Sunday, July 7, 2013

Blogger Op!! iPad with Retina display 32GB Giveaway.

Come and join us on this great giveaway.

We are giving away an?iPad with Retina display 32GB color Black

?value $599.00

We will have a max. of 200 bloggers for sign up, it will be a big giveaway.

The RC is not long because each co-host has there own RC with their links.

Here are the details to sign up:

-Free Link (Twitter or Pinterest)??

The first 50 bloggers to sign up will get a link free with announcement.?

Announcement?is require or you have to pay a?waver?fee of $5.00

(Please read the sign up form on the top to know if we still have free space available)

-Link/ or extra links $4.00 each (if the free?spots are gone, to be part of this giveaway you will need to pay $4.00 for each link you want on the giveaway)

Announcement?is require or you have to pay a?waver?fee of $5.00.

-Co-Host $20.00

The co-host get 2 host page. ?

10 links on the RC.

No announcement require.

Please send payment to melisurveys1978@gmail.com as a gift.

Source: http://theministerswifestampsandsaves.blogspot.com/2013/07/blogger-op-ipad-with-retina-display.html

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The UCC to divest fossil fuels stocks. Should the Episcopal Church?

The United Church of Christ has decided to divest itself of fossil fuels stocks or else retain those that meet certain standards.

The New York Times reports:

The United Church of Christ has become the first American religious body to vote to divest its pension funds and investments from fossil fuel companies because of climate change concerns. The Protestant denomination, which traces its origins to the Pilgrims in 1620 and has about 1.1 million members, voted on Monday to divest in stages over the next five years. But it left open the possibility of keeping some investments if the fossil fuel companies meet certain standards. The Rev. Jim Antal, who is president of the Massachusetts Conference of the United Church of Christ and who helped lead the divestment campaign, said it was motivated by the 350.org climate change campaign, which is also urging colleges and universities to divest from fossil fuel companies.

Nurya Love Parish asks on the blog churchwork if the time has come for the Episcopal Church to follow suit.

I thought that was an excellent question, and I didn?t know the answer, so I started poking around the internet. I discovered just enough to make me think that a roundup of resources was in order.

Here?s what I found:

GreenFaith has a new program called Divest and Reinvest, and just recorded an hour-long webinar on June 20 introducing it. Their Executive Director, the Rev. Fletcher Harper, is on Twitter.
The Episcopal Diocese of Western Massachusetts is definitely considering divestment; its trustees have published a statement about their reasons and process. According to this article, the Diocese of Massachusetts is also being pushed to consider divesting. The Rev. Bob Massie, an Episcopal priest, is a leader in the fossil fuel divestment movement and brings the lessons he learned as a leader of the South Africa divestment movement. I can?t tell from Google whether the Episcopal Church has called on him, but Google has its limits. The University of the South (Sewanee), an Episcopal college, has a divestment movement on campus. The Episcopal Church already has the Episcopal Climate Justice Network which would logically be part of a conversation about divestment. That conversation would also likely need to include the Episcopal Ecological Network and other Eco-Justice ministries.
The Episcopal Church?s General Convention Resolution B023 passed in 2012. It states that

The 77th General Convention calls on congregations, institutions, dioceses, and the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of The Episcopal Church, to work for the just transformation of the world?s energy beyond and away from fossil fuels (including all forms of oil, coal, and natural gas) and toward safe, sustainable, renewable, community controlled energy?

What do you think? Is this a sensible strategy to address climate change?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/episcopalcafe/~3/vajhzdWhk9M/the_ucc_to_divest_fossil_fuels.html

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Moroccan Cheaters' Got Talent | Morocco World News

By Youssef Sourgo

Morocco World News

Casablanca, February 26, 2013

Subsequent to the bitter reality that has recently been unveiled by the Moroccan Ministry of National Education, in which the latter disclosed the number of Moroccan baccalaureate students who were spotted cheating during the national exam taken in 2012, Moroccans are now questioning the effectuality of the Moroccan educational system more than ever before.

According to the list that has recently been made public by the Ministry of National Education, 3112 is the number of students found cheating during the national exam of last year. The list also exposes the methods whereby each student attempted to cheat, and even featured the disciplinary board?s decisions towards each student found cheating.

The ministry has made its motif behind the exposure of such deplorable truth crystal-clear, which is to bring what is going on in the soberest corners of Moroccan schools to the forefront of the public opinion, including parents, educators, researchers in the arena of education and pedagogy, politicians, and Moroccan at large.

Furthermore, the list unveiled by the ministry featured a colon entitled ?cheating methods,? thus rationalizing the sort of decision taken towards the student in concern. Having a glance at the myriad of methods that the students recurred to in their attempts to cheat, I feel more like reading the list of contestants participating in a talent show, wherein each of them strives to do it ?the most creative way possible.?

Some of the cheating students found it more practical to stick to traditional methods of cheating, or traditional ?talents,? as might be perceived from their angle. Those in this category resorted to mainstream methods ranging from asking the help of the student sitting the closest to them, to taking out a couple ?7jabat? (minimized versions of texts or summaries of lessons) prepared prior to the day of the exam?perhaps weeks earlier, to exchanging exam papers with other students in the room.

Those who wanted to ?step their game up? resorted to new technologies and other unusual methods of cheating, for they thought teachers might not anticipate having students recur to such methods to cheat during the national exam. Though becoming stepwise a tool that will soon join the list of traditional methods of cheating, the phone figures as one of the methods to which Moroccan cheating students resort the most. Be it via Bluetooth earplugs, or ordinary earplugs (with wires), those students did not mind adding their flavor of creativity to those technologies. The most peculiar, yet creative, of them is putting a skin-color make-up (by both boys and girls) on the top of the earplug wires that find their way along their necks all the way to their ears.

Multitudinous are other alternatives that students recur to in their cheating process that the list unveiled by the ministry did not feature, a thing that can be interpreted as a ?success story? for those students who ?could get away with it?. Now ?where do you think you?re going, dear cheater?? is the question I?d ask anyone of them if I happen to come across him/her. All right, hats off! You managed to successfully pass the baccalaureate exam ?like-a-boss?, but what now! Are you going to cheat in university, if you ever get the chance to enroll in it? Are you going to cheat to make your boss happy with your work, if you ever consider working after you obtain your unmerited certificate? Where do you think you?re going?

Those who resort to cheating under the pretext that the test they are exposed to signals a turning point in their lives, and thus legitimizes their use of unethical methods to pass it, might be partially right in this regard. However, what seems the hardest test today, will look like ?a piece of cake? when one comes across a more challenging one in the future. You all have tremendous talents, dear cheaters, talents that you sadly deploy there where you render them anything but something you can be proud of! What would you tell your kids years later to encourage them to work harder for their exams?something like, ?Work hard dear son/daughter! Do like me when I was your age!? How would you feel when cheating clings to you longer than you ever think?

Dear talented cheaters, if you want a standing ovation at the end of a performance, make sure you sweat enough and put your heart in it. If it had worked on a stage (baccalaureate) once, it doesn?t forcibly mean that it is going to work all across the board. One day, this is in case you maintain cheating your main performance, you will either realize that the theatre is empty at the end of your show, or wind up being the target of trash thrown at you by an audience that has for so long believed in the genuineness of your talent. Think about it!

The views expressed in this article are the author?s own and do not necessarily reflect Morocco World News? editorial policy

? Morocco World News. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, rewritten or redistributed

Source: http://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2013/02/80112/moroccan-cheaters-got-talent/

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Monday, February 25, 2013

ESM Goh visiting Seoul on Sunday for the inauguration Korean President Park Geun-hye

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Fewer boarded-up homes: Vacancy rate for US housing falls to pre-bust levels

In the final quarter of 2012, the vacancy rate was 1.9 percent of homeowner housing, and 8.7 percent of the rental housing market, according to a new census report.

By Mark Trumbull,?Staff writer / February 20, 2013

In this Jan. photo, a construction worker works at a new home under construction in Chicago.

Nam Y. Huh/AP

Enlarge

Across America fewer homes are boarded up. And fewer people are ?doubled up,? sharing a tight apartment with friends or parents.

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According to the Census Bureau, vacancy rates for residential housing in the United States have fallen to levels last seen before the peak of the housing boom in 2006 and the subsequent recession.

In the final quarter of 2012, the vacancy rate was 1.9 percent of homeowner housing, and 8.7 percent of the rental housing market. That?s down from rates as high as 2.9 percent (2008) in the owner market and 11.1 percent (mid-2009) for rentals.

The census numbers, released in an annual vacancy report Wednesday, add to other indications of rising strength in the US housing market ? from rising home prices to home-builder enthusiasm and investor activity.

?As long as the economy is adding jobs and growing, housing is going to continue improving,? says Patrick Newport, an economist who follows real estate at the forecasting firm IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Mass.

Two main drivers of progress for the housing market over the past year have been the persistence of low interest rates and the tightening supply of homes available for purchase.

?And since we're not building at normal rates ... the supply keeps getting tighter,? he says.

Of course, rising home prices are a mixed blessing. Owners feel rising wealth, and lenders feel greater confidence about making home loans. But it means the cost of housing, for potential buyers and renters, is going up.

Over time, the market?s tightening should prompt builders to rev up construction of both rental and owner-occupied units. Already, residential construction is adding to the gross domestic product, although it hasn?t been the driving force that it usually is in an economic recovery.

For more than five years, housing was a locus of economic challenges such as foreclosure and construction layoffs. As the unemployment rate rose, the vacancy rate soared. Homes were being lost to foreclosure, and people were doubling up with others rather than buying or renting.

Those trends aren?t over, but the census numbers suggest they are receding.

The quarterly census numbers on vacancy have some flaws, compared with the more thorough survey that the census does every 10 years, Mr. Newport notes.

Also, the fact that today?s 1.9 percent homeowner vacancy rate is lower than the 2 percent posted at the end of 2005 probably needs an asterisk. Many homes count as occupied today even though the households are financially troubled. Compared with 2005, many more borrowers are delinquent, with foreclosure looming, or are ?underwater? (with a loan balance larger than the value of their homes).

Still, the progress is real, and according to the new numbers, it spans much of the nation.

States that were hard hit by housing busts have seen significant declines in vacancy rates over the past year. These include Florida, Georgia, Arizona, Michigan, and Ohio, which have all experienced declines of half a percentage point or more.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Kl_RbJs56LM/Fewer-boarded-up-homes-Vacancy-rate-for-US-housing-falls-to-pre-bust-levels

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Pentagon notifies Congress of likely furloughs

Outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, right, talks with Marine Lt. Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, left, and assistant Defense Department press secretary Carl Woog, second from left, before boarding a E-4B aircraft at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013, before traveling to Brussels for a NATO defense ministers meeting. (AP Photo/Chip Somodevilla, Pool)

Outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, right, talks with Marine Lt. Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, left, and assistant Defense Department press secretary Carl Woog, second from left, before boarding a E-4B aircraft at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013, before traveling to Brussels for a NATO defense ministers meeting. (AP Photo/Chip Somodevilla, Pool)

Secretary of State John Kerry gestures as he delivers his first foreign policy speech, Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013, in Old Cabel Hall at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

Secretary of State John Kerry gestures as he delivers his first foreign policy speech, Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013, in Old Cabel Hall at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Va. Kerry said the greatest challenge to U.S. foreign policy is not emerging China or Middle East instability. It's Congress. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

Secretary of State John Kerry gestures as he delivers his first foreign policy speech, Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013, in Old Cabel Hall at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

(AP) ? Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told Congress on Wednesday that if automatic government spending cuts kick in on March 1 he may have to shorten the workweek for the "vast majority" of the Defense Department's 800,000 civilian workers.

They would lose one day of work per week, or 20 percent of their pay, for up to 22 weeks, probably starting in late April.

To dispel the notion that this is mainly a problem for the nation's capital, the Pentagon's budget chief, Robert Hale, told reporters that the economic impact would be felt nationwide. The biggest potential losses, in term of total civilian payroll dollars, would be in Virginia, California, Maryland, Texas and Georgia, according to figures provided by the Pentagon.

Hale said the unpaid leaves for civilian workers would begin in late April and would save $4 billion to $5 billion if extended through the end of the budget year, Sept. 30. That is only a fraction of the $46 billion the Pentagon would have to cut this budget year unless a deficit-reduction deal is reached.

Panetta also said the across-the-board spending reductions would "put us on a path toward a hollow force," meaning a military incapable of fulfilling all of its missions.

In a written message to employees, Panetta said that he notified members of Congress Wednesday that if the White House and Congress cannot strike a deficit reduction deal before March 1 to avoid the furloughs, all affected workers will get at least 30 days' advance notice.

"In the event of sequestration we will do everything we can to be able to continue to perform our core mission of providing for the security of the United States, but there is no mistaking that the rigid nature of the cuts forced upon this department, and their scale, will result in a serious erosion of readiness across the force," Panetta wrote.

Adding his voice to the budget debate, Secretary of State John Kerry said the fiscal impasse is a serious threat to American credibility around the world.

"Think about it: It is hard to tell the leadership of any number of countries that they have to resolve their economic issues if we don't resolve our own," Kerry said Wednesday at the University of Virginia.

House Speaker John Boehner put the blame on Obama and said he agrees with Panetta that automatic spending cuts would devastate the military.

Boehner released a copy of Panetta's letter formally notifying Congress that the Pentagon will have to consider furloughing a large portion of its civilian workforce if sequestration kicks in.

"The furloughs contemplated by this notice will do real harm to our national security," Panetta wrote in his congressional notification letter, adding that it would make troops less ready for combat and slow the acquisition of important weapons.

"Overall, sequestration will put us on a path toward a hollow force and inflict serious damage on our national security," Panetta wrote.

Panetta was flying Wednesday to Brussels to attend a NATO defense ministers meeting. Spokesman George Little told reporters en route that Panetta would tell his counterparts that across-the-board budget cuts will hurt not only the U.S. military but also the ability of NATO to respond to crises.

Little said the Pentagon is also discussing the possibility of not being able to send military units on planned rotations to various places around the world. In anticipation of cuts, the Pentagon has already decided not to send one aircraft carrier back to the Persian Gulf, reducing the U.S. presence there to one carrier.

The Pentagon has begun discussing details of the furloughs with defense worker union officials.

President Barack Obama has exempted military personnel from furloughs.

Obama was continuing to pressure Republican lawmakers to avert the automatic cuts by supporting a Senate Democratic plan that would replace the immediate cuts with a mix of spending reductions and tax increases. He was conducting interviews with local television in eight markets: Boston, Charleston, S.C., Baltimore, Oklahoma City, Okla., Wichita, Kan., San Antonio, Texas, San Francisco, and Honolulu.

"I don't know why it is in this town folks leave stuff to the last minute. You know, there's no other profession, no other industry, where people wait until the 11th hour to solve these big problems," Obama told WJZ, the CBS affiliate in Baltimore.

The only civilian Pentagon workers who would be exempt from furloughs would be Senate-confirmed political appointees such as the defense secretary and deputy defense secretary, as well as a relatively small number of workers deemed essential to protect the safety of defense property and personnel.

Panetta said the administration is still working with Congress to avoid automatic budget cuts by reaching agreement on a deficit reduction plan.

___

Associated Press writers Donna Cassata, Lolita C. Baldor and Bradley Klapper contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-20-Budget%20Battle/id-e5f71510e7b4498aa229045e00b3ec1c

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Trash Talkin? Tuesday

Trash Talkin’ Tuesday

Emma Stone picsEmma Stone Going For the Batman Look??[The Frisky] Vendors Serving Up Vegetarian at Morrissey Concert?[HollyWire] Hugh Grant a Dad Again?[Right Celebrity] Britney Spears Dating a New Man?[The Celebrity Cafe] Hayden Panettiere Poses for Nylon?[The Blemish] Kate Middleton Slammed By Author?[The Huffington Post] Clive Davis Comes Out in New Book?[Pop Crunch] Gwyneth Paltrow is Bored with ...

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/02/trash-talkin-tuesday-83/

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