Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Chicago's Cook County drops bullet tax, keeps gun levy

CHICAGO (Reuters) - The senior executive of the county that includes Chicago dropped a proposed tax on bullets on Wednesday but kept a plan to tax firearms to help defray healthcare expenses associated with the high rate of gun.

"It is very important to us to tax guns because we know that guns are the sources of the incredible violence we have in our neighborhoods," Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle told a news conference. She said 29 percent of guns used in crimes in Chicago were purchased legally in suburban Cook County.

Under the plan, the county would impose a $25 tax on the purchase of firearms. The tax is expected to raise $600,000 in revenue in 2013. Preckwinkle abandoned a proposed tax of 5 cents a bullet because the tax in some cases would have exceeded the price of ammunition.

If approved by the board, the nation's third most populous county with nearly 5.2 million residents could be the first major U.S. metropolitan area to impose a tax as a form of gun control, according to the Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

There have been 440 murders in Chicago so far this year, surpassing last year's total of 435 and 22.2 percent more than in the same period a year ago, according to Chicago police.

Preckwinkle proposed dedicating $2 million to a violence prevention program, which would primarily provide grants to non-profit organizations with proven experience in violence prevention or community outreach.

She noted that 670 victims of gun violence had been treated by the county's health system last year. The average cost per patient was $52,000.

The Cook County Board of Commissioners is due to vote on the firearm tax proposal on Friday. Commissioner Jesus Garcia, who supports the revised plan, said he thinks it will be approved.

Taxes on buyers or sellers of guns or ammunition have been proposed but failed in six states, including California, Louisiana, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania, according to the Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

Tennessee has a hunting-related 10 cent tax on shotgun shells and cartridges that applies to sellers. The money is used to support wildlife resources.

Richard Pearson, executive director of the Illinois State Rifle Association, said the proposal was another scheme to punish law-abiding firearm owners and dealers, and that it would prompt people to purchase weapons elsewhere.

"It's just another thing to drive the business out of state," Pearson said.

Father Michael Pfleger, pastor of Chicago's St. Sabina Church, said the tax would make a difference, just as cigarette taxes affected cigarette consumption. He called gun violence "the undeclared disaster," and said that in his South Side neighborhood a gun could be bought for as little as $20.

"We are a city with more guns than computers in many neighborhoods and that's unacceptable," Pfleger said.

(Reporting By Mary Wisniewski; Editing by Greg McCune, Cynthia Johnston and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chicagos-cook-county-drops-bullet-tax-keeps-gun-221122419.html

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Saturday, October 13, 2012

The Structural and Designing Requirements of Jaw Plates

The jaw plate of jaw breakers includes mobile jaw plate and fixed jaw plate, and each is composed with jaw bed into mobile jaw and fixed jaw. Jaw plate is fixed on the surface of jaw bed with a wedge-shaped iron and bolts to protect the bed from wear and tear. The bed of fixed jaw is the rack, and that of the mobile jaw is hung on the eccentric shaft. Because it is directly exposed to an extrusion force on the stone, so it must have sufficient strength and stiffness. The mobile jaw bed is generally made of iron or cast steel. Jaw plate directly contacts with stones, so except bearing the squeeze and impact, it still has strong friction with stones, therefore, it is required to be made with high strength and wear-resistant material.
The model is created on the solid works platform and the jaw crusher is simulated, through the kinematics? analysis of the jaw crusher, quantitative description of the broken jaw trajectories of mobile, horizontal and vertical as well as the characteristic values, determined the machine cycle at maximum load conditions. The results show that stress of mobile jaw changes with working position. The stress distribution pattern of mobile jaw at the maximum load is presented, which can be used as guide to improve product design. To optimize the dimension on mobile jaw where stress is small and value of the safety factor is too large, to reduce thick part of the structure and its weight, which can be used to increase economic efficiency. The research can be used to improve machine performance which provides a basis to improve the parameters of mobile jaw, there is practical significance and a better guide to improve the energy saving of jaw crusher.
Moving along the direction of movement of the mobile jaw crusher promotes discharging effect, so we can guarantee the efficiency of the production of the crusher to a certain extent. The vertical displacement of mobile jaw is also large in the simulation, so the lining board will be worn quickly, and its service life will be decreased. As the development of wear-resistant materials and the improvement of liner?s wear-resistant ability, jaw crushers are gradually becoming larger-sized.

Source: http://www.greenoptions.com/t/4406/the-structural-and-designing-requirements-of-jaw-plates

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Movie Review: Seven Psychopaths - Blogcritics Video

If the last few weeks are of any indication, we?re in for a slam dunk of a fall movie season. Each film has been trumping the last starting with Looper and last week?s Frankenweenie with no slowing down in sight. Usually, September and October are reserved for wading through the garbage Hollywood doesn?t deem big enough for summer and not good enough for Oscar chances. This year seems to be changing that with some small scale outings rounding out the usual happenings like the new Saw replacement Paranormal Activity. But that doesn?t keep the rest of us from having some fun too with the crazy cast of Seven Psychopaths.

Following up a debut film such as In Bruges seems like it would be too much a feat for anyone. But Martin McDonagh actually makes it look easy. With the same brand of drama, violence, hilarity, and wits, McDonagh has written one of the best screenplays in years for Seven Psychopaths. The film is about Marty (Colin Farrell), an Irish screenwriter living in Hollywood with a title and no story. Yes, Marty is writing a movie called Seven Psychopaths but hasn?t a clue what to do.

Billy (Sam Rockwell) is dying to help Marty with his screenplay throwing him lots of bones with crazy stories and even places an ad in the newspaper asking psychopaths to call Marty to tell them their own life stories. Hans (Christopher Walken) continues visiting his wife Myra (Linda Bright Clay) at the hospital when he isn?t returning ?lost? dogs to their owners for the reward and has ?stumbled? upon a shih tzu belonging to gangster Charlie (Woody Harrelson). Meanwhile, a serial killer dubbed ?Jack of Diamonds? is going around shooting down mobsters waiting around to whack their own targets.

It never crossed my mind that we needed Adaptation remade by Quentin Tarantino, but that?s exactly how the film plays. McDonagh has certainly outdone himself and anyone else this year so far by writing one of the funniest, smartest, most quotable films of the year. Things do get dark, but there are also hilarious moments of outrageous violence. But fear not, the nastiest bits are played for laughs. There were walkouts during some of these moments, but the film is called Seven Psychopaths people. Anyone offended shouldn?t be in the theater in the first place. But if you?re searching for one of the best films to see this weekend (the other being Argo), Seven Psychopaths is time well spent.

Photos courtesy CBS Films

Source: http://blogcritics.org/video/article/movie-review-seven-psychopaths/

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Friday, October 12, 2012

Biden-Ryan Debate Likely to Be Combative (WSJ)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/254830980?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Exide Technologies: Regional Sales Managers | The GreenSheet

Exide Technologies is recognized as the premier provider of battery solutions for the Automotive Aftermarket, Network and Industrial battery markets worldwide. HQ?d in Milton, GA, Exide is embracing new technologies and new ways of doing business. With a 120-year history of growth and success there is an exciting future for our organization. The strong management team is aggressively pursuing opportunities to enter new markets, expand business and grow sales. The evolving company culture is built on a commitment to quality, integrity and respect. In a fast-paced work environment where employees receive excellent compensation and benefits, the opportunities for professional growth and career advancement are significant.

We are currently seeking Regional Sales Managers (RSMs) for two separate territories:

  • the Pacific Coast (California, Utah, Arizona, Oregon, etc.)
  • the Great Plains (Minnesota, Missouri, North Dakota, Kansas City,
    Nebraska, Colorado, Oklahoma, Etc.)

Reporting to the General Manager ? Eastern Division, the Sales Director is responsible for leading a Regional sales team in the attainment of approximately $65 million in revenue or 1 million new units. This person will have primary responsibility for all aftermarket customer activity in the assigned territory. This includes both acquisition and maintenance of dealer participation in Reseller/Installer programs. Travel is required.

The ideal candidate is a seasoned sales professional who possesses at least five years of sales management experience. This highly visible position requires demonstrated leadership skills and a proven track record of successful selling. A Bachelor?s degree in business or a related field is preferred.

All interested candidates should send a resume with salary requirements to:?Idith.moran@na.exide.com
EOE m/f/d/v

previous post: The Greensheet Issue #37-12 (Headlines)

>> next post: FJC Inc.: Heavy Duty Rep Agencies Wanted

Source: http://www.thegreensheetonline.com/exide-technologies-district-sales-managers-7895.htm

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Shout yes! If you feel drinking chocolate should be treated like the ...

It is incredibly hard to look at Mortimer?s packets of chocolate powder before your mouth starts watering.

Mortimer's exquisite chocolate

Mortimer?s exquisite chocolate

You just have to read the descriptions?

Pure Dark Choclate Powder
Delicious as a hot chocolate drink ? Try making our sumptious chocolate sauce!
Ecuador ? Flavour Guide: 4 Intense
A deep tasting, full bodied dark chocolate with a seductive heady aroma.

White Couverture Powder
The dairy free alternative to white chocolate ? Ideal in your white chocolate recipes
The dairy free alternative to white chocolate. Free from soya and gluten too
Deliciously smooth white chocolate taste, with natural vanilla.

Pure Dark Chocolate Powder
Delicious as a hot chocolate drink ? Try making our gorgeous chocolate brownies!
West African ? Flavour Guide: 2 Mellow ? Great Taste Gold Award
An exceptional rounded, mellow dark chocolate loved by all the family.

Salivating yet?

And with others to try, such as The Ghana Blend or The South America Blend, it?s obvious that the Mortimer Chocolate Company are now doing the same for chocolate as has been done for coffee for many generations: highlighting the distinctive flavours of the many varieties of cocoa bean.

Mortimer have worked hard to source the finest cocoas from around the world to make chocolates that carry the characteristic flavours of those regions, from the mellow cocoas of West Africa with their brown fruit notes, to the sharper, spicier cocoas of South America. They are also working to ensure that their cocoa is sustainably sourced and fairly traded too.

But finally, and perhaps most importantly, when it come to chocolate, Mortimer are working hard to be purists. There?s no milk, no fats or additives in their powders, just the finest pure chocolate ? and rightly so, it is chocolate week after all!

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Be the first to like this.

Source: http://blog.goodnessdirect.co.uk/2012/10/12/shout-yes-if-you-feel-drinking-chocolate-should-be-treated-like-the-finest-coffee/

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Thursday, October 11, 2012

Carpenter pitches Cards past Nats 8-0 for 2-1 lead

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Chris Carpenter was every bit the postseason ace he's been in the past for the St. Louis Cardinals.

Taking the mound for only the fourth time in 2012, missing a rib after surgery to cure numbness on his right side, the 37-year-old Carpenter pitched scoreless ball into the sixth inning, rookie Pete Kozma delivered a three-run homer, and the defending champion Cardinals beat the Washington Nationals 8-0 Wednesday to take a 2-1 lead in their NL division series.

"If the baseball world doesn't know what an amazing competitor he is by now, they haven't been paying any attention," Carpenter's teammate Matt Holliday said. "Every guy on this team has watched him work his way back, watches him in between starts. He's a stud. Just a guy that you want out there."

All in all, it was quite a damper on the day for a Nationals Park-record 45,017 red-wearing, towel-twirling fans witnessing the first major league postseason game in the nation's capital in 79 years.

Three relievers finished the shutout for the Cardinals, who can end the best-of-five series in Thursday's Game 4 at Washington.

"We're not out of this, by a long shot," Nationals manager Davey Johnson said. "Shoot, I've had my back to worse walls than this."

Kyle Lohse will start for St. Louis. Ross Detwiler pitches for Washington, which is sticking to its long-stated plan of keeping Stephen Strasburg on the sideline the rest of the way.

The Cardinals won 10 fewer games than the majors-best Nationals this season and finished second in the NL Central, nine games behind Cincinnati, sneaking into the postseason as the league's second wild-card under this year's new format. But the Cardinals become a different bunch in the high-pressure playoffs ? no matter that slugger Albert Pujols and manager Tony La Russa are no longer around.

Carpenter still is, even though even he didn't expect to be pitching this year when he encountered problems during spring training and needed an operation in July to correct a nerve problem. The top rib on his right side was removed, along with connecting muscles.

He returned Sept. 21, going 0-2 in three starts totaling 17 innings, so it wasn't clear how he'd fare Wednesday.

Yeah, right.

"I'm not going to go out there and compete," Carpenter said, "if I'm not good enough to compete."

Carpenter allowed seven hits and walked two across his 5 2-3 innings to improve to 10-2 over his career in the postseason. That includes a 4-0 mark while helping another group of wild-card Cardinals take the title in the 2011 World Series, when he won Game 7 against Texas.

With the exception of Ian Desmond ? 3 for 4 on Wednesday, 7 for 12 in the series ? the Nationals' hitters are struggling mightily. They've scored a total of seven runs in the playoffs and went 0 for 8 with runners in scoring position and left 11 men on base in Game 3.

Rookie phenom Bryce Harper's woes, in particular, stand out: He went 0 for 5, dropping to 1 for 15. He went to the plate with an ash bat and no gloves in the first inning, tried wearing anti-glare tinted contact lenses on a sun-splashed afternoon ? nothing helped.

"Carp's been a dominant pitcher his whole career. Big-game pitcher. He showed up," Washington's Jayson Werth said. "He pitched well today. We had him in some spots. We had him on the ropes a couple of times. We were just one bloop away from a totally different ballgame."

Carpenter was pretty good with a bat in his hands, too, collecting a pair of hits, including a double off the wall that was about a foot or two away from being a homer. When he reached second base, he raised his right fist.

Similarly, neither club could be sure which Edwin Jackson would show up for NL East champion Washington, a year after he was part of the Cardinals' championship team: The one who struck out 10 and allowed one unearned run in eight innings against St. Louis on Aug. 30, or the one who lasted only 1 1-3 innings in a loss to the Cardinals on Sept. 28.

Much closer to the second version, it turned out, although he did recover from a rough start to retire eight of his last 10 batters Wednesday.

Still, Jackson was done after five innings and four runs.

"I didn't feel like I was out of rhythm. I didn't feel like I couldn't throw strikes. I just missed across the plate with a couple of balls and it cost me," Jackson said.

The Cardinals tacked on four runs off relievers Craig Stammen, Christian Garcia and Ryan Mattheus.

Not since the original Senators lost to the New York Giants in the 1933 World Series had big league baseball stretched past the regular season in Washington. Back then, of course, there was no MLB Network in HD to carry a game the way there was Wednesday; indeed, television itself was in its infancy, period. And spectators in attendance way back then could not enjoy a beer at the ballpark, because prohibition wasn't repealed until a couple of months later.

With the Capitol Dome rising beyond left field, the crowd of today was ready to root, root, root for the home team, breaking into chants of "Let's go, Nats!" after player introductions and again after a four-jet flyover. And, boy, did they boo ? when Cardinals outfielder John Jay was announced as the game's first batter, when catcher Yadier Molina trotted to chat with Carpenter, even when Carpenter paused between pitches to tie his red-and-gray right shoe.

Most of all, they booed when Washington's Danny Espinosa was ruled out at first after bunting in the second. TV replays showed that Espinosa did beat third baseman David Freese's throw, but the call was missed by Jim Joyce ? an umpire best known for blowing a call at first base to ruin Detroit pitcher Armando Galarraga's bid for a perfect game in 2010.

Earlier, those boos were directed at Jackson.

The Cardinals opened the second inning with four consecutive hits, the biggest being Kozma's first-pitch homer into the first row in left off a 94 mph fastball to make it 4-0. Kozma took over as the Cardinals' everyday shortstop in September, replacing injured All-Star Rafael Furcal, and only had 72 at-bats during the regular season.

But he's only the latest in a series of "Who's that?" stars of this postseason.

NOTES: Holliday fouled a ball off his left leg in the eighth, stayed in to deliver a two-run single, then left for a pinch runner. ... Frank Robinson, the first manager of the Washington Nationals, threw out the ceremonial first pitch. Former Senators slugger Frank Howard gets that honor Thursday. ... Lohse got the win when the Cardinals beat the Braves in the wild-card game. ... Detwiler will be making the first postseason appearance of his career. His last regular-season start also came against the Cardinals, and he went only 2 1-3 innings, giving up seven runs. ... Wednesday was the 88th anniversary of Washington's only World Series championship, won by the Senators on Oct. 10, 1924.

___

Follow Howard Fendrich on Twitter at http://twitter.com/HowardFendrich

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/carpenter-pitches-cards-past-nats-8-0-2-204550125--mlb.html

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Oregon plans hiking corridor : Sports Yakima

YAKIMA, Wash. ? A designated hiking corridor that would tie together many of southeastern Oregon?s most memorable desert destinations ? like the Oregon Badlands Wilderness, Hart Mountain, Steens Mountain, Pueblo Mountains and Owyhee Canyon ? is in the offing.

The proposed 750-mile Oregon Desert Trail would be, according to a story by Terry Richard in The Oregonian, ?a nonmotorized route for hikers, horseback riders and, in part, for cyclists,? ?linked by a continuous corridor of public land.?

It?s modeled after the Hayduke Trail in Utah and Arizona, though it would be hard for Oregon to match what the Hayduke can offer ? Zion, Bryce, Arches, Canyonlands and the Grand Canyon being, well, kind of untouchable in terms of awe-inspiring spectacle. But let?s face it, outdoor lovers are always looking for new challenges and experiences; why else would people set aside the time and arrange the logistics to, say, hike the length of the Pacific Crest Trail?

It?s also another way of drawing attention to the area?s natural and historical relevance, similar to what local agencies and volunteers are doing with the William O. Douglas National Recreation Trail, which officially opened this past June.

? Scott Sandsberry


Filed under Blogs, Out There, Outdoors

Source: http://sportsyakima.com/2012/10/63548/

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From lectures to explosives detection: Laser pointer identifies dangerous chemicals in real-time

From lectures to explosives detection: Laser pointer identifies dangerous chemicals in real-time [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 10-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Angela Stark
astark@osa.org
202-416-1443
Optical Society of America

WASHINGTON, Oct. 9, 2012By using an ordinary green laser pointer, the kind commonly found in offices and college lecture halls, an Israeli research team has developed a new and highly portable Raman spectrometer that can detect extremely minute traces of hazardous chemicals in real time. The new sensor's compact design makes it an excellent candidate for rapid field deployment to disaster zones and areas with security concerns. The researchers will present their findings at Laser Science XXVIIIthe American Physical Society Division of Laser Science's Annual Meetingcollocated with the Optical Society's (OSA) Annual Meeting, Frontier in Optics (FiO), taking place in Rochester, N.Y. next week.

Raman spectrometers rely on highly focused beams of light at precise wavelengths to illuminate small samples of materials. Very sensitive detectors then study the spectra of light that has been re-emitted, or scattered, by the sample. Most of this scattered light retains its original frequency or color, but a very small percentage of that light is shifted ever so slightly to higher or lower wavelengths, depending on the unique vibrational modes of the sample being studied. By comparing the shifted and the original wavelengths, it's possible to determine the precise chemicals present in the sample.

The researchers brought this capability down to size by constructing their Raman spectrometer using a low-power and low-cost commercial green laser pointer. The green laser's relatively short wavelength helped to improve the detection of the inherently weak Raman signal. The spectrometer also has the capability to first scan the entire sample optically, sweeping from side to side, to locate individual particles of interest a task usually performed by large and cumbersome Raman microscopes.

"Since the overall system is modular, compact, and can be readily made portable, it can be easily applied to the detection of different compounds and for forensic examination of objects that are contaminated with drugs, explosives, and particularly explosive residues on latent fingerprints," said Ilana Bar, a researcher with the Department of Physics at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel. "With proper investment this system could be deployed quite quickly as a consumer product." Other members of the research team include Itamar Malka, Alona Petrushansky, and Salman Rosenwaks.

Presentation LTh3I.3, "Detection of Explosives and Latent Fingerprint Residues Utilizing Laser Pointer Based Raman Spectroscopy," takes place Thursday, Oct. 18 at 2:30 p.m. EDT at the Rochester Riverside Convention Center in Rochester, N.Y.

###

EDITOR'S NOTE: An image showing a schematic of the system is available to members of the media upon request. Contact Angela Stark, astark@osa.org.

PRESS REGISTRATION: A press room for credentialed press and analysts will be located in the Rochester Riverside Convention Center, Sunday through Thursday, Oct. 14-18. Those interested in obtaining a press badge for FiO should contact OSA's Angela Stark at 202.416.1443 or astark@osa.org. A full list of meeting highlights for press is available on the FiO website: http://www.frontiersinoptics.com/home/media-center/conference-news/optics-and-photonics-technology-leaders,-researche/

About the Meeting

Frontiers in Optics (FiO) 2012 is the Optical Society's (OSA) 96th Annual Meeting and is being held together with Laser Science XXVIII, the annual meeting of the American Physical Society (APS) Division of Laser Science (DLS). The two meetings unite the OSA and APS communities for five days of quality, cutting-edge presentations, fascinating invited speakers and a variety of special events spanning a broad range of topics in optics and photonicsthe science of lightacross the disciplines of physics, biology and chemistry. FiO 2012 will also offer a number of Short Courses designed to increase participants' knowledge of a specific subject in the optical sciences while offering the experience of insightful teachers. An exhibit floor featuring leading optics companies will further enhance the meeting. More information at http://www.FrontiersinOptics.org.

About OSA

Uniting more than 180,000 professionals from 175 countries, the Optical Society (OSA) brings together the global optics community through its programs and initiatives. Since 1916 OSA has worked to advance the common interests of the field, providing educational resources to the scientists, engineers and business leaders who work in the field by promoting the science of light and the advanced technologies made possible by optics and photonics. OSA publications, events, technical groups and programs foster optics knowledge and scientific collaboration among all those with an interest in optics and photonics. For more information, visit http://www.osa.org.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


From lectures to explosives detection: Laser pointer identifies dangerous chemicals in real-time [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 10-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Angela Stark
astark@osa.org
202-416-1443
Optical Society of America

WASHINGTON, Oct. 9, 2012By using an ordinary green laser pointer, the kind commonly found in offices and college lecture halls, an Israeli research team has developed a new and highly portable Raman spectrometer that can detect extremely minute traces of hazardous chemicals in real time. The new sensor's compact design makes it an excellent candidate for rapid field deployment to disaster zones and areas with security concerns. The researchers will present their findings at Laser Science XXVIIIthe American Physical Society Division of Laser Science's Annual Meetingcollocated with the Optical Society's (OSA) Annual Meeting, Frontier in Optics (FiO), taking place in Rochester, N.Y. next week.

Raman spectrometers rely on highly focused beams of light at precise wavelengths to illuminate small samples of materials. Very sensitive detectors then study the spectra of light that has been re-emitted, or scattered, by the sample. Most of this scattered light retains its original frequency or color, but a very small percentage of that light is shifted ever so slightly to higher or lower wavelengths, depending on the unique vibrational modes of the sample being studied. By comparing the shifted and the original wavelengths, it's possible to determine the precise chemicals present in the sample.

The researchers brought this capability down to size by constructing their Raman spectrometer using a low-power and low-cost commercial green laser pointer. The green laser's relatively short wavelength helped to improve the detection of the inherently weak Raman signal. The spectrometer also has the capability to first scan the entire sample optically, sweeping from side to side, to locate individual particles of interest a task usually performed by large and cumbersome Raman microscopes.

"Since the overall system is modular, compact, and can be readily made portable, it can be easily applied to the detection of different compounds and for forensic examination of objects that are contaminated with drugs, explosives, and particularly explosive residues on latent fingerprints," said Ilana Bar, a researcher with the Department of Physics at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel. "With proper investment this system could be deployed quite quickly as a consumer product." Other members of the research team include Itamar Malka, Alona Petrushansky, and Salman Rosenwaks.

Presentation LTh3I.3, "Detection of Explosives and Latent Fingerprint Residues Utilizing Laser Pointer Based Raman Spectroscopy," takes place Thursday, Oct. 18 at 2:30 p.m. EDT at the Rochester Riverside Convention Center in Rochester, N.Y.

###

EDITOR'S NOTE: An image showing a schematic of the system is available to members of the media upon request. Contact Angela Stark, astark@osa.org.

PRESS REGISTRATION: A press room for credentialed press and analysts will be located in the Rochester Riverside Convention Center, Sunday through Thursday, Oct. 14-18. Those interested in obtaining a press badge for FiO should contact OSA's Angela Stark at 202.416.1443 or astark@osa.org. A full list of meeting highlights for press is available on the FiO website: http://www.frontiersinoptics.com/home/media-center/conference-news/optics-and-photonics-technology-leaders,-researche/

About the Meeting

Frontiers in Optics (FiO) 2012 is the Optical Society's (OSA) 96th Annual Meeting and is being held together with Laser Science XXVIII, the annual meeting of the American Physical Society (APS) Division of Laser Science (DLS). The two meetings unite the OSA and APS communities for five days of quality, cutting-edge presentations, fascinating invited speakers and a variety of special events spanning a broad range of topics in optics and photonicsthe science of lightacross the disciplines of physics, biology and chemistry. FiO 2012 will also offer a number of Short Courses designed to increase participants' knowledge of a specific subject in the optical sciences while offering the experience of insightful teachers. An exhibit floor featuring leading optics companies will further enhance the meeting. More information at http://www.FrontiersinOptics.org.

About OSA

Uniting more than 180,000 professionals from 175 countries, the Optical Society (OSA) brings together the global optics community through its programs and initiatives. Since 1916 OSA has worked to advance the common interests of the field, providing educational resources to the scientists, engineers and business leaders who work in the field by promoting the science of light and the advanced technologies made possible by optics and photonics. OSA publications, events, technical groups and programs foster optics knowledge and scientific collaboration among all those with an interest in optics and photonics. For more information, visit http://www.osa.org.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/osoa-flt101012.php

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Online privacy and online business - Internet: Marketing and ...

The blog Internet: Marketing and Messages is your one-stop website if you're looking for online research related conferences, workshops, book chapters and book recommendations, call for papers, call for participation, doctoral colloquiums etc. We publish information and articles about academic research related topics like CMC, Second Life, virtual communities, social software, mobile media, interactive systems, online culture, HCI and online marketing.

Source: http://internetmarketingandmessages.blogspot.com/2012/10/online-privacy-and-online-business.html

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Victoria & Michael's Sunny Art-Filled Home in DC House Tour ...

victoria-main-image.jpg

Name: Victoria "Tory" and Michael
Location: Washington, D.C.
Size: 1350 sq.ft.
Years lived in: 7, Owned

Within minutes, it was pretty obvious that Victoria (Tory) and Michael are patient, thoughtful and thorough people. The first thing I noticed when visiting their condo in a lovely old building in northwest Washington D.C. was the remarkable collection of artwork Tory has collected over the years, a collection that transverses an eclectic array of styles, value and media. Collecting works of art takes time. It takes patience. But it also takes courage.

thumbnails10112.jpg

Indeed, Tory has developed a assured and adventurous gift for discovering artistic gems at all manner of venues, from craft shows, galleries to online stores. Tory knows what she likes (and has a terrific artistic sensibility!) and is confident enough to take risks ? but at the same time she takes a careful and studied approach to building her art collection.

I think Tory's relationship with art spills over into the rest of her design aesthetic, which she calls "streamlined English." Every small step has been savored and executed with a joyful studiousness, from choosing fabrics to picking out light fixtures. The style is certainly formal and traditional, but it is not generic or overly orchestrated. The walls are stacked with the books of a voracious reader. And each chair, lamp or knick knack has a story behind it; these are rooms that have evolved slowly, with care, deliberation, and a genuine and joyful love of design.

Apartment Therapy Survey:

Our Style: Streamlined English.

Inspiration: My college roommate's mother. Her house is a wonderful mix of heirlooms, art and crafts collected from stints overseas, and family photos. She has a great eye for proportion; she told me (and she's right!) to look for narrow arms on sofas and upholstered chairs.

Favorite Element: The pendant light in the kitchen (Roll & Hill, Bluff City Pendant), which was an inspired choice born out of frustration. We had a schoolhouse-style, flush-mounted light in that spot and every time the bulb needed replacing we had to balance on our 5' ladder and fiddle with the tiny screws that held it in place. And then I realized, "We don't have to do this. We can get a pendant. A pendant with a bulb that is installed from below." Et voil?. So much easier.

Biggest Challenge: Michael's office, which is a work in progress. Michael, a writer, moved in shortly before we married in 2010. At that time, the office was a screened-in sleeping porch ? a solarium design that is frequently found in apartment buildings of 1920s vintage in Washington DC. We had the space winterized (windows, insulated walls, weatherproofing) last year. Now we're trying to pick out window shades, a wall color, and cabinetry that will suit Michael's needs for an efficient and ergonomically comfortable office and my wish for a space that doesn't look like a cubicle.

Quirkiest Feature: Michael's model of the starship Enterprise, which sits elegantly amidst the art, sculpture and modern light fixtures in our living room. Michael's taste in furniture ran (as he puts it) to Late Twentieth-Century Graduate Student and when we moved in together, he was happy to defer to my taste. The Enterprise was, however, one of the few things that Michael did want to see in our shared home. I think it's charming.

What Friends Say: "Your cats are ruining that sofa/chairs/rug." It's true. One of our cats is an irrepressible, unstoppable furniture scratcher. So, I buy extra fabric whenever I have anything recovered and then have damaged sections reupholstered as needed. Having pets keeps me from thinking that I can keep things (anything, really) perfect. And isn't a fluffy cat with a poker face better than a perfect sofa?

Biggest Embarrassment:
The floor in the hall bathroom. It's a white 1-inch hexagonal tile with white grout. It's impossible to keep clean. I thought the small tile would be the right scale for a small bathroom ? but I was mistaken. It looks busy and the surface area is probably 20-25 percent grout, which is harder to clean than tile. We're going to replace it with a larger tile (3" hexagonal) and grey grout.

Proudest DIY: I went to Galbraith & Paul's sample sale last December and scooped up a bunch of fabric remnants and then made some throw pillows from them. This is a pretty sad accomplishment in the universe of Apartment Therapy DIY, but it was really fun to see the G&P studio and very satisfying to resurrect my sewing skills.

Best Practical Advice: If you're moving into a new apartment and the floors need refinishing ? refinish all of them before you move in. If you're trying to spread renovation costs over a period of years, hold off on some other aspect of the work because you'll never want to deal with the inconvenience of refinishing floors once you've moved in.

Best Philosophical Advice: You should never feel bad about spending money on art. It's important to support working artists.

Best General Advice: It takes time to furnish a home. This apartment reflects acquisitions made over the last 16 years. If you are just starting out and aren't
rolling in cash, you should buy yourself one comfortable, beautiful upholstered chair
(with arms) for reading. You'll feel pleased every time you look at it and every
time you sit in it. And a chair can move easily from one room to another or one
apartment to another as your life changes.

Dream Sources: Odegard (rugs), Madeline Weinrib (fabric), George Smith (new furniture), Raoul Textiles (fabric), John Rosselli (antique furniture).

Resource List:

In DC: Random Harvest (for vintage and new furniture); Antique Row in Kensington MD (antique, but not precious, furniture); Woven History (rugs); the Washington Craft Show (ceramics and other objects); Susan Calloway Fine Arts (fine art, antique prints); Gallery Plan B (fine art); Chevy Chase Gallery (framing); Framesmith DC (framing); Timothy Paul Bedding & Home (for bedding, throw pillows, tableware); Tabletop (tableware and a great place to buy a gift when you have no idea of what to get); Woodridge Upholsterers; Silver Spring Furniture Service (furniture refinishing).

Further afield (places that I have visited or found on the Internet): John Derian, New York City (decorative plates, trays, platters and objects); Peter Fetterman Gallery, Santa Monica, CA (fine art photography); Newzones Gallery of Contemporary Art, Calgary, Alberta (Canada) (fine art).

ENTRY
? Paint: Benjamin Moore Golden Groves (50% formula)
? The hall table is a classic Parsons table that I scavenged from my building's loading
dock when a neighbor discarded it. Underneath the table are two litter boxes for our cats - a brilliant solution to a common apartment puzzle. The tablecloth is a Galbraith & Paul fabric (Tulip in Persimmon).
? The chair came from Baker's annual floor sample sale and the cushion is covered with another Galbraith & Paul fabric (Small Star) - one that I picked up very cheaply at Galbraith & Paul's annual sample sale.

LIVING ROOM
? Paint: Benjamin Moore Cottontail
? The sofa is from Ethan Allen, covered in a Kravet linen. The throw pillows are made from Pollack (Blossom) and Donghia (Prism) fabrics - which are expensive; but throw pillows are reasonable place to splurge, because it doesn't take much fabric to make a pillow (and both manufacturers had no prohibitive yardage minimums).
? The other chairs are from Random Harvest. The barrel chairs are covered in a fabric from Calico Corners (Rebecca). The chaise is covered with another Pollack fabric (Hanabishi).
? I like a trunk for a coffee table; it may not be the most elegant choice, but the extra storage is valuable.

DINING ROOM
? Paint: Benjamin Moore Crowne Hill Yellow
? The fabric is Muriel Brandolini.
? The light fixture is the Collage Pendant by Louis Poulsen.
? The butler's tray table is from Red Egg.
? The chest of drawers, table and end chairs came from Random Harvest.

KITCHEN
? Benjamin Moore Rock Harbor Violet
? Cabinetry: Kraft Maid
? Light fixture: Roll & Hill
? The table and chairs were purchased at stores on Antique Row in Kensington MD. The table has leaves that slide out from under the top, extending its width from 36 inches to 60 inches. In my last apartment, which didn't have a formal dining room, this piece served as a dining table and desk in the living room. The chairs were re-upholstered in cotton duck fabric that cost less that $10/yard; the welting was made from a toile that was nearly as cheap.

STUDY
? Benjamin Moore Boardwalk
? The library chair was a salvage from my office - in 1995! It was battered and needed to be refinished and re-upholstered.
? The sofa is from Mitchell Gold & Bob Williams, slipper chair from Random Harvest.

* The round table is a pretty campaign style occasional table, slipcovered in a Galbraith & Paul fabric (Ovals in Tobacco and Red). The other fabric-covered table was very cheap and is very ugly - I think it was advertised as suitable for the waiting area of a doctor's office; I bought it to hold books and a lamp, and knew that I would cover it.

HALL BATHROOM
? Benjamin Moore Bird's Egg

BEDROOM
Paint: Benjamin Moore White Chocolate
? The headboard is slipcovered in a fabric from Calico Corners.
? The chest of drawers cost $45 at the Georgetown Flea Market in 1994.
? The pictures hanging over the bed are three slides that I bought from a vendor at Eastern Market for $5 each.
? The rug is from Woven History.
? The large pastel was painted by Michael's grandmother.

MASTER BATHROOM
? Benjamin Moore G.I. Green
? I like open shelves for storage, but they have to be maintained tidily. In addition to flower pots and odd glasses, I used clear, acrylic boxes from the Container Store for holding supplies. I cut up an old Graham & Snowe calendar to make paper linings for some of these boxes so that no one can see what's inside.
? I like art in the bathroom, but I wouldn't put anything valuable in there because of water and humidity. The Marie Antoinette drawing/collage is actually a birthday card - proving that a generous 8-ply mat can turn the humblest piece into art.

OFFICE
? The chair is Embody by Herman Miller.
? The ergonomic split keyboard is made by Goldtouch.
? The painting of Michael's beloved cat (recently deceased), Elvis, is by Dina Kuhar of Visual Content, a talented artist and graphic designer.

Thanks, Tory and Michael!

(Images: Lauren Ackil Photography)

? HOUSE TOUR ARCHIVE: Check out past house tours here.
? Interested in sharing your home with Apartment Therapy? Contact the editors through our House Tour Submission Form.
? Are you a designer/architect/decorator interested in sharing a residential project with Apartment Therapy readers? Contact the editors through our Professional Submission Form.

Source: http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/victoria-house-tour-176509

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Madeleine M. Kunin: Pushing Forward With Paid Leave, Workplace ...

"Five of us were meeting for lunch and reminiscing about the women's movement. 'I was never one of those angry women,' one said. 'I'm still angry,' I blurted. My reaction surprised both me and my friends. Where did that come from? A source I hadn't tapped before. Upon reflection, I realized that I'm not angry enough to carry a placard down hot macadam streets in front of the nation's Capitol like I did in my thirties when I marched for women's rights. But now in my seventies, I'm still dissatisfied with the status quo... Why the anger, what did I expect?

"I expected that by the year 2012, grandmothers like myself would be able to tell their grandchildren how life used to be 'long ago' when families used to have to figure out for themselves how to be both wage earners and care givers." -- Excerpt from The New Feminist Agenda, Defining the Next Revolution for Women, Work and Family, Madeleine M. Kunin, Chelsea Green Publishing.pp 1-2.

When I held a conference on onsite childcare in the workplace during my first term as Governor of Vermont in 1986, I expected that most employers would recognize that this was a great idea, both for their workers and their bottom line. When I established a grant program for early childhood education, I expected there would surely be a national program by now.

And when the unpaid Family and Medical Leave Act was signed by President Bill Clinton on Feb. 5, 1993, I expected that paid family and medical leave would soon come about.

None of that happened. The need for sensible family/work policies is greater today than ever, as more middle class families are struggling with work/life balance, and with balancing their household budgets.

Working moms, and increasingly working dads don't want a government handout, but they do need a hand up.

What is at the top of the list? The moms I have spoken with put workplace flexibility at the top of the list. Some family-friendly employers provide workplace flexibility, enabling employees to work at home or work shorter weeks or days.

But flexibility depends largely on what kind of a boss you have. In England and Australia, there is a law called "the right to request flexibility" which applies to everyone. An employee can request flexibility but it is not automatically granted. Both parties have to negotiate a solution, and if none is found, it is settled by a tribunal. Employers have found that the law works for them because it allows them to retain good workers.

Paid family and medical leave is next on the list. Present law, while helpful, is not the answer for a new mother who is forced to either go back to work right after birth, or take the leave, and give up her paycheck for six weeks. Most families simply can't afford to do that. It's hard to believe, but only three countries in the world do not have some form of paid maternity leave: Papua New Guinea, Swaziland and the United States of America.

The same story applies to paid sick days. Connecticut recently passed a limited paid sick days law for service workers in large companies. The winning slogan stated by the governor was, "I don't want someone to sneeze in my salad." Paid sick days are both a family/work issue and a public health concern.

Child care is on every young family's list -- where to find quality care and how to pay for it. Again, most of the globe is ahead of us. It is high time for a national child care and early education policy, paid for on a sliding scale, to enable all children to get off to a good start. As a result of neuroscience studies we know that those early years are critical to a child's development. We also know that high quality childcare can help break the cycle of poverty.

One consequence of our lack of these policies is that the United States has the highest child poverty rate of any developed country -- about 22 percent. The price we will pay for neglecting of the needs of these children will far outpace the cost of investing in their future.

Why has change been so molasses slow? The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other big business interests have fought vigorously against these policies, but regardless of their opposition, two states now have paid leave laws -- California and New Jersey. It can be done. Several states are providing early childhood education and all day kindergarten -- despite tight budgets -- because they know that this is the best place to put their scarce dollars.

How can we speed up the process of putting workplace flexibility, paid family and medical leave, childcare and early childhood education on the agenda of both political parties? We have to amplify our voices and make our demands clear. A useful strategy is to form new and powerful coalitions. Policies that are good for families with young children are also good for the elderly the disabled -- and for that potentially enormous constituency -- men.

These policies are no longer just "women's issues." They are working family issues -- which means most of America.

We also have to play catch-up in electing more women to public office. Female membership in the Congress is 17 percent, which places us in 69th place among 168 countries. Yes, many men will support these issues, but women have the benefit of having experienced the struggles to raise their children while earning a paycheck. They have to have a seat at the table where their stories can be told.

In this election season, the most immediate step for women to take is to exercise the right to vote. Neither party has gone far enough in addressing these needs, but there is a clear distinction between the two, as reflected in the Paul Ryan budget. Instead of expanding programs like Head Start child care block grants and food stamps, they are cutting back.

Both parties are courting women's votes. Why? Because they know that women are very likely to determine the outcome of this election. That outcome will influence whether we move forward on family/work policies, or are pushed back.

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Follow Madeleine M. Kunin on Twitter: www.twitter.com/MadeleineKunin

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/madeleine-m-kunin/votes-for-women_b_1928919.html

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Investigators arrive in Washington County to review boy's disappearance

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WASHINGTON COUNTY - Jaliek Rainwalker was 12 when he disappeared nearly 5 years ago.

Now his case is getting some new attention.

A team of investigators from the National Center for Missing and Exploited children will arrive in Washington County in the coming weeks.

The team plans to review the investigation into the boy's disappearance.

Jaliek was reported missing by his adopted family.

Police labeled his adopted father, Stephen Kerr, a 'person of interest', though Kerry maintains he did not harm the boy.

No charges have been filed.

Source: http://benningtonmanchester.wnyt.com/news/news/160169-investigators-arrive-washington-county-review-boys-disappearance

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Obama: 'I'm Just Okay' At Debating - Business Insider

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President Barack Obama lowered debate expectations at a rally Sunday night in Las Vegas, where he is hunkering down for three days of preparation before his first head-to-head with Mitt Romney later this week.

"Governor Romney, he's a good debater," Obama told supporters. "I'm just OK."

The remark was not without a hint of irony, which Obama underscored later when he told the audience that he was not interested in taking down his opponent with "zingers." Romney has reportedly been working for months on memorizing one-liners to use against the president.?

"What I'm most concerned about is having a serious dis?cussion about what we need to do to keep this country growing," Obama said Sunday, according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal. "That's the debate the country deserves."

Obama's campaign press secretary Jen Psaki reiterated this strategy to reporters on Air Force One Sunday afternoon, adding that Obama will be more focused on addressing voters at home than he will be on his opponent on stage.?

"The president and Mitt Romney clearly look at the debates as a very different opportunity," Psaki said, according to the White House pool report. "The president sees this as an opportunity to continue his conversation with the American people as he has been doing over the last several months including at the convention which was probably our largest audience to date."

"This will be a very large audience," she added. "He wants to speak directly to the families of people who are on their couches at home, having snacks, drinking a beer, drinking soda whatever it is, and tuning in for the first time. That's who he is speaking directly to."

"Mitt Romney and his team have been clear that what they need, what they expect from the debates is a game changing performance."

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/obama-just-okay-debates-romney-good-2012-10

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Obama and Romney fight for religious groups? votes

Separation of church and state may be a constitutional requirement in US government. But in Election 2012 politics, religion has become an increasingly important factor.

Both President Obama and Mitt Romney are focusing on particular religious groups ? Roman Catholic, Jewish, and Evangelical Christians. Mr. Romney?s religion ? Mormonism ? is being covered by the media like never before in US political history. (At least since the sect moved to Utah in the 19th century in order to practice its own beliefs ? including, at that time, polygamy.)

Off to the side, meanwhile, is an apparent spat between the two most prominent Mormon politicians ? Romney and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid ? which seems to bear on their religion?s theology.

Are you smarter than an atheist? A religious quiz

The cover story in the current issue of Time magazine is headlined "The Mormon Identity: What Mitt Romney's faith tells us about his vision and values." It?s written by Jon Meacham, who?s a member of the Leadership Council of the Harvard Divinity School and whose books include ?American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation.?

"[T]he question is whether Romney has the capacity to draw once more on the pragmatic tradition of his religious forebears,? Mr. Meacham writes. ?Will he stick with a strategy that seems not to be working against President Obama, or will he respond to changing events ? with bold policy proposals or a more overtly negative campaign or whatever might move the election in his favor??

?One thing is clear: as a devout Mormon leader, Romney knows his church history, and he knows that difficulty and doubt are inherent elements of life,? Meacham writes. ?The key thing is to remain faithful, to serve, to press ahead ? to the next territory that might welcome you, to the next voter who might decide to give you a chance. From the outside, Romney's life looks to have been easy and affluent. There is, however, another angle of vision, one that reveals a deep-seated Romney instinct to survive and thrive in even the worst of storms.?

In the New York Times a few days earlier, Simon Critchley, professor of philosophy at the New School for Social Research in New York, had a long column titled ?Why I Love Mormonism.?

There, professor Critchley (who is not a Mormon) sought to explain to non-believers ? especially urban skeptics whose knowledge is limited to snarky superficialities ? that the Mormons he met as part of his academic work ?were some of the kindest, most self-effacing and honest people I have ever met.?

?They were also funny, warm, genuine, completely open-minded, smart and terribly well read,? he added.

But with many non-Mormons today, he finds ?a casual prejudice that is not like the visceral hatred that plagued the early decades of Mormonism ? lest it be forgotten, Joseph Smith was shot to death on June 27, 1844, by an angry mob who broke into a jail where he was detained ? but a symptom of a thoughtless incuriousness.?

Washington, DC being a company town, the Washington Post visited the Mormon ?ward? (congregation) where a President Romney likely would attend.

?More ethnically and economically diverse than the typical Mormon ward, its roughly 200 congregants are drawn largely from Northeast Washington and have included deported immigrants, a teen shot dead in gang violence, refugees from African wars, and youths who depend on the church for meals, tutoring for class and support to pay for Boy Scout camp,? the Post reported.

The writer seemed surprised to find that most ward members are Democrats. Still, one said, ?I?d welcome him with open arms.?

One who would not welcome Romney to Washington with open arms is fellow Mormon Sen. Reid. When Romney made his now-infamous comment which seemed to write off the 47 percent of Americans who ?are dependent upon government ? believe that they are victims ? believe the government has a responsibility to care for them,? Reid was quick to comment that Romney had ?sullied? their religion and that the GOP presidential challenger ?is not the face of Mormonism."

In the Washington Post?s ?Belief Watch? column, Lisa Miller puts Romney?s controversial ?47 percent? remark to wealthy donors in historical and theological perspective.

?Mormons regard thrift, industry and self-reliance as non-negotiable obligations,? she writes. But, she adds, ?The dark side of the Mormon devotion to self-reliance is a corresponding horror of failure and dependency on outsiders.?

?A good Mormon wants to care for others in need, but he doesn?t want to be cared for,? she writes. ?If in dire straits, he should seek help first from family and then from his church community ? not from government assistance.?

Not all Mormons agree with Romney?s apparent interpretation.

?That?s Republicanism,? Kathleen Flake, professor of religion at Vanderbilt Divinity School and a Mormon, told the Post. ?That?s not Mormonism.?

?What thunders from the Book of Mormon in LDS churches on Sunday, professor Flake added, is ?if you judge the poor, you have no place in the kingdom of God.??

Beyond Romney?s faith, both he and Obama are watching closely as other religious groups move toward one candidate or the other, seeking to influence that trend.

The Religion News Service reported this past week that ?President Barack Obama's support among Catholic voters has surged since June ? despite a summer that included the Catholic bishops' religious freedom campaign and the naming of Rep. Paul Ryan, a Catholic, as the GOP's vice-presidential candidate.?

?On June 17, Obama held a slight edge over Mitt Romney among Catholics (49 percent to 47 percent), according to the Pew Research Center,? the news service reported. ?Since then, Obama has surged ahead, and now leads 54 percent to 39 percent, according to a Pew poll conducted Sept. 16.?

Among Jewish voters in 2008, Obama won an overwhelming 78 percent, according to exit polls. This year, the GOP is trying hard to win a larger percentage of such voters.

Reports the New York Times: ?Focused on South Florida, Ohio, and Nevada, the Republican Jewish Coalition, backed mostly by the casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, a Zionist, has begun spending $6.5 million on an air-and-ground strategy to reach Jewish voters who may view Mr. Obama as unreliable on the question of Israel?s security.?

In recent weeks (and especially in light of the perceived threat from Iran?s nuclear progam), Romney himself has played up his close relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Meanwhile, Evangelical Christians ? a substantial minority of whom had previously indicated they might not be able to vote for a Mormon ? apparently began gravitating toward Romney once it became clear he would be the Republican nominee.

?There are at least two explanations for why Romney?s Mormonism matters so little among this powerful voting bloc,? writes Jonathan Merritt on the blog site for Sojourners, the progressive religious and social action organization. ?First, evangelicals seem to care more about political ideology than orthodox theology as far as voting is concerned. Polls show that voters care most about the economy, not faith. It?s why the Tea Party ? most of them being self-described evangelicals ? have gravitated toward another Mormon, Glenn Beck.?

?Second, any discomfort about Mormonism is outweighed by an even larger disdain for President Obama,? Mr. Merritt writes. ?Many evangelicals bemoan the last four years of his administration?s policies and they fear what he?ll do if re-elected.?

As religion scholar John-Charles Duffy of Miami University in Ohio put it in the Religion & Politics online news journal, ?Evangelicals may not think Romney?s a Christian, but at least he?s not Obama.?

Are you smarter than an atheist? A religious quiz

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-romney-fight-religious-groups-votes-then-romney-131539713.html

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