Wednesday, May 23, 2012

UCLA Happenings: SWC Health, Nutrition, & Fitness Zumba Class ...

Tuesday, May 29, 2012
5:30 pm - 7:30 pm, Sunset Canyon Recreation Ctr. - Buenos Ayres Room

See below for additional information.

Admission

Free and open to the public; first come, first served.

Contact

SWC Health, Nutrition, & Fitness
(310) 825-7586
swchnf@gmail.com

Additional Information

Come out to a free zumba class taught by a fitness instructor from the John Wooden Center. We will be raffling away UCLA gear as well as handing out free Clif Bars!

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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Working with Health Insurance Leads ? Yapperz - Speak out loud.

The health insurance does an excellent marketing investment, because it brings money into the health insurance customers, instead of a random advertising. A superior method to health insurance health insurance online sales leads provided a regular flow of interested, qualified consumers to buy health insurance. Health may result from customers or ads.

Like by companies, or call if you copy zero inflated health insurance sales leads from a topnotch online leads vendors to come, it does not immediately mean that the leads do not turn into sales, unless They act on them immediately.

There are many different types of health insurance leads to get. The Internet is only a means, you can use. Leads Nevertheless, the best way to get the insurance to get sales calls to them.

Before someone will buy, you should have a system and a plan. As efficient refers not only to the insurance product you are selling, but also on the method by which you sell. Basically you have to deal with your product inside out and can talk about easily.

Now everything should be ready to test several insurance lead generation programs until you could get the best solution for your sales. A good insurance policy can result in sales revenues and reduces the cost and time invested to increase. With the flexibility of the Internet and the divergence in the habits of users who purchase health leads, is a wise business decision, that an insurance agent or company apart not to lose position in an increasingly competitive trade.

You a sale, if you asked a question and you say: "Let me just confirm that the information", but you can lose it when you say: ".. I do not have enough data about you right now I would again call on these terms"

The leads major goal of health care providers to insurance agents get hold of fresh customers in order to work smarter, not harder, as also to develop them and grow.

To discover what would your service and product value, to distinguish what the competition provides, be aware of what consumers want, and find out the notable features of your insurance products. Familiar to his means, that you understand your market, your products and your existing and would-be patrons.

For all insurance agents who follow the insurance sales leads, it routinely shows that timing is everything. For example, as when in health care to one week after they are pointed out, there is a big possibility that these lines are already in use by another insurance company.

My other articles

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Convicted Lockerbie bomber dies of cancer in Libya

FILE - Undated file photo, issued by the British Crown Office of Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, the Libyan man found guilty of the Lockerbie bombing. al-Megrahi who was found guilty of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing of a PanAm flight over Scotland that killed 270 people, was released from a Scottish prison in 2009 on compassionate grounds after being diagnosed with a fatal cancer. He was reported by his son to have died Sunday May 20 2012. (AP Photo/Crown Copyright)

FILE - Undated file photo, issued by the British Crown Office of Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, the Libyan man found guilty of the Lockerbie bombing. al-Megrahi who was found guilty of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing of a PanAm flight over Scotland that killed 270 people, was released from a Scottish prison in 2009 on compassionate grounds after being diagnosed with a fatal cancer. He was reported by his son to have died Sunday May 20 2012. (AP Photo/Crown Copyright)

FILE - In this Aug. 20, 2009 file photo, Abdel Baset al-Megrahi who was found guilty of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing of a PanAm flight over Scotland that killed 270 people, leaves a police van at Glasgow International Airport, Glasgow, Scotland bound for Tripoli, after he was released on compassionate grounds. Al Megrahi was reported by his son to have died Sunday May 20 2012. (AP Photo/Danny Lawson, File)

FILE - A police officer walks by the nose of Pan Am flight 103 in a field near the town of Lockerbie, Scotland where it lay after a bomb aboard exploded, killing a total of 270 people, in this December 21, 1988 file photo. The son of the former Libyan intelligence officer convicted of the bombing says his father has died. Abdel Baset al-Megrahi was released in 2009 from his Scottish prison on humanitarian grounds. Al-Megrahi suffered from prostate cancer. His death was announced on Sunday May 20 2012 by his son, Khaled. (AP Photo/Martin Cleaver, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 20, 2009 file photo, Libyan Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, who was found guilty of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, gestures on his arrival at an airport in Tripoli, Libya. Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, a Libyan intelligence officer who was the only person ever convicted in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, died Sunday May 20, 2012 nearly three years after he was released from a Scottish prison to the outrage of the relatives of the attack's 270 victims. He was 60.(AP Photo/File)

FILE This Thursday, Aug. 20, 2009 file photo shows Libyan Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, who was found guilty of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, center, being helped down the airplane steps on his arrival at an airport in Tripoli, Libya. Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, a Libyan intelligence officer who was the only person ever convicted in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, died Sunday May 20, 2012 nearly three years after he was released from a Scottish prison to the outrage of the relatives of the attack's 270 victims. He was 60. (AP Photo)

(AP) ? He was the embodiment of one of modern Libya's darkest chapters ? a man synonymous with horrifying scenes of wreckage, broken families and a plane that fell out of the sky a generation ago. His name, Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, was little known compared to the single word that his deeds represented: Lockerbie.

Seven months after his patron dictator Moammar Gadhafi was slain in a revolution that began a new chapter for his homeland, al-Megrahi died Sunday of cancer, leaving behind countless unanswered questions about the midair attack in 1988 that blew up Pan Am flight 103 over Scotland. All 259 people on board ? mostly Americans ? and 11 on the ground were killed.

"I am an innocent man," al-Megrahi insisted, most recently in his final interview in December, in the final stages of prostate cancer. "I am about to die and I ask now to be left in peace with my family."

But his death at age 60 leaves no peace for families who still question his guilt and whether others in one of history's deadliest terror attacks went unpunished. Scotland's government said it would continue to investigate the bombing even after al-Megrahi's death.

"He holds the key to what actually took place in Pan Am 103," said Bert Ammerman, whose brother was killed in the bombing. "He knows what other individuals were involved and, more importantly, what other countries were involved."

His attorneys had argued that the Libyan intelligence officer was scapegoated to protect the real culprits: Palestinians acting on the behest of Iran.

Al-Megrahi's death comes about three years after Scottish authorities released him on humanitarian grounds, to the outrage of victims' relatives. At the time, doctors predicted he had only three months to live after he was diagnosed with prostate cancer. He ended up serving eight years of a life sentence.

Anger over his release was further stoked by the hero's welcome he received on his arrival in Libya ? and by subsequent accusations that London had sought his release to protect business interests in oil-rich Libya. Britain and Scotland denied the allegations.

In the months ahead of his release, Tripoli put pressure on Britain, warning that if the ailing al-Megrahi died in a Scottish prison, all British commercial activity in Libya would be cut off and a wave of demonstrations would erupt outside British embassies, according to leaked U.S. diplomatic memos. The Libyans even implied "that the welfare of U.K. diplomats and citizens in Libya would be at risk," the memos say.

Al-Megrahi kept a strict silence after his return, living in the family villa surrounded by high walls in a posh Tripoli neighborhood, mostly bedridden or taking a few steps with a cane. Libyan authorities sealed him off from public access, and on Sunday scores of fellow clan members surrounded his residence to keep the media away.

Al-Megrahi's son, Khaled al-Megrahi, confirmed that he died in Tripoli in a telephone interview but hung up before giving more details. Saad Nasser al-Megrahi, a relative and a member of the ruling National Transitional Council, said al-Megrahi's health had deteriorated in recent days and said he died of cancer-related complications.

Al-Megrahi was convicted in 2001 of planting the bomb aboard Pan Am Flight 103 by a Scottish court set up in the neutral ground of a military base in the Netherlands. The bomb blew up the jetliner as it flew over Lockerbie, Scotland, on Dec. 21, 1988. The New York-bound flight originated at London's Heathrow airport and many of the victims were American college students flying home for Christmas.

The father of one of the Lockerbie victims said al-Megrahi's death was "to a degree a relief" and said his release had little to do with his health.

"If he had been that bad three years ago, he wouldn't have lived this long. It was a political deal," said Glenn Johnson of Greensburg, Pennsylvania, whose 21-year-old daughter Beth Ann Johnson was killed in the bombing.

A spokesman for British families who lost loved ones in the bombing said he always believed al-Megrahi was innocent.

"His death is to be deeply regretted," David Ben-Ayreah said. "As someone who attended the trial I have never taken the view that Megrahi was guilty. Megrahi is the 271st victim of Lockerbie."

The Scottish government said Sunday that it will keep on investigating the bombing despite al-Megrahi's death. Scotland's First Minister, Alex Salmond, said prosecutors have always believed that al-Megrahi did not act alone in the bomb plot.

Little was known about al-Megrahi before he was charged, but he became a central figure in both Libya's falling out with the West and then its return to the international fold.

Gadhafi's regime presented his handover to Scotland in 1999 as a necessary sacrifice to restore Libya's relations with the world.

Gadhafi handed over al-Megrahi and a second suspect to Scottish authorities after years of punishing U.N. sanctions. Four years later, in 2003, Gadhafi acknowledged responsibility ? though not guilt ? for the Lockerbie bombing and paid compensation of about $2.7 billion to the Lockerbie victims' families. He also pledged to dismantle all weapons of mass destruction and joined the U.S.-led fight against terrorism.

The steps won Gadhafi quick rewards, with Western powers resuming diplomatic contacts and signing lucrative business deals.

In 2001, the Scottish court ? hearing the case in the Netherlands ? convicted al-Megrahi of planting the bomb but acquitted his co-defendant, Lamen Khalifa Fhimah, a Libyan Arab Airlines official, of all charges.

The prosecution's case was built around a tiny fragment of circuit board discovered among the airline wreckage that investigators determined was part of the timer of the bomb, hidden in a suitcase. Investigators said the suitcase was loaded onto a flight from Malta, booked through to Pan Am 103 via Frankfurt.

An executive from a Swiss company testified he had sold timers of the same make to Libya. Investigators found that al-Megrahi traveled to Malta on a false passport a day before the suitcase was checked in and left the following day.

Key to convicting al-Megrahi was the testimony of a Malta shopkeeper who identified him as having bought a man's shirt in his store. Scraps of the garment were found wrapped around the timing device.

However, a Scottish judicial body that carried out a major review of the evidence cast doubt on the shopowner's identification of al-Megrahi and said there was evidence the shirt was purchased on a day when al-Megrahi was not in Malta.

Al-Megrahi's lawyers also claimed that British and U.S. authorities tampered with evidence, disregarded witness statements and steered investigators away from suggestions the bombing was an Iranian-financed plot carried out by Palestinians to avenge the shooting down of a civilian Iranian airliner by a U.S. warship. The airliner went down, killing some 290 people, several months before the Lockerbie bombing. The judicial body, however, discounted theories of intentional misdirection.

"I had most to gain and nothing to lose about the whole truth coming out ? until my diagnosis of cancer," al-Megrahi said in a statement after his release. "To those victims' relatives who can bear to hear me say this, they continue to have my sincere sympathy for the unimaginable loss that they have suffered."

___

Hendawi reported from Cairo. Associated Press writers Rami al-Shaheibi in Benghazi, Libya, Meera Selva in London and Deepti Hajela and Verena Dobnik in New York contributed to this report.

Associated Press

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Monday, May 21, 2012

Call Center Outsourcing Services (Pittsburgh, United States ...

Need outsource call center services to make your businesses easier? Integracallcenter.com is here to help the small and mid-sized businesses with their call center outsourcing services. We bridge the gap between you and your customers, and bring them a trusted feeling on your business solutions. Now, businesses can afford our customer support service at lowest cost.

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Sumatran orang-utans delay puberty to build up strength

ANY teenage boy will confirm that older boys make it impossible to get the girls. Young male orang-utans with the same problem have a unique and unexpected solution: they don't grow up until they are strong enough to challenge the dominant males.

Male orang-utans can reproduce from around age 15, but in order to attract a mate they also have to develop secondary sexual characteristics - the equivalent of men growing chest hair. These include conspicuous cheek flanges. Yet Sumatran orang-utans often delay acquiring flanges, sometimes for over 10 years. No other primates do this, not even Bornean orang-utans.

Gauri Pradhan of the University of South Florida in Tampa and colleagues noted another difference between the species: unlike Bornean males, Sumatran males can monopolise females for weeks at a time. Pradhan built mathematical models of orang-utan populations from decades of field data, and varied the extent to which males could monopolise females. She found that males that could delay maturation did better when a few males controlled all the females. They gradually built up physical strength until they were capable of deposing the dominant males, at which point they matured (American Journal of Physical Anthropology, DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.22079). The model is simple yet solid, says Madeleine Hardus of the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands.

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Sunday, May 20, 2012

Concrete Driveway Pour

Concrete Driveway Pour by Sciulli Concrete. We show how we poured this concrete driveway. This is a close up and thorough look at the process (9 minutes long). If you want a very condensed and shorter version of the same video (3 minutes long), take a look at our other videos. Sciulli Concrete made this video to help our customers visualize what we do to complete your home improvement project. Sciulli Concrete handles all your residential concrete needs including driveways, sidewalks, patios, retaining walls and French drains -- inside and out. We do traditional concrete or exposed, and add an appealing finishing design. We also service commercial jobs such as parking lots, curbs, sidewalks and many other unique requests. www.sciulliconcrete.com Located in Moon Township, PA and serving the greater Pittsburgh, PA area.

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Prison: civilization's 'dark flower'

We jail people when we have despaired of any other way of dealing with their abhorrent behavior. But the vast majority will one day re-enter civilized society. Does prison make it more or less likely they will fit in?

By John Yemma,?Editor / May 20, 2012

A prison guard oversees inmates on their way to dinner at Calipatria (Calif.) State Prison.

Gregory Bull/AP

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Prisons have been around since the dawn of civilization. For all that time, prisons have been a dilemma.?

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We lock up murderers, thugs, and thieves both to punish them and to keep them away from law-abiding citizens. Yet prisons are notorious hotbeds of crime, from which first-time offenders too often emerge as hardened criminals. We spend millions persuading prisoners to go straight, giving them occupational training, and coaching them on reentry into civilized society. Yet the mere mention of a criminal record can disqualify a felon from employment, wilt a budding friendship, and relegate an ex-convict to a shadow life of halfway houses, dependence on charity, and possible recidivism.

Well, we tell ourselves, they had it coming; their victims are the ones who really suffered. Lock ?em up and throw away the key. But we also believe in redemption and second chances, at least for ourselves and those we know and love. If anyone close to us spends time behind bars, we experience ? and are appalled by ? the inhumanity of the penal system, the institution that Nathaniel Hawthorne called the ?black flower of civilized society.??

And here?s a practical fact: While there?s no denying that criminal behavior leads to dire consequences, there?s also no denying that the eventual outcome of prison for the vast majority of inmates will be their release back into society. Less than 3 percent of the 1.6 million people in US prisons are serving life sentences without the possibility of parole. The rest will at some point be living in our neighborhoods.

More than ever, that point is now. As Sean Miller reports a Monitor Weekly cover story, record numbers of inmates are leaving prison because of tightening budgets for correctional programs, new thinking about how to handle nonviolent offenders, and the completion of sentences by a bulge of people convicted during the higher-crime, tougher-sentencing era of the 1970s and ?80s.

Sean takes us to California and tracks the difficult post-prison prospects of a handful of men convicted of major crimes ? murder, drug trafficking, gang violence. All now say they are sorry for what they did, weary of prison, and ready to abide by the law. ?Most of them just got tired of it,? says Sean. ?And most of them acknowledge what they?ve done wrong.? They have served their time, sworn themselves to self-improvement, gained job skills, and are hoping for a second chance.?

But life after incarceration, which has never been easy, is especially tough in today?s job market. With time on their hands and few options for earning a living, it is too easy for ex-cons to end up hanging out with old friends and returning to bad behavior ? especially to drugs, which most abused before and even during prison.?

What everyone is worried about, says Sean, is that some felon among the thousands being released will commit a shocking act that tars other ex-prisoners and prompts a backlash against de-incarceration. Fear of a new Willie Horton ? whose crimes while on prison furlough became a factor in the 1988 presidential campaign ? has police, ex-cons, social workers, and parole officers on edge.?

We send men and women to prison when we have despaired of any other way of dealing with their abhorrent behavior. But prison is not a permanent solution. It is at best an opportunity to change a criminal mentality into a moral one. We owe it to the prisoner, the victim, and to us to make that the permanent solution.

John Yemma is editor of the Monitor.?

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