Monday, January 28, 2013

Nipro's Whitening Dental Care : DigInfo - sidneyvalajaga

DigInfo ? movie.diginfo.tv ? Nipro showed their new Poly-de-Clean-Gel whitening toothpaste, tablets and gum which use a natural condensed phosphate to white teeth. Other whitening toothpastes sometimes use harsh polishing agents which can wear away enamel and weaken teeth or foul tasting detergents which can cause ulcers in the mouth but this toothpaste uses only natural ingredients. The phosphates act immediately since they stick to the stain?s particles and remove them. They have been researching this product for about ten years and it will be released later this year.

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Medicinal value of Jambul/Jamun/Bla...

Black berry or Black plum is always appreciated for the color, flavor and taste of its fruit. When sucked, it changes the color of the tongue to purple due to its coloring properties. Besides these properties, its usefulness in treatment of diabetes is also praised by the people and health benefits ...

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The WRONG Way To Get Rid Of A Blist....

I had one of those white canker sores you get in your mouth, and it was killing me. So I decided to remove it. The bad way.

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Source: http://dentist.coastalweddingdreams.com/?p=4066

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Source: http://sidneyvalajaga.blogspot.com/2013/01/nipro-whitening-dental-care-diginfo.html

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Friday, January 18, 2013

Behind the Story: TIME?s Karl Vick Discusses Israel?s Upcoming Elections

Oded Balilty?AP for TIME

Right-wing newcomer Naftali Bennett has attracted Israeli voters with his talk?of annexing much of the West Bank

As Israeli voters prepare for elections on Jan. 22, they have been wooed in increasing numbers by right-wing politicians who support the Jewish settlements in the West Bank. Naftali Bennett, a former commando and high-tech entrepreneur, leads the party that best encapsulates this swing to the right?the Jewish Home party. The growing popularity of Jewish Home has taken some by surprise?not least Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who, when he called for the early election in October, did so from a position of strength.

TIME?s Jerusalem Bureau Chief, Karl Vick, wrote this week?s magazine story (available to subscribers here) on the burgeoning strength of pro-settlement parties in the run up to Israel?s national elections. TIME spoke with Vick to get the story behind the story.

(MORE:?When Palestinians Use Settler Tactics: A Beleaguered Netanyahu Responds)

What sparked the rightward shift in Israeli society and politics, and why is that shift stronger among young people?

People say the turning point was 2006. That was the year Hamas took over Gaza and began sending out missiles. It was also around the time of the Second Lebanon war. The lessons seemed to be, if you leave a land you formerly occupied, it becomes a launching pad. So therefore, what?s the incentive to leave the West Bank, which is very close to the heart of Israel? Around March 2003?there was a lethal attack inside Israel every day of the month. That was just shattering to this society?especially to their faith and hope in a resolution. So that is what the searing memory has been for young Israelis, this is what they have grown up in.

Naftali Bennett has emerged as the face of this rightward shift?what?s the story behind Bennett?s move from Netanyahu?s chief of staff to being his opponent in this race? Do you see similarities between him and Netanyahu?

Bennett doesn?t talk about why he doesn?t talk with Bibi anymore. The accepted truth is that he ran afoul of his wife Sara, who is supposedly the power behind the throne. I?d only been in Israel a month or two when I had an interview with Bennett. He was at the time the executive director of the settler council. I spent a day going around to the settlements, and he was really personable and direct. I would always make a point afterwards to go and see him when he gave a talk. As a reporter, I liked his candor, even in the Israeli context and settler context?he was direct. He is articulate, and has an interesting background in this commando unit. When he was showing me around the settlements I never really got the feeling that he was this religious idealist, he never really brought up religious testaments and so on, just military reasons why holding the settlements was important. I had to ask him outright how religious he was?he insisted he was very religious. This is quite different from Netanyahu.

One of the reasons I pressed Bennett on that question is because of religious nationalists, which is how many settlers are identified within Israel. They believe the West Bank belongs to Israel, keep kosher and openly say they want to take control of Israel. You could say they are the most determined people in Israel. This is a different line, one that Bennett is following, from which Netanyahu has come from.

(MORE:?The West Bank?s 2012: The Year of the Israeli Settlement)

Why has the religious Zionism movement become so relevant now?

In the Israeli context, things are very quiet here now in terms of security issues. It is more a question of whether it pays to engage in the question of what to do about the Palestinians. If Bibi says there is a hurricane out there, then you have to hunker down. It?s the feeling that no one outside Israel understands, that they have to watch out for themselves. Civic teachers now complain about how there is a stigma attached to values identified as left-wing such as equality and so on. It?s also the case that the national religious group, the settlers, because of the indifference of much of the remainder of Israeli society, tends to wield a disproportionate influence. They are an incredibly motivated group.

As Netanyahu has only recently approved a large number of new settlements, why is Bennett?s party, Jewish Home, taking ground from him?

I was just on the phone with the Yesha council?the Jewish settlement lobby?and they?re skeptical that he will actually build these homes. There is talk, and then there is actually establishing these homes and moving people in. Netanyahu is kind of seen as unsteady on this area, there?s a feeling that he sways too close to the center of politics and influence from the U.S. for the taste of these groups.

(MORE: Palestinians Take to the West Bank?s Streets in Protest)

How important has the economy been in the election campaign, given the high cost of living and the recently published unexpectedly high budget deficit figures?

Not nearly as important as you?d think, in a country where not 18 months ago half a million people were marching in the name of economic justice.? The conventional wisdom is security issues trump all in Israeli elections.? But this one has featured no overarching issue from either realm.? The news has been the prominence of the rightist challenge to Bibi.

What happens if Netanyahu?s Likud Party and its ally Israel-Beiteinu do not win a majority? Would they form an alliance with Jewish Home?

This is the great question in this election. Israeli elections come in two parts: people vote for the parties, and then there is the actual formation of the government, usually led by the party with the most votes. Netanyahu?s alliance of his Likud Party and the even more right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu will most likely be the largest.?However they?re not likely to gain a?majority, so who are the other parties in the ruling coalition going to be? The last three or four years, there has been a pretty right-wing coalition. Last time around Labor was the only outlier, and it left coalition when Ehud Barak split away to form his own party. Bennett will certainly be a natural partner to Netanyahu?s coalition.?He isn?t even running for Prime Minister he says, he?s running to keep Bibi honest. We?ll find out what happens in the week after the elections.

From the TIME Archive: 1967, Israel: A Nation Under Siege?

Source: http://world.time.com/2013/01/17/behind-the-story-times-karl-vick-discusses-israels-upcoming-elections/

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

skydiving fermat: adelinakitta: Health And Fitness: Aerobics Cardio ...

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Source: http://rtiiafu.posterous.com/adelinakitta-health-and-fitness-aerobics-card

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Channel 2's Ross Cavitt is in the Rome area covering flooding from all the rain...

Flooding in Rome area | Facebook
Sign Up Facebook ? 2013 ? English (US)

Source: http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10151450591475695.547875.10505090694&type=1

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Jennifer Lopez Is Happy For Ben Affleck's Globes Win

Jennifer Lopez' boyfriend Casper Smart had better not be the jealous type, because the 25-year-old dancer is going to see a lot of his girlfriend's ex's around Hollywood. At the Golden Globes alone, Smart and Lopez bumped into two of the most famous men she dated: Sean "P. Diddy" Combs and Ben Affleck.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/jennifer-lopez-happy-ben-afflecks-globes-win/1-a-515595?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Ajennifer-lopez-happy-ben-afflecks-globes-win-515595

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Johnson Controls Offers Micro Hybrid Battery for Start-Stop Systems ...

Forget high-voltage hybrids and instead look to the practicality of 48-volt systems, says Johnson Controls.

Alex Molinaroli, president of the company?s power systems business, said on Monday that a combination 12- and 48-volt system will power efficient start-stop vehicles first in Europe and eventually in North America. The company has named the battery system Micro Hybrid, a term that has generally been used for minimalist hybrid systems.

Mr. Molinaroli said that vehicles with start-stop systems ? a feature that shuts down the engine when the vehicle is not moving to eliminate fuel waste while waiting at a stoplight, for instance ? would soon edge out traditional vehicles. The Johnson Controls system will use the higher voltage for functions like electric air-conditioning and regenerative braking.

No cost was discussed for the system, and the company declined to name probable customers for the system. Energy savings are estimated at 5 percent to 10 percent. Initially the system will include separate lead-acid 12-volt and lithium-ion 48-volt batteries, but the second generation will combine both voltages in a single lithium-ion battery pack.

Higher voltages have been promoted by automakers and suppliers before, with disappointing results. A flurry of interest in 42-volt systems in the 1990s died out when engineering advances in power consumption at the lower end ? and the advent of full-hybrid vehicles like the Toyota Prius at the high end ? of the energy scale stole their thunder.

The new interest in 48 volts is a result of a focus on the battery as an active part of the drive system, rather than just as a source for high power, said Bernd Engwicht, vice president for lead-acid batteries at the company. He said the 48-volt technology gives inexpensive energy storage compared to full hybrid systems, while remaining below the 60-volt threshold for human safety that requires expensive insulation and isolation of electrical circuits.

Source: http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/15/johnson-controls-offers-start-stop-battery-system/

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Government bonus for hiring mature aged workers | Dynamic ...

The Australian Government has announced that it will provide a $1,000 bonus to businesses that hire mature-aged workers.

The Minister for Employment Participation, Early Childhood and Child Care, Kate Ellis, has announced that businesses of any size will be eligible for the $1,000 Experience +Jobs Bonus that aims to encourage more businesses to look favourably on hiring mature-aged workers.

?There are over 3.8 million mature-age Australians and many want to work, yet every week I hear stories from many mature-age jobseekers about their frustration in searching for work,? Ellis said.

?Mature-aged workers can save their employers $2000 a year on average compared to their younger counterparts ? they are more reliable, loyal, and provide a better return on investment.?

Businesses can apply for one of 2,500 bonuses that will be available each financial year until 2016 at this website.

Eligible employers are those that provide ongoing work opportunities to job seekers who are 50 years or older and who are registered to work with a Job Services Australia provider.

Ellis said that this is one of a number of initiatives that the?Government?has?introduced to encourage mature-aged workers looking for work, back in the workplace.

?We also appointed the first Age Discrimination Commissioner, Susan Ryan AO. We have also delivered more than 9,900 free career advice sessions to mature-age job seekers to help them market their skills to employers through the $11.7 million Experience+ Career Advice service since July 2010.?

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Source: http://www.dynamicbusiness.com.au/news/government-bonus-for-hiring-mature-aged-workers-16012013.html

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Northern Irish youths pelt Catholic church in latest "flag riots"

BELFAST | Tue Jan 15, 2013 7:45am GMT

BELFAST (Reuters) - Protestant youths in Northern Ireland threw petrol bombs at homes and a church in a Catholic area on Monday night as the latest outbreak of violence in Belfast took on increasing sectarian overtones.

At least one police officer was injured during violent clashes between pro-British and Irish crowds who threw rocks and other missiles at each other, police said in a statement.

The unrest has been some of the most sustained violence in the British-controlled province since a peace deal signed 15 years ago ended 30 years of conflict between Catholic Irish nationalists seeking union with Ireland and Protestant loyalists determined to remain part of the United Kingdom.

Loyalists have held nightly protests since nationalist councillors voted last month to end a century-old tradition of flying the British union flag every day over Belfast City Hall, exposing a deep vein of discontent with the peace deal.

Over the last six weeks, loyalist youths have fought street battles with police on an almost nightly basis that have left over 100 officers injured and raised sectarian tensions.

In the latest rioting, loyalists threw petrol bombs and stones at police, who responded with water cannon, police said.

A bus driver was also injured when youths hijacked two buses in the traditional flash point area within a couple of kilometres of the city centre.

Pro-British and Irish groups clashed on Saturday after mainly Protestant protesters passed the Catholic area on their way home from a rally in central Belfast against the flag's removal.

Politicians have branded rioters the enemies of democracy and claimed they were being exploited by paramilitary groups seeking to wreck the peace process.

The current wave of violence has knocked the city's fledgling reputation and hit the pockets of retailers facing a 30 percent drop in trade over the last two months.

(Reporting by Eamonn Mallie; Writing by Stephen Mangan; Editing by Robin Pomeroy and Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/01/15/uk-irish-unrest-idUKBRE90D18720130115?feedType=RSS&feedName=domesticNews

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Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Facebook offers peeks at backup plan, MySQL installations

Facebook is offering its users another glimpse under the hood of its back-end operations -- this time with a focus on how all of its data is backed up.

The Menlo Park, Calif.-based company described that it has employed "a highly automated, extremely effective backup system" designed to support the ever-growing amount of data generated by its global user base of more than one billion members and counting.

More pointedly, Facebook's engineering team boasted that it has "one of the largest MySQL installations in the world," with thousands of databases scattered across multiple regions worldwide.

Eric Barrett, a data plumber and member of Facebook's engineering team, explained further in a blog post on Monday that the infrastructure moves around "many petabytes" each week. (For reference, a petabyte is equal to one thousand terabytes or one million gigabytes.)

He continued:

Rather than extensive front-loaded testing, we emphasize rapid detection of failures and quick, automated correction. Deploying hundreds of new database servers requires very little human effort and lets us grow at the pace and flexibility required to support more than a billion active users.

More details about Hadoop clusters and long-term storage plans are available on the Facebook Engineering blog.

But one more area of potential interest for average users when it comes to backing up information is what happens in a worst case scenario and that data needs to be restored.

Beyond catching backup infrastructure and MySQL errors, Facebook's system includes its own system for "self-service restores" in which engineers can go back and restore older versions, much like you could on a PC for your own data and settings.

Barrett admitted that "backups are not the most glamorous type of engineering," but they should work so well that no one even thinks to notice them.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zdnet/BTL/~3/mP35eycQUNQ/

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Animal Profile, Bing the American Alligator

Animal Profiles are a closer look at some of the education outreach animals that are part of the Zoo's Interpretive Center.
_______________________________

Bing, the American Alligator was born in the fall of 2010 and spent his early days in a civilian?s bathtub. He was then confiscated from that individual by Fish and Game because it is illegal and dangerous to have them as pets.

?

Source: http://midtown.news10.net/news/animal-lovers/109308-animal-profile-bing-american-alligator

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Monday, January 14, 2013

Thirty percent of teen girls report meeting offline with someone they met online

Jan. 14, 2013 ? A new study highlights the risk that female teenagers face when they go online -- a risk heightened for teen girls who have been victims of abuse or neglect.

The study, published in the journal Pediatrics, shows that 30 percent of teenagers reported having offline meetings with people they have met on the Internet and whose identity had not been fully confirmed prior to the meeting.

"These meetings may have been benign, but for an adolescent girl to do it is dangerous," says Jennie Noll, PhD, a psychologist at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center and the study's lead author.

Moreover, abused or neglected teenage girls were more likely to present themselves online in a sexually provocative way than other teenage girls. Research shows that high-risk, online profiles are more likely to lead to offline meetings, according to Dr. Noll, director of research in behavioral medicine and clinical psychology at Cincinnati Children's.

"If someone is looking for a vulnerable teen to start an online sexual discourse, they will more likely target someone who presents herself provocatively," she says. "Maltreatment poses a unique risk for online behavior that may set the stage for harm."

Dr. Noll and her colleagues studied 251 adolescent girls between the ages of 14 and 17. About half were victims of abuse or neglect.

If families installed Internet filtering software at home, it made no difference in the association between maltreatment and high-risk Internet behaviors, says Dr. Noll. These behaviors included intentionally seeking adult content, provocative self-presentations on social networking sites and receiving sexual advances online. On the other hand, "high quality parenting" and parental monitoring helped reduce the association between adolescent risk factors and these online behaviors, she says.

The new study is part of a larger body of Dr. Noll's work on high-risk Internet behaviors. In a previous, pilot study, she asked girls whether they have ever met anyone offline after meeting them online and heard some "chilling" stories," she says.

"One patient told a story about a guy who started texting her a lot, and he seemed 'really nice.' So she agreed to meet him at the mall, she got in his car, they drove somewhere and he raped her."

The Pediatrics study was supported by a grant (R01HD052533) from the National Institutes of Health. Her continuing work is funded by a five-year, $3.7 million federal grant to gain deeper data about high risk Internet behaviors.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Jennie G. Noll, Chad E. Shenk, Jaclyn E. Barnes, and Katherine J. Haralson. Association of Maltreatment With High-Risk Internet Behaviors and Offline Encounters. Pediatrics, January 14, 2013 DOI: 10.1542/peds.2012-1281

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/03r7L1_Sf3k/130114092651.htm

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Saturday, January 12, 2013

Xact Communication XTR1 For Sirius Home Satellite Radio Receiver

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We find the most interesting Satellite Radio Sirius. Here are the best deals we found for the Xact Communication XTR1 For Sirius Home Satellite Radio Receiver for sale on the Internet.

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If you want to find similar items currently for sale on eBay please click here.

Xact Communication XTR1 For Sirius Home Satellite Radio Receiver Picture(s) and Description:

Selling my trusty Xact XTR1 Sirius satellite radio. Works great, but had to reduce my subscriptions. Included in this package: Xact base unit, can be used in home or car, has adhesive baseHome wall plug power adapterCar power adapterAudio output cord for home useIndoor/Outdoor antenna You could use this indoor/outdoor antenna for car use, but it is pretty bulky. The car antennas can be had here on ebay for around $20 if you so choose. Shipping cost is for US shipping only. Can do international shipping, but please contact me before buying to discuss cost. Thanks and happy holidays! Posted with eBay Mobile

Source: http://satelliteradiosirius.com/xact-communication-xtr1-for-sirius-home-satellite-radio-receiver

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Duke Energy commences operations at 10MW Black Mountain solar project in US

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'Zombie titles' haunt victims of home foreclosure

21 hrs.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -? Joseph Keller doesn't expect he'll live to see the end of 2013. He blames the house at 190 Avondale Avenue.

Five years ago, Keller, 10 months behind on his mortgage payments, received notice of a foreclosure judgment from JP Morgan Chase. In a few weeks, the bank said, his three-story house with gray vinyl siding in Columbus, Ohio, would be put up for auction at a sheriff's sale.

The 58-year-old former social worker and his wife, Jennifer, packed up their home of 13 years and moved in with their daughter. Joseph thought he would never have anything to do with the house again. And for about a year, he didn't.

Then it started to stalk him.

First, in 2010, the county sued Keller because the house, already picked clean by scavengers, was in a shambles, its hanging gutters and collapsed garage in violation of local housing code. Then the tax collector started sending Keller notices about mounting back taxes, sewer fees and bills for weed and waste removal. And last year, Chase's debt collector began pressing Keller to pay his mortgage, which had swollen, with penalties and fees, from $62,100.27 to $84,194.69.

The worst news came last January, when the Social Security Administration rejected Keller's application for disability benefits; the "asset" on Avondale Avenue rendered him ineligible. Keller's medical problems include advanced liver disease, hepatitis C and inactive tuberculosis. Without disability coverage, he can't get the liver transplant he needs to stay alive.

"I can't make it end," says Keller. "This house, I can't get out."

Keller continues to bear responsibility for the house because on December 23, 2008 - about two months after he received Chase's notice of sale - the bank filed to dismiss the foreclosure judgment and the order of sale. Chase said it sent Keller a copy of its court filing on December 9, 2008. Keller says he never received any notification. Either way, his name remained on the property title.

With impunity?

The Kellers are caught up in a little-known horror of the U.S. housing bust: the zombie title. Six years in, thousands of homeowners are finding themselves legally liable for houses they didn't know they still owned after banks decided it wasn't worth their while to complete foreclosures on them. With impunity, banks have been walking away from foreclosures much the way some homeowners walked away from their mortgages when the housing market first crashed.

"The banks are just deciding not to foreclose, even though the homeowners never caught up with their payments," says Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac, a real-estate information company in Irvine, California.

Since 2006, 10 million homes have fallen into foreclosure, according to RealtyTrac, a number that in earlier, more stable times would have taken nearly two decades to reach. Of those foreclosures, more than 2 million have never come out. Some may be occupied by owners who have been living gratis. Others have been caught up in what is now known as the robo-signing scandal, when banks spun out reams of fraudulent documents to foreclose quickly on as many homeowners as they could.

And then there are cases like the Kellers, in which homeowners moved out after receiving notice of a foreclosure sale, thinking they were leaving the house in bank hands. No national databases track zombie titles. But dozens of housing court judges, code enforcement officials, lawyers and other professionals involved in foreclosures across the country tell Reuters that these titles number in the many thousands, and that the problem is worsening.

"There are thousands of foreclosures in limbo, just hanging out there, just sitting, with nothing being done," says Cleveland Housing Court Judge Raymond Pianka, whose pending court cases tied to derelict properties have doubled in the past two years, to 1,000. He says the surge is due largely to homes vacated by people who fled before an imminent foreclosure sale, only to learn later that they remain legally responsible for their house.

When people move out after receiving a notice of a planned foreclosure sale and the bank then cancels, municipalities are left to deal with the mess. Some spend public funds on securing, cleaning and stabilizing houses that generate no tax revenue. Others let the houses rot. In at least three states in recent months, houses abandoned by owners and banks alike have exploded because the gas was never shut off.?

Threat of jail?

Unsuspecting homeowners have had their wages garnished, their credit destroyed and their tax refunds seized. They've opened their mail to find bills for back taxes, graffiti-scrubbing services, demolition crews, trash removal, gutter repair, exterior cleaning and lawn clipping. At their front doors they've encountered bailiffs brandishing summonses to appear in court.

In some cities, people with zombie titles can be sentenced to probation - with the threat of jail if they don't bring their houses into compliance.

"These people have become like indentured serfs, with all of the responsibilities for the properties but none of the rights," says retired Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Professor Kermit Lind.

Banks used to almost always follow through with foreclosures, either repossessing a house outright ? known in industry parlance as REO, for real estate owned ? or putting it up for auction at a sheriff's sale. The bank sent a letter notifying the homeowner of an impending foreclosure sale, the homeowner moved out, the house was sold, and the bank applied the proceeds toward the unpaid portion of the original mortgage.

That has changed since the housing crash. Financial institutions have realized that following through on sales of decaying houses in markets swamped with foreclosures may not yield anything close to what is owed on them.

By walking away, banks can at least reap the insurance, tax and accounting benefits from documenting the loss ? without having to take on any of the costs and responsibilities of ownership, according to a 2010 Federal Reserve paper. A walk-away also enables them to "sell the unpaid debt to debt collectors, sometimes noting to the court that the loan has been charged off," according to a Case Western Reserve University study released in 2011.

No regulations require that banks let homeowners know when they change their minds about a foreclosure. So they rarely do, according to housing court judges, homeowners' lawyers and academics who study foreclosure problems. "The banks do not answer inquiries, they do not answer phone calls, they do not answer letters," says Judge Patrick Carney of the Buffalo, New York, Housing Court. His zombie-title caseload has swollen in the past few years to well into the hundreds. "The whole situation is surreal," he says.?

Clean up or else?

Marlon Sheafe, a 55-year-old who drove trucks for Sara Lee Corp for 25 years, was sentenced to probation in May. The citation from the Cleveland Housing Court says that if he doesn't fix the problems with the investment property he bought in 2005, the grandfather of three, who suffers from advanced cancer, will go to jail in May 2014.

Ocwen Financial Corp, the servicer of Sheafe's mortgage, foreclosed on the house in 2008, when Sheafe was hospitalized with congestive heart failure and later lost his job, forcing him into default. That was the last he heard about the house until a year and a half ago, when he received a summons to appear in Cleveland Housing Court for code infractions on the property: cracked steps, shredded siding, weeds as tall as the doors. There was also a $300 lawn-mowing bill.

A few weeks later, Sheafe appeared at the drab, brown-paneled chambers of the Cleveland Housing Court, packed, as it is every Tuesday and Thursday lately, with other people in his situation. Sheafe expected his appearance that day would clear up what he thought was a big mistake. Instead he left with the order to get the house up to code.

Sheafe started visiting the tall, crooked house every week. Looters had stripped the place bare. The "dope boys" had left their sneakers on the porch and their empty cans of sausages strewn around inside. Sheafe repaired the steps and spray-painted patches of the exterior where the vinyl siding had been ripped off. He returned every week to check on the house and mow the lawn.

While Sheafe worked on the house, Judge Pianka worked on the mortgage servicer, subpoenaing Ocwen to appear in court. In February, Ocwen released its lien on the house, which Sheafe hoped would enable him to donate it to the local land bank - one of many set up by local governments in recent years to manage abandoned properties.

But Sheafe still can't shake free of the house. The county sold his tax lien to a debt collector, which is now suing Sheafe for foreclosure. He also faces $4,185 for code violations, $185 for court costs and up to $10,000 if the city is forced to tear down the house.

"There's no end to this," Sheafe says. "I can't win."

Asked to comment, Ocwen issued a statement saying: "It is Ocwen's policy not to disclose details about specific customers. In this case, Ocwen has attempted to work with the borrower over a four-year period. Ocwen offered to settle the account with the borrower but never received a response to the offer."

Sheafe says he couldn't afford the amount Ocwen proposed in its settlement offer.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the federal agency established in the wake of the financial crisis to guard against predatory lending and other abuses, declined to comment for this article.

Joe Smith is the monitor of the National Mortgage Settlement, the agreement struck a year ago between major banks and state attorneys general to, in part, address foreclosure abuses. In a statement responding to a request for comment, he said: "To my knowledge, the servicers' behavior in the situation... is not covered by any standards in the Settlement." He added: "However, it does sound like there are problems with this type of treatment. I recommend the borrowers contact their state's attorney general and remember that the Settlement does not preclude borrowers from taking their own legal action."

Patrick Madigan, Iowa's assistant attorney general, was instrumental in crafting the National Mortgage Settlement. He said that he thought the consent decree would attempt to address the issue of foreclosure limbo, but that in the end, the language in the order was ambiguous. "It's a very difficult situation," Madigan said.?

No responsibility?

Banks say that because they are not the legal owners of these homes, they aren't required to maintain them, pay taxes on them, or take any legal responsibility for them. Homeowners legally own their properties until the day of sale. And it's not until that day, the banks point out, that a homeowner's name vanishes from the title.

David Volker found that out the hard way. When the housing market crashed, so did Volker's contractor business, and he was unable to keep up with payments on his barn-like two-story house in Buffalo, New York. His mortgage servicer, HSBC, foreclosed on the home in 2009. A few months later, while he was staying with his girlfriend, he stopped by the house to find an HSBC padlock on the doorknob and bank stickers plastered across the door.

Shattered glass covered his front steps. When he crawled through a broken window, he found the place trashed - by whom, he doesn't know. Even the toilets were gone. Hearing nothing more from the bank, he figured the house was no longer his.

The place continued to decay. Gutters tore loose from the eaves. The yard turned into a dump for balding tires. Volker's neighbors started complaining to the Buffalo Housing Court, which eventually tracked down Volker at the rental where the 49-year-old was living and ordered him to appear in court. That's when Judge Carney told him that he was still the owner.

"I was stunned," Volker says. "I never for a moment thought I still owned this house."

Volker worked with a realtor to try to get HSBC to take several short-sale offers - deals under which the bank would allow Volker to sell the house for less than the amount owed on it - but he says HSBC turned them down. Since then, he's been asking the bank to agree to a deed in lieu, whereby he would give the house back to the bank. So far, he hasn't been able to make that happen. He has $1,000 in water and trash bills and faces up to $30,000 in demolition fees if the city decides his house is a safety hazard and must be torn down.

HSBC declined to comment on Volker's case, citing privacy concerns. In a statement, the bank said it "has a strong commitment to home preservation and regards foreclosure as a last resort, only after alternatives have been exhausted and the borrower is seriously delinquent."

Cases against zombie-title holders are rising due to everything from sewer bills to tilting chimneys, and they are clogging the courts. In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, about 900 cases in the foreclosure process involve zombie titles. In South Bend, Indiana, the number is 1,275, up from 600 in 2006. In Memphis, Tennessee, cases have doubled in the past two years to 1,500.

In Cleveland, 15 percent of foreclosures between 2005 and 2009 stalled out in foreclosure limbo, more than a third of them involving homeowners who had fled foreclosure notices, according to the Case Western Reserve study.?

State of action?

State tax authorities are getting into the game, too. When IndyMac foreclosed on Richard Chavarry's house in Victorville, California, in 2008, he had already relocated to Los Angeles to escape the 80-mile commute to his job. The renters he had initially relied on to help him keep up payments on the Victorville house were long gone, too. But he had no idea that IndyMac canceled the sale in October 2009. "They never notified me," Chavarry said.

Nearly two years passed before Chavarry started getting citations in the mail for code violations from the city of Victorville. In February, the California Tax Board seized his $631 tax refund to pay the city back for the costs of scrubbing graffiti, removing tumbleweeds and boarding up the windows of Chavarry's house.

In March, Chavarry filed a deed in lieu to try to get IndyMac, now owned by OneWest Bank, to take back the house. The bank rejected it. Chavarry still owes the county $5,731 in back taxes and fees for housing-code violations.

IndyMac declined to comment.

Once a bank walks away from a foreclosure, the real rot begins. Living rooms turn into meth labs. Falling shingles menace passers-by. Squatters' cooking fires turn into infernos. The latest iteration of the trend: gas explosions.

Electric companies usually shut off the juice when homeowners tell the utility they are moving. But natural-gas companies usually don't. In recent months, abandoned homes have exploded in Chicago, Cleveland and Bridgeport, Connecticut. In all cases, foreclosed homeowners had moved out. With no one home to smell the gas, it went undetected - until the houses blew.

"We are seeing more and more close calls," says Mark McDonald, a former natural gas public safety worker who now runs the New England Gas Workers Association. "These houses are a formula for disaster."

Cities are struggling to find ways to cope with growing numbers of blighted properties. Miami, Detroit and Las Vegas have created registries intended to force banks to take more responsibility for vacant houses.

The Mortgage Bankers Association has opposed these measures. Placing "unreasonable" and "onerous" requests upon servicers will only hurt the already ailing mortgage-lending business, the association says on its website.

The association did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

Registry advocates say the banking industry's opposition has helped water down some of those actions, such as a recently enacted Georgia law that requires banks to register vacant properties only after a foreclosure has been completed.

A vacant-property ordinance in Los Angeles requires banks to register a house as soon as they file a default notice. Failure to do so could result in a $1,000-a-day fee. However, "it's not being enforced," says Los Angeles Assistant City Attorney Tina Hess. "Part of the problem in L.A. is the building and safety departments have been cut so severely they don't have the inspection staff to monitor these properties."?

'To hell and back'?

In Columbus, Ohio, Joseph Keller recently paid a visit to the empty house on Avondale Avenue. In the living room, the floor was littered with dirty diapers, pill bottles, condoms, sooty mattresses and soda cans. In the kitchen, squatters had hung pink curtains.

"They tore it to hell and back," Keller said, kicking at a dirty mattress. "We never would have left the home if we weren't told to get out."

The Kellers live in their daughter's dining room, where their queen-size bed leaves little room to maneuver. Joseph can't sit, stand or sleep for more than 15 minutes at a time. He can't take pain medication because of his diseased liver. Every few months, he makes a trip to the emergency room, where doctors drain his abdomen of excess fluid.

Last May, Chase's debt collector, Professional Recovery Services, sent Keller a letter: "At this time," it said, "we are able to offer you a settlement of $25,258.41 on this account to be paid within 15 days." He lacks that kind of money, as well as the $11,759.08 he owes to the county in back taxes.

Professional Recovery Services declined to comment.

At a hearing in early December, a Social Security administrative judge told the Kellers that he would review their appeal of the original denial of benefits, a process that he said could take two months. Joseph Keller responded that he might not be around that long. Earlier this month, the judge sent the case back to the local office after it determined that the house was virtually worthless. Keller still has no benefits.

A Social Security Administration spokesperson declined to comment on the case.

"He's dying," says Keller's daughter, Barbara. "He needs his name off this house."?

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/zombie-titles-haunt-victims-home-foreclosure-1B7933378

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Friday, January 11, 2013

Calif. teacher talked to shooter so students fled

This image provided by the Taft Midway Driller/Doug Keeler shows paramedics transporting a student wounded during a shooting Thursday Jan. 10, 2013 at San Joaquin Valley high school in Taft, Calif. Authorities said a student was shot and wounded and another student was taken into custody. (AP Photo/Taft Midway Driller, Doug Keeler) MANDATORY CREDIT

This image provided by the Taft Midway Driller/Doug Keeler shows paramedics transporting a student wounded during a shooting Thursday Jan. 10, 2013 at San Joaquin Valley high school in Taft, Calif. Authorities said a student was shot and wounded and another student was taken into custody. (AP Photo/Taft Midway Driller, Doug Keeler) MANDATORY CREDIT

This image provided by the Taft Midway Driller/Doug Keeler shows paramedics assisting a student wounded during a shooting Thursday Jan. 10, 2013 at San Joaquin Valley high school in Taft, Calif. Authorities said a student was shot and wounded and another student was taken into custody. (AP Photo/Taft Midway Driller, Doug Keeler) MANDATORY CREDIT

This image provided by the Taft Midway Driller/Doug Keeler shows officials taping off an area outside San Joaquin Valley high school in Taft, Calif., Thursday Jan. 10, 2013. Authorities said a student was shot and wounded and another student was taken into custody. (AP Photo/Taft Midway Driller, Doug Keeler) MANDATORY CREDIT

Map locates a shooting in Taft Calif., where at least two are shot near a high school.

A unidentified woman cries while standing outside Taft Union High School after a shooting on Thursday, Jan. 10, 2012 in Taft, Calif. The sheriff of Kern County, Calif., says a 16-year-old student shot at a high school is in critical but stable condition. Sheriff Donny Youngblood says the shooter is a student who walked into a class at Taft Union High School Thursday morning and shot the teen with a shotgun, and then fired at another student but missed. A teacher suffered a minor pellet wound to the head. Youngblood says the teacher tried to get other students out a back door, then he and another staff member engaged the shooter in conversation to distract him, and convinced him to put down the gun. (AP Photo/The Bakersfield Californian, Alex Horvath) MANDATORY CREDIT; MAGS OUT; NO SALES; ONLINE OUT; TV OUT

(AP) ? The 16-year-old boy had just wounded a classmate he claimed had bullied him, fired two more rounds at students fleeing their first-period science class then faced teacher Ryan Heber.

"I don't want to shoot you," he told the popular teacher, who was trying to coax the teen into giving up the shotgun he still held.

Recounting the suspect's words, Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood said the confrontation was enough of a distraction to give 28 students time to escape their classroom Thursday at Taft High School.

The violence came just minutes after administrators had announced new lockdown safety procedures prompted by the Newtown, Conn., school massacre.

"Just 10 minutes before it happened our teachers were giving us protocol because of what happened in Connecticut," said student Oscar Nuno, who was across campus from the science building when an announcer on the speaker system said the school was under lockdown "and it was not a drill."

The teen victim, who classmates said played football last year for the Taft Wildcats, was in critical but stable condition at a Kern County hospital Thursday night. He was expected to undergo surgery on Friday.

The suspect surrendered his shotgun to Heber and campus supervisor Kim Lee Fields. His pockets were stuffed with more ammunition, Youngblood said.

"This teacher and this counselor stood there face-to-face not knowing if he was going to shoot them," Youngblood said. "They probably expected the worst and hoped for the best, but they gave the students a chance to escape."

Heber's forehead was grazed by a stray pellet, but Youngblood said the teacher who had graduated from the Taft school two decades ago was unaware he had been hit and didn't need medical attention.

"He's the nicest teacher I know," Nuno said. "He loves his students and he always wants to help."

Administrators closed the school Friday as residents of this remote town of 9,400 that sits amid tumbleweeds and oil fields about 120 miles northwest of Los Angeles tried to make sense of what happened.

"We know each other here," said former Mayor Dave Noerr. "We drive pickups and work hard and hunt and fish. This is a grassroots town. This is the last place you'd think something like this would happen."

The 16-year-old suspect's name is on the lips of everyone in town, but authorities aren't releasing it because he's a juvenile. He had felt bullied by the victim for more than a year, said Youngblood, who added that the claim was still being investigated.

Trish Montes described her neighbor as "a short guy" and "small" who was teased about his stature by many.

Montes said her son had worked at the school and tutored the boy last year.

"All I ever heard about him was good things from my son," Montes said. "He wasn't Mr. Popularity, but he was a smart kid. It's a shame. My kid said he was like a genius."

On Wednesday night the teen went home and plotted revenge against two students, Youngblood said. He found a gun that authorities believe belonged to the suspect's older brother and went to bed that night plotting revenge against two students.

"He planned the event," Youngblood said. "Certainly he believed that the two people he targeted had bullied him, in his mind. Whether that occurred or not, we don't know yet."

The suspect arrived after 9 a.m. Thursday, and video surveillance cameras captured him looking nervous as he entered through a side door, Youngblood said. He made his way to the second floor of the school's science building, where Heber's class with 28 students inside was under way.

The suspect walked in a door close to the front of the classroom and shot his classmate. When the shots were fired, Heber tried to get the more than two dozen students out a back door and engaged the shooter in conversation to distract him, Youngblood said.

"The heroics of these two people goes without saying. ... They could have just as easily ... tried to get out of the classroom and left students, and they didn't," the sheriff said. "They knew not to let him leave the classroom with that shotgun."

"When your son does the right thing, you have to feel fantastic," said the teacher's father, David Heber, who also lives in Taft.

He described his son as a "teacher who knows every single one of his students and not just by name."

He said his son had been teaching science to different grade levels for seven or eight years. The younger Heber was student body president when he went to Taft, his father said.

Heber couldn't remember any other time when a confrontation turned so violent. "I don't think he's ever been in a fight in his life. He can always talk himself out of it."

Youngblood said that the suspect would be charged with attempted murder. The district attorney will decide whether he's charged as an adult, Youngblood said.

Authorities said a female student was hospitalized with possible hearing damage because the shotgun was fired close to her ear, and another girl suffered minor injuries during the scramble to flee.

Wilhelmina Reum, whose daughter, Alexis Singleton, is a fourth-grader at a nearby elementary school, got word of the attack while she was about 35 miles away in Bakersfield and immediately sped back to Taft.

"I just kept thinking this can't be happening in my little town," she told The Associated Press.

Officials said there's usually an armed officer on campus, but the person wasn't there because he was snowed in.

The attack there came less than a month after a gunman massacred 20 children and six women at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., then killed himself.

That shooting prompted President Barack Obama to promise new efforts to curb gun violence. Vice President Joe Biden, who was placed in charge of the initiative, said he would deliver new policy proposals to the president by next week.

___

Associated Press writers Robert Jablon and John Antczak in Los Angeles, and Juliet Williams in Sacramento contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-11-Calif-School%20Shooting/id-163ea35f6a3c4fa0a61a02d21a543194

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On Language (talking-points-memo)

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Green Blog: In India, Solar Ambitions Are Suddenly Outsize

After years of lagging behind China and the West in the adoption of solar power, some states in India are proposing to build solar farms at a galloping pace that leaves them at risk of falling short of electricity (a familiar problem here) or of paying higher prices for it.

In just the last five months, five Indian states have announced plans to bring giant amounts of solar power online within five years, including 1,000 megawatts in Andhra Pradesh, 350 megawatts in Rajasthan, 800 megawatts in Madhya Pradesh, 1,000 megawatts in Chhatisgarh and a whopping 3,000 megawatts in Tamil Nadu.

By comparison, the entire nation of India currently has just over 1,000 megawatts of solar power, and California, the leader in solar power in the United States, has around 2,000. India has more than 300 sunny days a year and much of the nation lies near the equator ? ideal conditions, geographically speaking, for harnessing solar power.

The central government has a goal of producing 22 gigawatts of solar power by 2022. Proponents say that solar energy might reduce the country?s dependence on coal, which is always in short supply, and slow the effects of climate change, including sea-level rise, which endangers the country?s coastal cities.

The national government, known here as the Center, intends to lean heavily on the states in working toward that target. And in the last few months a handful of states have emphatically responded.? ?The momentum is shifting from the Center to the states,? said Vineeth Vijayaraghavan, who publishes a?newsletter?on the Indian clean tech industry.

Recent events in Tamil Nadu underline the risks of trying to build out solar power too quickly.

Rolling blackouts are a fact of life here because of a 4,000-megawatt deficit in power production. In response, the government announced in October that it was seeking bidders to build 1,000 megawatts of solar power each year until 2015.

Tamil Nadu modeled its bidding process after one that worked out strongly in the central government?s favor. In 2011, the center sought bids for solar power and was overwhelmed by suitors ? it received 5,000 megawatts? worth of proposals for 1,000-megawatt projects. The government held a novel reverse auction that made solar developers compete with one another to see who could sell power to the state more cheaply. The resulting rates saved the utility and its customers significant money.

Tamil Nadu introduced its own 1,000-megawatt offer last October, and initial interest by solar developers was intense. But some companies grew wary when they examined the fine print. Rules were vague about when payments would be made; the state?s power distributor, known as Tangedco, is in poor financial health, which makes it harder for solar builders to secure loans; and the utility took no responsibility for transmitting the electricity that the developers created.

Furthermore, the projects had to be unveiled at a punishing pace: companies had to acquire land, line up financing, build the solar farms and switch on the power by the end of this year.

As of Friday?s deadline, the state had received bids for just 499 megawatts, less than half its target.

Energy officials maintained in a press report that the response was ?by no means discouraging.??But Tobias Engelmeier, the managing director of Bridge to India, a solar research and consulting firm, said that since many of the bids won?t meet the state?s criteria, Tamil Nadu may end up getting only 150 megawatts of solar power this year.

?I think that Tangedco was expecting a lot more enthusiasm,? said Madhavan Nampoothiri, a solar consultant in Chennai, Tamil Nadu?s capital. ?They weren?t able to allow an extension, and now they?re going to have to.?

Source: http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/09/in-india-solar-ambitions-are-suddenly-outsize/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Thursday, January 10, 2013

String Theory Helps To Explain Quantum Phases Of Matter (preview)

Cover Image: January 2013 Scientific American MagazineSee Inside

Newly discovered states of matter embody what Einstein called ?spooky action at a distance.? They defy explanation, but lately answers have come from a seemingly unrelated corner of physics: string theory


MAGNET is being levitated by an unseen superconductor in which countless trillions of electrons form a vast interconnected quantum state. Astoundingly, the quantum state of many modern materials is subtly related to the mathematics of black holes.

Image: Zachary Zavislak

In Brief

  • Matter can assume many forms other than solid, liquid and gas. The electrons that perfuse materials can undergo their own transitions, which involve inherently quantum properties of matter. Superconductors are the best-known example.
  • These states of matter arise from an unimaginably complex web of quantum entanglement among the electrons?so complex that theorists studying these materials have been at a loss to describe them.
  • Some answers have come from an entirely separate line of study, string theory, typically the domain of cosmologists and high-energy particle theorists. On the face of it, string theory has nothing to say about the behavior of materials?no more than an atomic physicist can explain human society. And yet connections exist.

Several years ago I found myself where I would never have expected: at a conference of string theorists. My own field is condensed matter: the study of materials such as metals and superconductors, which we cool in the laboratory to temperatures near absolute zero. That is about as far as you can possibly get from string theory without leaving physics altogether. String theorists seek to describe the universe at energies far in excess of anything experienced in a lab or indeed anywhere else in the known universe. They explore the exotic physics governing black holes and putative extra spacetime dimensions. For them, gravity is the dominant force in nature. For me, it is an irrelevance.

This difference in subject matter is mirrored by a cultural gap. String theorists have a formidable reputation, and I went to the meeting in awe of their mathematical prowess. I had spent several months reading their papers and books, and I often got bogged down. I was certain I would be dismissed as an ignorant newcomer. For their part, string theorists had difficulty with some of the simplest concepts of my subject. I found myself drawing explanatory pictures that I had only ever used before with beginning graduate students.

This article was originally published with the title Strange and Stringy.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=7ebd17f8d2e7b29508166f164dd76696

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Boxee Is The Poster Child Of A Lean Startup: They Just Happen To Ship Hardware

Screen Shot 2013-01-09 at 4.03.06 PMBoxee launched the Boxee TV shortly before Christmas. At 3000 Walmart stores. And major feature is still in beta. Boxee is the poster child of a lean startup -- they just happen to ship hardware.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/o8QbkiaiQWI/

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Malaysia: New year looks bright for construction industry ? Oxford ...

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