless was made by John Hillcoat and Nick Cave, the director and writer behind the hyper-violent Australian film The Proposition. They have not lost their taste for blood or for evocative set design: Lawless takes place in the wild and woolly Appalachian Mountains of Virginia, circa 1931, a location awash in vintage Fords, gangsters with Tommy guns and dusty mountain towns with signs for Chesterfield cigarettes, Kist beverages and (my favourite) the Fire Proof Hotel.
In the milieu, as the French say, live the Bondurant brothers, a real-life clan of bootleggers ? the film is based on The Wettest County in the World, a novel that fictionalizes their adventures ? who turned out the strongest moonshine in these here parts. At one stage, someone runs out of gas and uses white lightning to get his truck moving again.

They?re a strange mix: Forrest (Tom Hardy, unleashed from his villainous mask in The Dark Knight Rises and drawling to beat the band) is the leader. He carries brass knuckles and a don?t-back-down attitude. ?We control the fear,? he says. ?Without the fear we?re as good as dead.?

His brothers are Howard (Jason Clarke), who?s kind of nutsy violent, and Jack (Shia LaBeouf), the baby of the family, who?s pretend violent. Jack dreams of fancy suits and fast cars, and he idolizes Floyd Banner (Gary Oldman, in an extended cameo), a Chicago gangster who turns up every once in a while to fire a machine gun at people. Banner seems like a genial enough sort, as long as you don?t let him get behind you with a shovel.
Everything is swell ? the Bondurants make the moonshine, the sheriff buys it from them and the G-men mostly stay away ? until the arrival of Special Agent Charlie Rakes, a corrupt cop from Chicago. He?s played by Guy Pearce, who showed his new edge of danger in the sci-fi thriller Lockout and is a lip-smacking over-the-top villain here: in bow tie and gaudy suits, his hair slicked back and rigorously parted down the middle, he brings a cruel sadism to the whiskey wars, and he?s not afraid of no mountain moonshiner neither.

?Forrest Bondurant is different from other fellas,? the sheriff warns him.

?Different?,? asks Rakes, enjoying the company of this hick.

?Indestructible,? says the sheriff.

That?s the legend, anyway, and while Howard rages and Jack moons around trying to start his own business with the disabled Cricket (Dane DeHaan), Forrest squints with indomitable calm. He?s a Depression-era version of the cowboy hero, the fastest brass knuckles in the east.

The knuckles are used a lot: Lawless is brutal ? there?s even a scene where a man is tarred and feathered ? and not much softened by a couple of love stories. One is Jack?s courtship of Bertha (Mia Wasikowska), the quietly knowing daughter of a preacher and one of those movie good girls drawn to bad boys. This would be more persuasive if LaBeouf seemed more of a bad boy and less of a formless wise guy whose main role is to get beat up.

Then there?s Maggie (Jessica Chastain), a former ?fan dancer? escaping the violent life of Chicago, and boy, did she ever pick the wrong county. Slyly sexy, she attaches herself to Forrest when he pounds the bejesus out of a couple of bad guys for her. Forrest pounds the bejesus out of people a lot in a way that seems both reluctant and bloodthirsty. Chastain is also the reason for the ?nudity? warning.
It?s a lot of plot, and Hillcoat barely has room for those scenes of old cars careering down mountain roads to the sound of fast fiddle music, heading to the next shootout. At one stage, they go past a billboard picturing a happy family. ?There?s no way like the American way,? it reads. Maybe that?s the point.

Source: http://o.canada.com/2012/08/29/movie-review-lawless/

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NASA to beam new will.i.am song from Mars

A song called "Reach for the Stars" will make its debut, appropriately, from space.

NASA plans to broadcast the tune, written by rapper and songwriter will.i.am, from its Curiosity rover, newly landed on the surface of Mars.

Though Curiosity has no speakers, it will transmit the song via radio waves back to Earth to be received at 1 p.m. PT (4 p.m. ET) Tuesday during an educational event at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

  1. Space news from NBCNews.com

    1. Flags?will fly at half-staff for Neil Armstrong

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: President Barack Obama orders that U.S. flags be flown at half-staff in honor of first moonwalker Neil Armstrong, who passed away over the weekend.

    2. NASA gets set for yearlong stays in orbit
    3. Rover sends first human voice from Mars
    4. Will.i.am song will get Red Planet premiere

"Members of the team that successfully landed the rover on Mars earlier this month will explain to students the mission and the technology behind the song's interplanetary transmission," NASA officials wrote in a statement. "Will.i.am will then premiere 'Reach for the Stars,' a new composition about the singer's passion for science, technology and space exploration."

During the event, NASA scientists and mission managers will talk about the Curiosity mission and explain the technology behind the broadcast to students. It won't be the first broadcast from space ? NASA used the Mars rover on Monday to broadcast a spoken message from the space agency's chief, Charles Bolden.

The musician will.i.am, a member of the Black Eyed Peas, was at JPL on Aug. 5 to watch Curiosity land on Mars. The car-sized, $2.5 billion rover is beginning a two-year mission to investigate whether Mars ever had the conditions necessary to support microbial life.

Follow Space.com on Twitter @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook and Google+.

? 2012 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/48808906/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Executive-Level Business Professional Resume Sample | Resume ...

The sample below is for a Executive-Level Business Professional Resume. This resume was written by a ResumeMyCareer professional resume writer, and demonstrates how a resume for a Executive-Level Business Professional Candidate should be properly created. Our Certified Professional Resume Writers can assist you in creating a professional document for the job or industry of your choice.

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Professional Profile
Self-motivated executive-level business professional with significant years of relevant experience in program development, project management, process analysis, relationship development, human resources, and staff training. Detail?oriented individual who exemplifies professionalism, and an ability to manage multiple projects and tasks at any given moment. Demonstrated history of successful organizational administration and effective process implementation, while providing high-quality guidance to other management personnel as well as facilitating solid member and community relations. Highlighted leadership qualities and the ability to work with and manage people from varying backgrounds, while promoting team values. Driven partner eager for professional growth, increased responsibility, and the opportunity to leverage extensive management, analytics, development, and interpersonal expertise ? along with an entrepreneurial spirit ? within the performance-based work culture of a growing organization.

Professional Experience
Downtown Cincinnati Inc. (Cincinnati, OH) 2004 ? Present
Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
? Oversee all strategic planning and project management functions while executing various critical business operations including organizational procedures, human resource functions, and technology assessment and utilization
? Hold responsibility for adherence to a more than $2 million budget, which includes the oversight of three of DCI?s four departments as well as the negotiation and management of related vendor contracts and DCI sub-contracts
? Act as liaison to DCI?s two boards of directors, providing operational direction for board member recruitment, training, engagement, and succession planning
? Implement successful improvements related to organization-wide efficiency, productivity, and communications, without increasing associated operating expenses
? Link mission of organization with current resources while empowering staff to identify and implement creative methods to exceed internal and external expectations

Cincinnati Works (Cincinnati, OH) 2003 ? 2004
Director, Community Relations
? Developed and executed strategies for growing membership and improving community involvement with organization, increasing average number of members by over 8% within first six months
? Forged relationships and strategic partnerships with community leaders and social service organizations to improve service to the economically, culturally, and educationally diverse members of organization
? Re-designed member intake and orientation process as well as co-designed a new suite of marketing materials

Infrastructure Services (Cincinnati, OH) 1999 ? 2003
Manager, Human Resources
? Acted as both a consultant and advisor to firm president in the facilitation of a change in strategic direction, functioning as liaison between management and engineering staff to promote efficient transitions and ensure staff satisfactions
? Oversaw the execution of all facets of employee relations, employment law and regulations, and benefits administration
? Developed and coordinated comprehensive staff training and development programs with related evaluation benchmarks
? Improved staff recruitment and retention through the research, analysis, and integration of a new employee benefits structure
? Created and assisted in the implementation of project quality control and quality assurance measures to drive profitability

Education
The Union Institute & University (Cincinnati, OH) [Insert Grad Year]
B.A. ? Communications

Certifications
Professional in Human Resources Certificate ? SHRM Certification Institute (Alexandria, VA; [Insert Year]

Professional Memberships
Society for Human Resource Management

Community Activities and Memberships
Emanuel Community Center (Board of Trustees; Governance Committee Chair) ? Spina Bifida Association of Cincinnati (Board of Trustees) ? Cincinnati USA Chamber of Commerce ? Leadership Cincinnati (Class XXXIII) ? WE Lead (Class II) ? Women Excel Leadership Team ? Small Business Awards Application Evaluator ? WE Celebrate Awards Application Evaluator ? Cincinnati Works Volunteer ? Over-the-Rhine Chamber of Commerce ? Business Atraction and Retention Committee ? Urban League African American Leadership Development Program (Class XII) ? YWCA Board Leadership Program (Class III) ? Former Board of Trustees Chair of African American Chamber of Commerce ? Former Over-the-Rhine Chamber of Commerce Board Member (Issues Committee Chair)

Source: http://www.resumemycareer.com/executive-level-business-professional-resume-sample/

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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Samsung unveils new Series 7 and Series 5 AIOs: Windows 8 and gesture recognition for $749 and up

DNP EMBARGO  Samsung unveils new Series 7 and Series 5 AIOs Windows 8 and gesture recognition for $749 and up

Samsung teased a Series 7 all-in-one running Windows 8 -- on a 10-point touch display -- at Computex in June, and today the machine gets official with pricing and specs. The Series 7 will be available in 23- and 27-inch flavors, both of which run Microsoft's latest OS on a 1080p touchscreen. The setup includes a redesigned keyboard, which is small enough to tuck under the display's metal stand, and the AIOs will support gesture recognition. The 23-inch Series 7 costs $1,099 and runs a Core i5 CPU with 6GB of RAM, 1TB of storage and Intel Graphics 4000. The 27-inch model offers a Core i7 processor, 8GB of RAM, 1TB of storage and discrete AMD Radeon HD 7850M graphics, all for $1,699.

In addition to refreshing its Series 7 machines, Samsung is introducing the 21.5-inch Series 5 all-in-one, which it describes as a "kitchen-style PC." Its legs are on either end of the display, leaving room to stow the keyboard under the screen and freeing up your desk (or counter) space. The Series 5 will go for $749, and it includes a Core i3 processor, 4GB of RAM and 500GB of storage. All three AIOs have two USB 3.0 ports, three USB 2.0 connections, HDMI and a media card reader, and all will go on sale October 26th. You know the drill -- head past the break for our hands-on photos.

Continue reading Samsung unveils new Series 7 and Series 5 AIOs: Windows 8 and gesture recognition for $749 and up

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Syria helicopter down in Damascus in massacre 'revenge'

Syrian rebels claimed they shot down an army helicopter during fierce fighting in Damascus on Monday, saying it was to avenge the "massacre" of over 330 people blamed on regime forces in the town of Daraya.

State television said the aircraft crashed near a mosque in the eastern district of Qaboon, where activists reported heavy shelling by combat helicopters and fierce fighting between government troops and Free Syrian Army rebels.

"It was in revenge for the Daraya massacre," Omar al-Qabooni, spokesman for the FSA's Badr battalion in Damascus told AFP, adding that rebels had found the body of the pilot after the helicopter crashed to the ground in a ball of flames.

A series of explosions rocked the city from about dawn, an AFP correspondent said, while the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported battles in Qaboon and the neighbouring district of Jubar, where anti-regime sentiment is strong.

The FSA also said it shot down a Syrian warplane on August 13 in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor, but the claims cannot be independently confirmed.

The assault on the northeast of the capital was unleashed a day after opposition activists accused President Bashar al-Assad's regime of a gruesome new massacre in the Daraya, a twon southwest of the capital.

The Observatory said hundreds of bodies had been found in the small Sunni Muslim town after what activists described as brutal five-day onslaught of shelling, summary executions and house-to-house raids by government troops.

It said Monday that a total of 334 bodies had now been found in Daraya, of which 241 had been identified.

Government troops launched the offensive last Tuesday in a bid to crush insurgents who have regrouped in the southwestern outskirts of Damascus after the regime claimed to have retaken most of the capital late last month.

Assad vowed Sunday that he would not change course in the face of what he charged was a "conspiracy" by Western and regional powers against Syria, which has been convulsed by 17 months of bloodshed.

"The Syrian people will not allow this conspiracy to achieve its objectives" and will defeat it "at any price," Assad said at a meeting with a top official from Iran, Syria's chief regional ally.

Assad has since March last year been trying through force to smother a popular uprising that has turned into a brutal civil war which has left thousands dead, seen more than 200,000 refugees fleeing to neighbouring countries and 2.5 million in need inside Syria.

But despite their far superior fire power, the government forces are struggling to defeat rebels who have built strongholds in many parts of the country, particularly the northern city of Aleppo.

Human rights groups have accused the regime of committing many atrocities during the conflict, and a UN panel said earlier this month it was guilty of crimes against humanity.

Grisly videos issued by opposition activists showed dozens of charred and bloodied bodies lined up in broad daylight in a graveyard in Daraya, and others lying wall-to-wall in rooms in a mosque.

The Local Coordination Committees, a network of activists on the ground, said many victims had been summarily executed and their bodies burnt by pro-regime shabiha militias that have been transformed into a "killing machine".

"Bodies were found in fields, basements and shelters and in the streets," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP, adding that many of the victims had died in shelling or were summarily executed.

The reports cannot be independently verified because of severe restrictions on media operating in Syria.

Britain said that if confirmed, the Daraya massacre "would be an atrocity on a new scale."

State media said blamed the rebels for the killings and said Daraya, a conservative Sunni Muslim town of some 200,000 people, had been was "purified of terrorist remnants."

Pro-government television Al-Dunia said "terrorists" carried out the attacks, as it interviewed residents including traumatised children and showed a number of bloodied bodies lying in the streets.

"Our valiant armed forces cleared Daraya of the remnants of armed terrorist groups which committed crimes that traumatised the citizens of the town and destroyed public and private property," government newspaper Ath-Thawra said.

Meanwhile, the head of the Iranian parliament's foreign policy committee, Aladin Borujerdi, vowed that Tehran will "stick by our Syrian brothers" at a meeting with Assad and Vice President Faruq al-Shara in Damascus.

It was the first public appearance in over a month by Shara -- the regime's top Sunni Muslim official -- following opposition claims he had tried to defect and was under house arrest.

Iran is a staunch ally of Assad's regime but is being excluded from most international efforts aimed at ending the conflict which has divided world powers with the West supporting the rebels and Moscow and Beijing backing Damascus.

The Britain-based Observatory, which has a network of sources on the ground, reported a total of at least 149 people killed nationwide on Sunday.

August is already the deadliest single month of the conflict with at least 4,000 people killed, according to the Observatory, while around 25,000 have died since March 2011. The United Nations puts the death toll at more than 17,000.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-helicopter-down-damascus-massacre-revenge-090322426.html

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We All Want POWER

Admit it or not, we all have a need for power.

Power supplies every of us with various really essencial things; the belief of being in control, the belief that we are right, a feel of security & the hope that we may attain what we need most for ourselves.

With Mind Control there is no question that it appeals to that really station need for power.

Even the most introspective & peace romantic have to allow that the genuine ability of brain shape comes in 2 shapes 1) exterior ? moderating others & the environs & 2) internal ? the ability to shape our individual thoughts, feelings & responses.

Here is a tiny brain shape tip that anyone may use that will attract to both views of brain control.

When interacting with someone what may you do to allow them to perceive as whenever they have power?

A bare exemplar is call for them to do anything that is slightly exterior of what they think is their current ability. In calling for that supply them the support & encouragement that they need to get the business done.

Here are the benefits as they relate to brain control.

First it will demonstrate to you that you have at least many ability over folks & your environs secondly, & most importantly, it will demonstrate that you have many individual & internal shape over yourself to do it.

The primary trouble with folks who suffer from shyness & need to shape it that they are too practically in their individual heads wondering ?What ought I do next?? or saying themselves ?This is stupid.? In so doing they are not truly aware of their exterior environs & thus not capable to shape it.

By taking bill in this little path anyone may begin to watch the genuine benefits of brain control.

Related posts:

  1. Healing With Neither Power Nor Holiness
  2. How to Have Power over Others.
  3. Power Cells As Alternative To Oil
  4. Power Struggles Being Right or Being Loving
  5. Solar Power Fun Facts

Comments are closed.

Source: http://www.society-guide.com/we-all-want-power/

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Monday, August 27, 2012

Finding Faith in a Moving Box or a Box of Wine; It All Works Out

Regroup. Reframe. Relax. This is my motto. My theme if you will. I use it in my writing, my personal perspective, my work and my every day life.? And yet, it?s a challenge. And right now, I am feeling very, very challenged.

I?m not sure if this is the appropriate place to vent, but seeing as I write about perspective and getting comfortable with our world, maybe it?s the perfect place to vent.

You see, I?m moving. And if you have ever moved, you will recall the highs and lows that come with moving and making just about any transition in your life.? I?m not opposed to transition and change, I know it?s inevitable and it helps us grow, but to combat any discomfort, I like to plan everything out and am a chronic goal setter because it makes me feel less chaotic during change. As long as I feel some semblance of personal control during transition, I?m good.

When my husband suggested we move (for the past three years, but I was in denial until this past Spring) I was very hesitant, and assumed/hoped we?d never find what we liked and would have to stay in our current home and expand.? I felt very strongly about this until I started visualizing myself in each new house and slowly started to see our family growing in these places.? And when we found the house we really wanted, that had everything we were looking for, we knew we had arrived, it was meant to be.

And so began our summer of transition. My normal goal of shutting down and relaxing with my children at the lake each day and berry picking and pool hopping had to shift to the new goal of getting fully prepared to move at the end of the summer and unfortunately during the first week of school.? But it?s a great house and I?m a great planner, so it would be a sacrifice well worth it.

Every transition has its low points and drama and the buying and selling of our houses has had its fair share in the past two months, but they?ve been manageable?until two weeks ago.? Long story short, we are scheduled to close on our current home this week, our boxes are packed, we?re on our way out, but at this very moment, we have no definitive plan on where we will move to.

Due to a major error on the seller of the house we are buying, we are no longer closing on the house this week. We may be in the future, but there is no guarantee and there are significant risks in the process of waiting it out.? We were offered the option of renting the house while we wait, but we still have not seen a rental agreement and we must be out of our home in four days.? We have no concrete back up plan- which is unheard of for me- but I am holding out.? Why? I am relying on Faith. I am practicing what I believe in and what I struggle with.

This morning I made various lists for myself of what I need to get done today.? Remaining closets that need packing, meal plan for the week, clothes laid out for school and a final exit plan for the house- the house I didn?t want to leave. I am taking control of what I can.? And the rest, a very large rest, I am leaving to Faith.? It is not easy. I am battling the What If?s, the uneasiness of not having an action plan, and the sadness of leaving the security and comfort of my home.? But I choose to believe that it will be okay.? I have to. I have to believe that it will work out for my family. I have to regroup various times throughout the day, I have to reframe my thoughts almost continuously and I have to relax, at least once a day, if even with help of a nice glass of Pinot Noir.? It is imperative.

I will have a back up emergency plan in a few days if I have to.? But for now, I?m riding it out.? Somehow, when it all works out, I think it will make the reliance on Faith that much more rewarding. And if it doesn?t??we?ll cross that bridge.

This particular life challenge has been a struggle, but not one I?m afraid to tackle.? It?s not any harder than the others and the lessons we?re learning will be invaluable somewhere down the road.? So if you don?t hear from me in a month, its not that I?ve given up. It?s that I?ve been locked up, behind some padded walls by some very skeptical people who are uncomfortable with my incurable optimism?or in the storage facility I am living in that doesn?t have Wi-Fi.? Either way, it only gets better from here, right?

Source: http://www.perspectiveparenting.com/2012/08/26/finding-faith-in-a-moving-box-or-a-box-of-wine-it-all-works-out/

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Ex-South Carolina governor to marry former mistress

CHARLESTON, South Carolina (Reuters) - Former South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford said on Sunday he is engaged to marry his Argentine girlfriend, Maria Belen Chapur.

"Yes, it's true and I stand by my statement," Sanford told Reuters by telephone.

He referred to a statement given to CNN in which he said, "Yes, we are engaged, and I'm both happy and excited for what that means. I have long expressed my feelings for her, she's a wonderful person. My closest friends have met and love her, and I look forward to introducing her to still many more that have yet to do so."

In the summer of 2009, then-Governor Sanford disappeared from his office for a week on a trip to Argentina to visit Chapur. Aides said he was hiking the Appalachian Trail. When Sanford returned, he gave a tearful, State House press conference admitting he had been unfaithful to his wife and calling Chapur his "soul mate."

He served out the rest of his term until January 2011.

Sanford and his wife, Jenny Sanford, were divorced in 2010.

(Reporting by Harriet McLeod; Editing by Daniel Trotta)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ex-south-carolina-governor-marry-former-mistress-212113657.html

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The Hidden Truths about Calories

The Hidden Truths about Calories | Guest Blog, Scientific American Blog Network '); } else { $('#'+formID+' > .error').fadeOut('slow'); $('#'+formID+' > .error').html(json.MESSAGE); } $('#'+formID+' > .error').fadeIn('slow'); } else { $('#'+formID).hide(); $('#'+formID).after('

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'); $('#'+formParentID+' > .result').fadeIn('slow'); $('#'+formID+' > .error').fadeOut('slow'); if (formID == "gigyaConnect") { var regParams = { timestamp: Number(json.TIMESTAMP), siteUID: json.UID, signature: json.SIG, callback: function reload_giga_blogs() {gigya.services.socialize.getUserInfo({callback:authenticateThroughGigya, context:"firstLogin"});} }; gigya.services.socialize.notifyRegistration(regParams); $('.gHideThisAfterSuccess').hide(); } } }, "json"); }); });

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=92fe94a28354e36d81d148f5ff104c94

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Sunday, August 26, 2012

Syria regime accused of 'massacre' near Damascus

Syrian opposition activists accused the regime on Sunday of a gruesome new "massacre" after several hundred people were reported killed in a town near Damascus in a ferocious five-day army assault.

Grisly videos issued by opposition militants showed dozens of charred and bloodied bodies lined up in broad daylight in a graveyard, and others lying wall-to-wall in rooms in a mosque in the town of Daraya.

At least 320 people were killed in the five-day onslaught on Daraya by troops battling to crush insurgents who have regrouped in the outskirts of the capital, according to a toll from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The Local Coordination Committees, a network of activists on the ground, described it as a "massacre" by President Bashar al-Assad's regime and said many victims had been summarily executed and their bodies burnt.

"The shabiha (pro-regime) militias... have been transformed into a killing machine that threatens the Syrian people and our future," it said.

The Daraya killings could prove to be one of the bloodiest episodes of the increasingly brutal conflict that has convulsed Syria for more than 17 months and shows no signs of abating.

Human rights groups have accused the regime of committing many atrocities since the uprising against Assad's rule erupted in March last year, and a UN panel said earlier this month it was guilty of crimes against humanity.

"Bodies were found in fields, basements and shelters and in the streets," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

He said 200 bodies had been identified so far, including 15 women and 14 children, and that many of the victims had died in shelling or were summarily executed.

In the first reaction by a world power, Britain said that if confirmed, the Daraya massacre "would be an atrocity on a new scale."

Assad, whose regime has been hit by a number of defections as the violence intensifies, vowed Sunday that Syria would continue to resist "at any price" what he said was a conspiracy against it by Western and some regional powers.

And Vice President Faruq al-Shara -- the regime's top Sunni Muslim official -- made his first public appearance in over a month at talks with an Iranian official, following opposition claims he had tried to defect and was under house arrest.

Activists issued graphic videos of the scenes in Daraya, one showing dozens of bodies in dimly lit rooms, with a commentary referring to "an odious massacre committed by the gangs of the Assad regime in the Abu Sleiman Addarani Mosque."

In another LCC video, Daraya's dead, among them at least two children, were shown being prepared for burial, their bodies lying in a hastily dug trench covered with blankets and strewn with palm fronds.

State media said Daraya, a conservative Sunni Muslim town of some 200,000 people, was "purified of terrorist remnants."

-- Bloodied bodies in streets --

--------------------------------

Pro-government television Al-Dunia said "terrorists" carried out the attacks, as it interviewed residents including traumatised children and showed a number of bloodied bodies lying in the streets.

"Our valiant armed forces cleared Daraya of the remnants of armed terrorist groups which committed crimes that traumatised the citizens of the town and destroyed public and private property," government newspaper Ath-Thawra said.

Activists described the offensive as a bid to crush "once and for all" the insurgency in Damascus after rebel Free Syrian Army fighters regrouped to the southern outskirts following an army offensive to retake the city last month.

The LCC accused the regime of blockading Daraya to choke off supplies and indiscriminately bombarding the town with heavy weapons and warplanes, and carrying out door-to-door raids.

"Afterwards the gangs of killers entered the town and carried out summary executions, before dismembering and setting fire to the bodies."

Reports by activists cannot be independently confirmed because of severe restrictions on media operating in Syria.

Meanwhile, the head of the Iranian parliament's foreign policy committee, Aladin Borujerdi, vowed that Tehran will "stick by our Syrian brothers".

"We see Syria's security as our security," he said in Damascus, where he met both Assad and Shara, Iran's state-owned IRNA news agency said.

Tehran -- Damascus's staunchest ally -- has said it will submit a plan for ending the conflict to a Non-Aligned Movement summit it is hosting on Thursday and Friday.

The Iranian initiative comes as its foes in the West ramp up the pressure on Damascus, with Washington and London threatening action if it uses its chemical weapons and Paris voicing support for a partial no-fly zone.

The Observatory also reported shelling or air strikes in other parts of the country on Sunday including the battered northern city of Aleppo and Daraa in the far south, the cradle of the uprising.

A report by UN investigators this month said government forces and their militia allies had committed crimes against humanity and that rebels had also carried out war crimes, although on a lesser scale.

In particular, it held government forces responsible for a massacre in the central town of Houla in May when 108 civilians, including 49 children, were killed in an atrocity that shocked the world.

August is already the deadliest single month of the conflict with at least 4,000 people killed, according to the Observatory, while around 25,000 have died since March 2011.

The United Nations puts the death toll at more than 17,000 and has warned of a major humanitarian crisis with more than 200,000 refugees fleeing to neighbouring countries and 2.5 million in need inside Syria.

New international envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, who takes over from Kofi Annan next month, said on Friday he was "scared" of the enormity of the task he faces to try to end what he describes as civil war.

Syria warned Brahimi on Sunday not to follow the same path as Annan, with Ath-Thawra accusing the former UN chief who quit this month after the failure of his peace plan of "bowing to US and Western pressure."

Damascus said last week it would cooperate with Brahimi to try to pave the way for "national dialogue," while also suggesting it was ready to discuss Assad's exit as part of any negotiated solution.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hundreds-bodies-found-syria-town-073526666.html

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American Taliban seeks group prayer in Ind. prison

FILE - In this Jan. 24, 2002 file photo, with his head shaven and his stare fixed straight, American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh leaves the Alexandria Detention Center in Alexandria, Va., before dawn, on the way to his first appearance in a nearby federal court. Lindh is expected to testify Monday, Aug. 27, 2012, in Indianapolis during the first day of the trial over prayer policies in a tightly restricted prison unit where he and other high-risk inmates have severely limited contact with the outside world. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 24, 2002 file photo, with his head shaven and his stare fixed straight, American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh leaves the Alexandria Detention Center in Alexandria, Va., before dawn, on the way to his first appearance in a nearby federal court. Lindh is expected to testify Monday, Aug. 27, 2012, in Indianapolis during the first day of the trial over prayer policies in a tightly restricted prison unit where he and other high-risk inmates have severely limited contact with the outside world. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - This Jan. 23, 2002 file photo provided by the Alexandria County Sheriff's Department in Alexandria, Va., shows John Walker Lindh. Lindh is expected to testify Monday, Aug. 27, 2012, in Indianapolis during the first day of the trial over prayer policies in a tightly restricted prison unit where he and other high-risk inmates have severely limited contact with the outside world. (AP Photo/Alexandria County Sheriff's Department, File)

(AP) ? An American-born Taliban fighter imprisoned in Indiana will try to convince a federal judge that his religious freedom trumps security concerns in a closely watched trial that will examine how far prisons can go to ensure security in the age of terrorism.

John Walker Lindh was expected to testify Monday in Indianapolis during the first day of the trial over prayer policies in a tightly restricted prison unit where he and other high-risk inmates have severely limited contact with the outside world.

Lindh, 31, a Muslim convert who was charged with supporting terrorists after he was captured by U.S. troops in Afghanistan and later pleaded guilty to lesser charges, claims his religious rights are being violated because the federal prison in Terre Haute deprives him of daily group prayer.

Muslims are required to pray five times a day, and the Hanbali school to which Lindh belongs requires group prayer if it is possible. But inmates in the Communications Management Unit are allowed to pray together only once a week except during Ramadan. At other times, they must pray in their individual cells. Lindh says that doesn't meet the Quran's requirements and is inappropriate because he is forced to kneel in close proximity to his toilet.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, which is representing Lindh, contends the policy violates a federal law barring the government from restricting religious activities without showing a compelling need.

"This is an open unit where prisoners are basically out all day," said ACLU legal director Ken Falk, noting that inmates are allowed to play basketball and board games, watch television and converse as long as they speak English so the guards can understand.

"They can do basically any peaceful activity except praying," he said. "It makes no sense to say this is one activity we're going to prohibit in the name of security."

Joe Hogsett, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Indiana, said he believes decisions about prison regulations are best made by prison officials, "not by convicted terrorists and other dangerous criminals who reside there."

"Mr. Lindh is allowed to pray in his cell; he's allowed to pray wherever he happens to be as many times every day as his religion suggests to him that he should," Hogsett said. "Where the rules must draw the line is how often must prison officials allow prisoners to congregate together?"

Attorneys for the government maintain that Lindh's own behavior since he was placed in the unit in 2007 proves the risks of allowing group prayer.

The government says in court documents that Lindh delivered a "radical, all-Arabic sermon" to other Muslim prisoners in February that was in keeping with techniques in a manual seized from al-Qaida members that details how terrorists should conduct themselves when they are imprisoned.

Lindh's sermon proves "that religious activities led by Muslim inmates are being used as a vehicle for radicalization and violence in the CMU," the government claims.

Falk said Lindh's speech wasn't radical and was given during the weekly prayer that inmates are permitted. He said Lindh was not disciplined for the speech.

The self-contained unit in which Lindh resides has 43 inmates, 24 of whom are Muslim. Inmates are under open and covert audio and video surveillance, and except for talks with their attorney, all of their phone calls are monitored. Prisoners are not allowed to touch their family members when they come for their tightly limited visits. They must speak English at all times except when reciting ritual prayers in Arabic.

Without such tight security, the government claims, the prisoners would be able to conspire with outsiders to commit terrorist or criminal acts.

According to court documents, daily prayers were allowed from the time the unit opened in 2006 until May 2007, when Muslim inmates refused to stop in the middle of a prayer to return to their cells during a fire emergency.

The lawsuit was originally filed in 2009 by two Muslim inmates in the unit. Lindh joined the lawsuit in 2010, and the case has drawn far more attention since then. The other plaintiffs have dropped out as they were released from prison or transferred to other units.

Thomas Farr, a former diplomat who now teaches at Georgetown University and studies religion and terrorism, said common sense suggests that the prison's need for security would outweigh Lindh's religious rights.

Stanford University terrorism expert Martha Crenshaw said prison officials have legitimate security concerns but questioned how dangerous Lindh really was, noting that he was not a leader or an influential cleric. Even the government says Lindh is currently characterized as a minimum-security prisoner.

He had been charged with conspiring to kill Americans and support terrorists, but those charges were dropped in a plea agreement. He is serving a 20-year sentence for supplying services to the now-defunct Taliban government of Afghanistan and carrying explosives for them and is eligible for release in 2019.

"The fact that the charge of conspiring to kill Americans was dropped could be considered evidence that he was not a personally violent jihadist," Crenshaw said in an email.

"Certainly after 9/11 the pendulum has swung toward preventing terrorism at almost any cost," Crenshaw said. "I would like to think that it could be swinging back, but it swings slowly. Once established, routines are hard to change."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-08-26-American%20Taliban-Prison%20Prayer/id-7adf7db9e7d14119b8dfccaae462a168

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AP Interview: Obama on Romney's 'extreme' views

President Barack Obama speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at the White House, Thursday, Aug. 23, 2012, in Washington. Obama talked about the presidential race and Republican challenger Mitt Romney in the exclusive AP interview before heading off to a long weekend with his family at Camp David, the secluded presidential retreat in the Maryland mountains. His comments come ahead of the GOP convention opening Aug. 27, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at the White House, Thursday, Aug. 23, 2012, in Washington. Obama talked about the presidential race and Republican challenger Mitt Romney in the exclusive AP interview before heading off to a long weekend with his family at Camp David, the secluded presidential retreat in the Maryland mountains. His comments come ahead of the GOP convention opening Aug. 27, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at the White House, Thursday, Aug. 23, 2012, in Washington. Obama talked about the presidential race and Republican challenger Mitt Romney in the exclusive AP interview before heading off to a long weekend with his family at Camp David, the secluded presidential retreat in the Maryland mountains. His comments come ahead of the GOP convention opening Aug. 27, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at the White House, Thursday, Aug. 23, 2012, in Washington. Obama talked about the presidential race and Republican challenger Mitt Romney in the exclusive AP interview before heading off to a long weekend with his family at Camp David, the secluded presidential retreat in the Maryland mountains. His comments come ahead of the GOP convention opening Aug. 27, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama speaks during an interview with Bell Feller, of The Associated Press at the White House, Thursday, Aug. 23, 2012, in Washington. Obama talked about the presidential race and Republican challenger Mitt Romney in the exclusive AP interview before he headed off to a long weekend with his family at Camp David, the secluded presidential retreat in the Maryland mountains. His comments come ahead of the GOP convention opening on Aug. 27, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at the White House, Thursday, Aug. 23, 2012, in Washington. Obama talked about the presidential race and Republican challenger Mitt Romney in the exclusive AP interview before heading off to a long weekend with his family at Camp David, the secluded presidential retreat in the Maryland mountains. His comments come ahead of the GOP convention opening Aug. 27, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama said Mitt Romney has locked himself into "extreme positions" on economic and social issues and would surely impose them if elected, trying to discredit his Republican rival at the biggest political moment of his life.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Obama said Romney lacks serious ideas, refuses to "own up" to the responsibilities of what it takes to be president, and deals in factually dishonest arguments that could soon haunt him in face-to-face debates.

Obama also offered a glimpse of how he would govern in a second term of divided government, insisting rosily that the forces of the election would help break Washington's stalemate. He said he would be willing to make a range of compromises with Republicans, confident there are some who would rather make deals than remain part of "one of the least productive Congresses in American history."

Mainly, Obama was intent on countering Romney even before his challenger got to the Republican National Convention, which starts Monday in Tampa, Fla . In doing so, the president depicted his opponent as having accumulated ideas far outside the mainstream with no room to turn back.

"I can't speak to Governor Romney's motivations," Obama said. "What I can say is that he has signed up for positions, extreme positions, that are very consistent with positions that a number of House Republicans have taken. And whether he actually believes in those or not, I have no doubt that he would carry forward some of the things that he's talked about."

Obama spoke to the AP on Thursday before heading off to a long weekend with his family at Camp David, the secluded presidential retreat in the Maryland mountains.

The president was at ease but doggedly on script, steering even personal-themed questions about Romney and running mate Paul Ryan into answers about starkly different visions for helping the middle class.

Romney, a successful former executive of a private equity firm and one-time Massachusetts governor, will introduce himself to a TV audience of millions next Thursday as he takes the convention stage to accept his party's presidential nomination. He has offered himself as a business-minded alternative to Obama and has seized on voter concerns about joblessness and the direction of the nation.

Nearly ten weeks before Election Day, the race is remarkably stable and reflective of a sharply divided nation, with registered voters about evenly split on their choice and nearly a quarter of them unsure or still willing to change their mind. Across the interview, Obama's messages often seemed directed at moderate and independent voters whose sway could make the difference.

Obama's depiction of a Romney presidency grew most pointed when he was asked if his Republican challenger has no core, as one of Obama's top advisers once put it.

The president suggested that whatever Romney really stands for in life is secondary to the promises Romney has made in the campaign.

In explaining his accusation of "extreme" positions, the president cited Romney's call for across-the-board tax cuts that Obama said would mostly help the rich at the expense of everyone else and cost the nation $5 trillion. Obama singled out Romney's opposition to tax credits for producers of wind energy, the kind of issue that carries large political resonance in a battleground state such as Iowa.

And Obama alluded to the provocative issue of abortion, suddenly thrust to the fore this week when Republican Missouri Senate candidate Todd Akin said the female body has a way to "shut that whole thing down" when a woman is the victim of "legitimate rape."

The Republican platform in Tampa calls for a ban on abortion with no specific exceptions for rape or other circumstances. Obama predicted that a President Romney would not "stand in the way" if Congress gave him a bill that stripped away women's control over their reproductive health.

Romney is on record, however, as not opposing abortion in cases of rape and incest or if it will save the mother's life.

Polling shows social issues such as abortion represent perhaps Obama's best opportunity to draw support from Romney. Obama already holds a broad lead as the candidate more trusted to handle those social issues among Democrats and independents. The issue is one of Romney's biggest vulnerabilities among moderate and liberal Republicans.

Obama also sought to chip away at Romney's trustworthiness, taking fresh shots at Romney's refusal to release years of tax returns for public inspection. He said that position was indicative of a candidate who has a "lack of willingness to take responsibility for what this job entails."

Yet it is the economy that has driven this election and has dominated Obama's message of a middle-class revival.

"We aren't where we need to be. Everybody agrees with that," said Obama, who inherited an economy in free fall and now bears responsibility for a recovery that remains weak. "But Governor Romney's policies would make things worse for middle-class families and offer no prospect for long-term opportunity for those striving to get into the middle class," the president said.

A Romney spokesman, Ryan Williams, jumped on Obama's account in the interview that the economy clearly needs to get better. "Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan agree," Williams said. "The American people know they aren't better off than they were four years ago."

Obama holds a decisive advantage over Romney when Americans are asked who better understands their daily woes. Yet nearly two-thirds of people in a new AP-GfK poll say the economy is in poor shape, and 60 percent say the country is headed in the wrong direction.

Obama expressed confidence that even voters whose lives have not improved during his term will stick with him as they assess the two candidates.

"If they saw Gov. Romney offering serious proposals that offered some sort of concrete ways in which middle-class families would be helped, then I could understand them thinking about that choice," Obama said. "But that's not what's happening."

And therein lies the central case that Obama made in the interview, as he has made for months, and as he will again at his own party's convention in Charlotte, N.C., in early September.

Obama said he is the candidate whose policies have historically helped the middle class on issues that people care about and that shape the economy ? education, manufacturing, science and research, Medicare, debt reduction, tax rates, health care, consumer protection, college aid, energy.

Williams, the Romney spokesman, responded that Obama has piled up national debt and presided over high unemployment. "Too many middle-class families are going to sleep each night worried," he said. "This may be the best President Obama can do, but it's not the best America can do."

The moment that could finally shake up a close race could come in the three debates Obama and Romney hold in October. The president said Romney could run into trouble because of arguments that are not backed up by facts, citing a widely debunked television ad campaign in which Romney accuses Obama of gutting the work requirement in the federal welfare law.

"It will be a little tougher to defend face-to-face," Obama said.

Obama's view of a different second-term dynamic in Washington, even if both and House Republicans retain power, seems a stretch given the gridlocked politics of a divided government. He said two changes ? the facts that "the American people will have voted," and that Republicans will no longer need to be focused on beating him ? could lead to better conditions for deal-making.

If Republicans are willing, Obama said, "I'm prepared to make a whole range of compromises" that could even rankle his own party. But he did not get specific.

The 25-minute interview, conducted in the library of the White House residence, was part of a multi-faceted campaign by Obama's team to snag some of the spotlight during Romney's big week. Obama denied the notion, widely if quietly held in political circles, that the fiercely competitive president is also driven to beat Romney because he does not hold him in high regard.

"I don't really know him well," Obama said. "The big arguments that I have with Governor Romney have to do with where we take this country forward."

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Associated Press Writer Ken Thomas and AP Deputy Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta in Washington and AP Writer Steve Peoples in Columbus, Ohio contributed to this report.

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Follow Ben Feller at http://twitter.com/BenFellerDC

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-08-25-Obama%20Interview/id-699933ef2a3841db8dda77180038ee61

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