Monday, November 12, 2012

Help for blighted suburbs meets French hostility

PARIS (AP) ? When the blighted housing projects ringing major French cities exploded in nationwide riots, France pledged quick action to fix them. Seven years on, the suburban projects remain islands of despair, lofty promises of rebirth largely forgotten. So a new plan to spend millions to help residents turn their neighborhoods around seemed cause for celebration.

Instead, it met a wall of resistance and outright hostility. The reason: the benefactor was the wealthy Arab emirate of Qatar.

The oil-rich state less than the size of Connecticut has exerted an outsized influence as a global bankroller, putting it at the cutting edge of an accelerating power shift between traditional Western powers and emerging economies. As Europe is engulfed in crisis, Qatar has been on a global spending spree, buying stakes in luxury brands, acquiring soccer club Paris St. Germain and financing London's "Shard" ? the EU's tallest building. Now, to the consternation of the French, the emirate wants to make a major humanitarian investment in the West.

It all started a year ago when 10 enterprising local officials from the heavily immigrant suburbs bypassed France's sleek diplomatic machine and knocked on the door of Qatar's emir with a request for help to fund the dreams of budding entrepreneurs without means.

In fairytale fashion, their wish was fulfilled beyond their expectations: The emir pledged a euro 50 million ($65 million) investment fund.

But the offer met a storm of protests by politicians back home, horrified that an outsider would leave its footprint in France's restive neighborhoods. Wounded pride may have played a role. Many found it hard to accept that a small Arab country might succeed where France itself had fallen short.

"France failed in its mission," said Leila Leghmara, one of the officials who made the trip to Qatar. "And now Qatar looks like the savior ... We touched where it hurt."

Permeating the hostile response was suspicion that the tiny Muslim state may have a special agenda at a time when fears of terrorism by Islamist extremists and a perceived infiltration of Muslim culture in French life have been on the rise. Was Qatar using its deep pockets to buy the sympathies of the many Muslims in the housing projects ? and ultimately become a power broker within France itself?

Far-right leader Marine Le Pen called the Qatari investment an "Islamist Trojan horse" while independent politician Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, who champions national sovereignty, said France would be "prostituting itself" by accepting the money. Even some members of mainstream parties balked at the Arab largesse.

The saga came to a head last month when the French government effectively hijacked the initiative, pledging matching funds but spreading the butter over all of France's disadvantaged regions ? and eliminating the focus on the disadvantaged suburbs. Far worse for the project's originators, the government put the funds under the control of a state bank, kicking the founders out of the driver's seat.

Now, a year after their visit to the palaces of Doha, the 10 who bucked a system that has failed the suburbs worry the money may never reach those they hope to help ? ordinary people from their neighborhoods with big ideas bereft of any hope of backing. The rioting that raged for weeks in 2005 was fueled by pent-up frustration about the dead-end futures of immigrants and their descendants in the forgotten suburbs.

The project's original champions dismiss fears of sinister forces at play in Qatar's offer.

"Qatar isn't going to buy France," said Leghmara. "This delirious thinking has to stop." Defenders of the plan note that nobody saw anything pernicious when Qatar raised its stake last year in France's media and defense group Lagardere to 10 percent, making it the largest single shareholder ? even though that investment goes to the heart of France's security apparatus.

Investing in the poor neighborhoods that ring French cities does represent a rare example of Qatar using its soft power to directly influence lives, as it is doing elsewhere. Last month, Qatar's emir, Sheik Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, visited the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian territory controlled by the Islamist militant Hamas ? branded as terrorists by the West. He launched $400 million worth of projects, including housing, a hospital and roads.

The no-strings-attached humanitarian investment in the West by an emerging economy is rare, perhaps unique.

However, Qatar insists that its fund for France is not charity.

"Qatar does business, not philanthropy," Ambassador Mohamed Al-Kuwari told Metro, the free daily, in his country's only reaction to the noisy controversy. "We have no political mission."

Whatever Qatar's motives, experts say the emirate's helping hand for the suburbs simply touches on France's sensitivities about its place in the world as it struggles with its economic downturn and strives to remain a diplomatic power.

"The symbol is very powerful," said Karim Bitar, senior fellow at the Paris-based Institute for International and Strategic Relations. "Qatar has become the conjunction of all French fears."

Two French presidents tried to figure out how to deal with the Qatari offer, first conservative Nicolas Sarkozy and now socialist Francois Hollande ? who last month confirmed the compromise of spreading the funds across all neglected regions.

"Each time a nation wants to invest, we say very good, we'll do it together because we can tell you what is strategic, and what is not," Hollande said in explaining his decision on France 24 TV.

The 10 officials looked to Qatar because of the glass ceiling that keeps most residents of the suburbs ? stigmatized by their often Arabic names or even their addresses ? from getting decent jobs let alone the financial backing for business ventures. French benefactors in the private sector simply aren't there.

"There are lots of people who want to succeed," said Leghmara. "But they find themselves standing in front of closed doors."

Aneld has received pitches for hundreds of projects in need of funding, from high-tech enterprises to a literary cafe. Salim Benradhia's plan for an affordable gourmet restaurant on a barge on the Seine is among them.

"In the suburbs, we don't always have access to Paris restaurants," said Benradhia, a father of two in Clichy-Sous-Bois, where the 2005 riots ignited. "This would make a beautiful night out."

But the banks refused him a loan. Now Benradhia, like others, fears that if the state bank in charge of the project makes all the calls on funding, "we will once again be left on the sidelines."

Now, the local officials who traveled to Qatar fear they will be erased from the picture ? along with their plan.

"After all the work we did, we can talk about a hijacking" if the money doesn't help the projects, said Aneld president Kamel Hamza. "It should (help) those who don't necessarily come from the right families or don't have anyone to guarantee a bank loan."

Figures representing France's minorities say accepting Qatar's generosity is just common sense.

"Better money from Qatar than no money at all," said Patrick Lozes, who helped found the Representative Council of Black Associations.

___

Brian Murphy in Dubai contributed to this report.

Follow Ganley on Twitter at: www.twitter.com/Elaine_Ganley

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/help-blighted-suburbs-meets-french-hostility-082942717.html

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Switzerland Eyeing Talks With U.S. Over Tax Dodging Investigations

ZURICH (Reuters) - Switzerland hopes to restart talks with the U.S. over a long-simmering tax dispute following the re-election of president Obama, its economy minister was quoted as saying on Sunday.

Switzerland is trying to reach a deal to end investigations by U.S. tax authorities into 11 banks, including Credit Suisse and Julius Baer , suspected of helping clients dodge U.S. taxes with the help of offshore bank accounts.

It needs the tax deal so that it can normalize its banking relations with the United States and wants the investigations dropped in return for the payment of hefty fines by the Swiss banks and the transfer of names of thousands of U.S. clients.

"We are seeking clarification quickly," Johann Schneider-Ammann told the Zentralschweiz am Sonntag newspaper. "The situation has been blocked recently. That must now change."

The talks had stalled in the run-up to the U.S. election, and finance minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf has suggested the ball is firmly in the U.S. court.

The two countries are at odds over U.S. demands for Switzerland to hand over bank data from before 2009.

In a separate interview with the BaslerZeitung at the weekend, Credit Suisse Chairman Urs Rohner said the unresolved tax deal was a burden.

"We are doing everything that we can and may to resolve the problem. But in the end there is a need for a solution that all involved will have to agree to."

(Reporting by Caroline Copley; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/11/switzerland-eyeing-talks-_n_2115220.html

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Thursday, November 8, 2012

Send to Kindle for Firefox Delivers Web Content to Your Kindle

Send to Kindle for Firefox Delivers Web Content to Your KindleFirefox: There are a few ways to send content from your browser to your Kindle (using Instapaper, for example, or the Send to Kindle Chrome extension), but if you're a Firefox user, Amazon now has a more direct way for you to push web content to your device.

Once you download the Firefox browser extension, you can click on the Send to Kindle icon in your toolbar to quickly send the page you're on to your Kindle library. Other options are to send just selected text or to preview the page before sending.

In your Amazon Kindle settings, you can specify if you want to send using Wi-Fi or via Amazon's Whispernet service (which costs you depending on where you are and how much data you send). In addition to the option of archiving docs in your Kindle Library, you can also choose which devices (e.g., the iPad) you want the documents delivered to.

All in all, it's great that this extension is finally available for Firefox. Amazon says a Safari version is coming soon.

Send to Kindle | Amazon

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/VgX5O6iaJsc/send-to-kindle-for-firefox-delivers-web-content-to-your-kindle

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Feel like an impostor at work? ? Business Management Daily: Free ...

Even if you?re doing well in your career, getting good reviews and advancing at a solid clip, you may have times when you feel like you don?t really know what you?re doing and you?re just faking it, writes Jessica Stillman at BrazenCareerest.com.

If that sounds familiar, you?re not alone. Even extremely successful people such as comedian Tina Fey, writer Maya Angelou and Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg admit to having that feeling, called impostor syndrome.

Experiencing impostor syndrome isn?t a bad thing, and could actually be a good sign, say experts. Typically it?s smart, diligent and competent people who get that feeling that they?re just faking it sometimes.

The best way to respond to a flare-up of impostor syndrome is to just ride it out, experts say. Recognize that this is just a short-term feeling that soon enough will pass. Then when it does, revel in feeling you?re on top of your game.

? Adapted from ?Feel Like You?re Faking It? That Might Not Be a Bad Thing,? Jessica Stillman, BrazenCareerest.com

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We believe great content should be read and passed around. After all, knowledge IS power. And good business can become great with the right information at their fingertips. If you'd like to share any of the insightful articles on BusinessManagementDaily.com, you may republish or syndicate it without charge.

The only thing we ask is that you keep the article exactly as it was written and formatted. You also need to include an attribution statement and link to the article.

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Source: http://www.businessmanagementdaily.com/33119/feel-like-an-impostor-at-work

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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Press Release: Mannatech Surpasses Goal of 100 Xtreme Food ...

195 Xtreme Food Makeover events help support 423 under-nourished children

(Coppell, Texas) November 5, 2012 ? Mannatech, Incorporated (NASDAQ: MTEX), the leading innovator and provider of naturally sourced supplements based on Real Food Technology? solutions, announced today that it surpassed its goal of 100 events in its ?XFM 100? one-night initiative on October 30th.

The XFM 100 initiative is part of Mannatech?s Xtreme Food Makeover campaign, originally launched in September 2012. This movement showcases Mannatech?s Real Food Technology approach to nutrition, and enables anyone to boost the nutrition of anything they eat with NutriVerus? powder, the company?s newest product. Xtreme Food Makeover events are hosted by independent Associates of Mannatech. The XFM 100 challenged Mannatech Associates to collectively host 100 events on one day. Associates surpassed this goal and held 195 Xtreme Food Makeover events on one night, October 30, 2012. In addition, the Mannatech corporate office committed that for every event scheduled between October 17 and October 30, they would donate valuable nutrition to a child for an entire year through its Give for Real donation-through-consumption program. Mannatech will be nourishing 423 children in need over the next year due to the overwhelming response of its Associates.

Executive Vice President of Sales and Marketing, Al Bala, said, ?Our Associates far surpassed our expectations in scheduling not 100, but nearly 200 XFM events. They have embraced our XFM system with such unmatched passion not only because it?s so simple, fun, and easy to duplicate, but most importantly, because they are sharing a unique solution to one of the world?s biggest problems?malnutrition. All of this is a powerful testament to their renewed faith and deep belief in Mannatech?s core values and what we stand for. When you combine all these things, you are looking at a powerful movement, one that is changing their own lives, the lives of children, and the world.?

Mannatech developed its Give for Real program to use the social entrepreneurship model to meet the needs of vulnerable children all over the world. For every purchase on Automatic Order containing one or more qualifying products, Mannatech donates PhytoBlend? powder formulated using Real Food Technology? solutions to undernourished children through MannaRelief?*Watch this short video to learn more about the Give for Real program.

?

About Mannatech

Mannatech, Incorporated, develops high-quality health, weight and fitness, and skin care

products that are based on the solid foundation of nutritional science and development

standards. Mannatech is dedicated to its platform of Social Entrepreneurship based on the

foundation of promoting, aiding and optimizing nutrition where it is needed most around the

world. Mannatech?s proprietary products are available through independent sales Associates

around the globe including the United States, Canada, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand,

Austria, Denmark, Germany, Norway, Sweden, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Japan,

Taiwan, Singapore, Estonia, Finland, the Republic of Ireland, Czech Republic, the Republic of

Korea, Mexico and Namibia. For more information, visit Mannatech.com.

?

To learn more about Mannatech and its products, visit Mannatech.com. Learn more about Mannatech science and related publications and studies at MannatechScience.org.
*MannaRelief is an independent, nonprofit organization. It is not owned or operated by Mannatech, Incorporated.

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Ben Hulet

Ben Hulet is the Marketing Program Manager at Mannatech and a "Jack of all Trades" in the truest sense of the word. He has worked as a limo driver, an event planner, an electronics engineer, an interior decorator and a recording artist. His life changed 13 years ago the first time he walked through the doors of Whole Foods and he has never looked back. Healthy living is his favorite topic of discussion and there's a very good chance that you and Ben have friends in common.

More Posts

Source: http://www.allaboutmannatech.com/archives/press-release-mannatech-surpasses-goal-of-100-xtreme-food-makeovers-on-one-day

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Code Name Insight: 100 Barter-able Skills and Services

In our everyday lives, if we need something done we usually break out the wallet or credit card and take care of the problem. ?It's coming to the point for many people, however, that they need other options besides cash or credit, to obtain the things they want and need. ?Enter the concept of bartering.
Bartering has been used for centuries and only went away from common use within the last century or so. ?These days many people feel uncomfortable with the concept of bartering (not ALL people as many communities have thriving underground bartering networks). ?Among the issues: they think they lack anything to trade, they are uncomfortable with the whole process, they don't know how to approach people about a trade, etc.
While much of the bartering process simply requires a bit of nerve and people skills, you will also need something (or many somethings) to trade. ?Note that trading things--like a rifle or a car or something smaller--is perfectly fine for bartering but once the item is gone, it's gone. ?With skills and services you can barter these things repeatedly. ?Here are 100 barterable skills and services that many people are happy to trade for:
  1. Car repair
  2. Sewing
  3. Computer repair
  4. Computer setup and networking
  5. Construction
  6. Plumbing
  7. Electrical work
  8. Finish carpentry
  9. Tree trimming/cutting
  10. Butchering
  11. Food production (meat, vegetables, fruit, etc)
  12. Cooking/baking
  13. Babysitting
  14. Elderly sitting
  15. Dog walking
  16. Website design
  17. Doctor
  18. Nurse
  19. Home health aid
  20. Home improvement (build deck, clean gutters, etc)
  21. Yard maintenance
  22. Fire wood
  23. Legal services
  24. Dentistry
  25. Logging/lumber
  26. Hair cutting
  27. Party/wedding planning
  28. Tutoring
  29. Teaching (dance, music, English, etc)
  30. Furniture making
  31. Reloading ammo
  32. Artist (painting, sculpting, etc)
  33. Animal husbandry/animal breeding
  34. Well drilling
  35. Heavy equipment operator
  36. Foraging/dumpster diving
  37. Wine making/beer brewing
  38. Defensive skills training (karate, tactical shooting, etc)
  39. Welding
  40. Gunsmithing
  41. Veterinarian services
  42. Food procurement (hunting, fishing)
  43. Small appliance repair
  44. Electronics repair
  45. Watch repair
  46. Soap making
  47. Candle making
  48. Photographer
  49. Musician
  50. Writer
  51. Video making/editing
  52. Midwifery
  53. Herbalist
  54. Educator (how-to on any of these listed topics)
  55. Land surveyor
  56. Tax preparation
  57. Accounting
  58. Architect
  59. Sports coaching
  60. Fitness trainer
  61. Software/app developer
  62. Aircraft mechanic
  63. Heavy equipment mechanic
  64. Dental?hygienist
  65. HVAC repair
  66. Interpreting
  67. Locksmith
  68. Parts machinist
  69. Blacksmith
  70. Residential/commercial?painting
  71. Sheet metal working
  72. Iron working
  73. Transportation (driver, boat captain, etc)
  74. Auto painting/body work
  75. Mining
  76. Masseuse
  77. Nail tech (manicure/pedicure)
  78. Private detective
  79. Security guard/body guard
  80. Houskeeper/maid
  81. Bicycle repair
  82. Ministering (conduct weddings, funerals, etc)
  83. Graphic arts
  84. Flooring installer/cabinet installer/appliance installer
  85. Glazier services
  86. Masonry?
  87. Tool and die maker
  88. Pet grooming/boarding
  89. Screen printing
  90. Hauling/moving
  91. Reselling
  92. Bee keeping
  93. Cheesemaking
  94. Septic system design/installation
  95. Security system design/installation
  96. Spinning/textiles/making cloth/quilting/kniting
  97. Canning/smoking/other food preservation
  98. Producing electricity from solar/water/wind
  99. Bee keeping
  100. Skilled clean up (crime scenes, mold, after a disaster, chemical spill, etc)

Source: http://codenameinsight.blogspot.com/2012/11/100-barter-able-skills-and-services.html

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Complaints about voter IDs, long lines in election

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. voters complained about erratic implementation of voter ID laws, while long lines in some battleground states and makeshift polling sites in storm-hit New York and New Jersey added to confusion in a bitterly contested presidential election.

Watchdog groups reported complaints from people turned away from polls because they did not have identification in states like Pennsylvania, where ID was not required.

In swing states Virginia and Florida, long lines led to numerous complaints and fears that people would give up without casting a ballot, while large numbers of people in Ohio reported being forced to vote by provisional ballot.

It was unclear what the fallout might be from the voting irregularities in Tuesday's election in which Democratic President Barack Obama won a second term, defeating Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

Throughout the day, voters in Pennsylvania, which saw court battles over controversial voter ID requirements, reported getting conflicting messages over whether an identification form was required to vote. A judge had ruled the new voter ID law could not be implemented this election because there was not enough time to ensure all registered voters had proper identification.

But poll workers were still requesting voter IDs, and reports surfaced of people being turned away if they could not produce one, witnesses and watchdog groups reported.

"The commonwealth's effort to inform their citizens and election officials that their voter ID law was struck down was wholly inadequate," said Eric Marshall and Marcia Johnson-Blanco, leaders of the Election Protection hot line that received nearly 89,000 calls from people reporting problems voting.

"The state shirked its responsibility to properly educate voters and poll workers about the ID requirements which led to reports of voters incorrectly being required to show ID across the state," Marshall and Johnson-Blanco said in a statement.

Election Protection said there were signs outside some voting areas in parts of Pennsylvania falsely telling people they needed an ID.

Pennsylvania's ID rules were among a raft of new voting laws passed mostly by Republican-led legislatures in dozens of states since 2011. The courts have thrown out the harshest of the new laws, or at least ordered delayed implementation.

Republicans had their own complaints in Pennsylvania. The party got a court order to reinstate 75 Republican election officials in Philadelphia who allegedly were prohibited from entering polling places.

In Ohio, many people complained they had been forced to vote by provisional ballot after their names did not appear on voter rolls.

Ohio regularly has the highest number of provisional ballots each presidential election, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University's Law School. This year, numbers are likely to exceed 200,000 provision ballots, which will not be counted until at least November 17.

OBAMA ON LONG LINES: 'WE HAVE TO FIX THAT'

Long lines at polls in many states prompted concerns that some voters would walk away without casting ballots. Lengthy waits to vote were reported in Florida, Virginia and Ohio, all key swing states, as well as New Jersey and New York, states that were walloped a week ago by superstorm Sandy.

Obama was clearly aware of the problems that led to long lines.

"I want to thank every American who participated in this election, whether you voted for the very first time or waited in line for a very long time," Obama said in his victory speech. "By the way, we have to fix that."

As Obama spoke, a bit after 1:40 a.m. EST(0640 GMT), Florida secretary of state's spokesman Chris Cate tweeted that people were still voting in Miami-Dade County.

Final election results from Miami-Dade, which accounts for about 10 percent of the state's registered voters, will not be available until Wednesday afternoon, a senior election official announced late on Tuesday.

Miami-Dade Supervisor of Elections Penelope Townsley said the delay was due to a high volume of absentee ballots and because a handful of precincts had voters still casting ballots after 10 p.m. EST (0300 GMT on Wednesday).

In a sign of the importance of the Florida vote, Obama tweeted just after polls closed: "Reminder: If you're waiting to vote in Florida, #StayInLine! As long as you were in line when polls closed, you can still vote."

Voters reported hours-long lines throughout the day in Florida, where the Republican-led state cut the number of early voting days to eight from 14.

About 12,000 voters in the Clearwater area of Florida received automated telephone calls on Tuesday telling them they had until the end of "tomorrow" to vote. Once officials realized the problem, they called voters to tell them the message had been sent out a day late and the election was really on Tuesday.

College students voting away from home also ran into problems in Florida after the new election law for the first time prohibited making address changes on the spot.

"Right now, it's annoying me," said Kristen Wiley, 20, a student from Boca Raton who said she had requested, but not received, an absentee ballot from Palm Beach County. She was waiting in line for a provisional ballot, knowing it would not count unless her eligibility is later verified.

Multiple problems were reported in New Jersey and New York, where Sandy crashed ashore eight days ago.

"There's just one word to describe the experience in New Jersey, and that is a catastrophe," said Barbara Arnwine, director of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

She said that computer servers had crashed, voters were being asked for ID that was not required, some polling places opened late and multiple locations did not have ballots.

New Jersey extended the deadline for voters displaced by the storm to fax or email their ballots until Friday.

(additional reporting by Susan Cornwell and David Ingram in Washington, Jane Sutton and Tom Brown in Miami, Barbara Liston in Orlando and Andrew Longstreth in New York; Editing by Ros Krasny, Marilyn W. Thompson and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/complaints-voter-ids-long-lines-election-074618563.html

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

The Downsides To Legal Pot, Ctd - The Dish | By Andrew Sullivan ...

While expressing his fears about legalization, Tony Dokoupil wrote?that every "year about 375,000 people end up in the ER with marijuana-related 'averse reactions,' more than any drug other than cocaine."?Mike Riggs counters:?

According to the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS), the 375,000 instances in which marijuana is noted in an ER visit are not necessarily instances in which marijuana caused an "averse reaction." Rather, the survey tells us that in those 375,000 cases, marijuana was "commonly involved in an emergency department visit." So, if you smoked a joint on Tuesday, and on Thursday you blew a tire in your work vehicle and careened into a guard rail, then had your blood drawn at the ER, marijuana was involved in your emergency room visit. While?people do ocassionally get so high?that they call for an ambulance, the NHAMC survey doesn't distinguish between people who go to the ER with drugs in their system, and people who go to the ER?because?of the drugs in their system.

Riggs also tosses grains of salt at the marijuana rehab numbers Dokoupil cites. Kleiman pushes back here.

Source: http://andrewsullivan.thedailybeast.com/2012/11/the-downsides-to-legal-pot-ctd.html

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

Why Democrats Are Likely to Keep the Senate: A Look at the Key Races (Atlantic Politics Channel)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/259566381?client_source=feed&format=rss

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New York's Cuomo to ask Washington to cover Sandy storm costs

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