Saturday, October 13, 2012

Romney hits Obama on China policies

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney on Saturday accused President Barack Obama of failing to "stand up to China" after the U.S. Treasury put off releasing a politically sensitive report on the currency policies of major U.S. trading partners.

"Four years after promising to take China ?to the mat' for its manipulative currency practices, President Obama has once again failed to live up to his word," Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul said in a statement released by the campaign office.

"We can't afford another four years of President Obama's failure to stand up to China. Mitt Romney will do it on day one of his presidency," she said.

The U.S. Treasury on Friday said it would delay a semi-annual currency report until after a meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers in Mexico on November 4-5, which makes it unlikely the report will be released before the U.S. presidential election on November 6.

Past reports have repeatedly singled out China for not allowing its currency to appreciate more rapidly, but the Obama administration and the previous Bush administration have stopped short of labeling China a currency manipulator,

The yuan has appreciated 30 percent since July 2005 and China argues that its currency is no longer tightly controlled. The yuan firmed against the dollar on Friday, hitting an intraday higher for the second straight day.

Romney has said that if he wins the November election he would declare China a currency manipulator on his first day in office, arguing that China's trade and currency policies are harming U.S. workers and businesses.

Obama has criticized Romney for "talking tough" on China, while his previous job at Bain Capital sometimes cut U.S. jobs or sent them overseas.

(Reporting By Andrea Shalal-Esa; Editing by Eric Beech)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/romney-hits-obama-china-policies-vows-action-day-200904465.html

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Biden, the anti-Obama, brings exasperation to debate with Ryan

On Thursday night, vice president Joe Biden and congressman Paul Ryan sat at a semi-circular piece of corporate office furniture to debate various aspects of foreign and domestic policy.?With moderator Martha Raddatz at the helm, the 90-minute conversation between the two contenders began fairly civilly, and grew increasingly snippy.

Those hoping for a few true wildman outbursts or gaffes from the easily lampooned Biden were disappointed. The vice president, however, grinning hugely, shaking his head and even giggling during some of his opponent's answers, did seem exasperated with the much younger congressman for most of the debate.

Answering the moderator's first question, about the recent terrorist attack on the American consulate in Benghazi, Libya, Biden, a former chairperson of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, promised that the Obama administration would "find and bring justice to the men" responsible for the death of Ambassador Chris Stevens and the three other Americans killed during the attack.

Ryan came back with the claim that the president's foreign policy is "making us less safe."

Shortly after, Biden had his first bona fide 'Biden moment': "With all due respect, that's a bunch of malarkey," he said. (Moments later "malarkey" and "malarky" were trending on Twitter.)

As the candidates segued to domestic issues, Biden went after the Romney/Ryan ticket for being on the side of fat cats. "They continue to put the interest of millionaires and billionaires ... ahead of the military and middle class," Biden said.

In response?and attempting to defend Romney's controversial 47 percent remark?Ryan said (to laughter), "I think the vice president knows, sometimes the words don't always come out of your mouth the way you want."

"But I always say what I mean," Biden retorted with a grin.

The vice president did seem to say what he meant for much of the debate, even looking straight at the camera and addressing viewers directly.

On Medicare, Biden asked: "Folks, all you seniors out there, have you been denied choices?" It was a daytime television commercial moment fit for a consummate salesman: there should have been an 800 number for people to dial so Biden could chat with them.

Raddatz also questioned the candidates about their tickets' respective tax plans. Biden pointed his pointer finger at Raddatz and proclaimed for the second time during the debate that Romney and Ryan were intending "to [hold] the middle class hostage."

Ryan, sounding like a wonky accountant running numbers and bobbing his head side to side a bit like a turtle, responded that there aren't enough rich people to pay for the Obama Administration's spending. Then, taking a cue from Biden, he addressed the camera directly: "Watch out middle class, the tax bill is coming to you."

(At 9:53, "Joe Biden's teeth" was also trending on Twitter.)

Ryan also claimed that bipartisanship could make his ticket's vague proposed tax plan work.

"Different than this administration, we actually want to have big, bipartisan agreements," Ryan said, suggesting cooperation could push through a 20 percent tax cut across the board for Americans. "Look at what Tip O'Neil and Ronald Reagan did. They worked out of a framework."

"The only way you can find $5 trillion in deductions is to cut deductions for the middle class," Biden said. Otherwise, it's "not mathematically possible."

"It is mathematically possible," Ryan responded. "Jack Kennedy lowered taxes and raised revenue."

This provoked the only line that could possibly count as the debate's only real zinger.

"Oh, now you're Jack Kennedy," Biden said, evoking visions of the 1988 vice-presidential debate between Lloyd Bentsen and Dan Quayle. ("Senator, I served with Jack Kennedy, I knew Jack Kennedy, Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine," Bentsen had said. "Senator, you're no Jack Kennedy.")

During that same exchange, the biggest zinger of the night was almost Raddatz's. She asked Ryan directly for details on the tax cuts: "Do you actually have the specifics, or are you still working on it?"

Closing out, Raddatz moved back to foreign policy, covering Afghanistan, and then asked the two Catholic candidates how their faith impacts their views on abortion.

Then, with the debate having grown downright testy, Raddatz said, "Let me calm down things here just for a minute," and asked her last question: "If you were elected, what would you both give to this country as a man, and human being, that no one else could?"

Ryan suggested his capacity to solve problems, but then rattled off statistics about jobs and the economy instead of sticking with the question.

Biden, casual, went broad: "Let me tell ya," he said. "My record stands for itself. Whatever I say, I do. I treat Main Street and Wall Street the same. You grow this country from the middle out, not the top down."

In his closing statement, Biden went again for the emotional connection to viewers that he reached for much of the evening. "You probably detected my frustration with [Ryan and Romney's] attitude toward the American people," he said. "All [the American people] are looking for is an even shot. The president and I are not going to rest until they have a clear shot and peace of mind and can say to their family, 'It's gonna be ok.'"

Ryan, in closing, looked like he was delivering a PSA: "Wouldn't it be nice to have a job creator in the White House?" he asked. "The choice is clear, and the choice rests with you, and we ask you for your vote."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/biden-anti-obama-brings-exasperation-debate-ryan-024159255--election.html

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Friday, October 12, 2012

Dinosaur Train's Halloween Happenings ? Costume Giveaway ...

This post is full of all the Halloween Happenings going on over at Dinosaur Train! It?s a busy month??.

Did you know that your child can dress up like Buddy (our favorite T-Rex) or Tiny?? It?s true!

Here?s the Scoop:

  • Each Dinosaur Train costume is made up of soft fabric to enhance comfort while wearing them, and created in vibrant colors and realistic design patterns to make toddlers look and feel like a dinosaur train character! The colorful Buddy costume includes the orange colored T-Rex jumpsuit, Buddy the dinosaur hood, and the shoe covers. The colorful Tiny costume includes the green colored Pteranodon jumpsuit, Tiny the dinosaur hood, and green shoe covers.
  • Both costumes are available for toddlers ages 3-4, and children ages 4-6.

You can also make costumes at home ? DIY!

Jim Henson?s Creature Shop ? the folks who brought you Elmo and Miss Piggy, among many others ? have created a Buddy costume that can be made at home!

For sew and no-sew options, visit this link: http://www.pbs.org/parents/dinosaurtrain/costume

Instead of candy, how about a $3.99 Dinosaur Train book like The Spooky Scavenger Hunt ?

Mr. Pteranodon is taking Buddy and Tiny on a nighttime trip to the Big Pond for a spooky nature walk! Mr. Pteranodon and the conductor insist they can?t be scared, but when the conductor?s mom jumps out at them, everyone gets a good scare!

Halloween TV Specials:

Both Haunted Roundhouse and Big Pond Pumpkin Patch will air during the week of October 15, October 22 and on October 31! We?ll be watching.

In Haunted Roundhouse, dad takes the kids on a special Night Train to Troodon Town, where the Troodons have decorated their Roundhouse into a ?haunted house? for a spooky party. The kids end up meeting a strange new nocturnal creature ? a mammal named Vlad Volaticotherium, who was hiding in the roundhouse trying to get some sleep.

And in Big Pond Pumpkin Patch, the Pteranodon family learns more about the customs of their neighbors, the Lambeosaurus family, when they are invited for the first time to accompany them to the Big Pond to celebrate ?Gourd Day? ? a kind of Mesozoic Halloween. The kids see their first pumpkins, and Larry Lambeosaurus even shows our family how to hollow them out and carve faces into them.

?

Now some extra fun for my readers:

GIVEAWAY

One (1) lucky winner will receive:

a Dinosaur Train Buddy Costume (Toddler size fits ages 3-4)?

and

a copy of the book, The Spooky Scavenger Hunt

HOW TO ENTER:
For your main entry, Leave a comment and tell me who is the Dinosaur Train Fan in your life! That?s it!

EXTRA ENTRIES:
You can earn one (1) extra entry for each of the following (leave as separate comments please for each entry):

2. Follow A Frugal Friend on Google +
3. Follow A Frugal Friend on Pinterest
4. Like A Frugal Friend on FB
5. Like PBS Kids on FB
6. Follow A Frugal Friend on Twitter
7. Follow Henson Parents on Twitter
8. Follow PBS Kids on Twitter
9. Tweet the following as is: Win a Dinosaur Train Costume and Book for Halloween! http://tinyurl.com/9hn8uux @AFrugalFriend

Giveaway ends at Midnight (central time) on Wednesday, October 17th, 2012! Valid for US residents and addresses only. No purchase necessary to enter. Winner will be randomly selected. I?ll announce (and contact by email) the winner on this post and the winner will have 2 days to get back to me for delivery details. Limit one set of entries per household.

(No compensation was received for this particular post. All remarks are the personal and honest opinions of A Frugal Friend. This post contains an affiliate link.)

Source: http://www.afrugalfriend.net/2012/10/dinosaur-trains-halloween-happenings-costume-giveaway-more/

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Dredging Today ? Senator Gillibrand Calls for Sandy Pond ...

Senator Gillibrand Calls for Sandy Pond Dredging

U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand called on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to offer all necessary resources to the Sandy Pond Channel Maintenance Association (SPCMA) to help stop further buildup of sand in the channel connecting Sandy Pond to Lake Ontario.

The accumulation of sand in the channel has prevented boaters from entering and exiting Sandy Pond, causing a decline in the tourism and recreation industries, and costing revenue to local retail businesses that operate around the pond, including restaurants, marinas, sporting goods stores, gift and antique shops, camp grounds, motels and other small businesses.

?The buildup of sand in the channel is coming at a major cost to the local economy of Oswego County,? Senator Gillibrand said. ?When boats can?t travel through the channel and reach Sandy Pond, it robs us of a thriving tourism and recreational industry, and holds a whole range of local businesses back ? costing us revenue and risking local jobs. It?s time for the Army Corps of Engineers to step in, and offer any resource available so we can get Oswego County?s economy back on the move.?

On top of the cost to the local economy, the buildup is also raising concerns about the effect on public safety. The Coast Guard, Sheriff?s Department and Sandy Creek Fire Department all rely on Sandy Pond to access Lake Ontario. The accumulation of sand makes navigating the channel into Lake Ontario more difficult, which puts the local communities at potential risk in the case of an emergency.

Press Release, October 11, 2012

Source: http://www.dredgingtoday.com/2012/10/11/senator-gillibrand-calls-for-sandy-pond-dredging-usa/

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China's Mo Yan wins Nobel prize for literature

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Chinese writer Mo Yan won the 2012 Nobel prize for literature on Thursday for works which combine "hallucinatory realism" with folk tales, history and contemporary life grounded in his native land.

The prize, awarded by the Swedish Academy, is worth 8 million crowns ($1.2 million).

Mo, who grew up in Gaomi in Shandong province in the northeast of the country and whose parents were farmers, sets his works mainly in China.

"He has such a damn unique way of writing. If you read half a page of Mo Yan you immediately recognize it as him," said Peter Englund, head of the Academy.

He said Mo had been told of the award. Mo Yan is a pen name which means "Don't speak". His real name is Guan Moye.

"He was at home with his dad. He said he was overjoyed and terrified," Englund told Swedish television.

The award citation said Mo used a mixture of fantasy and reality, historical and social perspectives to create a world which was reminiscent of the writings of William Faulkner and Gabriel Garcia Marquez.

At the same time, he found a "departure point in old Chinese literature and in oral tradition", the Academy said.

Mo is best known in the West for "Red Sorghum", which portrayed the hardships endured by farmers in the early years of communist rule. His titles also include "Big Breasts and Wide Hips" and "The Republic of Wine".

The literature prize is the fourth of this year's crop of prizes, which were established in the will of Swedish dynamite inventor Alfred Nobel and awarded for the first time in 1901.

The writer was one of the favorites to win the award this year, according to British bookmaker Ladbrokes, along with Japanese author Haruki Murakami.

(Reporting by Johan Ahlander, Simon Johnson, Anna Ringstrom, writing by Patrick Lannin, editing by Alistair Scrutton and Giles Elgood)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chinese-writer-mo-yan-wins-nobel-prize-literature-110645439.html

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Thursday, October 11, 2012

This Writer's Life.....: Interview with George Geisinger!

Today I have the privalge of interviewing George Geisinger. Mr. Geisinger is a?seasoned?writer who has written about many subjects that relate to his personal experiences; some are short stories, while others are novels. His passion for writing shows that?despite?your disability, creativity can find away to enrich your life.

AUTHOR BIO:

George Geisinger studied music education in the early 1970's at Appalachian State University, in North Carolina, but after two years of study, he had a disastrous turn of health, with which he has struggled for a lifetime.? Mr. Geisinger, a naturally creative person, composes music for classic guitar, as well as for piano, writes poetry, fiction, and autobiographical stories.? In the late 1980's, Mr. Geisinger achieved an Associate in Arts Degree in the liberal arts from Catonsville Community College, in Maryland.? He studied creative writing there, and has subsequently published short stories and poetry in literary and ?little? magazines over a period of several years thru the 1980's and 90's.? Now, he publishes independently on Amazon and Wordpress

What is your favorite thing about being a writer? I enjoy expressing myself, and writing gives me the opportunity to go on at some length about what's on my mind.? When I write, I'm the one who's in charge.? I don't have to worry about time or space.? I do the saying, and no one else is directly involved at the time, while I'm developing my expression.? It helps me to organize my thoughts, which is challenging to me, considering my disability. What genre(s) do you write? I write classic fiction, as well as various confessional autobiographical pieces.? I've been to a lot of psychotherapy, and I've finally found a therapist I can write to: It is my laptop!

What was the hardest part of writing your book?

I've written several books; that is, I've written a plethora of short stories I've collected into book format.? The most difficult thing about writing, for me, has been developing the determination to keep on writing, after I finished one or two book-length works.? Once I got over that hurtle, I've been writing like a house afire ever since.? It's the one book syndrome I found difficult to get past. Are you a plotter or a pantser? ? Let me see... I don't figure out plots ahead of time.? I figure out some kind of hook, or setting for a story to take place, and do the fleshing out from an overall scheme of an idea. Why do you think people should choose your books over another author? I think that's a question every writer should ask himself.? I work very hard at making myself understood on the page, and also work hard at being entertaining and amusing when I write.? With a certain kind of reader in mind, I address my public with a thought of conscience and purpose.? I feel a moral imperative to write, and believe absolutely that there is an audience out there who needs to read what I write. What do you hope readers take with them after reading one of your stories?

In many of my stories, I'd like the reader to come away with the idea that they absolutely don't have to continue practicing any of their addictions, regardless of whatever they might be addicted to, that there is Divine help out there for every practicing addict of every conceivable addiction.?In others of my stories, I'd simply like my reader to come away entertained.

Is there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp? That there is a God, and we're not it.? He is very powerful and caring.? He wants us to ask Him to help us, with the things we cannot do without His help.? That it's alright to trust Him, and that He's Someone worthy of our trust. How long have you been a writer?? All my life.? I'm over 60 at the moment. How much time did it take from writing your first book to having it published? I did some publishing of short fiction and poetry in the little magazine and literary magazine markets in the 1980's and 90's, but when I started writing my autobiographical stuff, my message, if you will, I went straight to Amazon Kindle, because there's no editor on the other end to say ?No,? we won't publish that." ?It's left up to the reader to choose for himself. What other careers have you had? I've been a disabled citizen all my adult life, struggling to do the most simple delivery driving jobs, or factory jobs on occasion.? I'm registered disabled with Social Security, and live off a pension. Do you write under more than one name? Why? I haven't done much with pseudonyms.? Whenever I want to write about myself, I'll make up a name to call myself, and become one of the characters in the story, not the pseudonymous author.? Stanley Hockenschmidt is one of my several aliases.? Another one I enjoy using is Barry Burns.? I'd rather sign my own name to my own work.. Are any of your characters based on real people or events? Yes.? Speaking of my nonfiction, well, of course they're real people and real events.? Speaking of my fiction, there is always a dose of reality mixed into the fictional setting of whatever I'm writing at that moment.? I believe fiction ought to ring true to the reader. How would you describe yourself if you were ?speed dating? your readers? I'm a circumlocutionist, not a quick study. What?s something fans would find fascinating about you? That I know very well what I'm writing about, and what I'm trying to say, regardless of the fact that my disability has to do with a hampering of my brain function. What else would you like readers to know about you or your work? I'm trying my best to be informative, and inspirational, without being pedantic, if I can avoid it.? My father was an unsuccessful Methodist Minister.? I'm not trying to take over his pulpit and finish what he left undone.? I'm trying to circulate my own message, generated by my own calling. What books or authors have most influenced your life? There have been so many, it would be impossible to come up with a list.? I've read a lot of classic English and American Literature, as an independent study project for much of my sober life, which spans about thirty years.? When I was first recovering from alcoholism and drug addiction, one of the things I did to organize my thinking was read classic literature voraciously. How do your family and/or friends feel about your book or writing venture in general? My family and friends are proud of the idea that I'm doing as much writing as I'm doing.? My brother and his wife have been very supportive, taking me to get a current day laptop, with an amazing amount of storage space, to help me with my creativity when I asked them to. I was born in Pittsburgh, PA, raised from the age of 13 in Aberdeen, MD, spent most of my life in the Baltimore area of MD, and now reside in the Tidewater Area of Southern VA. How do you come up with the titles? I do my best to settle on one word, or a very short phrase, to save my file shortly after I begin a project, which becomes the title of whatever project I'm working on.? On rare occasions, one of my friends with give me a title that I can wrap a story around. Has your life changed significantly since becoming a published writer? No, because I don't remember a time when I wasn't a writer, in one context or another. Do you work on one project at a time? Or do you multi-task? I mostly write one story at a time. When not writing, how do you relax? I like to go for walks around the hallways of the big assisted living building where I live.? It helps me clear my mind, and it's all contained indoors.? Sometimes, I'll mindlessly flip channels on the TV, or listen to Funk music on my stereo.??

Thank you very much for giving us insight into your life as a writer, Mr. Geisinger!?

Source: http://thiswriterslife-mjkane.blogspot.com/2012/10/interview-with-george-geisinger.html

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A note from julie fast | Straight Talk on Managing Bipolar Disorder

Hello to everyone,

I want to say thank y0u to all of the readers who leave comments on this blog. I know that we all can learn so much from each others. I get a lot of questions from readers- I want to let everyone know that I read all of them-? I try to answer in the blog posts themselves.? I still have not found a way to get to the questions as mush as I would like to.? My books answer the questions about bipolar disorder treatment and management- so that is where I lead people first- but I know there are many personal questions I would like to answer. I do encourage readers to leave their opinions and advice on the comments.

Julie

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Source: http://bipolarhappens.com/bhblog/a-note-to-blog-readers-from-julie/

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