বুধবার, ২৮ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

otofest 2012 at Cheras Auto... - Paul Tan's Automotive Blog

Used cars. A term that used to have less than pleasant connotations ? shady salesmen, dodgy deals and lemons come to mind. Of course, things have come a long way since the days of Honest Joe. They have.

Nowadays, chances are you?ll come away with a winner, taking your pick from the pre-owned route ? there are plenty of great deals and a veritable variety of vehicles to pick from, and none are what you?d consider antiques (unless you?re skimping on the dough, of course).

Much of the landscape has changed due to the arrival of grey, or parallel, imports. This has brought about a significantly improved level of selection and choices, and many times, at significantly cheaper prices.

Sure, most people usually like them new. Unfortunately, there are times when going new doesn?t always make for a wide and varied choice, what with new car prices being what they are.

The thing is, say you have RM80,000-RM90,000 to spend. You could buy a Toyota Vios, Ford Fiesta, Honda City or Nissan Almera new, and be plenty happy with any of them. But, if you?re a bit more open to things, you could end up with a steal like a 2011 Honda Civic 1.8SL, like seen on our sister site, oto.my.

If you?re feeling more adventurous, then something like a first-gen Mini Cooper S might tickle your fancy ? hunt around and you?ll find plenty of neat R53 examples in that sub-RM90k price range. Move up the price range to the RM125-RM150k region and a slew of E60 BMW 5 Series awaits you, not bad when you consider that they?re a good deal off the original price asked.

Whatever it is, the buyer is spoilt for choice when it comes to cars, especially going the recond and used route. More so now that it?s the end of the year, with stock clearances and discounts going full swing.

If you happen to thinking along those lines, and shopping around for a deal, then otofest 2012 will definitely pique your interest. The event, organised by our sister classifieds website oto.my, takes place next weekend, on December 8-9 2012, and the whole bag of dealerships located at Cheras Autocity are set to take part in the festivities.

More than 700 vehicles ? across a varied price range ? will be available for viewing, and there?ll be many offerings specially priced for the two-day event; you won?t get these prices pre- or post-event, we?ve been told.

In a straight-up case, say with a 2010 Toyota Vellfire 2.4Z Platinum that?s going for RM250,000, a seven-year loan tenure at 2.45% interest with a 20& downpayment works out to be RM2,789 a month. What if we tell you that we can knock off the first year repayment down by almost RM1,000? We won?t reveal all, but suffice to say that there are packages which will reduce the monthly repayment rate, among them a step-up repayment structure.

These are thanks to special financing packages only for the carnival. Our oto.my team has set up some fantastic deals thanks to Alphera, a division of BMW Credit Malaysia. Alphera will be setting up stall at the event, and will have very attractive interest rates (starting from 2.45% for new recond vehicles) and financing deals on hand.

We?ll cover more about this in due time, as well as highlight the cherry pick of the deals that await. All you need to do now is remember the dates ? December 8-9 ? and the place, which is otofest 2012 at Cheras Autocity.

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Source: http://paultan.org/2012/11/27/otofest-2012-at-cheras-auto-city-8-9-dec-2012-used-and-recond-vehicles-no-longer-second-rate/

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৭ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Small Business Saturday boosts Panhandle economy : News ...

Read?more: Local, National, Economy, Community, Small Business Saturday, Small Business, Black Friday, Cyber Monday, Amarillo, Texas, Holiday Shopping, Shopping Locally, Locally Owned Business, Small Locally Owned Business, Business, Local Shopping, Semblance Store, Semblance, Semblance Texas, Lilly Finch, Lilly Finch Boutique, Lilly Finch Boutique Amarillo, Lilly Finch Deal, Lilliy Finch Locally Owned, Semblance Amarillo, Shopping Season

AMARILLO, TEXAS -- Local business owners in Amarillo embraced Small Business Saturday in a big way by offering huge steals this past weekend.

While many larger retailers, such as Kohl's and Target, opened their doors to record numbers of shoppers, local businesses decided to keep it quaint this holiday season. Stores in Wolflin Square spent Saturday welcoming holiday shoppers all while boosting the local economy.

Women's clothing boutique, Semblance, offered up to 20% off selected items, and even held a raffle for gift cards on purchases made that day. Open for over a month, Semblance owner Robyn Grona hopes that more people will considering shopping locally throughout the year, not just on Small Business Saturday.

Lilly Finch, a lifestyle boutique, participated in Small Business Saturday for the first time this year. Retail associate, Krista Silva, feels that the event helps promote awareness of local businesses in Amarillo.

Small Business Saturday was created in 2010 by American Express as a way to promote local small businesses throughout the country.

Source: http://www.connectamarillo.com/news/story.aspx?id=829947

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Energy efficient windows ? Home Improvement: House Plans ...

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Source: http://murrayjosef.typepad.com/blog/2012/11/energy-efficient-windows-home-improvement-house-plans.html

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Photos: Dreamy images reveal beauty in physics

Country music titan Dolly Parton is anything but shy.In an exclusive interview with "Nightline," Parton dished about her love life (including those rumors that she is secretly gay), losing a drag queen lookalike contest and building an entertainment empire estimated at half a billion dollars.Watch the full story on "Nightline" tonight at 11:35 p.m. ETIn her long reign as a country music legend, Parton, now 66, has done it all. In her new motivational memoir, "Dream More," which will be released on Nov. 27, Parton talks about growing up dirt poor in Sevierville, Tenn. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/photos/dynamic-photos-marry-art-and-science-slideshow/

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What is Real Estate Fraud? | Law Office of Peter Cameron, APC

Real Estate Property Crimes can take many forms. ?Most often these crimes involve grand theft and forgery. ???Common ?fraudulent real estate investment schemes have typically involved the sale of trust deeds, ?the use of forged escrow instructions to steal escrow deposits, purchasing homes with straw buyers for those with poor?credit and?forgery of grant deeds or other recorded documents. ?Other fraudulent schemes can involve trusts. ?This happens when vulnerable ?owners are told to deed their property to a trust. ?They are told the trust ?will make the mortgage payments until the owner recovers financially. These kind of ?scammers steal the equity and get loans with even larger payments so the original homeowner never stands a chance to get his or her property back.

Recently, Identify Theft ?has become more common in real estate fraud. ???Identity Theft is a newer criminal activity aided by computer hackers ?and is becoming more widespread and dangerous to all consumers.
California Penal Code (CPC) section 530.5 defines Using Personal Information of Another:

CPC 530.5. ?(a) Every person who willfully obtains personal identifying
information, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 530.55, of
another person, and uses that information for any unlawful purpose,
including to obtain, or attempt to obtain, credit, goods, services,
real property, or medical information without the consent of that
person, is guilty of a public offense, and upon conviction therefor,
shall be punished by a fine, by imprisonment in a county jail not to
exceed one year, or by both a fine and imprisonment, or by
imprisonment pursuant to subdivision (h) of Section 1170.

By assuming the identity of the true owner, or claiming to represent the true owner, the thief fraudulently obtains title to a property. This kind of scammer may ?then borrow against the property, or sell the property, stealing the equity. The typical target of such a scheme is a property with a large amount of equity, most likely an elderly owner. Protect your identity by?securing?your personal information as much as possible on and off line. ?Especially on the computer, make sure any information you give out is?guaranteed?to be secure.

The housing market continues to be in a very unstable market, and ?criminals are taking advantage of struggling homeowners by committing fraud. Many appear to be legitimate brokers or ?consultants, but their activities and?illegal? schemes are aimed at stealing your money or property. If you believe that you have ?been a victim of real estate fraud, call ?the Law?Office?of Peter S. Cameron ?at 877-603-8473 or submit your ?questions online with our?guaranteed?secure case review form. ?We are here to help you explore the legal solutions available to this kind of consumer fraud.

This?article?is for educational and?marketing?purposes only. ?It does not?create?an attorney-client relationship.

?

Source: http://sandiegolegaloffice.com/2012/11/what-is-real-estate-fraud/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=what-is-real-estate-fraud

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Business Networking is Good for Franchises | Franchwire

This is a guest post from The Franchise King?, Joel Libava.? He provides tips and advice to individuals interested in franchise ownership with his top-notch guaranteed franchise ownership advisory services and to the masses via his award-winning franchise blog. He?s on Twitter constantly @FranchiseKing.

Have you been out and about, networking? Do lots of people in your community know who you are and what business you?re the proud owner of?

Do you know why it?s so important for you, the independent or franchise business owner, to do it?

I do, and I?m going to share 3 powerful benefits of networking.

1.? Visibility

People are busy. They?re what my Mom calls, ?Running and chasing? all the time. If they?re not working, they?re running errands, helping their family members with miscellaneous things, or doing other life-stuff.

At the same time, they?re getting bombarded with thousands of marketing messages.

And, unless you?re marketing budget is unlimited, those marketing messages aren?t always coming from you.

That?s why you need to be visible. And, networking allows you to do just that.

Visibility can come from things like;

  • Being a member of a committee at your local chamber of commerce
  • Being a sponsor for one of your community?s school sports teams
  • Becoming heavily involved in a charity

The bottom line is this; become a visible member of your community. If you do that, it will be a bit harder for marketing messages from other concerns to get through to your current and future customers. Plus, you?ll feel good about yourself, because you?ll be a contributing member of your community

2.? Drumming

If you?re the owner of the local Domino?s franchise, networking is a must.

And, because of the product you sell, you have a serious advantage over most of the other local businesses in your community; you can drum up new business by handing out free pizza.

Other types of businesses don?t have it so easy.

For example, if you?re the owner of the local Hardware store, what can you give away for free to drum up business?

If you?re a gas-station owner, what can you carry around from business to business-or even house to house that can help bring in new customers?

If you own a picture framing store, what can you bring to a networking event to give away?

In this example, being the owner of a pizza franchise clearly rules.

(If you own a non-pizza business, please share some of things that you?ve successfully done to drum up business as you network. Franchwire readers would love to hear about your success!)

3.? Advice

If you?re attending networking events, including formal ones like BNI, there will be numerous opportunities for you to forge deep connections with other like-minded business owners. These connections-if nurtured properly, can become resources for you and your business.

For example, what if you?re thinking of adding another location?

Now, obviously you?ll reach out to the commercial real estate agent who helped you secure your current business location. But, why would you want to only use one resource to help you find a suitable second location? There?s a certain amount of risk involved; you want an opportunity to look at all the options available?not just the ones that are being offered by the agent that helped you last time.

If you?ve been networking for a while, you have a built-in advice network that?s only a phone call or an email away. This is the time to use it!

Call the owners of a couple of non-competing businesses and ask them if they know of any commercial space that?s available-or about to become available. There?s a good chance that they?ve, ?heard things.? You may even get some unsolicited advice along the way that ends up saving you some money. Who knows what you?ll hear?

I know one thing for sure:

Small business owners who commit to spending some of their time networking and getting active in their communities have a huge leg up on those that don?t.

Source: http://www.franchwire.com/business-networking/

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শুক্রবার, ২৩ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

David Attenborough's Galapagos 3D begins airing New Year's Day in the UK on Sky 3D

David Attenborough's Galapagos 3D begins airing New Year's Day in the UK on Sky 3D

The long nights, relentless Christmas adverts and brisk chill in the air are all signs the year is coming to an end, and what better way to see in the next than with British documentary legend Sir David Attenborough? The first episode of his new three-part natural history series Galapagos 3D, written and presented by the man himself, will be airing New Year's Day on Sky 3D in the UK. Like most of his projects, it's sure to be a stunning visual treat that'll make you forget about even the worst of New Year hangovers. So, don't forget to stoke the fire, switch on your 3D TV, and enjoy an educational tour of the Galapagos Islands to start off your 2013.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: BSkyB

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/23/galapagos-3d-airing-new-years-day-on-sky-3d/

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Getting into the zone ? | WordzNerd Debz

November 22, 2012 ? 8:46 am

One of my favourite things about being a writer is when you get ?so into the zone? you lose time, you lose sanity, you lose yourself.

When I had to juggle my writing with the full-time day job, before the full-time day job became a writing one, the being in the zone was what made life bearable, but it was constantly being?interrupted?by intrusions from the ?real world.? I remember how I used to be sat here writing from 5 am until I ?knew at 7.30 I had to pack up the laptop and get ready for my lift into work. Resentment.

Then at least I still had half hour, because I got to work early, to write in a lovely quiet office before?they?came and that means my colleagues and so I would have to wait another 90 mins before I could write again. More resentment. I used to?fantasise?that I was really working in an office of creative writers and instead of discussing the?adjustment?curves and poor calibrations of problematic immunodiagnostic kits, we were actually discussing problems in?narrative?voice or ways of fixing faulty plots! Really! Not that I was obsessed or anything! And when I knew I was having to pull myself from the zone to do science things?this buzz would be in my fingers and my mind was having to be forced away from the call of the work in progress to the?other work in progress. But when an idea hit, as it will, there I was sneakily scribbling on a piece of paper. Oh don?t get me wrong I did often find my zone in the day job as well, and it was writing, only science speak, but it was still a form of writing never the less.

At break I had the office for 20 minutes to write. But then I had 90 mins until lunch and a girl has to eat so I couldn?t write then so that was the biggest gap and I had to wait until afternoon break to write again. By the time I went home I had clocked up about 3 and a half hours ?in the zone? before I then could do more in the evening although that was often publishing stuff for Bridge House.

No wonder they all thought I was obsessed with writing.

But is there any other way to be?

I probably only do the same amount of my own writing, or less as now I divide my day into my own writing and my paid critiques and edits etc but now I can?discuss problems in?narrative?voice or ways of fixing faulty plots! Okay so not in an office with other people, but now I have so many writing friends and friends who do the same job as me,?Facebook?is my office, my way of connecting to people who do what I do. Weird in it?

But I am living the dream and now if the muse takes me and I find myself in the zone, well I can stay there, I don?t have to let the other stuff intrude.

And that feeling of losing time, losing sanity and losing yourself is now my job :)

No going back now.

To infinity and beyond ?

Filed under Writing, freelancing, Publishing, Short Stories, Novel writing, Facebook, Social networking, Learning to be a writer, time to think, making money from writing, Winning, being a successful writer, Passion for writing

Source: http://wordznerd.wordpress.com/2012/11/22/getting-into-the-zone/

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How to Choose a Flagstaff Lawyer

Flagstaff?s law firm: (928) 226-0165

What is a free legal consultation? What can you talk about during a consultation with a lawyer? How do you choose a lawyer in Flagstaff, or Arizona, for your legal issues?

We offer this article as part of our series on free legal consultations. Nothing in this article is actual legal advice. These are tips and pointers on how to go about choosing the right lawyer or law firm for your legal issue.

1. What is your legal issue?

If you read any part of our website, you will see that we are Flagstaff?s criminal defense and personal injury law firm. If your legal issue is not criminal defense, and not personal injury, you should be looking for lawyers who specifically handle your type of issue. Why? Because lawyers may be trained in multiple areas of law, but those who are experts in particular areas are more likely to handle your issue efficiently and effectively. Would you hire a dentist to perform knee surgery? Of course not.

So, read the law firm?s website. See what they do best. And call the right lawyer for your legal issue.

2. Is it really a free consultation?

There are two parts to that question. When speaking with a Flagstaff or Arizona lawyer, you should feel free to ask direct questions. Is your discussion really free of charge? The better question, however, is whether you are really getting a consultation. How quickly does the lawyer ask you for money? Does the lawyer share any information about the law, or simply speak in generalities? Does the lawyer seem to be approachable and knowledgeable?

When you first speak with a lawyer, you can assess whether you and the lawyer communicate effectively. You can sense if the lawyer is rushing you or not knowledgeable about the law pertaining to your legal issue. Feel free to ask the lawyer, at your convenience, about rates and costs. But before you shop around for the cheapest price, remember: you get what you pay for. An experienced, sophisticated, successful trial lawyer may be worth a higher price? and may just get you a better result than a cheaper lawyer.

Make sure you get a true consultation. If you didn?t learn anything about Arizona law or your legal issue, then you didn?t get a consultation at all.

Source: http://flagstaff-lawyer.com/news-blog/2012/11/how-to-choose-a-flagstaff-lawyer/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-to-choose-a-flagstaff-lawyer

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বুধবার, ২১ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Israeli aircraft hit Hamas-linked bank in Gaza

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) ? Israeli aircraft on Tuesday battered the headquarters of the bank Hamas set up to sidestep international sanctions on its rule, as efforts to negotiate an end to a week-old convulsion of the latest Israeli-Palestinian violence brought the U.N. chief to the region on an emergency mission.

The strike on the Islamic National Bank was part of a widening Israeli assault against Gaza militants meant to quell rocket fire that has struck deep into Israel's heartland. U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon's itinerary was taking him on Tuesday to Egypt and Israel, where he hoped to prod the two sides to reach a deal.

From Cairo, U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon said he came because of the "alarming situation" in the region.

"This must stop, immediate steps are needed to avoid further escalation, including a ground operation," Ban said. "Both sides must hold fire immediately ... Further escalation of the situation could put the entire region at risk."

Israel and Gaza's militant Hamas rulers have staked tough, hard-to-bridge positions, and the gaps keep alive the threat of an Israeli ground invasion. In the meantime, grieving Gazans buried militants and civilians killed in ongoing Israeli airstrikes, and barrages of rockets from Gaza sent terrified Israelis scurrying to take cover.

The conflict erupted last week, when a resurgence in rocket fire from Gaza provoked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government to strike back, killing Hamas' military chief in an air attack and carrying out hundreds of assaults on militants' underground rocket launchers and weapons stores.

The onslaught abruptly turned deadlier over the weekend as aircraft were ordered to go after Hamas military commanders and buildings suspected of housing their commands and weapons caches. In the narrow warrens of crowded Gaza, where militants often operate from residential areas, civilian casualties mounted.

By Tuesday, civilians accounted for 54 of the 113 Palestinians killed since the operation began. Some 840 people have been wounded, including 225 children, Gaza health officials said.

Tuesday's attack on the Islamic National Bank in Gaza was the latest in a string of assaults on Hamas symbols of power. Leading Hamas members set up the bank after it violently overran Gaza in June 2007 because foreign lenders, afraid of running afoul of international terror financing laws, stopped doing business with the militant-led Gaza government.

Israel, the U.S. and other Western powers consider Hamas, which has killed hundreds of Israelis in suicide bombings and other attacks, a terror group.

The inside of the bank, which was set up by leading Hamas members and describes itself as a private enterprise, was destroyed. Abuilding supply business in the basement was damaged.

Owner Suleiman Tawil, 31, grimly surveyed the damage to his store and six company cars. "I'm not involved in politics," he said. "I'm a businessman. But the more the Israelis pressure us, the more we will support Hamas."

Fuad Hijazi and two of his toddler sons were killed Monday evening when missiles struck their one-story shack in northern Gaza, leaving a crater about 7- to 10-feet (two to three meters) deep in the densely populated neighborhood. Residents said he was not a militant.

On Tuesday morning, the boys' bodies lay next to each other on a rack in the local morgue, wrapped tightly in white burial shrouds. Their father lay in a rack below.

"We want to tell the world which is supporting the state of Israel, what this state is doing," said neighbor Rushdie Nasser. "They are supporting a state that kills children. ... We want to send a message to the U.N. and the West: Enough of supporting the Zionists, who are killing children."

Three Israeli civilians have also been killed and dozens wounded since the fighting began last week, the numbers possibly kept down by a rocket-defense system that Israel developed with U.S. funding. More than 1,000 rockets have been fired at Israel this week, the military said, including three that struck schools that had been emptied because of the fighting.

As part of global efforts to end the Gaza fighting, U.N. chief arrived in Cairo on Monday and was to meet with Israeli President Shimon Peres in Jerusalem on Tuesday. In Cairo, Ban said he would also travel to the West Bank to meet with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. With tens of thousands of Israeli soldiers dispatched to the Gaza border, awaiting a possible order to invade, his mission was all the more urgent.

Germany's foreign minister was also headed to the region for talks with Israeli and Palestinian leaders. Turkey's foreign minister and a delegation of Arab League foreign ministers were to visit Gaza on Tuesday.

Egypt, the traditional mediator between Israel and the Arab world, has been at the center of recent diplomatic efforts involving the U.S., Turkey, Qatar and other nations.

On Monday, Egyptian intelligence officials met separately in Cairo with an Israeli envoy and with Khaled Mashaal, the top Hamas leader in exile, to try to bridge the considerable differences.

Israel demands an end to rocket fire from Gaza and a halt to weapons smuggling into Gaza through tunnels under the border with Egypt. It also wants international guarantees that Hamas will not rearm or use Egypt's Sinai region, which abuts both Gaza and southern Israel, to attack Israelis.

Hamas wants Israel to halt all attacks on Gaza and lift tight restrictions on trade and movement in and out of the territory that have been in place since Hamas seized Gaza by force in 2007. Israel has rejected such demands in the past.

Mashaal told reporters Monday that Hamas would only agree to a cease-fire if its demands are met. "We don't accept Israeli conditions because it is the aggressor," he said. "We want a cease-fire along with meeting our demands."

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said Israel prefers to end this round of violence through diplomacy but insists the outcome would guarantee Israel long-term quiet along its border with Gaza.

"The declared purpose of this operation was to make rockets stop, once and for all, or at least for a very long time," he said Tuesday, without specifying a timeframe. "All instruments have their limitations. But if the diplomatic path proves itself unuseful, then the only path that will be left is the military. But we hope to explore the diplomatic path to its full extent."

Successive Israeli governments, meanwhile, have struggled to come up with an effective policy toward Hamas, which is deeply rooted in Gaza, a densely populated territory of 1.6 million.

Neither Israel's economic blockade of the territory nor bruising military strikes have cowed Gaza's Islamists, weakened their grip on the Palestinian strip their ability to fire rockets at the Jewish state.

An Israeli ground invasion would risk Israeli troop losses, and it could send the number of Palestinian civilian casualties ballooning ? a toll Israel could be reluctant to risk just four years after its last invasion drew allegations of war crimes. President Barack Obama and other Western leaders have urged Israel to avoid a ground war.

Still, with Israeli elections just two months away, polls show Israeli public sentiment has lined up staunchly behind the offensive Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government has launched.

Israel and Gaza's militants have a long history of fighting, but the dynamics have changed radically since they last warred four years ago. Though their hardware is no match for the Israeli military, militants have upgraded their capabilities with weapons smuggled in from Iran and Libya, Israeli officials claim.

Only a few years ago, tens of thousands of Israelis were within rocket range. Today those numbers have swollen to 3.5 million, as the militants' improved weapons allowed the unprecedented targeting of Tel Aviv and Jerusalem this week.

Hamas, a branch of the region-wide Muslim Brotherhood, is also negotiating from a stronger position than four years ago, when Israel launched a three-week war on the militants in Gaza. At that time, Hamas was internationally isolated; now, the Muslim Brotherhood is in power in Egypt and Tunisia, and Hamas is also getting political support from Qatar and Turkey.

At home, too, the military offensive has shored up Hamas at a time when it was riven by internal divisions over its direction and the new Egyptian government's refusal to lift the blockade it imposed along with Israel after Hamas seized the territory in 2007.

This newfound backing contrasts radically with the loss of stature the Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has endured as Palestinians lose faith in his ability to bring them a state through negotiations with Israel.

___

Teibel reported from Jerusalem. AP writer Ibrahim Barzak contributed from Gaza City.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israeli-aircraft-hit-hamas-linked-bank-gaza-081327934.html

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Book Fair to bring readers, writers together | TribLIVE


By Marilyn Forbes

Published: Wednesday, November 21, 2012, 1:21?a.m.
Updated 9 hours ago

The Mt. Pleasant library will be offering readers in the Fay-West region an opportunity to meet several local authors and get signed copies of their books during a Book Fair this week.

?We?d like to make the community aware of the wealth of authors we have locally, and meeting and speaking to an author should not be an unusual event,? library employee and author Barbara Miller said. ?We have had many individual book-signings at the library in the past, but this will make lots of authors available at once. It also gives the authors a chance to communicate with each other.?

In addition to individual authors, there will be several members present from writing groups in the area, such as the Beanery Writers, Scottdale Writing Group and Greensburg Writing Group.

The authors will be set up at tables located around the library. Everyone is invited to stop and talk with each writer.

?We?re hoping every patron who comes to the library will stop and talk to some of the authors about their work or to writing group members,? Miller said. ?At every table each patron will get a free raffle ticket so they may possibly win the basket of their choice. We also will have cookies, snacks, coffee and soda available in the meeting room.?

Authors expected to attend include:

? Linda Ciletti, with copies of her books ?Draegon Lari? and ?Knightstalker.?

? Brad Clemenson, with copies of his book ?Murtha War Fighting: Fighting for the Soul of America.?

? Ed Kelemen, who co-authored ?The Haunted Foothills? with Mary Ann Mogus.

? Barbara Miller, with copies of her book ?Two Hearts.?

? Bill Potoka, with copies of his book ?Love in an Altered State.?

? Cassandra Vivian, who will have numerous books she wrote including ?The national road in Pennsylvania,? ?Post Cards of the Mid Mon Valley? ?Monessen: A Typical Steel County Town,? ?The Overseers Family,? ?A Tuscan American Kitchen,? ?Americans in Egypt: 1770-1915 and ?Flavors of Egypt.?

Miller said that if the fair is well received, it may become an annual event. She noted the day would be a great way to bring readers and writers together.

?Mount Pleasant Public Library seeks to provide programs of interest to all age groups,? Miller said. ?We think it?s special to be able to get a book personally autographed to you and we hope patrons and guests will think so as well. We know there are writers who come to use the computers for their work and we?d like them to make some contacts at the fair. Writing is about communicating. We are offering an open channel for readers to speak directly to writers and ask questions about the process.?

The Book Fair will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at the library.

Marilyn Forbes is a freelance writer.

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Source: http://triblive.com/news/westmoreland/2984984-74/authors-book-library-copies-fair-miller-writers-writing-readers-books

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Children & Teen Nonfiction Picks ? November 2012 ? BrodartVibe

One of Brodart?s newest selection list offerings in 2012 is Children & Teen Nonfiction Picks. These titles are popular, fun nonfiction topics for kids and teens; it is not curriculum support.? Subjects include, but are not limited to, such topics as sports, animals and pets, current celebrities, computers and gaming, fashion, crafts, self-help, and dating. Check out a few choice selections from the November list below, then follow the link to view the entire list.

Disney Pixar Character Encyclopedia

Disney and Pixar began releasing computer-generated animated movies in 1995 with the blockbuster Toy Story. Since then, a total of 12 additional films have been released, including Monsters, Inc., Finding Nemo, Up, and most recently, Brave. Each movie seems to be better than the last, and receives not only wide spread critical acclaim, but becomes a beloved movie for parents and children to watch again and again. The characters have become synonymous with pop culture and American life, so a reference book like Disney Pixar Character Encyclopedia is a great way for kids and their parents to learn more about the one(s) that spoke the loudest to them. I know I?ll be turning right to Sully from Monsters, Inc. Learn more about this title at?http://bit.ly/S9WApL.

Gabby Douglas

One of the biggest stars to emerge from the 2012 Summer Olympics was Gabby Douglas, winner of not only the team gymnastics gold medal but the individual all around competition, becoming the first American woman to do so in the same Olympic Games. People were not only impressed with her skills on the various apparatuses, but with her down-to-Earth demeanor and likeable personality. Her popularity continues to rise as she earned a Kellogg?s Wheaties box, a spot in the new Super Mario Bros 2 ad campaign, and a role on the popular TV show The Vampire Diaries. Her youngest fans will want to learn all there is about this great role model, and Gabby Douglas tells the story of her life and her successes. Learn more about this title at?http://bit.ly/QTzxCI.

My Dog is a Hero

Who doesn?t love a good book about dogs? Man?s best friend can be everything from a lap dog who sleeps his day away on his favorite couch to a hard-working productive member of society. My Dog is a Hero gives readers ages eight to 12 a look at some of the hardest working dogs out there, including police dogs, rescue dogs, and guide dogs. Not only will they learn the history of how dogs came into those positions, but they?ll meet famous dogs who?ve done their job best. It?s perfect for any reader who has an interest in dogs, and could even inspire someone to take their dog to the next level. Learn more about this title at?http://bit.ly/Wq02kL.

My First Day

Not only do young readers like books about dogs, but they like books about all animals, especially baby ones. What makes My First Day stand out is that instead of focusing on the broad subject of animal babies, it narrows it down to just animals on their first day of existence. Steve Jenkins and Robin Page, who won the Caldecott for What Do You Do with a Tail Like This?, show through gorgeous paper-cut illustrations and short text what happens to 22 different animal species on the day it?s born. Everything from Siberian tigers to emperor penguins is covered. It?s not to be missed. Learn more about this title at?http://bit.ly/UaIvL8.

The Fairy Tale Princess

It seems 2012 is the year for retelling fairy tales. Adults can do so in Philip Pullman?s Fairy Tales From the Brothers Grimm, teens take a turn in In a Glass Grimmly, and now the youngest readers can in The Fairy Tale Princess. Seven different fairy tales with a princess theme are told in this book, including Sleeping Beauty, Cinderella, and Snow White. Each story gets its own color scheme in the illustrations, which makes the retelling even more magical. The illustrations are done via 3D paper sculptures from vintage book pages, and definitely steal the show. All fairy tale lovers, no matter the age, will be taken with the beauty of this book. Learn more about this title at?http://bit.ly/UaIZku.

View the entire Children & Teen Nonfiction Picks list?here.

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Source: http://brodartvibe.wordpress.com/2012/11/20/children-teen-nonfiction-picks-november-2012/

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MintLife Blog | Personal Finance News & Advice | 3 Tips to Buying ...

gift card

Gift cards are my favorite gift to give and receive and, apparently, I?m not alone.? According to the National Retail Federation, gift cards are the most requested holiday gift. They?re never the wrong size, never the wrong color and I never have to return them.

Some people call them thoughtless or impersonal, but I think they?re great. Still, whether you?re shopping for gift cards for someone else or you?ve received one as a gift, there are some things you should know about them.

They Will Lose Value, Just Not Anytime Soon

Prior to August 22, 2010, gift cards could rapidly lose value if they weren?t redeemed quickly enough. A common complaint was that you were given a card with a value of $100, for example, but when you redeemed the card months later, it was worth only $87. The remaining amount had been chewed up in fees.

You don?t have to worry about that happening any longer, unless you really take your sweet time redeeming your gift card. The value of any gift card purchased this year must remain in tact for five years from the date it was purchased. The exception to that rule is if your card is not used for 12 consecutive months.

The above rules do not apply for prepaid debit cards, which are often given as a gift, or promotional gift cards given as a rebate for a large purchase.

Don?t Fall For Gift Card Scams

Unfortunately, scams are just as common during the holiday season as they are the rest of the year and gift cards are not immune. Don?t fall for these gift card scams:

The Trojan Horse Scam:?If you buy the first card hanging on a rack at a store, there?s a chance a thief has already written down the number on the back of the card. The thief knows you?re not giving it away until December 25th, so he waits a few days and calls the toll free number off the back of the card to verify the value of the card.

If the card has value, the thief can then use it online and drain it. You won?t find out until after the holidays, if you ever find out at all. You?ll reduce your exposure to this scam by only buying cards that are in plain sight of security cameras or a check out clerk.

The Bait and Switch:?Buying gift cards on the secondary market has become very popular. Consumers get a card for a store they don?t care for and they?ll list the card on eBay, Craigslist or a gift card resale site like Plastic Jungle.

And while most auction and retail websites have some protections in place to deal with fraudulent transactions, some do not. Plastic Jungle, for example, guarantees the cards sold on their site and, of course, eBay has their seller rating system and other consumer protections as well.

Point being, if you want to buy a gift card that?s worth $100, you might want to purchase it directly from the retailer to reduce the chances of being defrauded, which dovetails nicely into my last tip.

You May Not Have to Pay Full Price

Buying discounted gift cards is an option if you?re one of the many shoppers who can?t stand paying full retail. There are a number of websites dedicated to buying and reselling unwanted gift cards.

You can normally save anywhere from 5% to 15% buying on the secondary market, depending on the card. As you can imagine, the more popular cards offer less of a discount, while less popular cards offer a much larger discount.

This cuts both ways. If you receive a gift card that you don?t want, don?t just let it sit around in your dresser drawer because it will eventually start to lose value. In many cases, you can sell it for at least 80% of its remaining value.

John Ulzheimer?is the President of Consumer Education at?SmartCredit.com, the credit blogger for?Mint.com, and a contributor for the?National Foundation for Credit Counseling.? He is an expert on credit reporting, credit scoring and identity theft. Formerly of FICO, Equifax and Credit.com, John is the only recognized credit expert who actually comes from the credit industry. The opinions expressed in his articles are his and not of Mint.com or Intuit.?Follow John on Twitter.

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Source: http://www.mint.com/blog/consumer-iq/3-tips-to-buying-and-using-gift-cards-this-holiday-season-1112/

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Hubble traps galactic fireflies

ScienceDaily (Nov. 19, 2012) ? Luminous galaxies glow like fireflies on a dark night in this image snapped by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. The upper central galaxy in this image is a gigantic elliptical galaxy designated 4C 73.08. A prominent spiral galaxy seen from "above" shines in the lower part of the image, while examples of galaxies viewed edge-on also populate the cosmic landscape.

In the optical and near-infrared light captured to make this image, 4C 73.08 does not appear all that beastly. But when viewed in longer wavelengths the galaxy takes on a very different appearance. Dust-piercing radio waves reveal plumes emanating from the core, where a supermassive black hole spews out twin jets of material. 4C 73.08 is classified as a radio galaxy as a result of this characteristic activity in the radio part of the electromagnetic spectrum.

Astronomers must study objects such as 4C 73.08 in multiple wavelengths in order to learn their true natures, just as seeing a firefly's glow would tell a scientist only so much about the insect. Observing 4C 73.08 in visible light with Hubble illuminates galactic structure as well as the ages of constituent stars, and therefore the age of the galaxy itself. 4C 73.08 is decidedly redder than the prominent, bluer spiral galaxy in this image. The elliptical galaxy's redness comes from the presence of many older, crimson stars, which shows that 4C 73.08 is older than its spiral neighbor.

The image was taken using Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 through two filters: one which captures green light, and one which captures red and near-infrared light.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA.

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


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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/space_time/astronomy/~3/w8OevSa5jts/121119174215.htm

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Natural Standard Blog: Natural Standard Featured CE/CME: Clove

Natural Standard's featured CE/CME for the month of November is?November: Safety & Effectiveness.

Clove is widely cultivated in Indonesia, Sri-Lanka, Madagascar, Tanzania and Brazil. It is used in limited amounts in food products as a fragrant, flavoring agent and antiseptic. Clinical trials assessing monotherapy of clove are limited, although the expert panel German Commission E has approved the use of clove as a topical antiseptic and anesthetic.

Natural Standard offers CE/CME modules for multidisciplinary healthcare professionals. Students and other users may take courses for training purposes without generating credit certificates. Continuing Education requirements differ based on discipline, license and location. If you are unsure of your specific needs, please contact your local agency.

Source: http://blog.naturalstandard.com/natural_standard_blog/2012/11/natural-standard-featured-cecme-clove.html

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মঙ্গলবার, ২০ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Cirque du Soleil's 'Totem' planned for New York

NEW YORK (AP) ? Cirque du Soleil will mark the 25th anniversary of its first trip to New York next year with a visit by its high-octane show "Totem."

The show will open March 14 at Citi Field, home of the New York Mets.

Since its world premiere in 2010, "Totem," written and directed by Robert Lepage, has visited over 16 different cities in four different countries. After New York, it goes to Philadelphia in May.

According to Cirque, the show "traces the fascinating journey of the human species from its original amphibian state to its ultimate desire to fly." It features acrobats on parallel bars, in aerial rings, on a trapeze, in roller skates and on unicycles.

The last Cirque show in New York was the summer return of "Zarkana."

___

Online: http://www.cirquedusoleil.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cirque-du-soleils-totem-planned-york-200003959.html

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Windows 8 Modern--is the customer right?

I own a restaurant called Standing Sushi Bar. Why? Because when I opened it, it had no chairs. It was the first restaurant in Singapore that forced customers to stand while they eat. Forced is a strong word; I felt that standing and eating during a fast-paced weekday lunch was a good and natural thing to do. You're spending the whole day sitting in front of a computer screen, why not stretch your legs during lunch time?

I didn't think it was a big deal. Apparently most others in Singapore did. After two years of trying to convince people that standing and eating was a good thing, I decided it was time to stop fighting what the public wanted and put in chairs.?From the beginning people kept telling me--people don't want to stand. They will ask for chairs. You will need to put in chairs.

Does this sound familiar? You're hearing the same thing when it comes to Windows 8. The "Modern" (Metro) interface is simply too jarring for a keyboard and mouse setup, yet Microsoft is adamant that their users get thrown into it.

From the preview builds, there was already feedback about how the Modern UI would be great for a touchscreen but poor for the conventional interface. As Windows 8 approached release, the clamor increased to bring back the Start button or an option to disable the Modern dashboard. Speculation is that Microsoft is charging forward with this interface and smashing it into every user's face as the quickest way to get people used to it. Giving people an option to disable it will slow down adoption.

Is this the right decision? I have no idea, but it's clear that Microsoft is making a specific choice to go against customer wishes. During usability tests, I'm sure Windows program managers and designers would have noticed the frustration in their users. "Oh, I was typing a document on Word and hit a key, and all of a sudden found myself in a tile-based screen." In my restaurant scenario, it's like if you were seated eating your meal and I yanked out your chair mid-bite.

Don't get me wrong; I think Windows 8 is great. I have been using it as my main operating system since the consumer preview, and have figured out the shortcuts to quickly flip between the classic desktop and the Modern dashboard. However I fall under the power user group; imagine your grandmother trying to figure out why she only sees the taskbar sometimes and how you would explain to her what's involved to show it.

It's brave for a company to plow forward and believe in something so strongly that they feel customers must be pushed to use it. Facebook did it with Timeline, Microsoft did it before with Windows 95, and Coke famously introduced "New Coke". Who knows whether Windows 8 Modern will be a successful implementation like Timeline or a roll-back-the-clock Classic Coke?

My guess? Microsoft adds an option that lets people stick only with the classic desktop mode. Over time as touchscreen Windows PCs and tablets become commonplace, people will naturally use the Modern interface and it will become the right choice for the appropriate scenario.

Source: http://www.zdnet.com/windows-8-modern-is-the-customer-right-7000007553/

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APLNG Begins Drawing from USD 8.5 Billion ... - LNG World News

APLNG Begins Drawing from USD 8.5 Billion Funding Facility

Australia Pacific LNG confirmed that all conditions precedent have been satisfied for its US$8.5 billion project finance facility, which will support the development of the Australia Pacific LNG coal seam gas (CSG) to liquefied natural gas (LNG) project in Queensland.

Project finance facility will specifically provide funding for the downstream parts of the project, including the liquefaction facilities on Curtis Island near Gladstone in Queensland.

First drawdown of the finance facility by Australia Pacific LNG has already occurred, and funding will be progressively drawn down throughout the construction period, up to the US$8.5 billion facility limit.

US$8.5 billion project finance facility is the largest ever signed in Australia and represents a key component of the financing of the Australia Pacific LNG project. The syndicated facility was signed in May 2012 by the Export-Import Bank of the United States, The Export-Import Bank of China, and a number of Australian and international commercial banks for 16 and 17 year terms.

Australia Pacific LNG is developing a A$23 billion CSG to LNG project in Queensland which includes the further development of CSG reserves in the Surat and Bowen Basins, a gas transmission pipeline and a two-train LNG facility on Curtis Island, near Gladstone. The shareholders in Australia Pacific LNG are Origin (37.5 per cent), ConocoPhillips (37.5 per cent) and Sinopec (25 per cent).


LNG World News Staff, November 19, 2012; Image: iStock

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Source: http://www.lngworldnews.com/aplng-begins-drawing-from-usd-8-5-billion-funding-facility-australia/

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মঙ্গলবার, ১৩ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Missing war records hurt veterans

By Peter Sleeth, Special to ProPublica,?and Hal Bernton, The Seattle Times

A strange thing happened when Christopher DeLara filed for disability benefits after his tour in Iraq: The U.S. Army said it had no records showing he had ever been overseas.

DeLara had searing memories of his combat experiences. A friend bled to death before his eyes. He saw an insurgent shoot his commander in the head. And, most hauntingly, he recalled firing at an Iraqi boy who had attacked his convoy.

The Army said it could find no field records documenting any of these incidents.

DeLara appealed, fighting for five years before a judge accepted the testimony of an officer in his unit. By then he had divorced, was briefly homeless and had sought solace in drugs and alcohol.

DeLara's case is part of a much larger problem that has plagued the U.S. military since the 1990 Gulf War: a failure to create and maintain the types of field records that have documented American conflicts since the Revolutionary War.

A joint investigation by ProPublica and The Seattle Times has found that the recordkeeping breakdown was especially acute in the early years of the Iraq war, when insurgents deployed improvised bombs with devastating effects on U.S. soldiers. The military has also lost or destroyed records from Afghanistan, according to officials and previously undisclosed documents.


The loss of field records ? after-action write-ups, intelligence reports and other day-to-day accounts from the war zones ? has far-reaching implications. It has complicated efforts by soldiers like DeLara to claim benefits. And it makes it harder for military strategists to learn the lessons from Iraq and Afghanistan, two of the nation's most protracted wars.

Military officers and historians say field records provide the granular details that, when woven together, tell larger stories hidden from participants in the day-to-day confusion of combat.

The Army says it has taken steps to improve handling of records ? including better training and more emphasis from top commanders. But officials familiar with the problem said the missing material may never be retrieved.

"I can't even start to describe the dimensions of the problem," said Conrad C. Crane, director of the U.S. Army's Military History Institute. "I fear we're never really going to know clearly what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan because we don't have the records."

The Army, with its dominant presence in both theaters, has the biggest deficiencies. But the U.S. Central Command in Iraq (Centcom), which had overall authority, also lost records, according to reports and other documents obtained by ProPublica under the Freedom of Information Act.

In Baghdad, Centcom and the Army disagreed about which was responsible for keeping records. There was confusion about whether classified field records could be transported back to the units' headquarters in the United States. As a result, some units were instructed to erase computer hard drives when they rotated home, destroying the records that had been stored on them.

Through 2008, dozens of Army units deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan either had no field records or lacked sufficient reports for a unit history, according to Army summaries obtained by ProPublica. DeLara's outfit, the 1st Cavalry Division, was among the units lacking adequate records during his 2004 to 2005 deployment.

Recordkeeping was so poor in Afghanistan from 2004 to 2007 that "very few Operation ENDURING FREEDOM records were saved anywhere, either for historians' use, or for the services' documentary needs for unit heritage, or for the increasing challenge with documenting Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)," according to an Army report from 2009.

Entire brigades deployed from 2003 to 2008 could not produce any field records, documents from the U.S. Army Center of Military History show.

The Pentagon was put on notice as early as 2005 that Army units weren't turning in records for storage to a central computer system created after a similar recordkeeping debacle in the 1990-91 Gulf War.

In that war, a lack of field records forced the Army to spend years and millions of dollars to reconstruct the locations of troops who may have been exposed to toxic plumes that were among the suspected causes of Gulf War Syndrome.

At the outset of the Iraq war, military commanders tried to avoid repeating that mistake, ordering units to preserve all historical records.

But the Army botched the job. Despite new guidelines issued in 2008 to safeguard records, some units still purged them. The next summer, the Washington National Guard's 81st Brigade Combat Team in Iraq was ordered to erase hard drives before leaving them for replacement troops to use, said a Guard spokesman, Capt. Keith Kosik.

Historians had complained about lax recordkeeping for years with little result.

"We were just on our knees begging for the Army to do something about it," said Dr. Reina Pennington, a Professor at Norwich University in Vermont who chaired the Army's Historical Advisory Committee. "It's the kind of thing that everyone nods about and agrees it's a problem but doesn't do anything about."

Critical reports from Pennington's committee went up to three different secretaries of the Army, including John McHugh, the current secretary. McHugh's office did not respond to interview requests. His predecessor, Peter Geren, said he was never told about the extent of the problem.

"I'm disappointed I didn't know about it," Geren said.

In an initial response to questions from ProPublica and the Times, the Army did not acknowledge that any field reports had been lost or destroyed. In a subsequent email, Maj. Christopher Kasker, an Army spokesman, said, "The matter of records management is of great concern to the Army; it is an issue we have acknowledged and are working to correct and improve."

Missing field records aren't necessarily an obstacle for benefit claims. The Department of Veterans Affairs also looks for medical and personnel records, which can be enough. The VA has also relaxed rules for proving post-traumatic stress to reduce the need for the detailed documentation of field reports.

But even the VA concedes that unit records are helpful. And assembling a disability case from witness statements can take much more time, said Gen. Peter Chiarelli, the retired Army vice chief of staff who worked to combat suicides and improve treatment of soldiers with PTSD and brain injuries.

"You would always love to have that operational record available to document an explosion, but there are other ways," Chiarelli said. "You can provide witness statements from others who were in that explosion. But it's going to be more difficult."

After reviewing findings of the ProPublica-Times investigation, Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., who chairs the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs, asked Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to report on efforts to find and collect field records.

"Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who are unable to document the location and functions of their military units could face the same type of problems experienced by Cold War veterans exposed to radiation, Vietnam era veterans exposed to herbicides and Gulf War veterans exposed to various environmental hazards," Murray said in a statement.

Already, thousands of veterans have reported respiratory problems and other health effects after exposure to toxic fumes from huge burn pits that were commonly used to dispose of garbage in Iraq and Afghanistan.

DeLara remains embittered about the five years he spent waiting for his disability claim. In an interview at his home in Tennessee, he pointed to Army discharge papers showing he'd received the Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, awarded for service in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Next to that were blank spaces where his deployment dates should have been.

"If they'd had the records in the first place, and all the after-action reports," DeLara said, "this never would have stretched on as long as it did."

A desperate search for records
The Army is required to produce records of its actions in war. Today, most units keep them on computers, and a 4,000-soldier brigade can churn out impressive volumes ? roughly 500 gigabytes in a yearlong tour, or the digital equivalent of 445 books, each 200 pages long.

Field records include reports about fighting, casualties, intelligence activities, prisoners, battle damage and more, complete with pictures and maps. They do not include personnel or medical records, which are kept separately, or "sigact" reports ? short daily dispatches on significant activities, some of which were provided to news organizations by WikiLeaks in 2010.

By mid-2007, amid alarms from historians that combat units weren't turning in records after their deployments, the Army launched an effort to collect and inventory what it could find.

Army historians were dispatched on a base-by-base search worldwide. A summary of their findings shows that at least 15 brigades serving in the Iraq war at various times from 2003 to 2008 had no records on hand. The same was true for at least five brigades deployed to Afghanistan.

Records were so scarce for another 62 units that served in Iraq and 10 in Afghanistan that they were written up as "some records, but not enough to write an adequate Army history." This group included most of the units deployed during the first four years of the Afghanistan war.

The outreach effort by the Army was highly unusual. "We were sending people to where they were being demobilized," said Robert J. Dalessandro, executive director at the Army's Center of Military History. "We even said ... 'Look we'll come to you' ? that's how desperate we got."

As word of missing records circulated, the Joint Chiefs of Staff became worried enough to order a top-level delegation of records managers from each service branch to Baghdad in April 2010 for an inspection that included recordkeeping by U.S. Central Command.

Centcom coordinated action among service branches in the theater. Among other things, Centcom's records included Pentagon orders, joint-service actions, fratricide investigations and intelligence reviews, with some records from Army units occasionally captured in the mix.

After five days, the team concluded that the "volume, location, size and format of USF-1 records was unknown," referring to the acronym for combined Iraq forces. The team's report to the chiefs cited "large gaps in records collections ... the failure to capture significant operational and historical" materials and a "poorly managed" effort to preserve records that were on hand.

In a separate, more detailed memo, two of the team's members from the National Archives and Records Administration went further.

"With the exception of the Army Corps of Engineers, none of the offices visited have responsibly managed their records," they wrote. "Staff reported knowledge of only the recently created and filed records and knew little of the records created prior to their deployments, including email. ... It is unclear the extent to which records exist prior to 2006."

Part of the problem was disagreement and lack of coordination about who was responsible for certain records, including investigations into casualties and accidents, according to Michael Carlson, one of the two archivists.

"The Army would say it's Centcom's responsibility to capture after-action reports because it's a Centcom-led operation. Centcom would say it's an Army responsibility because they created their own records," Carlson said in an interview. "So there's finger-pointing ... and thus records are lost."

Nearly a year after the U.S. pullout from Iraq, Centcom said it still is trying to index 47 terabytes of records for storage, or some 54 million pages of documents. It's not clear if those include anything recovered after a 2008 computer crash the Baghdad team termed "catastrophic."

Lt. Col. Donald Walker, an Air Force officer who took over as Centcom records manager in 2009, acknowledged that there was confusion about responsibility and confirmed that that some Centcom records may have been lost. In part, he blamed computer problems and the competing demands of wartime.

"Something just had to fall off the plate, there was so much going on," said Walker, who worked out of Centcom's Tampa, Fla., headquarters but was among the Baghdad inspectors.

Rather than risk letting classified information fall into the wrong hands, some commanders appeared to buck the orders to preserve records. One Army presentation asserts that in 2005, V Corps, which oversaw all Army units then in Iraq, ordered units to wipe hard drives clean or physically destroy them before redeploying to the States.

"They did not maintain the electronic files. They just purged the servers," according to the Military History Institute's Crane, who said he heard similar accounts from more than a dozen veteran officers in classes at the Army War College.

The orders directing Washington National Guard's 81st Brigade to erase hard drives before leaving Iraq came "from on high," according to unit spokesman Kosik, who said he confirmed the erasures with a senior Guard officer with first-hand knowledge. He said the orders came from outside the Washington Guard.

"There was a lot of confidential information, and they were not allowed to take it out of theater," said Kosik. "All that was wiped clean before they came home. ... It was part of their 'to-do' list before leaving country."

Steven A. Raho III, the Army's top records manager, said in an interview that he couldn't estimate what, if any, records might be missing. But Raho said his agency wasn't responsible for collecting records, only for storing them in the Army's central records system when individual units handed them over.

Units are not required to do so, he emphasized. "All's I know is we have some and units have some," Raho said.

As a test, ProPublica filed Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests for a month's worth of field records from four units deployed in Iraq in 2003 and 2004. The requests went to Raho's Records Management and Declassification Agency, which forwarded them to each unit.

One brigade ? the 2nd Combat Brigade of the 82nd Airborne Division ? did not respond, but FOIA officers from the three others said they searched and could find no responsive records.

"I don't know where any Iraq operational records are," said Daniel C. Smith, a privacy act officer at Fort Carson, Colo., who handled the request for the 2nd Brigade of the 2nd Infantry Division. "I've never been able to find out where they went."

At Fort Riley, Kan., FOIA officer Tuanna Jeffery looked for records from the 1st Battalion, 41st Infantry Regiment, 1st Armored Division. "Prior to and upon the inactivation of the unit on March 15, 2008, that unit had turned in absolutely no records," she responded.

In a follow-up email, Jeffery said the entire 1st Armored Division did not turn in any field records through 2008.

'They couldn't find it'
Chris DeLara is not the type of soldier to wear his heart on his sleeve, but the 1st Cavalry Division's shoulder patch is tattooed on his right forearm in a swirling piece of body art. Beneath it are the words: "Baghdad, Iraq."

DeLara, 38, grew up in Albany, N.Y., never dreaming he might someday fight a war. Now, his tour in 2004 and 2005 haunts his every day. Since winning his appeal in March 2011, he is classified as fully disabled by post-traumatic stress and cannot work. He was awarded a stipend of about $30,000 a year and has moved near Knoxville, Tenn., where he recently bought a modest house.

Getting to a stable point wasn't easy.

DeLara was an administrative specialist, essentially a personnel clerk. But he was repeatedly pulled out of his scrivener's life for missions as a roof gunner on convoys. It was a time of insurgency and exploding factional violence in Baghdad.

"They told us, 'This may be your job, but guess what? You're going to be doing everything,'" he said. "We had many hats. You go to combat, your job is secondary. Combat is first."

DeLara did not want to discuss his combat experiences, but they are described in part by a judge in the Board of Veterans' Appeals ruling that approved his PTSD claim.

In the years after his deployment, DeLara told psychiatrists and others who treated him at various times that two of his friends were killed in an insurgent attack on his convoy, and that he was unable to stop one of them from bleeding to death from a ruptured artery.

He said that one his commanders was shot in the head in front of him by insurgents, and reported that he had killed an Iraqi youth who had tried to attack his convoy after it was stopped because of a roadside bomb, according to the judge's summary.

After his return in 2005, DeLara was diagnosed several times with PTSD or its symptoms, according to VA exam records cited by the appeals judge. He drank and used drugs even though he'd abstained from them in the Army. In 2006, he overdosed on prescription drugs.

DeLara said he lived for a time in a shelter for troubled vets. He and his wife eventually divorced, but he credits her for helping him fight for his claim when he might have given up.

They first applied for a PTSD benefit in 2006, DeLara said. A denial came the next year because his separation document, called a DD-214, did not list any dates of overseas deployment, he said.

"They couldn't find it. Well my ex-wife, she being as persistent as she is, we started pulling all the stuff" to send to the VA, he said. DeLara dug out the movement order sending his unit to Iraq and the brigade roster with his name on it. He added descriptions of his combat experiences. "Basically what it was, I needed to provide proof," he said.

But he was denied again, this time because the VA said his symptoms were of bipolar disorder, not PTSD. DeLara said he appealed but got a letter saying there was insufficient evidence that he'd experienced combat stress. The VA told him that it had "no records, none whatsoever" of his time in combat, DeLara said.

"We basically put the whole packet together from scratch again," DeLara said. This time, he tracked down his former company commander, who was incensed about the VA denials and provided a letter confirming an incident in which DeLara came under enemy fire. Still, two years went by before DeLara received word that his appeal was set for a hearing in January 2011.

Although the judge found in his favor, the ruling notes that, in June 2008, the center responsible for locating his records "made a formal finding of a lack of information to corroborate a stressor for service connection for PTSD." The center even looked a second time but still came up empty-handed.

DeLara said he still can't believe it. "I had dates and everything" in the supporting material he and his ex-wife sent to the VA, he said. "The simple fact is that nobody filled out after-action reports," DeLara said. "There was no record of it."

Asked how often a search for unit records comes up empty, officials at the VA said they didn't know ? the agency doesn't track that statistic. A VA spokesperson said missing field records are not a major factor delaying veterans' claims, however. And some veterans' advocates agree.

"As long as an officer or a buddy who witnessed the event is willing to sign a notarized statement, that's good," said John Waterbrook, who advises vets on disability issues in Walla Walla, Wash.

In 2009, as DeLara was refiling his case, veterans' groups complained to Congress that soldiers serving as clerks or mechanics unfairly faced a higher burden of proof for PTSD than those with an obvious combat role, even though they faced the same dangers in wars with no front lines.

The VA relaxed its rules the next year, so that a vet's account of combat stress is proof enough if a VA medical examiner agrees. But while the change helps, it hasn't sped up claims or made field records less valuable, said Richard Dumancas, the American Legion's deputy director of claims.

Field records can come into play for other injuries. Take the case of Chief Warrant Officer 3 Lorenzo Campbell, a 53-year-old soldier with the Washington Guard who filed a disability claim resulting from a 2004 injury in Iraq.

During a rocket attack, Campbell banged his knee on a concrete bumper after jumping out of a Humvee to find cover. He saw a doctor, but there was no record in his medical files. His knee gradually deteriorated, and he now wears a brace and is unable to run.

Campbell said he tried to get records of the rocket attack from the state Guard but was told they were classified and left on computers in Iraq. He said he offered a letter from another soldier testifying to the incident and swore out a statement himself, but it didn't suffice.

"I tried to keep fighting it," he said. "They kept writing me saying they need more information, they need more information."

Campbell said his disability claim took four years to be approved ? a delay that could have been shortened had the records been available. "If you have no records," he said, "you can be fighting for five or six years and still not prevail."

Tradition eroded, warnings brushed aside
Military recordkeeping has been the cornerstone of the nation's war history for centuries. From the founding of the republic through the Vietnam War, recordkeeping was a disciplined part of military life, one that ensured that detailed accounts of the fighting were available to historians and veterans alike.

The records can hold untold stories that can surface decades after a conflict.

The massacre of civilians by U.S. forces at No Gun Ri, South Korea, in July 1950 came to full national attention only in 1999, nearly 50 years after the fact. Journalists at The Associated Press, working in part with military field records, uncovered the extent of the tragedy. Later, other reporters used the records to show that one purported witness wasn't really present.

By the Gulf War, however, what had been a long tradition of keeping accurate, comprehensive field records had begun to erode. Old-style paper recordkeeping was giving way to computers. And Army clerks had been reduced in number, leaving officers to take care of records work.

According to the Army's "Commander's Guide to Operational Records and Data Collection," published in 2009, the problem became evident months after the end of Desert Storm, when vets began reporting fatigue, skin disease, weight loss and other unexplained health conditions.

"When the Army began investigating this rash of symptoms, its first thought was to try and establish a pattern of those affected: What units were they in? Where were they located? What operations were they engaged in?" the guide says. "The answers provided by investigators were: 'We don't know. We didn't keep our records.'"

Afterward, the Army created Raho's records agency and a central records system. As the war on terror began, however, inspections and penalties for recordkeeping at the command level had largely fallen by the wayside, according to Army documents and interviews with officers who helped search for Gulf War records.

Robert Wright, a retired Army historian, said training broke down. "They fight as they train, and they never were trained," he said.

On March 28, 2003, then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz ordered retention of all records in the Iraq war. Military records, he wrote, "are of enduring significance for U.S. and world history and have been indispensable for rendering complete, accurate and objective accountings of the government's activities to the American people."

But in the combat zones, there were other priorities.

Kelly Howard served as operations officer to Army Gen. George W. Casey Jr., who was in charge of the Iraq war from 2004 to 2007. Her primary job was archiving Casey's papers, a task that had been ignored until her arrival in 2006. Casey stored them in a foot locker, among other places.

"The reason so many things got lost ... is because so many people at higher levels weren't requiring it," Howard said, referring to systematic recordkeeping. "You do what your boss wants you to do. It's not that anyone said, 'No, I don't care about that.' It's just so many other things were important."

Alarms mounted at about the same time as DeLara finished his Baghdad tour.

In 2005, the Army's Historical Advisory Committee learned that Raho's agency had not "received any records from units deployed in Afghanistan & Iraq."

This came as a shock. Members of the group include a mix of civilian historians and officials from the Army War College and Center of Military History.

"So we go through the whole meeting," said Richard Davis, senior historian at the National Museum of the U.S. Army. "So I ask the records manager point blank. I said, 'How many records have been retired from overseas by U.S. Army units?' And the answer was zero.

"By late October the records management people here in Washington had received not a single document from Afghanistan or Iraq," Davis said. "At that point all the historians looked at each other and said 'Holy @!$%#! '"

Minutes from the committee's 2006 meeting quote Raho as saying, "Our problems are that the training for Army personnel is incomplete, the responses are uneven, and the records themselves are either incomplete or nonexistent."

Another member suggested writing a book. "As an institutional history, I think it's a great idea," responded historian Pennington, then the committee's chairwoman. "'Losing History': It's a topic that merits visibility and study."

The committee included regular warnings about a broken recordkeeping system in its annual reports to the secretary of the Army.

The 2006 report to Secretary Francis J. Harvey said Raho had described "major problems" in records collection, including "the lack of centralized control of data collection, the destruction of records without evaluation, and inadequate communications between Army units and records collection personnel."

Raho, the report said, "observed that 17 to 23 percent of all Iraq/Afghanistan War veterans will suffer from various forms of PTSD. ... Without strong and immediate action to remedy present shortcomings, the Army's ability to substantiate veteran disability claims will be degraded seriously, with potentially highly troublesome and expensive consequences."

In its 2008 report, the committee said: "Units are losing their own history. This will create a snowball effect, resulting in problems with awards and heritage activities in the future."

Pennington signed the report, adding a personal comment: "After six years of service on DAHAC, and now as its chair, I am frankly discouraged by the frequency with which DAHAC has expressed some of the same concerns, and how little progress has been made on some issues."

Then-Secretary Geren's office responded with a thank-you letter under his signature. But Geren said in an interview that he was not personally informed about missing records, despite his March 31, 2009, letter. "I'm confident it was not brought to my attention."

When McHugh, the current secretary, arrived in 2009, he received a committee report reiterating that the system was broken and pleading for resources to fix it. "This has been requested every year since 1997," the report said.

"It's probably the most serious problem historians have ever had," Pennington said in an interview. "I honestly don't know how we're going to be writing records-based history in 20 to 30 years." Typically, field records remain classified for two to three decades after a war, then are transferred to the National Archives.

Although committee members felt unheard, wheels had slowly begun moving in the Army. In 2007, Raho's agency and the Center of Military History launched the outreach project that discovered the historians were right: Scores of units did not have the records they should.

Because Raho did not have enough staff, the Center of Military History provided detachments for the search. For more than two years they collected field reports, turning up about 5.5 terabytes' worth.

Some additional records have dribbled in since: Dalessandro, the center's director, said one brigade of the 1st Armored Division handed over field records from its 2007 Iraq deployment. It's possible that more might be found from other units, but historians say the chances fade with each year.

Burn pits: the new Agent Orange?
The demand for the field records isn't likely to abate as members of Congress ratchet up pressure to investigate exposure to burn pits.

Veterans' groups say the long-term health impacts could be similar to those of herbicides in Vietnam. Rep. Michael Michaud of Maine, ranking Democrat on the House Veterans' Affairs Subcommittee on Health, said missing field records "could have consequences for veterans for years to come."

In September, the House passed the Open Burn Pit Registry Act to track veterans with symptoms and find out where they were exposed and for how long. A similar measure is pending in the Senate. The VA currently runs registries for Agent Orange and Gulf War Syndrome, and last year the Institute of Medicine said more research is needed.

Some veterans' advocates say field records could provide critical.

"It's going to be very hard to connect individuals without the field records," said Dan Sullivan, director of the Sgt. Thomas Sullivan Center, a nonprofit named after his brother, an Iraq vet who died from mysterious health complications.

"It would strike me that they are very important."

Are you a veteran who can't obtain your military field records? Tell us your story.?

Versions of this story will be published by?The Seattle Times?and?Stars and Stripes.

Peter Sleeth is a veteran investigative reporter who covered the Iraq war for The Oregonian and helped the paper win a Pulitzer Prize in 2007? for breaking news. Now freelancing, his most recent piece for the Oregon Historical Quarterly is a profile of progressive-era activist Tom Burns.

Hal Bernton has been a staff reporter for The Seattle Times since 2000. He has covered military and veterans affairs, reporting from Iraq in 2003 and from Afghanistan in 2009 and this fall. Among other things, Bernton has reported on veterans' health issues, post-traumatic stress and, recently, improvised explosive devices.

ProPublica's Marshall Allen, Liz Day and Kirsten Berg contributed to this story.

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Source: http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/11/15090122-lost-to-history-missing-war-records-block-benefits-for-iraq-afghanistan-vets

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