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NPI – ratas NPi speaks with Detroit Youth Builders Beanchmark: Dell Vostro vs Notion Adam vs Samsung Captivate [part 2] NPI Forms Partnership with Corceuticals® | Hot News Today Information and news about Delray Beach, Fla. (PRWEB) March 7, 2011 Nutritional Products International ( NPI ), a company that brings consumer products from around the world to the in Hot News Today. WORLD INFO: NPI Became Partnership With Corceuticals Nutritional Products International ( NPI ), a company that brings consumer products from around the world to the American marketplace, has announced its partnership with Corceuticals®, a developer of science based nutraceuticals for … Meet the hypocrites: United States foreign policy – NPI Advocate Follow NPI on Twitter. Catch NPI announcements and highlights on our Twitter feed. Twitter is also where we publish emergency status reports if the NPI network goes down. Become a fan of NPI on Facebook … NPI Forms Partnership with Corceuticals Hot News Today | www.5E8.net Nutritional Products International ( NPI ), a company that brings consumer products from around the world to the American marketplace, has announced its partnership with Corceuticals, a developer of science based nutraceuticals for people … What is the limit of cos ( nPi /4) as n approaches to infinity … It doesn’t exist, because at an infinite number of values for n (namely, all. Kimberelyzqv says: http://bit.ly/hYt4hd Join NPi for Social Changeup on April 26th at Pour House in Boston, MA npi

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My, they really are hypocrites of the highest degree , aren’t they? After all the water they carried for the insurance industry for Medicare Part B, and during the health care debate, they’re going to try to pin AARP with making money on insurance ? What happened to their much-loved free market? Guess it only works when the businesses support the Republicans! I’m not always a fan of AARP (they do provide affordable insurance to people who otherwise couldn’t get it). They did a lot of work to push the Affordable Care Act, and they stand up for consumers on a wide variety of issues. Bottom line? Even if I didn’t like them at all, the fact that the Republicans have targeted them would make me want to defend them. After all, sometimes the enemy of my enemy is my friend! Newly empowered House Republicans are getting ready to renew their attacks against AARP over its support for the healthcare reform law, The Hill has learned. The Ways and Means health and oversight subcommittees are hauling in the seniors lobby’s executives before the panel for an April 1 hearing on how the group stands to benefit from the law, among other topics. Republicans say AARP supported the law’s $200 billion in cuts to the Medicare Advantage program because it stands to gain financially as seniors replace their MA plans with Medicare supplemental insurance — or Medigap — policies endorsed by the association. The hearing will cover not only Medigap but “AARP’s organizational structure, management, and financial growth over the last decade.” An embarrassing hearing would not only hit AARP back for its support of the law, but fits in with the GOP’s mantra that the law was written behind closed doors to favor Democratic allies. And policy-wise, it could empower Republicans to tackle Medigap policies, which many conservatives want to reform because they believe they contribute to over-utilization of the medical system by reducing out-of-pocket contributions. Imagine the nerve of old people actually going to the doctor’s, taking care of their health and extending their lifespan. Shame on them! Two Ways and Means Republicans — Reps. Wally Herger (Calif.), the No. 2 Republican on the panel, and Dave Reichert (Wash.) — led the charge against the seniors group during the healthcare reform debate, along with then-Rep. Ginny Brown-Waite (Fla.). “AARP unfortunately has become a mouthpiece for this president at the expense of what is best for America’s seniors,” Brown-Waite wrote in a letter to the association at the time. The AARP’s support for healthcare reform “just doesn’t make sense” until “you dig a little deeper and see that [a lot] of their revenues come from these royalties,” Reichert told The Hill during the healthcare reform debate. “And if Medicare Advantage does go away, they may gain millions of dollars in additional royalties.” Just breathtaking, the hypocrisy.

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We need more diverse supreme court

All eight appointments to the bench since that of Lady Hale in 2004 have been white men Just two weeks after it was reported that women in the legal professions are still finding it difficult to break through the glass ceiling , here comes another setback. Though an official announcement has yet to be made, it seems that the next two appointments to the supreme court will be men. Sir Nicholas Wilson and Jonathan Sumption QC were said to be in the running when Sir John Dyson was appointed in March 2010. This time they’ve made it to the finish line. Of course there is much to be said about Sumption’s “leapfrogging” from the bar straight into the top level of the judiciary. But what about the most obvious characteristic they both share with all but one of their new colleagues? What of the fact that, Baroness Hale excepted, the supreme court is populated by white men? When it comes to the diversity of its members, the supreme court continues to lag far behind its overseas counterparts . Since Lady Hale’s elevation to the then House of Lords in 2004, all of the subsequent eight appointments to the supreme court have been men. In contrast, four of the nine members of the Canadian supreme court, three of the nine justices on the US supreme court, three of the seven judges of the high court of Australia and 19 out of the 47 judges on the European court of human rights are women. Furthermore, none of the members of the UK supreme court (or the court of appeal for that matter) has a black or minority ethnic background. Nor is there the diversity in sexual orientation found on the South African constitutional court and, until recently, Australia’s high court. This lack of diversity should give us pause for thought. Indeed, if the recent exchange between Lady Kennedy (incidentally the only woman on the government’s bill of rights commission ) and Lord McNally in the House of Lords is anything to go by, questions are already being asked. After all, assuming that judicial qualities are, on the whole, evenly distributed between men and women, appointment on merit should lead to (more or less) equal numbers of male and female judges, precisely because women are just as likely as men to possess the attributes of good judges. However, the reality is that this will happen only if the pool from which appointments are made is itself gender-balanced. We don’t know how many women applied in the latest round of appointments (though none made it on to the all-male shortlist ). But what we do know is that as long as we continue to select only from legal professions in which women continue to find it difficult to progress , appointment “on merit” will do little more than replicate this imbalance. If this is the case, then appointment on merit and progress to a more diverse judiciary truly are opposed. Something has to give. So what are the options? The answer need not be simply to parachute women into the shortlist through the use of quotas or targets. Nor should we abandon the search for “the best”, the goal of appointment on merit. The way forward lies in recognising that, all other things being equal, a more diverse judiciary is a better judiciary. Appointment on merit requires us to look for merit wherever and however it is to be found. This requires, first, that we acknowledge – with Hale – that a judiciary is enriched by the diversity of its members, by incorporating a broader pool of experiences, insights and attributes. For it is on this experience, insight and expertise that all judges will, on occasion, need to rely when applying and developing the law. Second, it means we must be alive to the risk that our quest for the best appointments may be thrown off track by misplaced assumptions as to how and where these are to be found. Should the rumours prove true, what the latest round of appointments shows is that there is a danger that we end up associating judicial quality with the attributes possessed by those who have traditionally held such positions, the result being that we see merit only in its familiar guises. Direct appointments to the supreme court bench may yet prove to be an effective way of addressing some of these problems. However, if the government is truly committed to a more diverse judiciary, then it needs to do more to ensure that the highly qualified women, who are out there and are eligible for judicial appointment, are promoted to the supreme court bench. After all, when it is suggested that the appointment of yet another white, male barrister – albeit one who has not previously held a judicial appointment – might be welcomed for the “diversity” it brings, then something is amiss. • Erika Rackey is on the executive committee of the Equal Justices Initiative , a group of academics, practitioners, judges and policymakers working towards gender parity on the bench UK supreme court Judiciary Gender Race issues Erika Rackley guardian.co.uk

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England’s worst-off town revealed

• North-east Essex seaside resort tops deprivation table • Jaywick Sands belies north-south divide Neil Stock swings his Jaguar into the car park by the sandy south-facing beach and, with the sun beating down on what at first glance could be a bohemian seaside community, says: “It’s embarrassing isn’t it? We’re only 60 miles from London, in the affluent south-east and here we are in the most deprived place in the country.” Jaywick, a ward of Tendring district council in north-east Essex, has earned the unhappy distinction of being placed first in the dauntingly named Indices of Multiple Deprivation 2010. Using statistics for income, employment, health, disability, crime and living standards, the government report ranks 32,482 neighbourhoods by local authority area according to where they stand in a national poverty league table. At the opposite end of the scale, the Hertfordshire suburb of Chorleywood, where houses cost 30 times as much as property in Jaywick, is named least deprived. With its magnificent miles of golden sand it’s hard to imagine how Jaywick stumbled first on hard times and then disappeared into the abyss. Its chalets along the shoreline look satisfyingly weather-beaten, painted in bleached pastel shades. But take a few steps inland and gaps appear like missing teeth in a smiling face. In the Brookslands estate, the Mermaid Tavern has been torched and left as a blackened shell, as have numerous houses. Nearby, not a single shop remains open for business – even the whelks and jellied eels store on the promenade which used to cater for the summer day-trippers has gone. The locals are happy enough to talk but don’t want to give their names, “in case we get our windows put in”. Stock, the Conservative leader of the council, which is run from the town hall in neighbouring Clacton-on-Sea, looks somewhat out of place. “It is depressing being number one, because we do take this issue very seriously. It’s a problem beyond the scope of a district council. We need national and European intervention.” So how did Jaywick – or more specifically the Brooklands estate – get here, having overtaken Breckfield in Anfield, Liverpool? Despite its problems, Jaywick still possesses character. It’s the largest surviving example of the “plotlands” movement of the 1920s and 1930s, when land was sold off in little strips, usually to city dwellers longing for a piece of paradise. Jaywick Sands was built in 1928 as a resort by Fabian property developer Frank Stedman. He marketed them as “chalets” but people lived in their two-bedroom bungalows all year round. One local recalled his father had bought the house off-plan at an exhibition in London. After the second world war most plotlands were bulldozed but the Jaywick residents hung on, even going to court in 1970 and succeeded in preserving it. There is a proud tradition of self-reliance. But the area is relatively isolated and the properties have deteriorated. A total of 62% of working age residents receive benefits, compared with the national average of 15%. It is in a high-risk flood zone. Many of the roads are not maintained by the council and are narrow dirt tracks. Mains sewerage did not arrive until the 1980s and in some areas street lighting and pavements have never been installed. “Eight years ago Jaywick had the highest rate of outright property ownership in the area but that has gone into reverse,” said Stock. Four fifths of the housing stock is rented, with ownership concentrated in the hands of “one or two landlords” who rent out to housing benefit claimants. “The going rate is £450 a month for a two-bedroom house, which these qualify as. Because of their state of deterioration there’s no deposit required, so we are attracting people from miles away to live here,” he said. Those incomers aren’t necessarily what an old community like Jaywick needs. Anne Dewart moved here in the 1970s, paying £15,000 for her house. She wanted to escape London and found a job in a local factory making waxed-cotton jackets. “But when that closed down you had to go to Colchester to find work, which a lot of people didn’t want to do or couldn’t,” she said. “It’s like most places in that you get your good and you get your bad. But in every one of these streets there will be one person who thinks they own the road. “And for that reason a lot of the houses were going up in flames. The attitude was ‘If the police won’t do anything about it, we will’. But it does seem to have calmed down. The kids are destructive but to be honest there’s nothing for them to do and they get bored.” Anne strokes her Alsation pet dog ‘Fella’. “That’s why I’ve got him. Mind you, he was stolen from me as a puppy. The police knew which drug-dealer took him but they wouldn’t do anything. I only got him back because someone went round and said ‘Give him back or your legs’ll get broken’ and miraculously the next morning Fella reappeared. “I had a stone bench stolen from outside the house and nobody saw a thing, funny that.” Stock says it’s a housing problem. “The Guinness Trust came in and built some lovely new houses on the edge of the estate. “But as soon as they’d decanted families into the new homes the old ones filled up. I’m afraid the old ones have to be pulled down as they become vacant.” Communities Essex Local government United Kingdom Europe Poverty Social exclusion Social trends Unemployment Disability Health David Sharrock guardian.co.uk

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Larry O’Donnell, Contessa Brewer Spin Libya Scrutiny Away From Obama

In discussing the present “kinetic military action” in Libya, MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell and Contessa Brewer both tried to shift scrutiny away from President Obama and toward Republicans Monday afternoon, hours before the President's address to the nation on Libya. O'Donnell tried to pinpoint the hypocrisy of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) for criticizing Obama's failure to obtain authorization from Congress for military action in Libya. The liberal MSNBC host referred back to a nonbinding Senate resolution passed unanimously on March 1, calling for the U.N. Security Council to implement a no-fly zone over Libya. Since the resolution passed unanimously, O'Donnell believed McConnell to be a hypocrite for voting for a no-fly zone and then calling out President Obama for failing to seek authorization from Congress. The nonbinding resolution, though, was effectively an opinion from the Senate on the matter. The U.S. Congress never authorized President Obama to declare war or preside over military action in Libya.

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WaPo Profiles Obama’s Use of Selectively-granted Local News Interviews In Swing State News Markets

While President Obama has been withdrawn from press scrutiny over his handling of Libya, he's managed to sit down to no less than six local TV interviews this month, with a view to a friendly format focused on issues of concern to his liberal base in swing states. Washington Post's Peter Wallsten has the story on today's print edition front page (emphases mine): Obama has made such encounters with local news stations a staple of his communications strategy. Since December, White House aides have handpicked 13 stations, all in key cities in presidential battleground states, to reward with the biggest “get” in the TV news business: a one-on-one White House interview with the president. An additional interview was granted to Hearst Television’s Washington bureau, which serves more than two dozen local stations across the country.

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WaPo Profiles Obama’s Use of Selectively-granted Local News Interviews In Swing State News Markets

While President Obama has been withdrawn from press scrutiny over his handling of Libya, he's managed to sit down to no less than six local TV interviews this month, with a view to a friendly format focused on issues of concern to his liberal base in swing states. Washington Post's Peter Wallsten has the story on today's print edition front page (emphases mine): Obama has made such encounters with local news stations a staple of his communications strategy. Since December, White House aides have handpicked 13 stations, all in key cities in presidential battleground states, to reward with the biggest “get” in the TV news business: a one-on-one White House interview with the president. An additional interview was granted to Hearst Television’s Washington bureau, which serves more than two dozen local stations across the country.

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This is only the warm-up of things to come. From mcjoan of Dkos: The House will vote on the Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization and the provision in it which would essentially codify vote fraud in organizing elections. A recap: last year the the National Mediation Board that oversees those elections ruled that the railroad and airline industries would have to end their practice of counting non-votes in these elections as no votes. Previously, any eligible worker who chose not to vote was automatically counted as a no. Which would be fraud in any other election in the United State. The industries, and most House Republicans, want the rule back. Fast forward. The anti-union push is building, in part fueled by one particular airline’s zeal to kill fairness in the workplace . I’m at the point that I will never fly Delta again. I think you should consider it too. Air travel is no day in the park and many people want to book a flight and be done with it, but there comes a time when even if it causes us more inconvenience, we have to do the right thing. TPM: In the next several days, the state-level fight between Democrats and Republicans over unions will go federal. House Republicans want to re-establish old rules which say that when aviation or rail workers don’t vote in unionization elections, they’re treated as having voted against unionization. And now on of the nation’s largest airlines is getting involved in the fight. The push is reflected in language in the House’s FAA re-authorization bill. In an earlier stage of the legislative fight, Democrats, joined by a few Republicans, nearly succeeded in getting the provision stripped. Now, sources say, a similar fight is likely to play out on the House floor, and anti-union employees at Delta Airlines are preparing to fly to Washington to join the fight. In a message to its members obtained by TPM, the group “No Way AFA” — a coalition of Delta employees who want to deliberalize union rights — frames the fight this way. (AFA is the Association of Flight Attendants, the flight attendants union.) “Title IX of the House FAA Reauthorization bill repeals the National Mediation Board’s 2010 elections rule change, which permits a minority of employees at airlines and railroads to determine whether or not the majority will be represented by unions,” the message reads. “[I]t is anticipated that an amendment will be offered on the House floor to strike these provisions from the bill and allow the NMB’s modified rule to stay in place.” According to the note, “Delta strongly supports the bill” as currently written. Members are encouraged to participate in a fly-in to Washington, D.C., to lobby their congressmen, for which “positive space travel” — free travel for airline employees — is permitted. A Delta spokesperson said No Way AFA operates separately from the company itself, but that the company “allow[s] employees to travel positive space to D.C. when supporting legislative efforts that the company supports.” By contrast, Delta policy requires employees to fly standby for leisure and personal travel, suggesting that the “positive space” standard for the fly-in could squeeze out seating space for regular travelers. How many times have you been booked on a flight only to hear these dreaded words while waiting to board the plane? “This flight is over-booked.” In this case your seats are probably going to anti-union Delta workers . If we apply the standard that these union busters want to use, namely that if you, as a worker fail to vote, it now counts as a “no” then Rep’s like Rep. Mica would not have been elected. Brian Beutler explains: Under the current system, a simple majority of those voting wins, just like in, say, the House of Representatives. If Republicans get their way, those rules will change, and workers who don’t vote will be tallied as having voted “no.” To illustrate the unfairness of that structure, the Communication Workers of America will circulate a new report on the Hill Monday, making the point that none of the recently-elected members of Congress would have won if their constituents who didn’t vote at all had been counted as votes against them. “[L]et’s take a look at what would happen to Rep. John Mica (R-FL), the Chair of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and the lead driver behind the insertion of the NMB elections provision into the larger FAA Reauthorization bill,” their report reads. Rep. Mica received support from 69% of the voters in his district who cast a ballot in his successful 2010 re-election campaign, amounting to slightly over 185,000 actual votes tallied for him. However, if you add the over 83,000 voters who voted against Rep. Mica to 312,000 eligible voters who did not participate, then Rep. Mica would only muster 32% of the overall total – falling far short of the majority needed for election. Rep. Mica would lose handily to the 68% of “voters” who chose his opponent or were non-participating voters whose absence was counted as a vote for the alternative. This is a cute way to look at the debate, but it’s also the way several Republicans see things . We are in a long battle that’s not going to end until Tea Party and extreme right-wing legislators are voted out of office. Wisconsin was only the beginning. I know propaganda plays a huge part in the uninformed stances taken by many American voters who are too busy to pay attention like we do, but with every vote they only secure the destruction of their own future.

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Cobra

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Cobra

03 cobra srt-4 bakersfield street race Stranded in the Jungle (Part 4) Stranded in the Jungle (Part 3) Bronx Zoo Closes Reptile House After Cobra Disappears NEW YORK — A poisonous cobra has vanished from an enclosure outside public view at the Bronx Zoo, and its Reptile House remained closed Sunday as a precaution while zoo workers searched for the missing reptile. Cobra Escapes Bronx Zoo – The Daily Beast Maybe he was angry that he wasn’t getting enough attention? A rebellious, adolescent cobra from Egypt escaped from its off-exhibit cage in New York’s Bronx Zoo on Saturday, forcing zoo employees to close off the Reptile House and comb … Cobra's iRadar App Keeps the Cops off Your Tail – World Travel … Photo: Jon Snyder/ cobra . iRadar is labelled during $170, as good as is right away accessible by name wiring retailers. That’ll give we the little allege notice of the speed trap good prior to the radio detector gun essentially paints … In Flex We Trust » Deadly Cobra Missing from Bronx Zoo The Egyptian cobra is most commonly found in North Africa. Its venom is so deadly that it can kill a full-grown elephant in three hours — or a person in about 15 minutes, according to wildlife experts. The venom destroys nerve tissue … Deadly Egyptian cobra missing from zoo | www.bullfax.com “Not for the snake but for us.”The young, 30-centimetre (12-inch) monocle cobra , which as adults can grow to 1.5 metres, slithered out of sight three weeks ago, prompting an evacuation and the fire brigade ripping up floorboards. … jessperelle says: I find the missing Bronx Zoo cobra hilarious. I'm picturing all kinds of great scenarios where it tries to hitchhike back to Egypt.

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Ceni

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Ceni

Detalhe não divulgado sobre o centésimo gol de Rogério Ceni Ituano 2 x 3 Santos – Gols & Melhores Momentos – Paulistão 2011 – 27/03/2011 Gol histórico Rogério Ceni nº100 Sao Paulo goalkeeper Rogerio Ceni delighted with 100th career goal … Sao Paulo shot stopper Rogerio Ceni has expressed his delight with scoring his 100th career goal in the 2-1 win over Corinthians on Sunday. The 38-year-old goalkeeper found the net with a well-taken free kick to help Sao Paulo to the … Goalkeeper Ceni scores 100th career goal (AP) | Sports News … Goalkeeper Rogerio Ceni converted a free kick to score his 100th goal on Sunday, helping Sao Paulo defeat Corinthians 2-1 in the Sao Paulo state championship. Striker-Keepers, Losers' Weepers « Futebol Thoughts! Rogerio Ceni : leadership, character, experience, saves…and goals! To be a goalkeeper… To be a keeper is to be a hero and a villain. It is to wish to be able to avoid the inevitable, always thinking, deep inside, that the most … Goalkeeper Ceni scores 100th career goal (AP) | soccerfact.com “It was beautiful,” said Ceni , who was the third goalkeeper in Brazil’s squad when it won the 2002 World Cup. “As a goalkeeper you don’t enter the match thinking about scoring a goal, but it happened just as I wanted: with a free kick, … All Sport in One Sites: Goalkeeper Ceni scores 100th career goal (AP) SAO PAULO (AP)—Goalkeeper Rogerio Ceni regenerate a liberated squawk to reason his 100th content on Sunday, serving Sao Paulo defeat Corinthians 2-1 in the Sao Paulo state championship. Ceni struck a amend right-footed effort over the … emersonmarques says: Goalkeeper Ceni scores 100th career goal – http://bit.ly/ejke1N /via @SI_24Seven

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