Sunday, November 11, 2012

Canon Pixma MG4220 Wireless Inkjet Photo All-in-One


Despite being one of Canon's photo inkjet MFPs, which is usually synonymous with being a home-oriented printer, the Canon Pixma MG4220 Wireless Inkjet Photo All-in-One is just as suitable for a home office, in a distinctly low-end kind of way. It doesn't offer any office-centric features like a fax capability or an automatic document feeder (ADF), but given its better-than-average text quality, it's a good choice for light-duty home office printing. In addition, its Wi-Fi capability makes it easy to share, which in turn makes it a potentially good fit in the dual role of home and home office printer.

The MG4220 has a lot in common with the lower-priced Editors' Choice Kodak ESP 3.2 All-in-One Printer that I reviewed earlier this year. Both can print, scan, and copy, and both can print JPG files directly from memory cards. In both cases, you can also preview the images on memory cards before printing, with a 2.5-inch color display in the case of the MG4220.

One limitation for the printer is its paper handling. The low paper capacity, with a 100-sheet input tray, is enough for only light-duty use, even in a home office. On the other hand, the MG4220 also includes a duplexer (for two-sided printing), a welcome extra that doesn't show up on many inexpensive printers aimed at home users.

Setup and Speed
For my tests, I connected the MG4220 by USB cable to a system running Windows Vista. Setup was standard fare, with one annoying exception. Most inkjets include a printhead alignment step, either as an automatic step in the installation program, or with instructions in a Quick Start guide. The MG4220 simply shows a message suggesting that you align the printheads and saying that the instructions are in the User Guide.

Less sophisticated users are likely to be frustrated by this. More knowledgeable users are likely to skip the User Guide and go directly to the driver menus, where they'll find a manual alignment procedure. However, there's also a much simpler, semi-automated procedure hidden in the printer's control panel menus. Installation would be a lot easier for both groups if the Quick Start guide or onscreen message gave the steps for the second choice.

Canon Pixma MG4220

Once installed, the printer works as promised. Speed, however, is not a strong point. I timed the printer (using QualityLogic's hardware and software for timing) at an effective speed of just 2.1 pages per minute (ppm) on our business applications suite. That translates to being far slower than the similarly priced home-oriented HP Photosmart 5520 e-All-in-One , at 3.7 ppm, and slower even than the less expensive Kodak ESP 3.2, at 3.2 ppm.

Photo speed was also unimpressive, with an average 2 minutes 7 seconds for a 4-by-6 print on our tests. That makes the MG4220 far slower than either the HP printer, at 1:03, or the Kodak printer, at 50 seconds.

Quality, and Other Issues
The good news for the MG4220 is that its output quality largely makes up for any deficiencies in speed, thanks largely to above-par text. The text doesn't offer the kind of crisp clean edges I'd want for, say, a resume, but it can match many lasers for overall readability at a variety of fonts and font sizes. It's certainly good enough for any business use. The one potential issue is that it smudges if it gets wet.

Graphics quality is at the high end of the tight range where most inkjets fall. It's easily good enough for any internal business use, including PowerPoint handouts. Depending on how much of a perfectionist you are, you may consider it suitable for output that?s going to an important client or customer. Somewhat oddly for a printer that's supposed to be aimed at home use, the photo quality is less impressive than either graphics or text quality. It falls at the low end of par for an inkjet, or roughly the low end of what you would expect if you went to a local drugstore for prints.

One last feature worth mention is support for mobile printing, including AirPrint and Google Cloud Print. To use any of the mobile printing features, however, you have to connect the printer to a network, which means using Wi-Fi, since the printer doesn't offer Ethernet.

The saving grace for this printer, and what makes it worth considering, is the overall above-par output, with particular emphasis on text quality. The HP 5520 offers much better speed at the same price, and the Kodak ESP 3.2 offers somewhat better speed and most of the same features at a lower price. But for a home office where text quality is a key consideration, the Canon Pixma MG4220 Wireless Inkjet Photo All-in-One can easily be the best fit.

More Multi-function Printer Reviews:
??? OKI MB451w
??? Canon Pixma MG4220 Wireless Inkjet Photo All-in-One
??? Epson Expression Premium XP-800 Small-In-One Printer
??? Dell C3765dnf Color Laser Printer
??? Brother MFC-J4510DW
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Saturday, November 10, 2012

The Longform Guide to Presidential Losers

155691448 Mitt Romney concedes defeat to President Obama on Wednesday in Boston

Photo by Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty Images.

Every weekend, Longform shares a collection of great stories from its archive with Slate. For daily picks of new and classic nonfiction, check out Longform or follow @longform on Twitter. Have an iPad? Download Longform?s app to read the latest picks, plus features from dozens of other magazines, including Slate.

What?s life like for those who reach for the brassiest of brass rings?the American presidency?and miss? Mitt Romney, repeat loser, is about to find out. He may want to consult his predecessors for a possible glimpse of his future. (Note: George H.W. Bush was not, as our 41st president, a total loser.)

The Man Who Never Was
Todd Purdum ? Vanity Fair ? November 2010

?McCain and his wife, Cindy, have been living essentially separate lives for years. She has spent most of her time in Arizona while he has spent the workweek in a Virginia condominium where, he once told me, he sometimes went months at a time without ever entering the living room, simply coming home to the kitchen and bedroom late at night and leaving again early the next morning. In 2008, McCain was deeply stung by a long New York Times article about his working relationship with a lobbyist, Vicki Iseman, and its assertion that certain McCain aides feared the relationship had some years earlier morphed into an affair. To this day, McCain declines to give interviews to the paper, which was once one of his favorite outlets. While associates say the McCains are companionable, one former aide allows, ?I?m not going to tell you that they have a conventionally close marriage, but I?m just not going to get into it.?

The Senate is McCain?s whole life, his reason for being. ?This is what he does,? one former aide says. ?He is a United States senator. This is his ecology. It?s a big job, but it?s a really small world. It?s like a killer whale born in captivity in SeaWorld; it doesn?t know any better. It doesn?t know it?s supposed to be in the Pacific Ocean.? ?

The All-American
James Traub ? New York Times Magazine ? July 2011

?Why, then, does Kerry bother? Why is he racing back and forth to put out the fires being set by a serial arsonist? I asked him about this on the short flight from Kabul to Islamabad. Kerry tried to put the best possible face on what he had learned. Despite the warlords in Kabul, he said, Karzai had appointed some talented officials at the provincial and district levels. ?It?s a mixed bag,? he concluded gamely. Kerry knew Karzai?s failings as well as anyone, but he was not prepared to abandon Afghanistan?s president, because he was not prepared to abandon Afghanistan. But why not??

The Wilderness Campaign
David Remnick ? The New Yorker ? September 2004

?In a parliamentary system, a candidate for Prime Minister, after losing an election, often returns to the party leadership or at least to a prominent seat in parliament. It doesn?t work that way in the United States. Here, you make your own way: you give speeches, write memoirs, accumulate a fortune, find a righteous cause. Sometimes a reporter might come calling, but not often. In any case, Donna Brazile, Gore?s campaign manager in 2000, said, ?When it was over, the Democratic Party kicked him to the curb,? preferring to forget not only the Florida catastrophe but also Gore?s own misplays: his mutating personality in the three debates with Bush; his reliance on political consultants; his inability to exploit Bill Clinton?s enduring popularity and his failure to win Clinton?s Arkansas, much less Tennessee; his decision not to press immediately for a statewide recount in Florida. Now, everywhere he goes, Gore is faced with crowds who despair of the Bush Administration and see in him all that might have been, all the what-ifs. The heartbreak of a lifetime. Sometimes people approach him and address him as ?Mr. President.? Some try to cheer him up and tell him, ?We know you really won.? Some tilt their heads, affecting a look of grave sympathy, as if he had just lost a family member. He has to face not only his own regrets; he is forever the mirror of others?. A lesser man would have done far worse than grow a beard and put on a few pounds.?

Bob Dole: Great American
Jeanne Marie Laskas ? GQ ? July 2012

?I ask if he ever thought about what the country would have been like if he'd been president.

?I've thought about it, not a lot, but I thought my relationship with Congress?the Democrats and Republicans?would help me get some things done. Not everything, but at least they'd be willing to try.?

Bipartisan leadership, he tells me, was not exceedingly complicated. ?We'd meet on an issue. If we could work it out, we'd work it out. If it wasn't possible, we'd have a vote.?

The Revision Thing
Paul Burka ? Texas Monthly ? November 1997

?Bush has settled into the role of ex-president. It is a good job once you get used to it. At first Bush took defeat hard; the Parmet biography says that on the weekend after the election, he told Colin Powell, ?It hurts. It really hurts to be rejected.? Bush said that the return to private life wasn?t hard, but his description to me of his first hours out of office??We flew to [Houston?s] Ellington Field and went straight to a small house where nobody was living??sounded pretty bleak. In those early months, according to friends, he sometimes lapsed into apologies and regrets when he was around colleagues from the White House years. For Barbara Bush the transition was easier: ?We?re not dumb enough to want what we don?t have,? she said. What they did have, courtesy of the federal government, was seven staffers and more than a dozen Secret Service agents, an annual pension of $148,000, and an annual budget of $391,000. And there are side benefits. If, say, you want to jump out of an airplane, the Pentagon will provide you with a paratrooper escort, at your cost.?

What Might Have Been
Michael Leahy ? Washington Post ? February 2005

?He puts on a brown overcoat, shuffling toward the door, then stops abruptly. Over his shoulder, hung in a hallway, is a framed photo of himself on the cover of what appears to be the November 13, 1972, issue of Newsweek magazine?or a Newsweek from a parallel universe. The headline says, ?THE GREAT UPSET.? Beneath those words, alongside the candidate's beaming visage at age 50, is the cover's subtitle: ?President-Elect McGovern.? Newsweek prepared the cover, McGovern explains, just in case he beat the odds and won the '72 race. It is one more reminder for him of what might have been.?

Have a favorite piece that we missed? Leave the link in the comments or tweet it to @longform. For more great writing, check out Longform?s complete archive.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=c4dddb5de105cce339db8fbe683336f0

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Fruit Salad & Mixed Veg: Eat Drink Blog 3 - Part 2 - d'Arenberg ...

On November 3rd and 4th 2012, I had the pleasure of attending the third Australian food blogging conference,?Eat Drink Blog,?which was held in my hometown of Adelaide. I was one of 80 lucky Australian food bloggers who were selected to attend the fun and food filled conference. Our second adventure on day one was a visit to the picturesque d'Arenberg Vineyard and Winery in McLaren Vale, less than an hour from the Adelaide CBD. Here we undertook the Blending Bench experience, blending our own red wines.


One great thing about Adelaide is the fact we have two wonderful wine regions on our doorstep; the McLaren Vale (45 minutes from the CBD) and the Barossa Valley (60-90 minutes from the CBD). If you have some more time up your sleeve, the Claire Valley is approximately two hours away from the city centre.

















































Upon our arrival we sat down at the tables in the restored 1880 stables. In front of us we found tasting glasses, paper for recording tasting notes, three bottles of Shiraz and equipment that I last saw in my grade 12 chemistry class.

D'Arry, the chief winemaker, welcomed us and gave us an overview of the vineyard and winery. He started to manage his father's winery full time in 1957. In 1959 he launched his own label named 'd'Arenberg' in honour of his mother. Wine fans and judges enjoyed the wine very much and it won many awards in the late 1960s. In the 1970s, d'Arenberg wines had established a name for itself, both nationally and internationally. In 2004, d'Arry was awarded with an Order of?Australia?for his contributions to the wine industry.





























d'Arry

Next ?Jack (I think this was his name!!) spoke to us, about the Shiraz bottles on the tables and took some questions from the group in regards to how one properly tastes a wine.

From my notes, it goes a bit like this:

1. Colour - Look at the colour of the wine. If you are in a yellow lit room as we were, hold the wine over some white paper.

2. Swirl - This releases the compounds in the wine into the head of the glass.

3. Smell - Place your nose into the glass and smell. You can take three 'sniffs'; the first will pick up the fruit, the second will go deeper and pick up oak and herbal flavours and the third will pick up the alcohol.

This is Jack, he likes wine too!




























The Shiraz in front of us, and with a little more wine?knowledge?than we had before, we set about tasting the wines. My tasting partner was the friendly Bryan from Let's Get Fat Together.

The Shiraz wines up for tasting were:

WINE A

2010 Blewitt Springs Shiraz, Penneys 3, 2003 French oak

My notes: smokey, savoury, spicy, long tenin, cherry, earthy, elegant

WINE B

2010 Beautiful View Shiraz, Big Sand, 1999 American oak
My notes: plum, caramalised, leather

WINE C

McLaren Flat Shiraz, White MS2, 2010 French oak

My notes: leafy, salami





























We were then given the chance to blend our own bottle of wine, using the three Shiraz wines we had tasted. We were able to blend three combinations and pick our favourite to bottle. How exciting!

My blend was not too good. It was far too strong and just really bad. However, Bryan did very well and blended a nice combination of the three Shiraz wines. We bottled his combination, which was 60% wine A, 30% wine B and 10% wine C.




























MAGICAL CHEMISTRY THINGS!

In order to keep our wine from?oxidizing?too much, it was mixed with some dry ice. It looked quite amazing! See above.

We named our blend, the 'No idea red' because were were quite unsure about what we were doing. But hey, it looks very professional doesn't it? We are now wine makers! Well, not really ;)

After a busy afternoon of blending wine it was then time for something to eat. Food bloggers may not be the best at blending wine, but they can sure eat and photograph it.

Olive things. I do not really know what they were, but they were mighty tasty

Coffin Bay oysters topped with seaweed. My first raw oyster experience! Reminded me of the ocean.

Little dumplings which were filled with pumpkin

Not so sure what this was. It was topped with pork crackling


This was some sort of rice cube topped with mysterious flavoursome food items:)

After re-fueling some of us went into the tasting room to taste other wines on offer. I can highly recommend a certain dessert wine. Yes, I like dessert wine:) The 2010 Noble Mud Pie Viognier Pinot Gris. Wow! So floral on the nose and when you taste it, you've got sensations of passionfruit, pineapple and other tropical fruits dancing on your tongue. Looking at the tasting list now, I should have bought a bottle as it was only $20!

If you would like to try your hand at blending your own wine, the Blending Bench experience costs $60 for a 90 minute session.?

So my friends, that was the Blending Bench at d'Arenberg. Thank you to everyone at d'Arenberg for hosting us and the sponsors involved. We had a splendid time (even though?some of us were not so confident at blending our wines).

Where:?Osborn Road, McLaren Vale, South Australia 5171

When: Cellar Door--->Monday - Sunday 10:00 - 17:00


For more information on Eat Drink Blog 3, click?here.
For a full list of delegates, click?here.

I attended the conference event free of charge thanks to Eat Drink Blog and the sponsors.


More tasty posts : conference, d'Arenberg, Eat Drink Blog 3, finger food, McLaren Vale, oysters, seaweed, Shiraz, South Australia, travel, wine, winery

Source: http://fruitsaladmixedveg.blogspot.com/2012/11/eat-drink-blog-3-part-2-darenberg.html

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Friday, November 9, 2012

Obama to hold news conference on Wed. (The Arizona Republic)

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Stocks slide on Wall Street, extending sell-off

Luke Scanlon, left, of MND Partners Inc. works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange the day after Pres. Barack Obama was re-elected, Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2012 in New York. With President Barack Obama elected to another term, U.S. investors dumped stocks Wednesday and turned their focus to a world of problems, including a "fiscal cliff" of tax increases and spending cuts at home and a deepening recession in Europe. (AP Photo/Henny Ray Abrams)

Luke Scanlon, left, of MND Partners Inc. works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange the day after Pres. Barack Obama was re-elected, Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2012 in New York. With President Barack Obama elected to another term, U.S. investors dumped stocks Wednesday and turned their focus to a world of problems, including a "fiscal cliff" of tax increases and spending cuts at home and a deepening recession in Europe. (AP Photo/Henny Ray Abrams)

NEW YORK (AP) ? Stocks slid on Wall Street Thursday, a day after the Dow Jones industrial average logged its biggest one-day drop of the year, as investors fretted about the potential for gridlock in Washington.

The Dow closed down 121.41 points to 12,811.32, bringing its two-day loss to 434 points. The Standard and Poor's 500 index fell 17.02 points to 1,377.51 and the Nasdaq composite slipped 41.71 to 2,895.58.

The Dow plunged 313 points Wednesday, its fifth worst one-day drop following a U.S. presidential election. The biggest, in 2008, came in the midst of the financial crisis on the day after President Barack Obama won his first term.

The two-day slump came in the wake of Obama's re-election to a second term as investors turned their focus back to Europe's problems and the so-called fiscal cliff, a package of tax increases and government spending cuts in the U.S. that will occur unless Congress acts by Jan. 1. Investors see it as a serious threat to the economic recovery.

"The thinking before the election was that it would remove some of the uncertainty, but it seems to have done the opposite," said Tyler Vernon, chief investment officer at Biltmore Capital Advisors in Princeton, N.J.

Stocks are still up on the year, but well below the peak they reached in September. That was when the Federal Reserve announced a third round of its bond-buying program, which is intended to hold down borrowing costs and encourage lending.

The S&P 500 is 6 percent below its high close of the year, 1,465, which it reached on Sept. 14. That was its highest level in nearly five years. It's still up 10 percent for the year.

Investors may be tempted to sell appreciated stock before a possible increase in the capital gains tax at the end of the year, Vernon said. Tax cuts enacted by President George W. Bush expire at the end of this year and the U.S. government wants to cut a $1 trillion budget deficit.

"The mood of the market has certainly switched," said J.J. Kinahan, chief derivatives strategist at TD Ameritrade, as investors monitor developments on the fiscal cliff and wait for more clues about Obama's agenda.

Investors were encouraged by two reports on the U.S. economy that came out before the market opened. The Dow climbed as much as 48 points in the morning but started to sink after the first hour of trading.

The Dow fell steadily throughout the rest of the day, and more steeply in the last hour of trading. The Dow gave up 73 points in the last 40 minutes, accounting for more than half the day's loss.

The Labor Department reported that the number of people seeking unemployment benefits fell 8,000 last week to 355,000, a possible sign that the job market is healing. Officials cautioned that the figures were distorted by Superstorm Sandy.

A separate report showed that the U.S. trade deficit narrowed to its lowest level in almost two years as exports rose to a record high.

There was also encouraging news from Europe, where leaders shocked markets a day earlier with a dire forecast for economic growth next year.

European Central Bank head Mario Draghi said financial market confidence "has visibly improved" as the 17-country group that uses the euro struggles with its debt crisis. But he said the outlook for the economy remains "weak." Draghi spoke after the bank's governing council left its key interest rate unchanged at 0.75 percent.

The European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union, on Wednesday slashed its outlook for growth for this year and 2013. The report helped set off a sharp decline in stocks in the U.S and Europe.

Spain's government said that it had met its financing needs for the year after raising the equivalent of $6.07 billion in a series of bond auctions on Thursday. Spain became the focal point of the European debt crisis earlier this year amid concern that it would struggle to refinance its debt at affordable rates.

Among stocks making big moves:

? Energy drink maker Monster Beverage sank 57 cents to $44.40 after the company said its revenue growth slowed in the third quarter.

? Kayak Software surged in after-hours trading, gaining $8.14 to $39.18, after the travel website agreed to be bought by Priceline.com for $40 a share.

? Burger chain Wendy's rose 13 cents to $4.39 after the company said that a key sales figure rose. Revenue at restaurants open at least 15 months rose 2.7 percent, the sixth straight quarter of growth.

? CBS rose 36 cents to $34.36 after the company said that earnings rose 16 percent as falling ad revenue was offset by higher fees from pay TV distributors.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-08-Wall%20Street/id-a6307342e51a4fb4a45aae1ad7fc38f5

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New Faces: Newly elected US senators

FILE - In this Nov. 6, 2012 file photo, Sen.-elect, current Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., waves during an election night party in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Matt York, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 6, 2012 file photo, Sen.-elect, current Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., waves during an election night party in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Matt York, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 6, 2012, file photo, Sen.-elect Chris Murphy, D-Conn., celebrates his win, in Hartford, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 6, 2012 file photo, Sen.-elect, current Rep. Maize Hirono gives a victory speech at the Japanese Cultural Center, in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 6, 2012 file photo, Sen.-elect Angus King, I-Maine, celebrates his victory, in Freeport, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 6, 2012 file photo, Sen.-elect Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. waves to the crowd before giving her victory speech, in Boston. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)

A look at the newly elected U.S. senators from Tuesday's election:

ARIZONA

Republican Jeff Flake, the congressman who won Arizona's open U.S. Senate seat, built his reputation on a fierce opposition to "earmarks," the special funding requests for roads, bridges and other local pet projects that are criticized as wasteful patronage.

His opposition to pork-barrel spending has proved popular in the past, but Flake faced criticism during the race to succeed retiring Republican Sen. Jon Kyl that his crusade has hurt efforts to attract new businesses to the state.

"Arizona is far better without earmarks," a confident Flake said during an October debate.

Flake, who has represented cities in eastern metro Phoenix in Congress since 2000, won the Senate seat over independent-turned-Democrat Richard Carmona, who served as President George W. Bush's surgeon general.

Before Carmona entered the race a year ago, both parties viewed Flake as the overwhelming favorite. The contest grew more competitive after Flake emerged from a bruising primary against a wealthy businessman who put $6 million of his own money into the race and outside groups threw in about $15 million into the general-election contest in October.

Flake has supported Republican priorities over the years, but also has sided with Democrats on other issues.

In the past, Flake opposed the rescue of financial firms during Bush's administration, the 2010 health care overhaul and the 2009 economic stimulus package. He has applauded the Obama administration's decision to lift a ban on travel and remittances to Cuba.

Flake has been criticized for changing his immigration views. He supported proposals in the past that would have revamped guest-worker programs and created a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants. But he took a narrower position when he announced his Senate candidacy last year, saying voters won't trust government to fix the nation's immigration woes unless it can first secure the U.S.-Mexico border.

CONNECTICUT

When Connecticut Democrat Chris Murphy neared the end of his victory speech in a bruising U.S. Senate race Tuesday night, he returned to the story of his mother rising out of poverty and what the election meant for a fictional girl living in a public housing complex.

The three-term U.S. congressman said voters gave the girl a better chance at a brighter future.

"She's wondering whether that promise that was made to my mother ? work hard, play by the rules and you'll have a chance to make it ? is still alive," he said. "She's going to wake up tomorrow and know that that chance to be great ... is just a little bit closer. And in the end my friends, that is the most important measurement of what we've done here tonight."

Murphy defeated Republican former wrestling executive Linda McMahon in the race to succeed retiring independent Sen. Joe Lieberman, touting his commitment to the middle class and accusing McMahon of favoring the rich. In the process, he survived McMahon spending $42 million of her own money, $8 million short of what she spent in her unsuccessful bid for Senate in 2010.

He also survived McMahon's attacks on his past financial problems, which included late mortgage and property tax payments, despite McMahon's own bankruptcy years ago.

His victory was part of Democrats' sweep of five congressional races in Connecticut.

Murphy, who served eight years in the state legislature before going to Congress, said his priorities include reforming the tax code to help small businesses, promoting and strengthening American manufacturing, rebuilding roads and rails, improving education and growing the renewable energy industry. He agrees with President Barack Obama on most social and economic issues.

Bridging the bitter divide between Democrats and Republicans in Washington has been another of his goals. He is a co-chairman of the Center Aisle Caucus, a bipartisan group of House members trying to promote civility and positive dialogue in Congress.

HAWAII

While campaigning for U.S. Senate, U.S. Rep. Mazie Hirono rarely shied away from fierce support of Democrats and consistent criticism of Republicans, arguing that her party's stances better reflect the values of Hawaii.

Now, after trouncing former Hawaii Gov. Linda Lingle, Hirono is embracing her standing as the state's first woman to serve as senator and the Senate's first Asian-American woman.

Hirono told The Associated Press after winning Tuesday night that the historical footnote says more about the makeup of the country's electoral pipeline.

"What it reflects is that we need a lot more diversity in the United States Senate," said Hirono, who was born in Fukushima, Japan. "I'm going to do my part to support more women to run for Congress and certainly support more minority candidates."

Hirono, 65, moved to Hawaii with her mother in 1955, then went on to practice law in Honolulu before she was elected to the Hawaii Legislature in 1980. She was elected as lieutenant governor in 1994 and 1998, then lost a governor's race to Lingle in 2002. She was elected to the U.S. House in 2006, and is generally considered one of its more liberal members.

Hirono ran on a platform of stopping Lingle as a representative of national Republican interests. At every turn in the race, Hirono linked her opponent with well-known GOP names including Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan and George W. Bush.

Hirono held court for Democrats in a state known to support the party. President Barack Obama topped the ticket for Democrats in his birth state in his bid for re-election.

While Hirono didn't win as much support as Obama in the state, she beat Lingle with nearly 62 percent of the vote compared with nearly 37 percent for Lingle.

Hirono has followed other Democrats on several issues, including Obama's jobs plan and health care reform.

INDIANA

Democrat Joe Donnelly is a three-term congressman from northern Indiana who ran as a centrist highlighting his support for extending the George W. Bush-era tax cuts while fending off attacks over his support for the federal health care overhaul.

He was born in Massapequa, N.Y., and received bachelor's and law degrees from the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind. He worked as an attorney and ran a printing business before defeating Republican Rep. Chris Chocola in 2006. He had lost to Chocola him two years earlier.

Donnelly entered the U.S. Senate race after GOP-controlled redistricting moved a couple strong Republican counties into what had been a swing district.

The Senate race turned in Donnelly's favor after Republican Richard Mourdock said in a debate that pregnancies resulting from rape are something "God intended." Donnelly, meanwhile, twice supported a bill that would have denied federal abortion funding even in cases of rape and incest.

Donnelly positioned himself during the campaign as a bipartisan problem-solver against the tea party-backed Mourdock, who defeated longtime Sen. Richard Lugar in a contentious Republican primary.

Donnelly, 57, and his wife, Jill, have two children.

When asked about his vote of the federal health care law, he told the story of his daughter, who takes Enbrel for her rheumatoid arthritis, at a price tag of $1,500 a month. Donnelly says he worried about people who can barely pay their rent being able to afford such drugs.

"How do they make it so their daughter doesn't have to go in a shower stiffened up every single day, as opposed to being able to get this prescription?" he said.

MAINE

Independent Angus King may be just starting out in his new role as a U.S. senator, but he's long been a well-known figure in Maine whose independent politics have been his calling card.

The 68-year-old King was Maine's governor for two terms between 1995 and 2003, establishing credentials as someone who could work with both parties. Before that he spent 18 years as a public broadcasting commentator on state public policy issues.

Angus Stanley King Jr. was born in Alexandria, Va., grew up there in a politically active family, and after law school at the University of Virginia came to Maine as a lawyer serving low-income people.

He later went to work for William Hathaway, the Democrat who ousted entrenched Republican Sen. Margaret Chase Smith from her Senate seat. Hathaway's election in 1972 led to King's appointment to staff of the Senate Labor Committee.

With King's 2012 election, he returns to the national political stage ? only on a different level. Then, he was refining policy. Now, he's in a position to shape policy in a much more polarized environment, said Rutgers University political science professor Ross Baker.

Asked whether King will have any influence in Washington, Baker said, "Just ask Joe Lieberman," referring to the Connecticut independent who is retiring. "Independents have a huge impact."

Being independent wasn't always easy, but King made it work.

He walked into a state government on rocky fiscal ground in which cutbacks were required to keep the books balanced. But gradually, as the economy improved, state tax revenues poured in beyond anticipated levels.

King was involved in hydropower and energy conservation work before running for governor, and after serving got involved in wind power. He sold his stake in the wind company when he ran for Senate.

MASSACHUSETTS

On the campaign trail, Democrat Elizabeth Warren told supporters she never envisioned jumping into the rough and tumble of electoral politics ? let alone making the U.S. Senate the object of her first campaign.

Now the 63-year-old is preparing for the transition from the upper echelons of academia at Harvard Law School to the halls of Washington, where she will occupy the seat once held by Democratic Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.

Warren was born in Oklahoma City on what she has called "the ragged edge of the middle class." Her father sold carpeting and worked as a maintenance man and her mother answered phones at Sears. Her first job was waiting tables in her aunt's Mexican restaurant when she was 13.

She became a teacher after earning a bachelor's degree from the University of Houston in 1970. Six years later she earned a law degree from Rutgers University and began a career as a law professor, going on to become a pre-eminent expert in the fields of bankruptcy and commercial law.

She came to prominence nationally following the financial collapse of 2008, when she was tapped to serve as chair of the Congressional Oversight Panel for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which authorized the U.S. Treasury to spend $700 billion to stabilize the economy.

She pushed for the creation of a new federal agency to hold the nation's largest financial institutions accountable by protecting consumers from "tricks and traps" hidden in mortgages, credit cards and other products.

She then turned her sights on the U.S. Senate, announcing she would challenge Republican incumbent U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, who won a special election in 2010 to fill the seat left vacant by Kennedy's death.

The massively expensive race, the most costly in state history, turned harsh at times, with Brown charging that Warren had used her claims of Native American heritage to help her academic career.

The two remained neck and neck in public opinion polls until Election Day, when voters handed Warren a 54 percent to 46 percent margin over Brown, making her the first woman in Massachusetts elected to serve in the U.S. Senate.

NEBRASKA

Republican Deb Fischer's rise from little-known rancher and state senator to Nebraska's U.S. senator-elect completes the deeply conservative state's move to full Republican domination ? just one goal of the rock-ribbed conservative.

Fischer, 61, handed Democrat Bob Kerrey his first loss in Nebraska, handily defeating the former governor and two-term U.S. senator in a race that had been perceived as close.

Friends and political strategists have said Fischer's success was a combination of hard campaigning in some of Nebraska's most isolated hamlets, her appeal as a conservative rancher, and a flood of outside money that paid for relentless television ads attacking first her better-known and better-funded primary opponents, then Kerrey in the general election.

"I look around this room and I see so many volunteers who helped with this campaign from the beginning," Fischer said Tuesday night in her victory speech. "You folks were here for me when we weren't given much of a chance at all. We formed a great grassroots organization, we worked hard, and, hey, we're here today."

When Fischer announced her Senate campaign 16 months ago at an Omaha steakhouse, only a few dozen people showed up ? mostly reporters, Fischer family members and a smattering of campaign aides. But her star power was heightened in the subsequent months.

Fischer's colleagues in the Legislature have described her as a tough lawmaker and an unwavering advocate for her overwhelmingly rural district ? the largest geographically in the state ? in north-central Nebraska.

Speaker of the Legislature Mike Flood, a Republican who came into office the same year as Fischer, said he could tell Fischer was "tough as nails" when they met during an orientation for freshman lawmakers.

"It didn't take me very long to figure out she was in it to achieve great things," Flood said. "She does not back down. She does not squirm. She looks you straight in the eye to tell you what she's going to do, and she works with people to get it done."

Fischer credited her win to her boots-on-the-ground campaign, in which she put 45,000 miles on her car traveling rural Nebraska during the primary campaign, and the support of popular of Republicans like Gov. Dave Heineman and U.S. Sen. Mike Johanns in the general campaign.

NEW MEXICO

Democrats held onto both of New Mexico's Senate seats Tuesday with election of one of the state's fast-rising political stars, Martin Heinrich.

The 41-year-old, two-term representative in the U.S. House defeated Republican Heather Wilson for the seat being vacated by retiring Democrat Jeff Bingaman.

It is the second time in four years New Mexicans have elected a new senator, after Bingaman and Republican Pete Domenici held the state's two seats for more than 30 years.

In 2008, Democrat Tom Udall, a former congressman and state attorney general, was elected to replace Domenici.

The themes of this year's Senate campaign mirrored many of those in the presidential race. Heinrich portrayed himself as a defender of the middle class and safety net programs such as Medicare and Social Security. But Wilson blamed Democratic policies for job losses and the nation's sputtering economy. She opposed President Barack Obama's health care overhaul, which Heinrich supported.

Heinrich, 41, has quickly climbed up the ranks in New Mexico politics. He moved to the state in 1995 to take a job at a federal research facility after earning an engineering degree from the University of Missouri. He started a public affairs consulting business and in 2003 won a seat on the Albuquerque city council. Three years later he became state natural resources trustee, an appointive state government job overseeing the restoration of environmentally contaminated areas.

He took the seat vacated by Wilson when she made her first unsuccessful run for Senate in 2008, becoming the first Democrat to win the Albuquerque-area district in 40 years.

Heinrich grew up in Missouri, where his father was a utility company lineman and his mother was a factory worker. He and his wife, Julie, have two children.

NORTH DAKOTA

Democrat Heidi Heitkamp's ascension to the U.S. Senate, as the first woman ever to serve North Dakota in Congress, represents the capstone of a political career that began 28 years and six campaigns ago.

The former North Dakota attorney general and tax commissioner defeated Republican Rick Berg on Tuesday by about 3,000 votes, with all precincts reporting. Berg had the option of demanding a recount, but he conceded the race Wednesday.

Heitkamp, 57, grew up in the rural southeastern North Dakota hamlet of Mantador, one of seven children. Her brother, Joel Heitkamp, is a former North Dakota Democratic state senator and a popular talk show host on Fargo's KFGO Radio.

An attorney, Heitkamp was working as an assistant attorney general for the state Tax Department when she ran for North Dakota state auditor in 1984. She lost, but Gov. George Sinner appointed her state tax commissioner two years later when the incumbent, Kent Conrad, was elected to the U.S. Senate.

Heitkamp won her own term as tax commissioner in 1988, and subsequently was elected to two terms as attorney general, getting at least 62 percent of the vote in all three races. Voters warmed to her affable, glad-handing campaigning style and often blunt public speaking style.

As attorney general, Heitkamp was one of the lead negotiators of a $206 billion lawsuit settlement reached by 46 states with the nation's largest tobacco companies to compensate the states' medical expenses for treating smoking-related illnesses.

She ran for governor in 2000 but lost to Republican John Hoeven, the former president of the state-owned Bank of North Dakota, in a campaign that was derailed late by Heitkamp's disclosure that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer. She says she is now cancer-free.

Heitkamp stayed active in politics after her loss, helping to lead a referendum campaign against the weakening of North Dakota's bank privacy laws, and a ballot initiative campaign to force the Legislature to spend a larger portion of North Dakota's share of the tobacco lawsuit settlement on anti-smoking measures.

She has vehemently disagreed with what she describes as President Barack Obama's hostility to coal and oil as energy sources.

TEXAS

Ted Cruz's election to the U.S. Senate from overwhelmingly Republican Texas was once unthinkable. Now it feels almost anti-climactic.

The tea party darling and former state solicitor general beat Democrat Paul Sadler to replace retiring Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. But his sweetest victory came in the GOP primary, when he stunned Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, one of the state's most-powerful Republicans.

Never before having sought elective office, Cruz began the race polling at 2 percent. His father was born in Cuba and fought with Fidel Castro before his government embraced communism, then fled for Texas with $100 sewn into his underwear.

Cruz was born in Canada while his parents were there working in the oil fields. He refuses to say if he holds dual U.S.-Canadian citizenship.

Cruz became a debate champion while at Princeton and has a law degree from Harvard. His fiery, populist oratory made him a grassroots favorite and he spent than two years shaking hands with pastors during Bible study groups at Denny's, chatting up Republican women's gatherings around the state, and attending dozens of candidate forums Dewhurst skipped.

Dewhurst had the support of the state's conservative establishment, including popular Republican Gov. Rick Perry, had overseen the state Senate since 2003, and poured more than $20 million of his own personal fortune into his campaign.

It wasn't enough. Cruz convinced tea party activists that his opponent was a closet moderate because Dewhurst sometimes comprised with Democrats in the state Legislature to get key bills approved.

Cruz's primary win vaulted him into the national spotlight. He spoke at the Republican National Convention and became a regular on national political talk shows. He has since moved hard to the center and mended fences with the Texas Republican mainstream ? even attending fundraisers with Dewhurst and Perry.

Cruz is the first Hispanic from Texas to be elected to the U.S. Senate.

VIRGINIA

Virginia Sen.-elect Tim Kaine almost stumbled into politics, but reached elite levels in the Democratic Party nationally with a diverse partisan pedigree.

The son of an Overland Park, Kan., ironworker, Kaine easily could have become a Republican. At Harvard Law School, he met the daughter of A. Linwood Holton, Virginia's first GOP governor since Reconstruction. They married and moved to Richmond, Va.

"For me, bipartisanship begins at home," Kaine says at nearly every public appearance.

Beliefs forged of his Roman Catholic upbringing and a year as a missionary in Honduras led him into a law practice focused on civil rights, and that morphed into Democratic politics. He won a Richmond City Council seat in 1994 and served as mayor for a term.

He entered statewide politics unexpectedly only after state Sen. Emily Couric, the sister of Katie Couric, was forced to abandon her bid for lieutenant governor after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. Kaine took her spot on the Democratic ticket and was elected in 2001. Four years later, he was elected to succeed fellow Democrat Mark Warner, making Kaine Virginia's first Catholic governor.

In February 2007, Kaine hitched his future to the longshot presidential bid of U.S. Sen. Barack Obama and became the first statewide elected official outside Obama's home state Illinois to endorse him.

The morning after Obama's 2008 election, Kaine huddled with a gaggle of reporters on the Virginia Capitol lawn and, when asked what positions he'd consider in Obama's administration, flatly ruled out serving as Democratic National Committee chairman. Less than two months later, he began a two-year stretch in that very position, one of those years shared with final year as governor.

Kaine had intended to stay in the job through Obama's first term, but when Democratic Sen. Jim Webb announced he would not seek re-election in February 2011, Kaine faced heavy pressure from within his party to run against another former governor, Republican George Allen, and keep the seat ? and possibly control of the Senate ? in Democratic hands.

With Obama's blessing, Kaine handed his DNC duties over to U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz and began reassembling the campaign team from his 2005 gubernatorial victory.

Ironically, Kaine capitalized on partisan gridlock in Congress to portray Allen as a brutish, uncompromising partisan who once exhorted fellow Republicans to knock the Democrats' "soft teeth down their whiny throats."

WISCONSIN

Tammy Baldwin is used to firsts. And while her victory in Wisconsin's Senate race doesn't break ground for Democrats ? the seat has been under their control since 1957 ? it does mark the first time the state has elected a woman to the Senate. She is also the first openly gay candidate ever elected to the Senate.

In 1998, she became the first woman from Wisconsin elected to the U.S. House.

Baldwin defeated former Gov. Tommy Thompson, who many people thought would walk away with the Senate race given his deep connection with Wisconsin and voters after serving as a popular governor for 14 years.

Baldwin ran a disciplined and well-funded campaign, turning the tide on the race in the weeks after the mid-August Republican primary that Thompson won but left his campaign broke and him admittedly exhausted.

Consistently ranked among the most liberal members of Congress, Baldwin served seven terms representing the capital city of Madison before running for the Senate seat vacated by the retiring Sen. Herb Kohl.

Baldwin, 50, was born to a teenage mother and raised by her grandparents. When she was 9, she was struck with an illness that put her in the hospital for three months. Her grandparents didn't have insurance for her and made huge sacrifices to pay her medical bills, she said.

Baldwin has spent most of her adult life in politics. She was first elected to the Dane County Board at age 24, just two years after she graduated from Smith College with a double major in political science and mathematics.

From there she was elected as the youngest woman ever to the state Assembly, at age 30. She served three terms before going to Congress in 1999. She was re-elected with more than 60 percent of the vote every two years since 2002.

Baldwin has been a staunch supporter of President Barack Obama's health care reform law, even advocating for more government control and a single payer system before she ran for office. During the campaign, she said she would focus on making sure the law as passed is implemented and not seek a broadening of its scope.

___

Compiled by Associated Press writers Jacques Billeaud, Dave Collins, Oskar Garcia, Tom Davies, Glenn Adams, Steve LeBlanc, Margery A. Beck, Jeri Clausing, Dale Wetzel, Will Weissert, Bob Lewis and Scott Bauer.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-11-07-Senate-New%20Faces/id-080e2f8d88b440669aab3d59b0b7e7d8

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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Japan utility seeks more funds for nuclear crisis

(AP) ? The Japanese operator of the nuclear power plant devastated in last year's disasters is seeking more government financial support, saying the cost of the cleanup could be double the 5 trillion yen ($62.5 billion) allocated so far.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. made the appeal in a management "action plan" it presented Wednesday.

TEPCO, its finances wrecked by the accident at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant in northeastern Japan and the closures of other nuclear plants, has received a 1 trillion yen bailout and was put under government ownership.

Pressed repeatedly for an estimate of exactly how much it will cost to decommission the crippled plant and pay costs for decontamination and damages, TEPCO president Naomi Hirose said it was impossible to know.

But in a statement, the company outlined two potential scenarios, one involving costs of some 10 trillion yen ($125 billion) that it said would make it difficult for TEPCO to raise funding from private lenders and oblige it to seek further government financial support.

The massive earthquake and tsunami in March last year severely damaged four reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant north of Tokyo, knocking out cooling systems and triggering radiation leaks. Tens of thousands of people fled their homes in the worst atomic disaster since Chernobyl.

Officials say the plant has since stabilized, but it runs on makeshift equipment, causing concerns about its ability to withstand any major earthquakes. TEPCO officials say it will take about 40 years to fully decommission the wrecked reactors, a huge financial burden in addition to the astronomical compensation payments.

Including the bailout, the government has injected 2.5 trillion yen ($31.3 billion) into TEPCO and allocated at least 5 trillion yen for compensation for the disaster and decontamination.

On Wednesday, company executives outlined plans to revitalize TEPCO by cutting costs and making it competitive, arguing that in the long run, keeping the company as a public utility would run counter to the government's strategy of increasing competitiveness in the power sector.

The company, which serves the Tokyo region and is the world's fourth largest electrical utility, has raised electricity rates and sold assets to help staunch its flood of red ink.

TEPCO last week reported a 299.5 billion yen ($3.7 billion) loss in April-September, compared with losses of 627.3 billion a year earlier. It forecast a 45 billion yen ($563 million) loss for the fiscal year ending March 31, down from its earlier estimate of a 160 billion yen ($2 billion) loss.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-07-Japan-Nuclear/id-46f905286fd74a9ba810cbf887abbe60

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34 Frames: The Bond Girls

The world is not enough, and neither is 24 pictures enough to pay full tribute to the loveliest Bond girls ever.
Thus, this week's 24 Frames becomes a very special 34 Frames because, eh, you only live twice.

Hint: use arrow keys to navigate.

Submitted By: RT Staff

Date: Sep 28, 2012

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1926210/news/1926210/

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Obama Calls Christie, Passes Phone to Springsteen

COLUMBUS - President Obama played peacemaker today on Air Force One en route to Ohio.

On the phone with New Jersey Gov. - and Bruce Springsteen superfan - Chris Christie to discuss Hurricane Sandy recovery efforts, Obama patched in the legendary rocker, who was joining him on the flight. Springsteen has famously avoided the governor because of political differences, somewhat to Christie's dismay.

"The president told me if I had one more minute, there was someone else he wanted me to talk to," Christie told reporters at a press conference. "In times of real difficulty, he thought the only thing better than one Jersey guy was two Jersey guys, and he put Bruce Springsteen on the phone.

"Bruce said to me how proud he was of his state," Christie said. "How proud he was and how tough we are. It was a good conversation today and it was great to talk to the president - and even better to talk to Bruce."

A White House official said Christie's description was an accurate account of the conversation. But when asked about the call on the tarmac here in Columbus, Springsteen indicated he didn't want to talk about it.

"Sir, have you spoken with Gov. Christie since the storm?" a pool reporter asked Springsteen.

"Yes, we have," he replied curtly.

"What did you say?" followed the reporter.

"Sorry, I have to get ready," Springsteen said before walking off.

But when ABC's Jake Tapper jokingly tweeted about the phone conversation, Springsteen's official Twitter account retweeted it.

By bringing together @ springsteen and @ govchristie, perhaps the president's Nobel now makes a bit more sense, amirite?

? Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) November 5, 2012

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-calls-christie-passes-phone-springsteen-002236692--abc-news-politics.html

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