Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Synthetic magnetism used to control light: Opens door to nanoscale applications that use light instead of electricity

ScienceDaily (Oct. 31, 2012) ? Stanford researchers in physics and engineering have demonstrated a device that produces a synthetic magnetism to exert virtual force on photons similar to the effect of magnets on electrons. The advance could yield a new class of nanoscale applications that use light instead of electricity.

Magnetically speaking, photons are the mavericks of the engineering world. Lacking electrical charge, they are free to run even in the most intense magnetic fields. But all that may soon change. In a paper published in Nature Photonics, an interdisciplinary team from Stanford University reports that it has created a device that tames the flow of photons with synthetic magnetism.

The process breaks a key law of physics known as the time-reversal symmetry of light and could yield an entirely new class of devices that use light instead of electricity for applications ranging from accelerators and microscopes to speedier on-chip communications.

"This is a fundamentally new way to manipulate light flow. It presents a richness of photon control not seen before," said Shanhui Fan, a professor of electrical engineering at Stanford and senior author of the study.

A Departure

The ability to use magnetic fields to redirect electrons is a founding principle of electronics, but a corollary for photons had not previously existed. When an electron approaches a magnetic field, it meets resistance and opts to follow the path of least effort, travelling in circular motion around the field. Similarly, this new device sends photons in a circular motion around the synthetic magnetic field.

The Stanford solution capitalizes on recent research into photonic crystals -- materials that can confine and release photons. To fashion their device, the team members created a grid of tiny cavities etched in silicon, forming the photonic crystal. By precisely applying electric current to the grid they can control -- or "harmonically tune," as the researchers say -- the photonic crystal to synthesize magnetism and exert virtual force upon photons. The researchers refer to the synthetic magnetism as an effective magnetic field.

The researchers reported that they were able to alter the radius of a photon's trajectory by varying the electrical current applied to the photonic crystal and by manipulating the speed of the photons as they enter the system. This dual mechanism provides a great degree of precision control over the photons' path, allowing the researchers to steer the light wherever they like.

Broken Laws

In fashioning their device, the team has broken what is known in physics as the time-reversal symmetry of light. Breaking time-reversal symmetry in essence introduces a charge on the photons that reacts to the effective magnetic field the way an electron would to a real magnetic field.

For engineers, it means that a photon travelling forward will have different properties than when it is traveling backward, the researchers said, and this yields promising technical possibilities. "The breaking of time-reversal symmetry is crucial as it opens up novel ways to control light. We can, for instance, completely prevent light from traveling backward to eliminate reflection," said Fan.

The new device, therefore, solves at least one major drawback of current photonic systems that use fiber optic cables. Photons tend to reverse course in such systems, causing a form of reflective noise known as backscatter.

"Despite their smooth appearance, glass fibers are, photonically speaking, quite rough. This causes a certain amount of backscatter, which degrades performance," said Kejie Fang, a doctoral candidate in the Department of Physics at Stanford and the first author of the study.

In essence, once a photon enters the new device it cannot go back. This quality, the researchers believe, will be key to future applications of the technology as it eliminates disorders such as signal loss common to fiber optics and other light-control mechanisms.

"Our system is a clear direction toward demonstrating on-chip applications of a new type of light-based communication device that solves a number of existing challenges," said Zongfu Yu, a post-doctoral researcher in Shanhui Fan's lab and co-author of the paper. "We're excited to see where it leads."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Stanford School of Engineering. The original article was written by Andrew Myers.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Kejie Fang, Zongfu Yu, Shanhui Fan. Realizing effective magnetic field for photons by controlling the phase of dynamic modulation. Nature Photonics, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/nphoton.2012.236

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/electronics/~3/CN4E8DgHc7A/121031151609.htm

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Amazon Q3 2012 earnings: $13.18 billion revenue, net loss of $274 million

Amazon announces Q3 2012 earnings

Amazon has just released its earnings for the third quarter of the year and it looks like it's slightly off analysts' expectations. The company reported $13.18 billion in revenue (a growth of 27 percent) and an operating loss of $28 million, with net income standing at a loss of $274 million. As Amazon notes, though, a chunk of that, some $169 million, comes from losses resulting from its investment in LivingSocial -- it says the figure is "primarily attributable to its impairment charge of certain assets, including goodwill." Expectedly, the company still isn't offering any specific numbers for device sales, noting only that the Kindle Fire HD is the number one selling product across Amazon worldwide, and that the next two bestselling products worldwide are the Kindle Paperwhite and the $69 Kindle. As for its outlook for the next quarter, the company is expecting net sales of between $20.25 billion and $22.75 billion, and operating income of anywhere from a loss of $490 million to a profit of $310 million. You can find the company's full breakdown of all the numbers at the link below.

Continue reading Amazon Q3 2012 earnings: $13.18 billion revenue, net loss of $274 million

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Investment Flows Back into Africa

Over the past 10 years, foreign direct investment (FDI) has helped boost sustainable economic growth in many African countries.

In theory, FDI can assist to accentuate productive capacity, employment and exports. When properly managed, it can also bring secondary benefits in the form of transfers of technology, management expertise and marketing skills.

With continued liberalisation and globalisation of markets, African countries are beginning to turn toward FDI as a source of capital inflows rather than relying on official development assistance (ODA).

According to the African Development Bank, annual FDI represented 15.9% of gross fixed capital formation during 2000-2010, compared to 7.2% during the 1990s. In fact, the annual average FDI inflows to Africa over the period 2005-2010 totalled $45.4?billion ? almost three times higher than in the previous five years.

The sub-regions that benefited most were in North and West Africa. The latter attracting around 25% of the total annual FDI inflows to the continent.

Added to this, emerging economies such as China and South Korea gained ground as key investors in the continent. Particularly in the extractive sectors.

Within the African region, a country?s level of natural resources endowment (gas, oil, ores etc) is a key criterion for FDI. Data released by the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in July 2012 reveal that Africa accounted on average for just 3.2% of total global annual FDI flows over the period 2005-2010, falling to a mere 2.8% in 2011.

In stark contrast with the previous year, which saw a strong recovery in Central Africa and a sharp decline in Southern Africa, large annual swings were recorded for a number of major FDI recipients, including South Africa, Nigeria, and Morocco.

The decline in FDI to Africa in 2011 reflected reduced inflows to North Africa, largely as a result of the political and social instability in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya. North Africa posted a drop of 57.9% in 2011, while Central Africa registered a 10.9% decline for the same period.

In contrast, inflows to sub-Saharan Africa grew robustly in 2011, reaching an estimated $34.8?billion, a rise of 28.1% over the previous year. This partly reflected a rebound in investment to South Africa, as well as new natural gas development opportunities in Mozambique.

Apart from Southern Africa, the other major sub-region to benefit from FDI was West Africa, which witnessed a sharp 37.1% increase in inflows compared to the previous year, to reach $16.1?billion. The principal beneficiary countries were Nigeria and Ghana, which jointly attracted about three-quarters of the sub-region?s total FDI inflows. For East Africa, inflows increased by 7.2% compared to 2.1% in the previous year.

The primary sector ? mainly the extractive industries ? remains the traditional principal beneficiary of foreign direct investments.

The continents FDI prospects for 2012 are promising, according to the latest UNCTAD World Investment Report.

Africa?s robust economic growth, combined with high commodity prices and on-going economic reforms, have improved investor perceptions of the continent.

However, the outlook is tempered by on-going fragility in the global economy which could have transmission effects in Africa. As reported by the World Bank, external shocks are already impacting negatively on net private capital flows to developing countries in general, especially FDI flows.

Source: http://ieet.org/index.php/IEET/more/chetty20121024

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5 Halloween Activities for Kids in San Francisco

Halloween weekend is quickly approaching, and your kids will be aching to get out of the house for some slightly-spooky, totally exciting Halloween festivities. Fortunately, San Francisco Bay offers a myriad of fun attractions for kids that go above and beyond neighborhood trick-or-treating, and we?ve rounded up the top five for your family. Whether you?re looking for something to do indoors or outdoors, during the day or in the evening, we?ve covered all the bases for kid-oriented entertainment that captures the essence of the season. We promise, nothing too scary or grotesque?only age-appropriate family fun!

  • Open Daily, 9 AM ? 10 PM
    1620 7th Avenue, San Francisco

    In 1979, Clancy?s opened the first pumpkin patch in San Francisco, and they?ve providing fall family entertainment ever since. During the entire month of October, you can bring your family to see the ghosts that hang in Clancy?s trees

    san francisco halloween

    Clancy's is a barrel full of fun for the whole family

    and the scarecrows that guard the Patch. Kids will be especially delighted to crawl through the hay maze and take a hay ride down to the field. You?ll find pumpkins of all shapes and sizes, as well as gourds, corn stalks, and Indian corn. The fun doesn?t stop when you leave Clancy?s, because when you get home, the carving, decorating, and baking can commence!

  • Friday, October 26th, 5:00 ? 8:00 pm
    Ed Levin County Park, Santa Clara

    An eerie family hike around Spring Valley Pond is just the beginning of the fun at this ghoulishly entertaining Santa Clara County Parks event. In a full evening of spooky family fun, you?ll join the park staff in playing Halloween-themed games, carving your own free pumpkin, and eating s?mores around a traditional campfire. Don?t forget to wear a costume and bring a canned good for donation to the Second Harvest Food Bank. All you have to do is show up at the park office and pay a $6 per vehicle fee to enjoy this unforgettable evening.

  • Saturday, October 27th, 10 AM ? 5 PM
    24th Street (Between Sanchez & Church), Noe Valley, San Francisco

    What?s not to love about a FREE carnival? At the 8th Annual Noe Valley Harvest Festival, families will enjoy entertainment in the form of live music, a pumpkin patch, two bounce houses, a caricaturist, a balloon artist, a juggler, a pie eating contest, a pet costume contest, face painting, and even a dunk booth! And while the kids are off playing, you can get a little early Christmas shopping in as over 50 Bay area artists and artisans will be set up for the Harvest Fest marketplace. Of course, the Noe Valley Farmers Market will also be open from 8 AM ? 5 PM, putting the ?harvest? in Harvest Festival.

  • Saturday, October 27th, 5:00 ? 9:30 PM
    California Academy of Sciences, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco

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    Be transformed into your favorite animal at SuperNatural Halloween 2012.

    As one of California?s most popular and beloved attractions, the California Academy of Sciences always puts on a great party for Halloween. This year?s event,?SuperNatural Halloween 2012,? will feature trick-or-treating in a safe and fun indoor environment, stilt walkers and roaming magicians, full face painting, live animal shows, a giant pumpkin carving demonstration, arts and craft booths, a special, spooky shows in the Planetarium, and much more. Tickets must be purchased in advance.

  • Sunday, October 28th, 12 ? 1:30 PM
    Children?s Garden, Yerba Buena Gardens, San Francisco

    The 12th annual Halloween Hoopla presented by the Yerba Buena Gardens Festival is a fun, free, outdoor program specifically for kids (accompanied by their adults). Hosted by ?the Unique Derique,? the festival features interactive entertainment in the form of live music, eco-friendly arts and crafts, origami folding, and palm reading. Halloween Hoopla culminates in the much adored Halloween Costume Parade, where kids love showing off their cool costumes.

  • Source: http://www.smartdestinations.com/blog/5-halloween-activities-for-kids-in-san-francisco/

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    Wednesday, October 24, 2012

    Missing NJ girl's body found in recycling bin

    Photos released by Clayton, N.J. Police Department show Autumn Pasquale, 12, of Clayton, N.J. Authorities say her family reported her missing Saturday. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Clayton Police Department at (856) 881-2301. (AP Photo/Clayton, N.J. Police Department)

    Photos released by Clayton, N.J. Police Department show Autumn Pasquale, 12, of Clayton, N.J. Authorities say her family reported her missing Saturday. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Clayton Police Department at (856) 881-2301. (AP Photo/Clayton, N.J. Police Department)

    A teen who declined to be identified is overcome with grief after visiting the crime scene on Clayton Avenue in Clayton NJ on Tuesday Oct. 23, 2012, after the discovery of a girl's body in a home's recycling bin. Gloucester County prosecutors say a body believed to be that of Autumn Pasquale was found around 10 p.m. Monday in the bin just blocks from her house. (AP Photo/ Joseph Kaczmarek)

    Jennifer Cornwell, mother of the missing girl Autumn Pasquale, comforts her other daughter Natalie Pasquale, 11, during a candlelight vigil, Monday Oct. 22, 2012, in Clayton, N.J. About 200 law enforcement officials and hundreds more volunteers searched Monday for a southern New Jersey girl who disappeared over the weekend, raising anxiety in a rural town and pulling residents together. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)

    Clayton, N.J. Police Department shows an undated photo of missing Autumn Pasquale, 12, of Clayton, N.J. Authorities say Autumn Pasquale was last seen on her white bicycle on West High Street in Clayton at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012. Her family reported her missing at 9:30 p.m. Police are still searching for her. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Clayton Police Department at (856) 881-2301. (AP Photo/Clayton, N.J. Police Department)

    A woman standsin the rear yard of a home Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2012, in Clayton, N.J., near the spot where a body preliminarily identified as a missing 12-year-old girl's was found in a home's recycling bin. The Gloucester County Prosecutor's Office announced early Tuesday that they believed the body of Autumn Pasquale was found around 10 p.m. Monday, in a recycling bin at a home just blocks away from her house and from Borough Hall, where thousands of people gathered earlier in the evening for a tearful candlelight vigil to pray for the girl's safe return. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

    (AP) ? The discovery of a 12-year-old girl's body in a home's recycling bin spread grief and fear Tuesday through a small town in southern New Jersey that had been desperately searching for her since she missed her curfew over the weekend.

    Gloucester County Prosecutor Sean Dalton said the body of Autumn Pasquale was found around 10 p.m. Monday in the bin just blocks from her house and from Borough Hall, where thousands of people gathered earlier in the evening for a tearful candlelight vigil to pray for her safe return.

    "The search for Autumn is over," he told a news conference Tuesday.

    With autopsy results pending, he did not label the death a homicide. He said the investigation was just beginning and that there were no suspects.

    If someone is found responsible for the death, "they don't deserve to be walking the streets," he said.

    Dalton said Clayton was a safe community, but parents should continue to keep close watch on their children.

    The girl's uncle, Paul Spadofora, gathered with other relatives at the news conference to thank the community for its help in the search. The victim's parents did not attend.

    "There's evil everywhere, even in the small town of Clayton," Spadofora said.

    Crime scene investigators arrived shortly before 9 a.m. at the house where the body was found. Authorities have not said where on the property the recycling bin was found.

    But Tuesday was trash collection day, and many residents had dragged their trash cans and recycling bins to the curb the night before. The covered recycling bins are collected by an automated truck that picks them up and dumps the contents into the back.

    Police barricaded the block, and friends and neighbors came by to see. Some mothers said they were keeping their kids out of school for the day. Even before the body was found, students reported that Spirit Week had been canceled because of the sorrow.

    One young man rode a bike up, sat on a porch of a home and cried, then biked away.

    Clayton Mayor Thomas Bianco walked to the scene, cried, hugged a police officer and gave a brief statement to the gathered reporters.

    "You hear about it in other places but never think it would happen in our little town," he said.

    Howard Kowgill, 60, who lives in town and, like many, knows members of Autumn's family, said the discovery of the body changes the nature of the town.

    "Until they find out who did it, you don't let your kids out," he said.

    Authorities said Autumn, whose 13th birthday is next Monday, was last seen around 12:30 p.m. Saturday pedaling her white BMX bicycle away from the Clayton home where she lives with her father, her two siblings, her father's girlfriend and the girlfriend's children.

    Relatives said they believed Autumn was heading to see a friend, and they became worried only after she did not return by her 8 p.m. curfew.

    Sunday morning, her disappearance became not only a crisis but a town-wide cause in Clayton, a town 25 miles south of Philadelphia. Volunteers by the hundred joined the search, scouring malls, nearby towns and passing out fliers.

    By Monday evening, officials were thanking the volunteers for their help but asking them to call it a night.

    Hundreds of people returned Monday for the vigil. The girl's great-uncle spoke, saying he hoped the town could gather again a week later, with Autumn back, with candles to mark her birthday.

    ___

    Follow Mulvihill at http://www.twitter.com/geoffmulvihill

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-23-Missing%20NJ%20Girl/id-83d3abcbd2ca49128db245ef89b4ee72

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    News: Sustainable tourism central to the future of Africa?s parks http://ow.ly/2...

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    Source: http://www.facebook.com/breakingtravelnews/posts/10150255797479946

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    Hot Gym Trend: Cy-Yo | Lose Weight | Fitness | Article

    Cy-Yo is an evolutionary step in bringing the mind, body, and spirit together in a fitness workout. Cy-Yo is a one hour holistic cardio workout that helps bring all the aspects of our being into focus to achieve optimal physical and spiritual results.

    A Cy-Yo class begins with a 10 minute yoga flow focused on energizing the muscles, lubricating and warming the joint structures, and bringing awareness to the mind/body energy centers. Following the 10 minutes yoga warm up is a 40 minute indoor cycling class. During the cycling class particular attention is paid to our energy centers, our visualization techniques, and our breathing patterns. Releasing negative energy, detoxifying our bodies, and increasing our higher energy fields are key aspects in achieving optimal physical performance in this phase of the workout. A 10 minute yoga flow is done immediately following the cycling class in order to refocus our minds, calm our bodies, and create a positive energy flow in our bodies.

    Cy-Yo focuses on physical body development, while also acknowledging the non-physical aspects of our being.

    Posted by: TWW Editors

    Source: http://www.thewellnesswire.com/Lose-Weight/hot-gym-trend-cy-yo.html

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    Tuesday, October 23, 2012

    Storify: Readers react to final presidential debate on Twitter

    The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.

    We have introduced a new commenting system called Disqus for our articles. This allows readers the option of signing in using their Facebook, Twitter, Disqus or existing MiamiHerald.com username and password.

    Having problems? Read more about the commenting system on MiamiHerald.com.

    Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/10/22/3062592/storify-readers-react-to-final.html

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    Teens' families search for the worst as they pray for the best ...

    SHERRILLS FORD Just before 2:45 a.m. on Oct. 13, Catawba County teenager Ray Pierce sent a text message to his girlfriend. ?We?re almost at the beach.?

    That was the last time anyone heard from Pierce, 17, or his friend Jake Ziegler, 18.

    Now, after 10 days of frantic searching, families of the missing teens are exhausted and are turning to law enforcement and a private investigator to bring their sons home.

    Fearing that the teens might be injured in a wreck hidden off the road ? or worse ? the families, friends and volunteers have driven thousands of miles, back and forth, between Sherrills Ford and Myrtle Beach. They?ve rented a helicopter to fly overhead and search for any signs of the green Pontiac G6. They?ve handed out missing-persons fliers outside Bank of America Stadium to fans arriving for Sunday?s Panthers-Cowboys game.

    ?We?ll do what we need to do and go where we need to go,? said Jake?s mom, Sue Ziegler, in an interview Monday. ?Jake has been stubborn since the day he was born. He?s not going to let this get him down. He?s going to pull through whatever this is and he?s going to come home.?

    Monica Caison, founder of the Wilmington-based CUE Center for Missing Persons, said both families have contacted her organization to help find the teens. But every day that they?re missing lowers the chance they?ll be found alive, she said.

    Caison said she informed the families on Sunday that chances were already slim that the teens are still alive.

    ?But I also shared with them that I had once rescued a woman who was missing for 11 days,? she said. ?There are miracle cases.?

    Caison also said she understood the families? need to organize their own search efforts, in addition to law enforcement?s.

    ?Some families go the extra route because they don?t feel like things are being done quick enough so they jump in and take it on themselves,? she said. ?There are a lot of people that don?t want to sit back and wait for a phone call.?

    ?Testing his freedom?

    Ziegler, 18, and Pierce, 17, were last seen about 1:30 a.m. Oct. 13, when they left a party in Catawba County. The Bandys High School seniors told friends they were driving to Myrtle Beach and would return home in time for Pierce to be at his job Saturday afternoon at Denver restaurant.

    Authorities say Pierce sent his last text message from his phone about 2:45 a.m. A signal from his cell phone bounced off a cell tower in Rock Hill around 2:48 a.m.

    Authorities say they believe the signal was sent from I-77, somewhere between mile markers 44 and 47 in Fairfield County. The teens? cellphones and debit cards have not been used since.

    Zig Ziegler recalled in an interview Monday how excited his son was to take the road trip. The friends had decided earlier in the evening to drive down in Jake?s newly bought car to see the sunrise in Myrtle Beach, his father said.

    ?He was test-driving his freedom,? said Zig Ziegler. ?He wanted that little touch of freedom.?

    Beginning to panic

    By the afternoon of Oct. 13, Ray Pierce had not showed up for work and his family filed a missing persons report with the Catawba County Sheriff?s Department.

    As the afternoon wore on without any word from the teens, Ziegler?s family began to panic.

    ?Jake is very good. If he?s not planning to come home, he always texts,? said Zig Ziegler. ?It was absolutely out of the norm not to hear from him.?

    By Sunday, Zig Ziegler was driving down to Myrtle Beach to search for his son with a family friend. The trip took seven hours as they stopped often at places where Jake?s car might have run off the road. They also scoured maps, plotted coordinates and tried to figure out how to access Jake?s cellphone records.

    ?It doesn?t matter if the police have it. I couldn?t sit here for two minutes knowing that that car could be somewhere,? said Zig Ziegler. ?If I could do anything to find that car, I would.?

    Zig Ziegler said he and his friend got excited in Myrtle Beach when they found a green Pontiac with a nearly identical license plate to Jake?s. They blocked the car so it couldn?t move, he said.

    But it wasn?t Jake?s car.

    ?We had some tremendous highs ? but we also had tremendous lows when they didn?t pan out,? Ziegler said. ?You try to stay positive but it?s been really rough.?

    On the first day of searching, a friend began posting updates on his Twitter and Facebook page. By Monday, the Twitter hashtag findjakeandray was trending.

    Within days, someone who was not connected with the two families had started a Facebook page to help spread the word. As of Monday evening, that page had nearly 23,000 likes.

    Army of volunteers

    Jake?s father returned to Sherrills Ford for less than a day before he headed back to South Carolina to set up a command center in a conference room at the Sleep Inn in Conway, about 15 miles inland from Myrtle Beach.

    More than 20 volunteers who had been following the case on Facebook also showed up to help. Over the course of a couple of days, that group grew to the hundreds. Jake?s sister Jackie Ziegler, 22, became the de facto leader of the group.

    For a couple of days last week, Jackie Ziegler led efforts by mapping out search routes, assigning volunteers and gathering data at the end of the day to see if there were any leads.

    ?She was the captain of the ship,? said Zig Ziegler. ?She had some tough days where something would remind her of her brother and she?d be broken down. But five minutes later, she was back to organizing volunteers and tracking routes.?

    During that time, the Zieglers also rented a helicopter for two days and rode in an airplane to search the area.

    After days of searching and an estimated 5,000 total logged search miles, Zig Ziegler said he decided to close up the command center.

    ?We looked at the maps, and we knew that we had done as much as we could there,? said Zig Ziegler.

    Search and rescue pros

    On Sunday, family members announced they?d hired a private investigator to help with the search.

    Kevin Ryan was introduced by family members during a news conference in Blythewood, S.C., a suburb north of Columbia.

    ?We just need that next piece, to give us another direction,? Ryan said during the news conference.

    Ryan said he plans to continue following leads that come in until the two teens are found. He is also looking at financial records and cellphone records and interviewing people who know the two teens.

    ?It?s something that has to be done in a methodical way. You don?t want to miss something,? Ryan said.

    Catawba County Sheriff Coy Reid said his agency is also pursuing any leads, although he added that those have tapered off in recent days.

    Officials with the Fairfield County Sheriff?s Office have said they think the two young men were involved in a wreck on I-77 in that area.

    Authorities say the search is complicated by the green color of the 2006 Pontiac G6, which has the N.C. license plate BBD-8844. They say it will be difficult to find the car in the tangled brush and trees that line the interstate highways.

    On Monday, the mothers of the missing teens said that the search has emotionally drained them.

    ?I?ve gone through every single emotion that there is. Right now, I?m at the point where I?m just numb,? said Wendy Pierce.

    But they resolved to not give up until their sons come home.

    They also stressed that anyone with information should come forward.

    They added that there is a $5,000 reward for anyone providing information that leads them to finding their sons. Staff writer Steve Lyttle and staff researcher Maria David contributed.

    Source: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2012/10/23/3615354/teens-families-search-for-the.html

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    With new mass spectrometer, researchers can grow knowledge of plants and environmental stress

    With new mass spectrometer, researchers can grow knowledge of plants and environmental stress [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Oct-2012
    [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

    Contact: Ruth Welti
    welti@k-state.edu
    785-532-6241
    Kansas State University

    MANHATTAN, KAN. -- A Kansas State University professor's research analyzing lipids is helping scientists around the world understand plant responses and develop better crops that can withstand environmental stress.

    To support her collaborative work, Ruth Welti, university distinguished professor of biology, recently received a grant of more than $440,000 from the National Science Foundation's Major Research Instrumentation program. The grant -- with matching funds from the university -- will be used to purchase the most advanced mass spectrometer for the Kansas Lipidomics Research Center, which Welti directs.

    The new instrument will help Welti and other researchers study plant responses to heat and cold stress, plant infection by pathogens, and the development of plants and seeds, including seed oil production.

    "We are trying to understand the basis for the way plants respond to stresses so the information can be used to improve crop plants," Welti said. "We want to obtain global information on plant responses and see how it relates to plant genotype."

    Co-principal investigators on the grant include Kathrin Schrick, assistant professor of biology, and Timothy Durrett, assistant professor of biochemistry. The instrument coordinator will be Mary Roth, analytical laboratory manager for the center.

    The new spectrometer will enable the researchers to better identify and quantify lipids, which are nonwater-soluble compounds that are found in all living cells and form cell membranes, store energy and serve as messengers. For one of the spectrometer's major projects, the scientists are studying Arabidopsis thaliana, a plant species that is a good model for a number of crop species, particularly closely related species such as canola.

    "The information we gather in Arabidopsis can be translated into crop plants," Welti said. "We want to be able to improve plants so they can withstand environmental stresses better. That way, when we have a summer like this last one with a lot of extra heat, crops will be better able to withstand it."

    To understand the genetic basis of plant stress, the researchers are studying a broad range of plant stresses, including heat, cold, freezing, salinity, bacterial pathogen infection and fungal pathogen infection. The scientists are also looking at how plants respond to mechanical wounding, such as insect biting or animal grazing.

    "We are looking at how these stresses affect plants' ability to continue growing and living," Welti said. "We are assessing how long they can endure stress and assessing their response to stress in relation to their genetic makeup. Genetic changes can affect lipid composition, and we think the lipid changes are signals within and between plants as they respond to stress."

    To assess the changes in lipids, the researchers are measuring lipid compounds. They are also comparing wild-type plants with plants that have altered genes to see how each responds.

    "The advantage of doing this in a model plant species is that is it easy to understand genetic changes, which is really important," Welti said.

    The collaborative project involves several other researchers, including Jyoti Shah at the University of North Texas; Xuemin Wang at the University of Missouri-St. Louis; and Charmaine Naidoo at Langston University.

    The project involves analyzing more than 500 compounds in more than 17,000 plant samples. The new spectrometer will enable the researchers to collect and analyze the data nearly 20 times faster.

    "What is taking us 36 months now will take us two months on this new instrument," Welti said.

    The new spectrometer can benefit other research organizations with projects aimed at increasing agricultural production and understanding animal and human physiology. Because the center also performs mass spectrometry-based lipid analysis for scientists from all over the world, the spectrometer will also be available to the state, national and international scientific communities for other biochemical research projects.

    The center, which was founded in 2003, is renovating space for the new spectrometer, which is expected to help with ongoing research from 15 laboratories in eight U.S. states and three countries. The new spectrometer is also expected to advance the training of numerous postdoctoral trainees, graduate students and undergraduates.

    ###



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    ?


    AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


    With new mass spectrometer, researchers can grow knowledge of plants and environmental stress [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Oct-2012
    [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

    Contact: Ruth Welti
    welti@k-state.edu
    785-532-6241
    Kansas State University

    MANHATTAN, KAN. -- A Kansas State University professor's research analyzing lipids is helping scientists around the world understand plant responses and develop better crops that can withstand environmental stress.

    To support her collaborative work, Ruth Welti, university distinguished professor of biology, recently received a grant of more than $440,000 from the National Science Foundation's Major Research Instrumentation program. The grant -- with matching funds from the university -- will be used to purchase the most advanced mass spectrometer for the Kansas Lipidomics Research Center, which Welti directs.

    The new instrument will help Welti and other researchers study plant responses to heat and cold stress, plant infection by pathogens, and the development of plants and seeds, including seed oil production.

    "We are trying to understand the basis for the way plants respond to stresses so the information can be used to improve crop plants," Welti said. "We want to obtain global information on plant responses and see how it relates to plant genotype."

    Co-principal investigators on the grant include Kathrin Schrick, assistant professor of biology, and Timothy Durrett, assistant professor of biochemistry. The instrument coordinator will be Mary Roth, analytical laboratory manager for the center.

    The new spectrometer will enable the researchers to better identify and quantify lipids, which are nonwater-soluble compounds that are found in all living cells and form cell membranes, store energy and serve as messengers. For one of the spectrometer's major projects, the scientists are studying Arabidopsis thaliana, a plant species that is a good model for a number of crop species, particularly closely related species such as canola.

    "The information we gather in Arabidopsis can be translated into crop plants," Welti said. "We want to be able to improve plants so they can withstand environmental stresses better. That way, when we have a summer like this last one with a lot of extra heat, crops will be better able to withstand it."

    To understand the genetic basis of plant stress, the researchers are studying a broad range of plant stresses, including heat, cold, freezing, salinity, bacterial pathogen infection and fungal pathogen infection. The scientists are also looking at how plants respond to mechanical wounding, such as insect biting or animal grazing.

    "We are looking at how these stresses affect plants' ability to continue growing and living," Welti said. "We are assessing how long they can endure stress and assessing their response to stress in relation to their genetic makeup. Genetic changes can affect lipid composition, and we think the lipid changes are signals within and between plants as they respond to stress."

    To assess the changes in lipids, the researchers are measuring lipid compounds. They are also comparing wild-type plants with plants that have altered genes to see how each responds.

    "The advantage of doing this in a model plant species is that is it easy to understand genetic changes, which is really important," Welti said.

    The collaborative project involves several other researchers, including Jyoti Shah at the University of North Texas; Xuemin Wang at the University of Missouri-St. Louis; and Charmaine Naidoo at Langston University.

    The project involves analyzing more than 500 compounds in more than 17,000 plant samples. The new spectrometer will enable the researchers to collect and analyze the data nearly 20 times faster.

    "What is taking us 36 months now will take us two months on this new instrument," Welti said.

    The new spectrometer can benefit other research organizations with projects aimed at increasing agricultural production and understanding animal and human physiology. Because the center also performs mass spectrometry-based lipid analysis for scientists from all over the world, the spectrometer will also be available to the state, national and international scientific communities for other biochemical research projects.

    The center, which was founded in 2003, is renovating space for the new spectrometer, which is expected to help with ongoing research from 15 laboratories in eight U.S. states and three countries. The new spectrometer is also expected to advance the training of numerous postdoctoral trainees, graduate students and undergraduates.

    ###



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    ?


    AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


    Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/ksu-wnm102312.php

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    Monday, October 22, 2012

    Lawyers, CEOs boosted Obama's Sept. donations

    (AP) ? Attorneys, business owners and retirees were among those who helped President Barack Obama maintain slim fundraising supremacy over Republican challenger Mitt Romney last month, with the president raising $181 million as he entered the last full month in the fight to keep his job.

    An Associated Press review of newly released financial reports found at least $11 million from lawyers and at least $3 million from investors and bankers, some of whom cooled to the president earlier in this election campaign when critics say he cracked down on Wall Street and pushed for consumer-protection reforms. About $22 million more came from retired Americans, an important bloc of voters likely more tuned in to health care reform and changes in retirement benefits.

    Their contributions, among hundreds of thousands, went hand-in-hand with record donations to an outside political group helping Obama win a second term. Still, the president began October with less available money to spend than Romney, as Obama's campaign, the Democratic Party and related groups reported $149.8 million cash on hand. That's compared with $183.1 million in the bank among Romney's campaign, the GOP and his joint-fundraising apparatus.

    All told, a swath of small-dollar contributions helped Obama and the Democratic Party best Romney and the GOP by more than $10 million last month after being repeatedly walloped in the money race earlier this year. The president's fundraising haul topped the more than $114 million he and the Democrats raised during the month of August, and the cash Obama pulled in last month was slightly less than his record-breaking $190 million from September 2008.

    Financial support to Obama and Romney are putting the presidential election on track to cost nearly $2 billion, thanks to mountains of cash earmarked to both campaigns and independent "super" political committees working on their behalf. Wealthy Americans are increasingly picking up the tab this year, at times giving millions of dollars apiece to super PACs that have buoyed costly advertising.

    September's reports show major financial support going to both Republican and Democratic super PACs, with the pro-Romney Restore Our Future PAC reporting it collected $14.8 million in September, the group's second-most lucrative month. Late Saturday, American Crossroads, the major super PAC headed by GOP strategist Karl Rove, reported $11.6 million for September, the highest single-month total for the group.

    Rove's top donors in September included Texas billionaire Harold Simmons, who gave $2.5 million and Oklahoma coal baron Joseph Craft III, who gave $1 million. Another $1.32 million was donated by the Armstrong Company, a Pennsylvania conglomerate which provided the donation as "in-kind cable access, and $1 million from Jay Bergman, an Illinois oilman.

    Meanwhile, Priorities USA Action, the pre-eminent Obama-supportive super PAC, said it raised a record $15.3 million.

    "People who support the president know that we've come too far to go back now," Priorities senior strategist Bill Burton said. "We're ahead a little bit now, but it is time to close the deal."

    Both campaigns and super PACs have made an all-out push for contributions as Election Day quickly approaches. The contributions are funding a record-breaking campaign operation for both candidates, which translates to paying a legion of campaign staff and hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of television ads.

    So when it came to contributions directly to Obama's campaign, business owners and some Wall Street types helped pick up the tab, even if they didn't make up a majority of total contributions. Obama's donors in September included more than 4,000 CEOs, records show, and his campaign continued to tally millions pouring in from key battleground states.

    Yet Obama hardly has a lock on winning the financial fight.

    Republican super PACs have helped to match or exceed Obama's TV ad spending in dozens of media markets in battleground states. Ad spending data obtained by the AP from April through early October found pro-Romney spending has exceeded pro-Obama ad spending by at least $65 million across the nine states expected to decide the election: Colorado, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Virginia, Iowa and Wisconsin.

    Obama broke presidential fundraising records four years ago, but has found himself financially outgunned for much of the summer, thanks in part to super PACs supporting Romney. Meanwhile, an AP review of campaign data this fall found Obama out-raising Romney in most of the 11 states that at one point were pivotal to win the election.

    Reports detailing revenues and expenses for the first half of October are due to the Federal Election Commission by Oct. 25. Those will provide the public with the last financial snapshot before the Nov. 6 election.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Stephen Braun contributed to this report.

    ___

    Follow Jack Gillum on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jackgillum

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-10-21-Campaign%20Money/id-7a349d5bae80457590bd244d8ba85771

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    How to Find the Most Popular Topics on Meetup.com | Raleigh ...

    Meetup Most Popular Topics

    Check out this list:

    socialnetwork
    social-media
    businessnetwork
    friends
    singles
    entrepreneur
    women
    smallbiz
    spirituality
    moms
    personalgrowth
    fitness
    newintown
    diningout
    playgroup
    nightlife
    alternative
    meditation
    self-improvement
    weightloss
    wellness
    adventurers
    metaphysics
    parents

    lawofattraction
    dance
    realestate
    networkmarket
    business-networking
    social
    travel
    consciousness
    bookclub
    hiking
    marketing
    sports
    yoga
    wine
    newlysingle
    energyhealers
    newparents
    spirituality-personal-growth-meditation
    photo
    web
    movies
    workathome
    politics
    art

    If you are doing research for a meetup and you want to know:

    • if there is somewhere to go to see a current list,
    • see the list that is most popular by members or by group, or
    • see the list by member rankings,

    then try this:

    While there?s no place to see a definitive list of the most popular topics on Meetup, you can check to see how many Members have a topic listed as an interest by checking the topic page for that interest.

    To find those pages, just type in a URL like this:

    http://hiking.meetup.com/all/

    That will show you all the Meetup Groups using that topic, but it will also show you the number of Members interested in that topic. Near the top of the page, look for ?123 Interested.?

    If you replace ?hiking? in that URL with any other topic on the site, you?ll get the same page for the new topic.

    Happy searching.

    Source: http://raleighinboundmarketing.co/2012/10/how-to-find-the-most-popular-topics-on-meetup/

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    Ongoing Children's Classes At The Longview Recreation Center ...

    The Williamson County Parks and Recreation Department will offer a variety of ongoing classes for children in November at the Longview Recreation Center, 2909 Commonwealth Drive in Spring Hill. Classes require pre-registration and space may be limited. For information about activities at the Longview Recreation Center, call (615)302-0971, ext. 10 or view the monthly newsletter at www.wcparksandrec.com. You may also receive department information by ?liking? us on Facebook. The Longview Recreation?Center is a?public facility, here to benefit the community. Anyone, including out-of-county residents, can register for and participate in?classes and events held at Longview, even if you don?t have a facility pass!

    LONGVIEW JUDO/KARATE

    Join Instructor Richard Javitt?s?martial arts program; a combination of Judo and Karate. Great for exercise, confidence and self defense. This class for ages 8 and older will meet on Mondays, November 5-26 (skip 11/12) from 5:15-6:15 p.m. at the Longview Recreation Center, 2909 Commonwealth Drive in Spring Hill. The class fee is $30 per person. Please register by calling (615)302-0971, ext. 10.

    MARTIAL ARTS FITNESS

    This class combines the elements of Kick Boxing, Karate, judo and the sword to develop fitness, increased flexibility, coordination and lifelong wellness. All levels of fitness are welcome. This class for ages 8 and older will be held on Mondays, November 5-26 (skip 11/12) from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at the Longview Recreation Center, 2909 Commonwealth Drive in Spring Hill. The class fee is $30, and the instructor is Richard Javitt. Please register by calling (615)302-0971, ext. 10.

    POLYNESIAN DANCING

    Learn to dance like the natives of Hawaii, Samoa, New Zealand and Tahiti in this fun 4-week class of Polynesian dancing. Instructor Chris Hendrickson uses these dance representations as a form of both exercise and education. Adults and teens are welcome in the class which will meet on Wednesdays, November 7-28 (skip 11/21) with a beginner class from 5:15-6 p.m. and an intermediate class from 6-7 p.m. at the Longview Recreation Center, 2909 Commonwealth Drive in Spring Hill. The class fee is $18.75 for the first family member and $15 for each additional family member. The supply fee is $5. To register, call (615)302-0971, ext. 10.

    AMERICAN RED CROSS BABYSITTER?S TRAINING
    This class will give participants, ages 11-15, the skills and confidence they need to become great babysitters. This course covers training in care-giving, decision making, safety and first aid skills, plus preventing and responding to emergencies. Pre-registration with the instructor is required. This class will meet on Saturday, November 10 from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. at the Longview Recreation Center, 2909 Commonwealth Drive in Spring Hill. Participants should bring a sack lunch to class. The class fee is $85. To register, call instructor Cyndea Wendell (615) 585-9055. For more information about this class visit the website at www.redcrossbabysitter.com

    ?

    Tags: featured, Longview Recreation Center, Maury County, moms, Spring Hill, thompson's station, Williamson County Parks and Recreation Department

    Category: Events, Fundraisers & Announcements

    Source: http://springhillfresh.com/blog/2012/10/21/ongoing-childrens-classes-at-the-longview-recreation-center/

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    Sunday, October 21, 2012

    Search Engine Results Enhancements Peter Konig Art

    Oct21

    Online Marketing SEO The web has become the most popular place customers use for information on businesses and it is imperative to market your business using a wide variety of Internet tools. Social media, content writing, web design, and SEO are just a few of the tools we can utilize. Using these resources can make sure that your business identity is kept current, vibrant, and at the forefront of your clients? minds. Because all of these things are difficult to manage while still operating your business, it?s vital to trust your internet marketing to a business who is experienced doing all of these things. When you use online marketing, you will begin seeing a big change quickly.

    Source: http://peterkonigart.com/search-engine-results-enhancements/

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    Unsecured loan for small business

    Published on October 20th, 2012 in Loan




    Normally, a lender asks when security that prompted provide the loan and no wonder it runs serious economic risks of losing the money lent. This security can be anything from a house to a car. An unsecured business loan, however, is not backed by any security.

    The money comes through an unsecured business loan can be used for any purpose you have in mind. In general, businessmen use this type of financial products for various purposes such as office renovation, purchase of machinery, acquisition of stock etc. There are other benefits of using unsecured loans, apart from the obvious of not having to put one of your properties as collateral at stake. Avoid the hassle of filing of documents generally time consuming and gives a lot of trouble is something that does not occur in this case.


    The interest rate on unsecured loans is higher compared to other secured loans. Above all, the terms and conditions are discussed between the borrower and the lender making agreements can be very variable. While it is relatively easy to get a loan when the situation is good, it becomes much more difficult when the business is going through a difficult phase, (just the time we need more funding for good ?). An unsecured business loan becomes a great help in these situations. The entrepreneur can borrow money, use it to fulfill their business requirements and return the resulting amount in easy installments.

    There are many ways through which you can use one of these great types of financial products. Financial institutions such as banks, private lenders and the Internet are three of the most common options that can be found for this purpose. Banks are the most established of the plot and that tend to dominate the market, in fact many people do not even know of the existence of more options. The trend of private financial firms began much later. The Internet is the most recent and perhaps is that more is this catching on with telephone banking options. The online alternative is the best in terms of choice and convenience, speed and simplicity.

    The disadvantage of an unsecured business loan is that the money you can borrow is relatively little compared to secured business credit. While it may be the perfect alternative for effectively some short-term financing for small amounts, for large companies in general is much more convenient for business secured loan, where conditions are more favorable.

    Related posts:

    1. Get a business loan It is relatively easy to obtain financing for your business...
    2. Your business loan fund with a loan of securities A securities lending (not a margin loan) allows investors to...
    3. How to Choose the Best Loan Fast You can get quick personal loans using one of several...
    4. A merchant loan can save your Small Business I do not make statements like that lightly. A merchant...
    5. Loan when starting a new small business If you are someone with a keen business mind that...

    back to Consumer Credit.

    Source: http://www.ccnw.org/2012/10/unsecured-loan-for-small-business.html

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    Pippa Middleton party planning book: Celebrate. A Year - BelleNews

    Now ? in her new party-planning book Celebrate. A Year of Festivities for Family and Friends ? Pippa Middleton has acknowledged the ?startling? reality that she has achieved worldwide fame because Kate married Prince William and because of the unexpected focus on her bottom.

    Pippa Middleton, 29, admits: ?It is a bit startling to achieve global recognition before the age of 30 on account of your sister, your brother-in-law and your bottom.

    ?One day I might be able to make sense of this. In the meantime I think it?s fair to say that it has its upside and its downside.

    ?I certainly have opportunities many can only dream of ? but in most ways I?m a typical girl in her 20s trying to forge a career and represent herself in what can sometimes seem rather strange circumstances.

    ?I am by nature an optimist so I tend to concentrate on the advantages.

    ?One of the most attractive has been the chance to publish [this book] Celebrate.?

    Celebrate: A Year Of British Festivities For Families And Friends is party-planner Pippa Middleton?s guide to home entertaining and goes on sale at the end of this month.

    In Celebrate, Pippa Middleton acknowledges the effect her sister the Duchess of Cambridge?s fame will have on sales, saying: ?I know many of you will pick up the book out of nothing more than curiosity.

    ?[But] I can assure you that it feels even stranger to me than it probably does to you to have seen so much written about me when I have done so little to paint a picture of myself.

    ?This is my first chance to do that and I?ve enjoyed every minute of it.

    ?The book is designed to be a comprehensive guide to home entertaining, based on my experience in my family?s business Party Pieces and work for London-based events company Table Talk.?

    Pippa Middleton party planning book Celebrate A Year of Festivities for Family and Friends 350x262 photo

    Pippa Middleton party planning book, Celebrate A Year of Festivities for Family and Friends

    Last year it was revealed that Pippa Middleton ? whose previous literary experience includes writing the online newsletter Party Times for the family?s business ? had secured an almost unprecedented ?400,000 ($620,000) deal for the book with publisher Michael Joseph.

    Pippa Middleton?s recipes are accompanied by glossy pictures of the author along with a selection of anecdotes recalling her childhood growing up with Kate in Bucklebury, Berkshire.

    Talking about Bonfire Night, Pippa Middleton says: ?The unique sights, sounds, smells and tastes make this festival a particularly evocative one.

    ?I remember the noise of the bells ringing at school as the effigy of Guy Fawkes we?d prepared earlier was carried out on a canvas stretcher, hoisted on to the huge bonfire and set alight.

    ?Then the revelry would begin.

    ?My school friends and I would all have sparklers we passed around, lighting one from another.?

    Pippa Middleton also reminisces about playing conkers at school: ?We all used to get really competitive. The trick was to paint clear nail varnish on the conkers to make them very tough and less likely to break ? outrageous cheating of course!?

    ?

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    Related search articles:

    Additional Reading...

    1. Kate Middleton bottomless photos published in Danish magazine Se og H?r
    2. Karl Lagerfeld says he doesn?t like Pippa Middleton?s face
    3. Kate Middleton wins Vanity Fair?s Best Dressed list 2012 for third year running
    4. Pam Behan, former nanny for the Kardashians, writes tell-all book about the famous family
    5. Kate Middleton Wimbledon outfit: Alexander McQueen vintage tennis style
    6. Kate Middleton must show reverence to the blood princesses, according to new Order of Precedence
    7. Olympics 2012: Angelina Jolie invites Kate Middleton to her Olympic party
    8. Kate Middleton wears the same LK Bennett nude shoes at Emily McCorquodale?s wedding
    9. Kate Middleton wears the same LK Bennett nude shoes at each event
    10. Jessica Simpson celebrated her baby shower with family and famous friends
    Tags: business party, Celebrate, home entertaining, kate middleton, party planner, party planning, pippa middleton, Prince William

    Short URL: http://www.bellenews.com/?p=25339

    Source: http://www.bellenews.com/2012/10/21/home-garden/pippa-middleton-party-planning-book-celebrate-a-year-of-festivities-for-family-and-friends/

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    Saturday, October 20, 2012

    US and UK Healthcare Systems Should Learn From Each Other ...

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    Source: http://www.helpingyoucare.com/22783/us-and-uk-healthcare-systems-should-learn-from-each-other-experts-conclude

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