Monday, November 19, 2012

The New Bridge : Cascade creative writing students reap what they ...

Home > Cascade > Cascade creative writing students reap what they?ve sown

Erik Burlingame, Cascade Editor
November 18, 2012
Filed under Cascade, News

CASCADE ? Students of Cascade campus? creative writing program are to share their seasonal yield of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction at the 3rd-annual Harvest of the Word recital.

The recital is open to the public and will be held in the Cascade cafeteria on Friday, November 30th, from noon to 3p.m.

Refreshments will be provided.

Drop-ins are welcomed.

For further information, contact Gardner Mein at?gardner.mein15@pcc.edu

Source: http://www.pccnewbridge.com/news/2012/11/18/cascade-creative-writing-students-reap-what-theyve-sown/

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Sunday, November 18, 2012

South African President Congratulates Somalia on Its New Cabinet

You Are Here: Home ? Africa ? South African President Congratulates Somalia on Its New Cabinet

Flag of South AfricaPresident Jacob Zuma has extended "hearty congratulations" to the new Somali ministers, the government and the people of the Federal Republic of Somalia, following the recent endorsement by the Somali Parliament of that country?s new Cabinet.

"This marks a new dawn for a state embarking on nation building, reconciliation, economic recovery and capacitating of various government institutions, which will in turn translate itself into practical democratic gains on the ground," said Zuma.

He said South Africa commended Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shiridon, President Hassan Sheikh Mohamoud and the Somali Federal Parliament in their decision to assemble a Cabinet.

"The ministerial appointments give hope to the people of Somalia, as well as the international community, that Somalia is indeed on the road to recovery.

"The Cabinet will also play a critical role in executing the vision developed by President Mohamoud that will serve as a foundation upon which Somalis will rebuild their country together with essential international partners, including South Africa," said Zuma.

The South African government remained committed to strengthening its relations with the government of Somalia and developing strong collaboration and interaction between the two countries and peoples at various levels, especially at the ministerial level now that the new Cabinet has been confirmed.

Source: SAnews

African News from NetNewsPublisher.com


Source: http://www.netnewspublisher.com/south-african-president-congratulates-somalia-on-its-new-cabinet/

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Spanish police protest govt cuts hitting them

A police officer wears a hat with a banner reading, "Urban guards in conflict" during a protest against government?s austerity measures and the elimination of their Christmas bonus pay, one of 14 paychecks that most Spanish civil servants get each year, in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

A police officer wears a hat with a banner reading, "Urban guards in conflict" during a protest against government?s austerity measures and the elimination of their Christmas bonus pay, one of 14 paychecks that most Spanish civil servants get each year, in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

Police march holding a banner reading, "work as they pay you, work as they treat you" during a protest against government?s austerity measures and the elimination of their Christmas bonus pay, one of 14 paychecks that most Spanish civil servants get each year, in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

A police officer marches carrying a banner reading, "National police fights for its rights" during a protest against the government?s austerity measures and the elimination of their Christmas bonus pay, one of 14 paychecks that most Spanish civil servants get each year, in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

Police march holding union flags and a banner reading, "all the police united against the financial cuts" during a protest against government?s austerity measures and the elimination of their Christmas bonus pay, one of 14 paychecks that most Spanish civil servants get each year, in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

MADRID (AP) ? Police officers from across Spain are protesting the government austerity measures affecting them, including frozen pensions and the elimination of their Christmas bonus.

More than 5,000 people paraded Saturday to the Interior Ministry building in Madrid, blowing whistles and shouting slogans.

Jose Maria Benito, a spokesman for Spain's Unified Police Union, said "we are here to tell the government that security has to be its priority."

Benito said police were worried that budget cuts meant that working conditions were more precarious, that law enforcement equipment was not adequate and that the 15,000 officers who had left the force were not being replaced.

He said "in socially convulsive times, we need an adequate police response."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-17-Spain-Financial%20Crisis/id-1f22a69dc4f54545a325235f819c860b

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Best citirs to buy investment rentals? - Zillow Real Estate Advice

In my area, Palo Alto, Los Altos and Mountain View are great cities for investment properties.? My family has owned investment property for most of my life and I can recall most of my summers and weekends spent painting and cleaning those homes.? But before you buy, consider the following;

When buying an investment property, location is key.? Ask yourself the following questions;

1) What are the schools like?? Do people want to move to this area for schools?? Our school system has fantastic API and AYP scores and we even have people from other countries moving to this area just so their children can attend our schools.

2) Are there any jobs?? In the Bay Area, we have many different employers, from technology companies to educational institutions.? Because of our diversity, this area has thrived, when others have struggled.

3) Is it safe?? Palo Alto, Mountain View and Los Altos have thriving downtowns and people are out and about at all hours.

4) Is the area family friendly?? In Los Altos, we have many different family/kid programs, such as Hidden Villa.? In Mountain View and Palo Alto, there are many different educational and family programs also, from after school child care to specialized summer programs.

5) Do properties tend to historically appreciate or depreciate? Historically, in this area, property tends to hold it's value or go up.? While no one can predict the future, having a past track record of being profitable is another good indicator of strong investment properties.

6) What are the rents?? Would a buyer be able to pay down the mortgage with a tenant's monthly rent payment?? Even if you are paying all cash, knowing you could cover the mortgage if you had to- that is a great indication of a profitable investment.

7) Would you live there?? Nobody wants to live in a slum.? Don't be that kind of a landlord.? Be proud of your investment and make sure it is the kind of place you would be comfortable to call home yourself.? If you treat your investment well, you will find your investment will return the favor.

With all those questions in mind, I can say that the Bay Area is a great place for investment property!

Source: http://www.zillow.com/advice-thread/Best-citirs-to-buy-investment-rentals/468829/

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Heron: Part 2 | My Brain Cancer Diary

?See how you feel, eating candy all the time.? A mother might propose so, in the old days, hoping to demonstrate the foulness of such a diet with the inevitable tummy-twisting sickness. Then dad would put you in the closet with a pack of cigarettes.

Judging by my cache of food, I?d yet to learn my lesson: three dozen protein bars with appetizing names like ?Vanilla Toffee? and ?Chocolate Peanut Butter?; enough Gatorade to drown a gator; syrupy sweet Starbucks canned espresso; and of course the Irish cream. I sat up in my nylon bivy sac, pounded a Starbucks (caffeine? check!) and choked down a few protein bars. It was like eating sugared clay, but I would need the protein.

A generator roared to life nearby, signaling start of business. It was some kind of aquaculture operation: a floating shack and a couple of platforms anchored in shallow water, with a miniature plumb-stem Novi tied up aside. () You can see it from up on the Eastern Promenade, though like this island it?s easy to miss, small and far away and inconspicuous in a sweeping 15-mile view of island-dotted sea.

He?d be raising clams or mussels or who knows? Another boom-and-bust in the vein of urchins and elvers, maybe. They?re farming seaweed now, too.

I was up at 7:00 and ready to go at 8:30.

I paddled southeast in a sunny but stuffy morning calm, past yesterday?s collision site, past the aquaculturist?s man-sized gamble. Little Chebeague Island and my passage to the outer bay were a couple of miles away in a bank of fog. The surface of the water settled into a bulging black mirror that doubled the blinding sun. I was already thirsty and dripping sweat. Pins and needles pricked my feet where I sat on them. (I had intended to craft a foam seat, but ran out of time).

I dug in hard with my paddle. The fog was burning off now and baring the shoulders of Little Chebeague. I was desperate to get around it, through the gap of Great Chebeague and Long, and see the broad flat horizon of the Gulf of Maine.

I was nearing the edge of those ?new waters? I had promised myself, at the northern tip of Long Island, when I saw a few people on the beach there. It reminded me that I had not entirely committed myself to self-sufficiency in bearing supplies. Fresh water I could beg. I needed more, and this was the last best place to get it. The beach-combing woman and her grandchildren did not know of a handy water source. They were only visiting for the day. But she pointed up the beach to where the paved main road came around.

This is the kind of island that just barely tolerates anonymity. It?s served by the Portland ferry, and has a few stores and restaurants. () When a convoy of bicyclists passed by, I asked to be pointed to a water source. I was directed, pleasantly (and apparently without suspicion), to a nearby garden hose. With water for a day or two, I paddled across the channel to Deer Point, at the south end of Great Chebeague Island. A gulf wind stirred the surface into shadows with electric seams. It folded chips of water into strands of blue sky and spread a fine twinkling fabric to the horizon.

?She?s rollin? now!? came a radio voice, firing my desire to sail. The waves and wind were building, out there in the gulf. I rigged up. I wanted to go straight out, southeast, into the wind, just to feel the sail-filling freshness of it, but of course sailboats can?t do that. So I had either to go south and tack back in open water or, more directly, go east behind Hope Island. I cautiously chose the latter, suddenly feeling small before the ocean. But Hope was tall enough and close enough to effectively block the wind, and the next mile cost an age.

In good wind I can ?sit back? and balance the pull of the sail with my body weight, thru the connection of the boom to my seat harness. Without a counterweight, the sail is top-heavy and keeping it balanced is frustrating.


But alas, new waters. There ahead east was Broad Sound and rows of skinny ridge-backed islands all going northeast and southwest, the way this bay was built. Cliff Island rose steeply to my right. Beyond it, Bates Island and Ministerial Island blocked my view of the next cape. It was 2:30 by then. The breeze of noon had proved a tease, but the sun never let up. I tan well, but it was too much for one day. My arms were tender. I knew I was in for a burn. Belatedly I slopped on sunscreen.

A couple of nice white sailboats came behind on the same route, gleaming majestically, passed by and turned north toward Freeport. How they carry sail! It is said the two happiest moments of a man?s life are: when he buys his boat; and when he sells his boat. Use it or not, it grows old eating your money. But on a day like this?

Now the wind was gaining strength: a real sea-breeze. I rounded north of Stave Island and turned east again, with all 7.5 square meters of sail puffed and working. I hooked in with my harness and picked up speed. If I could stay upright, I?d make Bailey Island within the hour and go for Cape Small.

But I could not. Windsurfing is not easy, not for me anyway. I simply did not have the technique, the balance, or the strength required to keep control in higher winds. The sail, like an airplane wing, stalled and then pitched forward violently, throwing me into the water. It?s striking to see a windsurfer fall, from a distance, because what might at first appear to be a sailing dinghy seems to disappear in an instant. The slim board may be obscured by waves, the sail is flat on the surface, and the sailor, for a moment, is probably underwater.

It?s no wonder other boaters are concerned by the sight. It seemed only seconds later that a little motorboat puttered up with an offer of assistance. It?s hard to explain, to someone who is not familiar with windsurfing, that man overboard is a natural state of being. A wetsuit is standard dress. We expect to be soaked.

Fortunately, the sail in the water effectively anchors the board so it won?t blow away. The trade-off is ?uphauling?, an exhausting struggle to pull the sail up to sailing position. The rig is not terribly heavy, but it?s tall and poorly leveraged by the short uphaul line. With the wind flagging the sail and the waves rocking the board, it?s not uncommon for me to lose my balance and fall in again.

Compare it to log-rolling and weight-lifting at the same time. It can, and now did, result in a downward spiral of fatigue and frustration. After half an hour of trying and failing, I was exhausted. I sat down on the board to reassess. The wind was still too strong. I?d had maybe 10 minutes of good sailing as the wind speed climbed from ?anemic? to ?sporting?. There?s not much you can do to adapt a sail made for windsurfing. You can?t reef it or roll it on the mast, nor easily carry an alternative size.

I came back to the mantra that summarized my personal collection of wind wisdom: ?just wait?. () Conditions change. Rest a while. In the meantime I drifted north with the tide and the wind. I thought of deploying my ?sea anchor?, which is like an underwater parachute, but the fuss of coiling 50 feet of line put me off.

I had made the sea anchor thinking I wouldn?t use it, then when I needed it I just didn?t bother. When did such sloth become acceptable? I thought of Merlin and the terrifying allure of shedding one?s cares, of finding oneself propped up by others? labors. How do graceless infants grow to command themselves and then, in middle age, so readily deny themselves capable?


Everyone knows the afternoon sea-breeze settles down in the early evening, but I tired of waiting. Wind or no wind, I could gain ground with the paddle, starting now. Almost now. By the time the rig was stowed, it was past 4:00. I had drifted about a mile. I still couldn?t see Bailey Island. All day I?d imagined sailing into the marina there, stowing the board in some secret corner of water, under the pier, and arriving for dinner as if out of nowhere. Like much of the route, I?d never seen it before.

I passed north of Upper Flag Island and headed for Haskell Island. The wind softened in its stages, with another period of good sailing wind giving way too quickly to light air. The pain and numbness in my feet, together, were disturbing. Haskell Island was like a kingdom, guarded by granite cliffs. A few palatial houses rose from bold slopes of emerald lawn. I paddled under a fanciful observatory perched on the northern tip. It was a tidy, upright sort of island, and, at the moment, apparently empty.

Finally I caught a glimpse of the southern tip of Bailey Island, across Merriconeag Sound. I expected to see the marina and its restaurant but there was nothing of the sort. Then I thought it must be on the other side of the island. I paddled across the sound chasing an old dog of a sailboat. It headed south and tacked east, and I almost kept up with it on my side of the triangle. Either it?s slower than it should be or I?m faster than I thought.

I followed it into Jaquish Gut, past the famous ?Land?s End Gift Shop?, which, at the very end of Route 24, fairly earns its name. On the other side of Bailey Island, the remainder of Casco Bay stretches to Cape Small. Swells rolled in from the southeast, as if to highlight the difference. I still expected to see the marina. I remembered seeing it on a snippet of a Google map on a search results page. I remembered the shape of it, sticking out into the sea, with a crescent-shaped cove on one side. But I hadn?t marked it on my chart.

The sun was very low. It was almost 7:00. Time to find shelter. I saw a break in the rocky shore, up ahead. It revealed a rocky cove choked with seaweed, and nothing that looked like a marina. A man by the shore at the Driftwood Inn, who was preparing for an evening swim, said he knew of no marina nearby.

?Dolphin-something, it?s called, I think,? I said.

He was not from around here, but thought it sounded familiar. ?Yeah, I think it?s over that way?. He motioned westward.

I took out my phone. ?No Service?. I suspected the marina was actually located at the end of Harpswell Neck, which I had passed a couple of hours ago. It appears similar in shape and orientation on the map. Uggh. Instead of making the sea anchor, the one I figured I wouldn?t need and declined to use when I did, I might have informed myself a hundred times over. Why so carelessly cast off a good sense of priorities, for a crafty distraction?

Maybe it?s adaptive. ?Under-informed? is a state of mind I?m learning to live with. I don?t know when my cancer will come back (). My doctors don?t know how to beat it. So what if I don?t know where I?m going to sleep tonight? Let night come, I?ll find a place.


Turns out the place was nearby. At the inner end of the cove was a gravel beach, backed up to weeds and bushes. It didn?t offer much visual privacy, but with rugged, rocky shores on both sides I didn?t expect any foot traffic. Finding a fire pit sealed the deal. But on the question of dinner, ?protein bars? was not the answer I preferred.

A little poking around revealed a path leading up from the beach to a green lawn and a white house on a paved road. The paved road. Across the street I could see the sunset over the opposite shore. I found a little ice cream shack, down the road a bit, and bought a hot dog, root beer and pie a-la-mode on special. The kindly silver-haired matron of the place made a generous comparison to Florida sunsets, of which she?s seen many: this one made the grade.

Mosquitos chased me back to the beach. I changed out of the wetsuit and ate quickly. A fire seemed just the thing, if only for the smoke. With the paper plate and a few handfuls of driftwood twigs and a couple half-burnt logs I managed to build a fire in a few minutes. It lasted about an hour, into the moonless dark. The sky was radiant with stars, shooting stars, airplanes, satellites?

I felt blessed. I wanted to bottle it up and save some for later. That I could not recover moments like these has, at times, caused me regret, but I?m learning to leave them be.


NOTES:

Source: http://mybraincancerdiary.com/2012/11/18/heron-part-2/

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

iPad Mini is fun but you may want to wait

10 hrs.

I think the best way to review the iPad Mini is to pit it against competitors in a series of death matches. After all, come holiday time, you'll likely put your money down on just one tablet ? or none. In making the decision, you will consider the iPad Mini against the reduced-price?iPad 2, the Amazon Kindle Fire HD, Google's Nexus 7 by Asus, and the full-size?iPad, now in its fourth generation. You may even weigh it in against Microsoft's Surface RT.?Let's just get all of?that comparison shopping?out of the way for you right?now.

First, though, let's talk for a moment about what the iPad Mini is. It's a mini iPad. OK, moving on.?

No, seriously, it really is just a miniaturized version of the tablet that's already been sold 100 million times. The biggest advantage of the smaller size that I've found is that it's a lot easier to type on, so you may find it to be a more helpful email companion. It's also nicer to hold when reading, but its screen ? which I will discuss further on ? gets in the way of pure literary immersion.

Before you get into the review, take a look at my video walkthrough:

Vs. iPad 2
Compared to 2011's iPad 2, the Mini has much better front and back cameras.?And because it has the same pixel resolution in a smaller display, the screen density is better, too. It's not a "Retina" screen like the 3rd- and 4th-gen iPads ? you can still see the pixels that make up letters?when you're reading, for instance ? but it's certainly?easier on your eyes than the iPad 2 screen.

The iPad Mini also has Siri, while the iPad 2 (for reasons that defy logic) does not. And if you're going to buy a tablet with cellular connectivity ? not?that I recommend going that route unless you are on the road a lot, or have a corporate expense account paying your wireless bills ? the $459?iPad Mini can give you high-speed 4G LTE connectivity on AT&T, Sprint or Verizon. You'll?be stuck with slower 3G on the $529 cell-connected?iPad 2. I'm just gonna spell this part out for you: Even if you do?buy an iPad 2, for the love of Pete do not buy the one with the cellular connection!

So what are the iPad 2 advantages, for $70 more? Well, there's a roomier display and an old 30-pin connector?? in case you're wedded to older accessories or want to keep using that rat's nest of white cables in your junk drawer.?The new iPad Mini has the new Lightning connector, and so does the full-size?4th-gen iPad.?

WINNER: iPad Mini

Vs. Microsoft Surface RT
The most innovative product of the season comes from Microsoft. The Surface RT tablet packs a lot in for $499, and the re-envisioning of Windows as a matrix of "live" tiles is compelling in the always-connected era.

But despite its elegant design, innovative keyboard and airplane-tray-table-friendly proportions, there is at its core a software challenge that makes it hard to recommend, especially to the huge number of?people who seek tablets because they are easier to use than computers. Until the Surface RT's software gets more user friendly, and until there are enough apps to make it a worthwhile platform, it remains stuck?in the "Wait and See" bin.

WINNER: iPad Mini

Vs. Kindle Fire HD
Amazon's second-generation, $199?7-inch tablet was improved in all ways over the initial product, but the experience is largely the same. That is, fire up your tablet, open your wallet, and Amazon will fill your life with books, videos, music and games till kingdom come. But don't expect to do anything else on this, because productivity is not its strong suit.

Also weighing against the Kindle Fire HD is the fact that?Amazon is smart enough to build a?Kindle reader, Amazon Prime video and a bunch of other apps for the iPad, too. A happy Amazon customer can get pretty far on an iPad, never having to buy a Kindle device.?That's fine with Amazon, because the company makes money on the content, not the hardware.

If you're mainly into watching movies and reading books, there are two key bonuses that the Kindle Fire HD brings to the table, besides a cash savings of $130: a 16x9 screen aspect ratio, meaning movies like "The Avengers" fill up the whole display; and a higher pixel resolution than the iPad Mini, that?you may notice while watching high-def content and can definitely see when reading text.?

So what does paying?$130 more for an iPad Mini actually get you? The iPad has a much better Web browser and email experience, and though Amazon has cloud storage and streaming music (and?even a music matching service like Apple's), the iPad's?iCloud suite promises more, including synced contacts, documents, notes and browser history, not to mention advanced services like?iMessage, Photo Stream and Siri.?

The biggest reason to choose iPad, however, is apps. Apps, apps, apps. More of that next.

WINNER: Draw (because of the $130 difference and the screen resolution)

Vs. Nexus 7
All the nerds love the $199 Nexus 7 hardware, and I get that ? it's a pretty little machine. But unless you are really just?focusing on Web and email, there's just not a lot of directions you can go with it.

Its advantages are on par with the Kindle Fire HD's: the?16x9 widescreen display?with tighter pixel resolution makes it better for movies and books. But with only a few exceptions such as Netflix, it's hard to get movies and TV shows from anywhere but Google itself, and ditto for books.?For now, buying a Google tablet means, essentially, paying Google for content. I, for one, would rather give my content allowance to Amazon or Apple, because they both have strong track records of selling digital media, and Google doesn't have a track record of selling anything but ads.

Worse still, there are seriously zero apps available for Android tablets.?You can put apps on?an Android tablet, sure, but almost?every one is just a stretched-out Android?phone app, even the ones you'd expect to be tablet-ized, like Kindle Reader and the Weather Channel.

WINNER: iPad Mini?

Vs. Fourth-generation iPad
You now know what you get ? and what you lose ? by saving $130 and buying one of the $199 Android tablets. But what do you gain by spending an extra $170 for the full monty? Well, that larger Retina display is the main thing, and let me tell you, it really does make a huge difference in eye-strain, especially for us night-time e-book readers. Movies, too, will look nicer on the high-definition screen. Here's a screen comparison to illustrate what I mean:

In general, you will also?find that larger screen size to be better for many apps that are meant for interaction, like sketch apps, or strategy games that require multiple windows.

Speaking of games, you also get Apple's latest-generation A6X processor, a dual-core chip with quad-core graphics. Game developers are going to be optimizing for that, not the 2011-era A5 that's inside the iPad Mini.

But a larger tablet may not be what you want. Some people have been waiting for something that offers the convenience and app lineup of the iPad in a package closer in size to a paperback book. Well, that's what the iPad Mini is.

WINNER: Draw

Vs. iPad Mini 2
Wait, what?? Apple put out an iPad Mini 2 already?? No, it hasn't. But you know that within 12 months, it certainly will. And Apple will have sorted out a way to jam a higher-resolution screen and faster processor in there. (It'd be nice if Apple lowered the price to $299 while at it, but we're not holding our breath.)

There are many examples of this in Apple's history, but it's easiest to simply look back on the larger iPads. The iPad 2 was a huge step up from the first iPad, because it got cameras and a thinner body. The third iPad basically completed the formula for perfection with better cameras and a high-resolution Retina display. In fact, the third iPad is so good, the only reason the fourth generation exists is to tidy up Apple's own production lines, and perpetuate the Lightning connector.

So then you extrapolate: Is there a consistent complaint about?the iPad Mini, one that holds up even in Apple's world of "we know better than you" design choices? Yes, it doesn't have a Retina screen. Then ask, what's the chance that Apple fixing this particular problem within 12 months? Answer: 100 percent.

So then the calculus is, how much happiness do I sacrifice by waiting a year for an iPad Mini? Is it worth it to buy a cheaper tablet and put the remaining $140 in the iPad Mini 2 fund? Do I even have the willpower to resist a shiny new Apple product??

WINNER: Non-existent future iPad Mini 2 with Retina display ? assuming you can hold out for it.

Wilson Rothman is the Technology & Science?editor at NBC News Digital. Catch up with him on Twitter at @wjrothman, and join our conversation on Facebook.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/review-ipad-mini-beats-competition-you-may-want-wait-1C6820707

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Tips to Keep Bathroom Drain Flowing

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Keeping the bathroom drains flowing is one of the important maintenance tasks you need to do in the bathroom. The bathroom sink can be clogged with different stuff like shaving creams, hair, toothpaste and other residues. If you cannot keep the drain flowing on your bathroom sink it can impose more serious problems such as completely blocking the drains on the sink.

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Clean the Bathroom Drain Frequently

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To keep the bathroom drain flowing, it is important to be consistent with its maintenance of frequently cleaning the drain. You can run warm water on the drain for at least a minute once a week. This is easier to keep the drain flowing than waiting for the blockage to build up over time. Another way to drain the bathroom sink is to use table salt by placing it on the drain and then pour ? cup of white vinegar over it. Leave it stay there for at least an hour and then pour hot water to remove the salt. Another easy way to prevent clogs is to clean the sink frequently using liquid bleach. Frequent cleaning of the bathroom drains and tiles are needed to prevent black moldds from developing in the bathroom.

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Remove Clogs

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Clogging typically prevents bathroom drains from flowing. Bathtub drains are commonly clogged by hair buildup and soap residues. Falling hair is commonly stuck in the drain and you can easily pull them out. If you find it difficult to reach the hairs with your fingers, you can remove them alternatively by using tweezers or a pair of needle nose pliers. Bending a wire hanger can also do the trick. If the drain is seriously clogged out and it requires the removal of the drain cover, you may want to call a plumber to do the job for you. An alternative is to plunge the drain by putting enough water in the tub or sink and block the overflow unit with a cloth. Use the plunger over the drain and put pressure up and down to help open the pipe unclogging the blockage. The water should drain quickly after you remove the plunger. Pour hot water over the drain after unclogging the blockage. This will help rinse anything left in the drain that can still cause a blockage.

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Prevention is better than the solution

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Clearing a blocked drain can be tasking and it is better to prevent the situation before it happens. When washing down soap do not assume that it will just dissolve on its own. Leaving it settled down the drain without washing can cause buildup that eventually clogs the drain. It is best to always wash the sink thoroughly with water each time you use soap. At least once a month, pour hot water down the drain in order to remove grease and oils before they build up over time. Doing this once a week if you can is a better practice to observe in keeping the bathroom drain flowing. Using baking powder, bleach, or table salt and vinegar at least once a month is highly recommended to clean the drain. Doing these routines will significantly improve the performance of the drain to keep it flowing.?

Source: http://drain.ezinemark.com/tips-to-keep-bathroom-drain-flowing-7d380e18fa75.html

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While Romney didn't serve in military, many Mormons do (reuters)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/260195189?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Seeking The Help Of A Bankruptcy Attorney | The Walks of Life

Friday, November 02nd, 2012?|?Author: admin

Attorneys play a very important role in our lives. Ordinary people like us are?definitely?not aware of some of the governing laws in our places. We might know the basic laws but there are those complicated laws that only attorney can help us comprehend. This is why when we are facing some legal suit or we wanted to file a suit against a person who cause us problems or who violated some laws, we always seek for the help of a attorney. But each lawyer have their own specifications when it comes to law. There are lawyers who are more?knowledgeable?in corporate law, civil law, taxation law, and other aspect of laws. This is why whenever you wanted to hire a lawyer, you should look for a lawyer that has better knowledge and experience with your case.

And when you are facing problems with your debts and you think you can no longer pay them, it is better for you to make an appointment with a?bankruptcy attorney new orleans. This attorney is the most ideal person who could help you resolve your financial burden. You need to tell him everything about your financial status and this way, he can conclude if it is better for you to file bankruptcy.

If you think you have a lot of debts that you can no longer repay with your limited income and you do not want your property to be foreclose, then filing a bankruptcy might be the best solution. This filing bankruptcy has a lot of advantages. Aside from the fact that you will going to eliminate most of your debts, you can still be able to save some of your property from being foreclose.?Your?creditor will no longer going to bother you asking payment for the debts. You will going to to have a better sleep knowing that your worries have already been resolve.

And once you have resolved this financial problem of yours, it is more ideal if you are going to be very much careful in making financial decisions. Think of the consequences that might happen if you make the?wrong?decision. Always learn from your mistakes.

This is a sponsored post for Kirkpatrick and Associates, however, all the points and views are my own.

Source: http://thewalksoflife.info/2012/11/02/seeking-the-help-of-a-bankruptcy-attorney/

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Guest post: Take your blog to the speaking circuit | Styling You

When I started my blog, Tune into Radio Carly,?in December 2009, I never imagined where it would take me.

I created it to develop and distribute my writing and to connect with new people. Three years on, my blog has helped create a very successful side career (I already have a day job in the government) as a writer, speaker and community TV presenter.

My blog could be classed as a lifestyle blog with a difference. I write about food, fashion, live music, (failed) romance and blogging. I also write a lot about what it?s like to live with a chronic illness and visible facial difference ? a severe skin condition called Ichthyosis form erythroderma (meaning scaly red skin).

I write about the medical and social challenges of this condition. I also write a little about body image diversity, highlighting the need for people with visible facial differences to be represented more widely in the media. In doing so, I receive emails and comments from many people with similar skin conditions and various chronic illnesses, as well as from people without illnesses, telling me I?ve helped them in some way. I?ve given them information, hope or courage to tell their own story.

Shortly after starting my blog, I submitted some blog posts to a state government-run disability website called DiVine. The editor asked me to write for them, and I?ve since written for Mamamia, ABC?s Ramp Up, The Hoopla and News Limited, plus a number of guest posts on blogs, as well as shared my story with journalists in the mainstream media.

In addition to the writing, I?ve shared my story through speaking.

Carly Findlay, right, with Layne Beachley at the Aim for the Stars ball in 2012

Carly Findlay, right, with Layne Beachley at the Aim for the Stars ball in 2012

I started speaking about five years ago at a workplace event for International Day of People with Disability. Speaking in front of colleagues was good for developing my confidence. Mid way through 2010 I auditioned for a role on a disability TV show called No Limits, and I was cast as a presenter. We discuss disability issues on a panel and interview a wide range of people. This has been great because I have learnt a lot about disability issues, culture, history and language, and met some amazing friends.

I really enjoy sharing my story face to face with an audience, and I also believe that because of my appearance, a speech often has greater impact than the written word. Because of my blog, I have an archive of stories to share, and I can draw on these and modify them for various audiences. I speak about living with Ichthyosis ? hoping to make people laugh and think, and change their perceptions of people with visibly different appearances. I also speak about blogging and social media.

I have spoken to many audiences including young people at the Royal Children?s Hospital, potential sponsors at a community television event, doctors and genetic counsellors, bloggers, and at the Australian Public Service Commission?s ethics and social media conference

It?s funny how speaking at one event, or being involved in a particular community, can help you get to another.

My contacts in the disability and blogging networks have been fantastic in putting me forward for speaking opportunities ? including radio appearances. The lovely Nicole Avery from Planning with Kids asked me to speak at the AusBlogCon in 2011. My good friend and ABC Ramp Up editor Stella Young put me forward for an ABC interview. Members of No Limits asked me to feature in a 15 minute community radio documentary. Just recently, I was filmed for a federal government social media initiative for International Day of People with Disability.

The best speaking opportunities have come from blogging! You can take your blog to the speaking circuit.

I gave a speech at my work about blogging as an effective way of story telling. Someone in the audience was a Girl Guides leader and she asked me to speak at the next Guides meeting. I did, and at that meeting, I met a woman who worked at a disability organisation. She then asked me to speak at her organisation?s youth training event. When I arrived at the event, there were 600 school children that I had to speak in front of.

And in August 2011 I received a tweet from the Centre for Appearance Research (CAR), based at the University of the West of England, in Bristol, UK. They had read a blog post of mine, and shared it with their readers. I checked out their website, was interested in what they do, and contacted them to see how I could work with them. They asked me to review a computer based psychology program about appearance for young people.

Earlier this year some of the CAR team came to Melbourne for a conference and they met me. They asked me to speak at their Appearance Matters conference in Bristol in July 2012. Of course I said yes!! It was such a good experience ? I spoke to around 50 academics and doctors, and received great feedback. My speech is here.

My hospital?s dermatology department has been great in helping me get to speak in England, and they too have given me speaking opportunities. I now alternate between patient and speaker, educating dermatologists and geneticists about both the medical and social elements of this condition.

Diversifying from your blog means that you can develop and share your skills in other areas, which in turn could earn you some money. While I don?t work with many PR companies, I feel the writing and speaking opportunities given to me by community groups, hospitals and universities are far more beneficial to my career ambitions.

If you are thinking about taking your blog from the written to spoken word, here are some of my tips:

From little things big things grow

Continue blogging. Your blog is a great resource for content for your speeches, and also for sharing your completed speeches (transcripts and video) with your readers who couldn?t be at your speaking event.

Attend events where you?ll meet bloggers and other people in your interest areas. Share your work on social media ? you never know who might discover it. Offer to do speaking in your workplace or local community ? your church or a school are good places to start.

Practise your speaking

Attend Toastmasters groups or book into a short course. Practice in front of your family or friends, or even in meetings at work.

I?ve not done Toastmasters, but I did a lot of presentations during my university degrees, and I?m fortunate that through doing community TV, I can watch myself back and find areas where I can improve.

Speak about what you know

As a blogger, you are often an expert in a certain field ? parenting, cooking, fashion. As a speaker, I think it?s best to speak about what you know too. It makes for an authentic speech. I feel most confident speaking about myself ? my skin condition and blogging. When I write a blog post, I write it how I speak or think. This means my blog posts can often easily be translated into a speech.

Know your audience

You may be speaking about the same topic at all of the events you?re invited to, but your audience demographic will not always be the same. Your content may need to be tailored to suit your audiences. For example, I have used simpler language for children, provided technical explanations for non social media users and covered more strategic content for academics and doctors (I included parts of my Masters thesis for these speeches).

Be yourself

You don?t need to be like an evangelical speaker to have an impact. I recommend you speak clearly, maintain eye contact with your audience, and try to make them think and make them laugh.

In my writing and speaking I am always honest and authentic. I hope not to come across as seeking pity. I am always myself, always realistic, but never sympathy seeking. If I can make someone laugh at a really unfortunate situation that I?ve been faced with, I know I?ve done my job right.

Do you speak because of your blog? What tips do you have for bloggers asked to speak to an audience?

Carly Findlay lives in Melbourne. She?s a blogger and writer, community TV?presenter and lover of cooking, live music, fashion and Darren Hayes.?Carly blogs?here??and tweets at?@carlyfindlay?|?Photo credits:?Bio photo Camille Condon and Layne Beachley photo by Carol Gibbons Photography.

Editor?s note: I too have been asked to speak many times since starting my blog and my business. The courses that really helped me step up to those keynotes and presentations ? and deal with confidence in getting in front of an audience ? were the courses run by Carren Smith. Carren ? a Bali bombing survivor ? has turned her story of survival into one that can help others tell their story. I?m very proud to call her my friend.

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Share your blogging know-how

Thanks so much to everyone who plays along with my Saturday blogging linky. Sharing your blogging knowledge with other bloggers and potential bloggers really is how this blogging world best goes round. It?s a bit like having a mini online conference here every week.

Remember if you want to join in, just add your link below. The link needs to be to a post ABOUT BLOGGING?(all others will be deleted). Please fill in the box where it says ?name? like this:?BLOG NAME: Blog post title. That way your blog gets a plug and if you include the title of your post, you?ll attract readers interested in the topic.



( Submissions will close in 6d 15h 12m )
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Source: http://www.stylingyou.com.au/2012/11/blog-to-the-speaking-circuit/

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